EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, August 7, 2020 Volume 93, Number 32 CapitalPress.com $2.00 LIVE FROM THE FIELD Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Brit Ausman, an Asotin, Wash., farmer and board member of the Washington Grain Commission, sends a greeting to over- seas customers from his hard red winter wheat field July 30. Commission program director Joe Bippert records the video. Virtual trade teams keep wheat farmers, overseas customers connected By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press A SOTIN, Wash. — Brit Aus- man stood in his hard red winter wheat field on a warm Thursday morning giving an update on the harvest. A breeze rippled through the grain as Ausman spoke to millers and bak- ers on the other side of the world. Yields are high and quality is good, said Ausman, who farms in the southeastern corner of the state and is a member of the Washington Grain Commission. With travel restricted by the COVID-19 pandemic, this is the only way U.S. wheat farmers can keep in touch with their overseas customers, who last year bought roughly $6.2 billion in wheat from them. Joe Bippert, program director of the state grain commission, recorded Ausman’s presentation with two cameras and flew a drone to get a bird’s-eye view of the crop. Since April 28, Bippert has recorded six videos at farmers’ fields around Washington state. He will record five or six more as the harvest progresses. “If they can’t come to the crop, we’ll take it to them,” Bippert said. “I’d like to personally thank all of our overseas customers that purchase our products,” Ausman said in his greeting. “Without you, we wouldn’t be able to do what we do.” Kansas Wheat Commission See Trade, Page 12 U.S. Wheat Associates led an in-person trade team for customers from sub-Sa- haran Africa near Salina, Kan., in 2019. This year, overseas buyers are getting virtual updates on crop conditions from U.S. farmers. Feds affirm opposition to breaching Snake River dams By DON JENKINS Capital Press Three federal agencies affirmed July 31 that breaching four Lower Snake River dams in Eastern Wash- ington would have high social and economic costs and require Congress to authorize it. Barges that carry wheat would be stranded, as would farmers’ irriga- tion pumps. And electric rates would rise, as would the chances for power blackouts, according to a report judge’s order and public comments. by the Army Corps of Engineers, In a press release, the agencies Bureau of Rec- said their pre- lamation and the ferred alternative Bonneville Power for managing the Administration. rivers complies The final envi- with President ronmental state- Trump’s order to ment impact secure reliable lays the founda- water supplies in tion for a deci- the West. sion in Septem- Environmental ber on operating Associated Press File and fishing groups 14 federal dams The Ice Harbor dam near Bur- said they were on the Colum- bank, Wash. outraged, urging bia and Snake riv- Congress to inter- ers. A federal judge vene and predicting in Oregon ordered the environmen- lawsuits. tal review. “The federal plan totally and com- The final report mirrors a draft pletely fails Idaho and isn’t good report released in February. The enough for the many guides, outfit- agencies continued to favor spilling ters, river businesses and communi- more water over dams in the spring ties in Idaho that depend on healthy to help wild salmon and steelhead runs of fish,” Idaho Conservation protected under the federal Endan- League executive director Justin gered Species Act. Hayes said in a statement. The agencies rejected pleas from “The Trump administration’s environmental and fishing groups to reckless rush to finalize the Colum- breach Lower Granite, Little Goose, bia Basin hydropower review pro- Lower Monumental and Ice Harbor cess is heartbreaking and immoral,” said Natural Resources Defense dams on the lower Snake River. The report acknowledged that Council senior attorney Giulia Good breaching the dams would do more Stefani. Washington Grain Commission for fish. But it also would damage the federal system’s other uses, such as CEO Glen Squires said the report flood control, irrigation, navigation, presents all the drawbacks to breach- recreation and electricity generation. ing dams. He also predicted that The agencies said they couldn’t farm groups will need to continue to breach the dams unless Congress explain the dams’ benefits. changed their mandate. They said they studied the option because of the See Dams, Page 12 Carl Sampson/Capital Press The NORPAC plant in Stayton, Ore. Farmer-members to receive compensation in NORPAC deal By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press A settlement deal between the bankrupt NORPAC coop- erative and its farmer-mem- bers is expected to provide some compensation for past crop deliveries. Without delving into the deal’s specifics, attorneys for the growers, the cooperative and its unsecured creditors told a bank- ruptcy judge Aug. 4 that they’ve reached an agreement resolving their disputes. For the deal to come into force, farmers representing 85% of the settlement amount will need to sign onto the agreement. The deal affects 108 farm- er-members of the coopera- tive, which has sold off substan- tially all of its food processing assets since filing for bankruptcy last year. It’s now called North Pacific Canners & Packers, as the NORPAC name was sold along with its other intellectual property rights. Aside from receiving a pro- portional share of the undis- closed settlement amount, farm- ers who agree to the deal also won’t be subject to the “claw- back” attempt by unsecured creditors, who want to recover past payments NORPAC made for crops. Growers who want to con- tinue pursuing claims against NORPAC can decide against opting in to the settlement, but they would not have legal claims against them dropped, said Rebecca Russell, attorney for several farms. “You have to choose to partic- ipate,” she said. Earlier this year, the cooper- ative filed a complaint against member farms who demanded See NORPAC, Page 12