Friday, March 26, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Company applies to plant solar, wind project on farmland By DON JENKINS Capital Press Bill Breneman/EO Media Group File Dense smoke caused by wildfires along the Santiam Canyon blocks the sunlight. Oregon lawmakers are considering a legislative package to reduce future wildfire risk with targeted forest treatments. Oregon lawmakers consider ‘all-lands’ approach to wildfire risk By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Oregon would empha- size reducing fuels in high-risk forests near communities and key environmental resources as part of broader legisla- tion aimed at mitigating wildfire hazards. A crucial aspect of the proposal involves steer- ing forest treatments toward where they’re most needed, regardless of property ownership. “We are taking an all- lands approach here,” said Dylan Kruse, gov- ernment affairs director for the Sustainable North- west nonprofit organiza- tion. “Immediately, we’re going where there’s the most urgent need.” Though the Oregon Department of Forestry would take charge of the planning and implemen- tation, the agency would rely on help from Oregon State University and other entities. The targeted approach would likewise rely on state money while “lever- aging” funds from the fed- eral government. At its core, the legisla- tion is aimed at selecting where and how to conduct forest projects that would be most effective, Kruse said. “We know we can’t treat all the forest acreage we want to in this state, so we have to narrow down and prioritize where we get the best return on investment,” Kruse said during a recent legislative hearing. The U.S. Forest Service has developed a “quantita- tive wildfire risk assess- ment” that indicates about 5.6 million acres in Ore- gon need fuels treatments, he said. Under the legislation, projects would begin in the four highest risk cate- gories, with an eye toward protecting human life, property and critical infra- structure, as well as water- shed health and habitat restoration. For projects to be under- taken on federal lands, they would have to undergo analysis under the National Environmental Policy Act and exclude roadless areas, riparian reserves and other sensitive sites. The ODF already engages in “shared stew- ardship” projects with the U.S. Forest Service and other agencies, so the pro- posed legislation would accelerate this approach, said Jeff Burns, the depart- ment’s partnership and planning director. In February, the agency requested collaborative project proposals from across the state and received 93 applications for roughly $20 million, he said. The ODF is funding 37 of those proposals with $4 mil- lion from the state’s emer- gency board — enough to treat 7,000 acres — but has another 56 “shelf-ready” projects as a result. Under the most recent version of Senate Bill 248, one of the bills being considered, ODF would receive $20 mil- lion to implement new projects in the 2021-2023 biennium. The current proposal would serve as a type of “pilot project” that lays the groundwork for future treatments and partner- ships, said Kruse. Of the 5.6 million acres identified as requiring management by the For- est Service, about 65% are on federal lands, 25% are owned by small woodland owners, 6% belong to state, local and tribal govern- ments, and only 4% are on industrial timber properties, said Kyle Williams, forest production director for the Oregon Forest & Industries Council, a timber group. “Our federal lands are struggling. They’re over- stocked, overgrown and underutilized,” Williams said. To increase the resil- iency of forests and pre- vent wildfires, the problem can’t be categorized into “silos” of land ownership but must be considered in terms of the entire land- scape, he said. A state council next week will have public hearings on plans to build solar panels and erect wind turbines on thousands of acres of farm- land in Benton County in south-central Washington. Scout Clean Energy of Boulder, Colo., would lease 72,295 acres. While 6,860 acres would be “perma- nently impacted,” the rest could remain in agricultural production, according to the company’s application to the Washington Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council. The project has encoun- tered opposition. Two county commissioners have said they oppose it. Up to 244 wind turbines would be visible in the Tri-Cities, as well as neighboring Frank- Capital Press File Wind turbines line a ridge in a wheat field north of Helix, Ore. A Colorado company proposes to put up to 244 tur- bines on farmland to the north in Benton County, Wash. lin and Walla Walla counties and Oregon. Wheat farmer Chris Wiley, one of 69 landown- ers who have signed lease agreements, said the sta- ble annual income will help farmers keep farming. “This is definitely a way to keep family farms in the family for generations,” he said. “As far as taking farm- land out of production, it’s pretty negligible,” Wiley said. “We’ve weighed the pros and cons, and we’ve decided we’re in favor of it.” Scout Energy, owned by private investment firm Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners, has been putting together the parcels for sev- eral years. Rather than seek approval from a county hearings examiner, the company last month opted to apply to the state council, an unelected board of public employees that makes recommenda- tions to Gov. Jay Inslee. In its application, Scout Energy said the wind and solar project will help the state have carbon-neutral electricity by 2030, a sig- nature goal of Inslee’s cli- mate-change agenda. Rep. Brad Klippert, R-Kennewick, said Mon- day he opposes the project, saying wind turbines have marred Central Washing- ton’s landscape. He called handing over the decision to Inslee “tragic.” “When so many of my constituents say they oppose something, I listen,” he said. “Now it’s a decision that will be shoved down the local area’s throat.” Regulatory changes in store for meat industry under new administration By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press New rules and regula- tions are headed for the meat industry under the Biden administration. “We’re gonna see a lot of new rules,” Andrew Harig, a policy expert at FMI, the Food Industry Association, told attendees at the virtual 2021 Annual Meat Confer- ence Tuesday. The meat industry, experts say, should be pre- pared for changes surround- ing supply chains, trace- ability, salmonella tracking, labeling and antitrust issues. Supply chains On Feb. 24, Biden issued an executive order on Amer- ica’s supply chains requir- ing the secretary of agricul- ture and other officials to investigate supply chains for “agricultural commodities and food products.” By next February, officials must sub- mit findings and recommen- dations to the president. Later this year, farmers will have an opportunity to comment on what’s good and bad about their supply chains. Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press File A plant manager walks through rows of carcasses at a meat processing facility. Experts say the meat industry should be prepared for a slew of regulatory changes un- der the new administration. “As drafted, it’s a big, broad rule,” said Harig of FMI. He said the rule could lead to cross-regulation between FDA and USDA. “Once the genie’s out of the bottle, it’s hard to stuff it back in,” he said. Casey Gallimore, director of regulatory and scientific affairs at the North Ameri- can Meat Institute, called the proposal “unworkable.” The rulemaking is not finalized, and Gallimore encouraged producers to contact FDA. Salmonella Producers can also expect the administration to crack down on salmonella. “I’d argue salmonel- la’s the biggest issue fac- ing the industry today,” said Gallimore. Salmonella prevalence in beef is low, so upcoming standards likely won’t be too stringent on beef. Under the Food Safety and Inspection Service’s proposal, within a 52-week window, FSIS will review the most recent 48 samples. Two or fewer pos- itive salmonella samples would meet performance standards; three or more would fail. A similar proposal is underway for pork, but the final version won’t be released until 2022. It’s expected to have three cat- egories: pass, fail and warning. When a company fails a salmonella test, it will be published in a public disclo- sure database — Gallimore calls it a “naughty list.” This already happens in the poultry industry. Traceability On Sept. 23, prompted by section 204 of the Food Safety Modernization Act, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a pro- posed rule on traceability. If adopted, the rule, called “Requirements for Additional Traceability Records for Certain Foods,” will require everyone along the meat supply chain to keep more detailed records. Farmers would have eight more data factors to track. Washington overtime bill gets House hearing By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — Farmwork- ers said Tuesday they are worried about losing money, joining employers in asking lawmakers to add a limited harvest-season exemption to Washington’s coming agri- cultural overtime law. Uriel Vargas, a farm- worker, said that if farms can’t afford paying time- and-a-half after 40 hours, workers will have to move around to maintain their incomes. “Please change this bill and keep us at one place and not have to get a second job somewhere else,” Var- gas asked the House Labor and Workplace Standards Committee. The committee took tes- timony on Senate Bill 5172, which phases in overtime pay for all farmworkers. The bill passed the Senate and got its first hearing in the House on Tuesday. The bill responds to the state Supreme Court’s ruling in November that declared denying dairy workers over- time wages after 40 hours was unconstitutional. The decision opened the flood- gate for lawsuits seeking back pay and to expand the ruling to other farm sectors. The 5-4 ruling commits dairies to immediately pay overtime. The Senate bill, however, gives dairies pro- tection against the back-pay lawsuits. For other farms, the over- time threshold will be 55 hours beginning Jan. 1, 2022. The threshold drops to 48 hours on Jan. 1, 2023, and finally to 40 hours on Jan. 1, 2024. The bill has the support of labor groups such as the United Farm Workers and Familias Unidas por la Jus- ticia, an independent farm- worker union. Farm lobbyists are not opposing the bill, but they are focused on adding a pro- vision to permanently lift the overtime threshold to 50 hours for 12 weeks chosen by the farm. Washington State Labor Council government affairs director Joe Kendo said the seasonal exemption would undermine the protective nature of the court’s ruling and the overtime law. “The purpose of over- time is to limit the exposure of workers to the physical demands of work,” Kendo said. Other farmworkers besides Vargas said that they’re were more worried about their pay checks than overtime hours. The weather and crops dictate the hours — some- times 20 and sometimes 60 in a week, said Ignacio Diaz, a Quincy farm owner and farm employee. “We cannot control that,” he said. “As a small business owner I know I can’t afford overtime for my employees.” Farmworkers are paid overtime in a handful of states. No state has handled the issue like Washington, where a one-judge majority discarded a 61-year-old law, leaving lawyers, lobbyists and legislators to clean up. By a legislative act, Cal- ifornia has been phasing in overtime for several years. Beginning next year, farms with more than 25 workers must pay time-and-a-half after 40 hours. Smaller farms will get there in 2025. Being a customer- member means a lot. This year it pays even more. It’s no secret that it pays to be a Northwest Farm Credit Services customer-member. This year patronage dividends total $177 million. Because when we do well, our customers benefit. That’s the Northwest Farm Credit difference. 800.743.2125 | northwestfcs.com S222007-1