Friday, March 19, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Wooden Shoe Tulip Festival returns in 2021 By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press TULIP FESTIVAL WOODBURN, Ore. — Iver- son Family Farms in Woodburn, Ore., announced Monday it will resume its annual Wooden Shoe Tulip Festival — one of Oregon’s most popular agritourism events — this spring. The event will kick off Friday, March 19, and continue through May 2. Blooms are expected to be at peak the second and third weeks of April. This year, visitors must buy tickets online in advance and follow new safety protocols. The Iversons say they’re thrilled to renew the event, which was canceled last year due to the pandemic. When COVID-19 hit last March, the Iversons canceled the festival for the fi rst time in 36 years. Karen Iverson Bever, one of the festival’s coordinators, estimated the farm lost “well over $1 million” in revenue. The festival drew more than 150,000 visitors from around the world the previous year. “We are so thrilled to be able to invite guests to experience the color and beauty of our tulip fi elds this year,” Bever said Monday. At the farm this year, guests will be able to explore 40 acres of tulip Festival dates: March 19 to May 2, 2021 Hours of operation: Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Capital Press File The Wooden Shoe Tulip Festival near Woodburn, Ore., will reopen this year after COVID-19 forced its closure in 2020. fi elds and 80 acres of other outdoor spaces. Iverson Family Farms, with Mount Hood as its backdrop, grows about 1,200 acres of grass seed, tulips, winegrapes, vetch seed and industrial hemp. At this year’s festival, state COVID-19 protocols permitting, the farm will off er hot air balloon trips, tram and hay wagon rides, wine tast- ing, an event garden and food vendor off erings. Washington farm groups seek ‘seasonality’ in OT bill By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — Washing- ton farm groups hope an agricultural overtime bill will be amended in the House, raising the threshold before farmworkers become eligible for time-and-a-half during peak harvest weeks. The bill that was passed by the Senate on March 9 blocks back-pay lawsuits and phases-in overtime pay. By Jan. 1, 2024, all farmworkers would be paid time-and-a- half after 40 hours in a week. A tentative agreement allowing growers to choose 12 weeks a year to pay over- time after 50 hours, instead of 40, fell out of the bill shortly before the Senate voted 37-12 to send it to the House. Some Republican sen- ators criticized the bill for excluding “seasonal- ity.” Hawaii, one of a few states with overtime pay for farmworkers, raises the threshold to 48 hours for 20 weeks picked by the employer. If seasonality isn’t in the bill, growers may be per- manently locked into pay- ing time-and-a-half after 40 hours during peak harvests, Washington Farm Bureau associate director of govern- ment relations Breanne Elsey said. “I do think it needs to be included in the fi x this year,” she said. Senate Bill 5172 has been referred to the House Labor and Workplace Standards Committee. No hearing has been scheduled. The bill requires dair- ies to begin paying overtime immediately, simply affi rm- ing a ruling in November by the Washington Supreme Court. Overtime pay for all other farmworkers would be phased-in, beginning Jan. 1, 2022. The threshold would be 55 hours initially, drop- ping to 48 hours in 2023 and fi nally to 40 hours in 2024. Washington State Tree Fruit Association President Jon DeVaney said the bill accomplished his organiza- tion’s primary goal. “It did appear that we were going to see overtime spread to the rest of agricul- ture through court actions. It was preferable that it be phased-in, rather than hap- pen overnight as happened to dairies,” he said. “We still think there needs to be seasonal fl exibility, and that’s still under discussion,” DeVaney said. The bill also achieves the dairy industry’s top priority by prohibiting the court’s 5-4 decision from being applied retroactively. Dozens of law- suits have been fi led since the ruling, seeking up to three years’ back overtime. The DeRuyter Brothers Some activities will be canceled this year due to COVID-19, includ- ing the pony rides, photo cut-out boards and cow trains. Visitors must buy day tickets or season passes online rather than at the gate this year. The farm will honor any unused tickets purchased in 2020 and will continuously release tickets available for purchase seven days in advance of each visit date. Further arguments loom in Klamath re-quantifi cation ruling By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Washington farm groups hope lawmakers will raise the overtime threshold for peak harvest weeks. Dairy in Yakima County was excluded from lawsuit pro- tection. A class-action law- suit against the diary led to the court’s overtime rul- ing. The lawsuit is ongoing, and lawmakers did not want to intervene, a spokesman for Senate Democrats said Thursday. Most Republicans, includ- ing many from agricultural regions, voted against the bill, while other Republi- cans grudgingly voted “yes,” acknowledging the court left little leverage for employers. Two weeks ago, the bill would have immediately granted overtime pay to all farmworkers after 40 hours and still left farmers open to retroactive claims. “We’re overall pleased with the outcome, consid- ering where we were when negotiations began,” Elsey said. Senate Democrats embraced the bill, saying in a press release it would correct an “historic injustice” and make Washington the fi rst state to “bring the 40-hour work week to agricultural workers.” If the overtime law dis- courages longer hours, farm- workers may have to work at more than one farm to main- tain their incomes, DeVaney said. Growers, meanwhile, may try to hire more work- ers to spread out the hours or automate, he said. Washington agriculture already says there is a labor shortage, forcing farmers to hire foreign seasonal work- ers on H-2A visas. California has been phas- ing in overtime for farmwork- ers since 2019. All farms will be required to pay time-and- half after 40 hours beginning Jan. 1, 2025. Farms with 26 or more employees will have that obligation Jan. 1, 2022. New York farmwork- ers are paid time-and-a-half after 60 hours in a week. The threshold in Minnesota is 48 hours. Another provision that fell out of SB 5172 proposed to give farmworkers a one- time $5,000 payment to set- tle back-pay claims. Farm groups balked at contributing to an account, estimated to total $400 mil- lion, that implied farmers have been wrongly under- paying workers. “We absolutely refused to put money into a fund,” Elsey said. “It would be against everything that was honest.” Emily Iverson, who’s helping run the event, told the Capital Press the farm plans to require masks and limit the number of guests each day in order to follow state guidelines. Iverson estimated that the festival will have about 50% of its usual pre- COVID attendance. Iverson said her family has been closely watching how the Oregon Zoo, farmers markets and annual food festivals are operating and tak- ing cues from them. The farm has also raised its ticket prices this year to help make up for last year’s losses. “Due to hardships in 2020 and the struggle of our family farm, we have made the decision to increase the prices for our tulip festival,” the farm said in a statement. During 2020, the farm pivoted, selling more than 10,000 fl ower pots and delivering fl owers to senior homes. Iverson said the farm intends to deliver fl owers to seniors again this year and plans to partner with the Alzheimer’s Association and Relay for Life. Iverson, whose grandpar- ents died of Alzheimer’s and cancer, said supporting these causes means a lot to her. Iverson said she’s excited to resume the festival and continue delivering fl ower pots “for years to come.” An Oregon judge has agreed to hear further legal arguments over his ruling that tribal water rights in the Klamath basin must be re-quantifi ed. Because the judge’s legal opinion from last month hasn’t yet been reduced to an order, that means the Klam- ath tribes can enforce their water rights to shut off irriga- tion in the meantime. In February, Klam- ath County Circuit Judge Cameron Wogan broadly upheld fi ndings by state reg- ulators that the Klamath Tribes had time immemo- rial water rights in the basin that hadn’t been abandoned or diminished. These are the oldest water rights in the basin, which the tribes can enforce to cut off irrigation water to junior users when stream fl ows get too low. The judge disagreed with the Oregon Water Resources Department on a potentially important legal point, though: Wogan said the agency hadn’t properly considered the Klamath Tribes’ “moderate living standard” in quantify- ing their water rights. The opinion created an opening for farmers and ranchers in the Upper Klamath basin to argue that reduced stream fl ows could still satisfy tribal hunting and fi shing treaty rights, thereby freeing more water for irrigation. While Wogan has agreed to vacate the OWRD’s quan- tifi cation of tribal water rights, he hasn’t yet issued an order that would make the opinion’s determinations binding. Due to a “water call” from the Klamath Tribes, the agency has already begun issuing regulation orders to cease irrigation diversions from the Williamson and Sprague rivers in the Upper Klamath basin this month. Until the court rules oth- erwise, OWRD said it must enforce tribal water rights according to its adminis- trative fi ndings from 2013. Those administrative fi nd- ings are now being adju- dicated in state court by Wogan. The Klamath Tribes have asked the judge to clarify his opinion as to the quantifi ca- tion of water rights, argu- ing that his conclusion was inconsistent with other deter- minations in the ruling. Apply less, expect more? It’s time for a crop nutrition plan that gets more return from every drop. Get custom-calibrated formulas and complete agronomic support for the nutrients you need and the quality potatoes you want. Every step of the way, AgroLiquid has precisely what it takes to help you succeed like never before. Find an AgroLiquid dealer near you. ApplyLessExpectMore.com Pro-Germinator®, Sure-K® and Kalibrate® are registered trademarks and LiberateCa is a trademark of AgroLiquid. © 2021 AgroLiquid. All Rights Reserved. S235329-1