SPECIAL SECTION INSIDE LIVESTOCK & HORSE Friday, December 11, 2020 Volume 93, Number 50 CapitalPress.com $2.00 EPA proposes limits on chlorpyrifos By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Environmental Protection Agency will consider new restric- tions on the pesticide chlorpyrifos, including limiting its use to about a dozen crops, according to a new review. Final decisions aren’t due until at least 2022, and the EPA indi- cated it may opt for less restrictive measures. The pesticide’s future use may depend on resolving its affect on the brains of infants and unborn children. EPA said the science is unset- tled. If the agency chooses its most-cautious approach, registered uses for chlorpyrifos could be reduced from more than 50 crops to select, “high-benefit” crops. Apples, alfalfa, strawberries, and spring and winter wheat are on the list, as are tart cherries, aspar- agus, citrus, cotton peaches, soy- beans and sugar beets. “It’s a good place to be if you need that material,” said the North- west Horticultural Council’s David Epstein, vice president for scien- tific affairs. “You still have 50 that fall into the other category.” The EPA on Monday opened a 60-day comment period on its “proposed interim registration review decision.” The document presents ways the EPA may reduce exposure to chlorpyrifos, includ- ing to pesticide handlers. The EPA said residential expo- sure to chlorpyrifos was “negligi- ble.” The only approved home use is for roach bait in child-resistant packages. Exposure to chlorpy- rifos in drinking water in highly localized areas is a concern, though assessing the exposure is difficult, according to the agency. Washington Friends of Farms and Forests executive director Heather Hansen criticized the EPA for relying on models that she said overstates actual exposure in drinking water. “Take that out, you’re left with See EPA, Page 11 BETTING ON BIDEN Agriculture looks for trade stability 150.0 U.S. ag exports 144.4 (in billions of dollars) By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press F 139.5 138.2 136.6 134.7 our years ago, farmers and ranchers The Trump administration has distributed were optimistic that incoming Pres- $23 billion in direct payments to farmers and ident Donald Trump would bring ranchers to offset lost trade with China, but added prosperity to farm country producers have consistently said they want through new and better trade “trade not aid.” agreements. “First and foremost, farmers Now, they’re counting on Presi- need stability, predictability,” said dent-elect Joe Biden to undo the insta- Brian Kuehl, co-executive director bility and damage caused by Trump’s of Farmers for Free Trade, a non- profit that promotes export opportu- trade wars. nities for U.S. agriculture. While some in agriculture agreed That’s been missing for four with Trump’s hard line on trade policy, years, he said, adding that instead, particularly in regard to China, others farmers have endured trade wars warned of the toll it would take on an Brian Kuehl that start with an online “tweet,” with already struggling farm economy. U.S. no warning of what’s to come, followed by farm exports decreased from a peak of $150 retaliation, driving down markets and com- billion in 2014 to $136.6 billion last year. modity prices. Low prices for some commodities have “So we need certainty and predictability, driven farm debt to a record high, and the that would be point number one,” Kuehl said. number of farm bankruptcies in 2019 was the highest since 2010 amid the fallout from the See Trade, Page 11 global recession. 133.1 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Source: USDA Foreign Agricultural Service 2019 Capital Press graphic U.S. net farm income 123.7 (in billions of dollars) 92.2 81.3 81.6 83.7 75.1 62.3 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: USDA Economic Research Service 2017 2018 2019 Capital Press graphic Doing the right thing: Marty Myers helped pioneer sustainable agriculture in Oregon By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press Marty Myers BOARDMAN, Ore. — It didn’t take long for Marty Myers to sell Greg Harris and Jeff Wendler on his vision for regenerative, sustain- able agriculture at Threemile Canyon Farms. Harris remembers interview- ing for an agronomy position at the farm in 2000, and was capti- vated by Myers’ warm enthusiasm. Twenty years later, Harris remains at Threemile Canyon as the direc- tor of farming operations, overseeing 39,500 acres of cropland. “Listening to Marty, he just had a way about him,” Harris said. “You knew right then you wanted to be a part of it, and he was the guy you wanted to do it with.” Myers, who served as general manager of Threemile Canyon Farms since it opened in 1998 and helped grow the enterprise into one of the largest dairies in the U.S., died Dec. 1 at his home of natural causes. He was 68. Similar to Harris, Wendler — now the farm’s director of livestock oper- ations — met Myers for the first time when he interviewed for a job at the dairy. After just 20 minutes, Wend- ler said he knew this was where he wanted to work. “I canceled all the other inter- views I had,” Wendler said. “He was proud of this place. But he always wanted to do the right thing.” For Myers, doing the right thing meant caring for the people, animals and being good stewards of the land. He pioneered the closed-loop system at Threemile Canyon, an award-win- ning model that recycles dairy waste on-site as much as possible. Closed-loop system It all starts with the cows. Threemile Canyon has about 35,000 milking cows and close to 70,000 cattle in total. All that manure has to have someplace to go, so Myers innovated to come up with several solutions. First, manure is used as nitro- gen-rich fertilizer for the thousands See Myers, Page 11