EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, April 16, 2021 CapitalPress.com $2.00 Volume 94, Number 16 TOM VILSACK Secretary of Agriculture talks about issues facing farmers and his plans for USDA By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press W ASHINGTON, D.C. — On Feb. 24 Tom processing facilities that would allow Vilsack took the oath of offi ce as the them to stay in business (and) to be 32nd Secretary of Agriculture. able to pay the costs, for example, of It’s Vilsack’s second time as chief of overtime they had to incur. the USDA. He previously served eight CP: Would that funding come years in the same role in the Obama administration. exclusively from COVID relief? Vilsack, 70, is also the for- Vilsack: It’s mer governor of Iowa, and most coming from recently was president of the COVID relief U.S. Dairy Export Council, a resources Congress dairy trade and lobbying group. has provided. On Monday, Vilsack sat down ... Secondly, with Capital Press reporter Sierra Congress has also Dawn McClain for a wide-rang- directed us to take a ing interview. The text has been look at ways in which edited for brevity and clarity. we might facilitate Capital Press: On Feb. 24, interstate sale of prod- President Biden issued an uct, across state lines. Matthew Doyle/USDA executive order requiring you To do that, state-in- to investigate agricultural sup- Vilsack, left, walks with Douglas Em- spected enterprises would ply chains. What do you hope hoff , husband of Vice President Kamala need inspections to be equiv- Harris, on a trip to Des Moines, Iowa. alent to the federal inspection to accomplish through this? Tom Vilsack: I think, fi rst Vilsack and Emhoff were on this trip and foremost, we want to make in March to show their support of the See Vilsack, Page 12 sure we build back the supply American Rescue Plan. chain so that it’s more resilient in the event of a large-scale disrup- tion similar to COVID. Secondly, I think there’s a reason for us to take a look at the supply chain from an equity perspective. I think the third thing is a competitive and open mar- kets aspect. If the supply chain is concentrated in the hands of a few, it makes it more diffi cult for those sell- ing to get the best price for whatever it is they’re grow- ing or raising. That’s particularly true in animal protein. How do we enlarge, encourage competition, create bet- ter price discovery? CP: That leads into my next question. You’ve talked a lot about the need for price discovery in the livestock sector. Can you break down how you plan to address lack of price transparency? Vilsack: Well, it would start in taking a look at our processing facilities across board — beef, poultry, pork — and asking: Are there additional market opportunities we could take advantage of? That could happen one of three ways. One, can we help smaller processing facili- ties stay in business? There are programs as a result of COVID relief to get resources to small Klamath Project to receive historically low water allocation By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. — The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation delivered a gut-punch to Klamath Project irrigators Wednesday, announcing a historically low water allocation as the basin struggles with extreme drought. Farms and ranches in the Project will receive an initial allocation of just 33,000 acre-feet — the lowest total since the shut- down of 2001 and barely 8% of historical demand. That is dramatically lower than the George Plaven/Capital Press File bureau’s original estimate of 130,000 acre- Water fl ows from Upper Klamath Lake into the A feet based on hydrological conditions at the Canal, part of the Klamath Project. beginning of March. Since then, snowpack in the Klamath Basin has dropped to 72% of normal for the water year dating back to Oct. 1, and precipitation is just 67% of normal. The Klamath Project provides irrigation for 230,000 acres of farmland in Southern Oregon and Northern California. Camille Touton, deputy commissioner for the Bureau of Reclamation, said this water year is unlike anything the Project has ever seen. “We will continue to monitor the hydrology and look for opportunities for operational fl exibility, provide assistance to Klamath Project water users and the tribes, and keep an open dialogue with our stakeholders, the states, and across the fed- eral government to get through this water year together,” Touton said. Initial water supplies from Upper Klam- ath Lake will be available to recharge Proj- ect canals and provide for some limited irrigation no earlier than May 15. Remain- ing water will be delivered no earlier than June 1. The bureau will maintain Upper Klam- ath Lake at or above a minimum elevation of 4,138.3 feet, “whereby additional proj- ect water may be available,” according to the bureau. Reclamation will monitor and adjust available water on at least a semi- monthly basis. Offi cials also announced $15 million in immediate aid to the Klamath Project See Klamath, Page 12 Washington farm groups embrace OT bill, for this season By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — The overtime bill that’s likely headed to Gov. Jay Ins- lee will protect farms from back- pay lawsuits and give farm groups more time to convince the Legisla- ture that time-and-a-half pay after 40 hours will harm farmworkers more than it helps them. The bill, Senate Bill 5172, phases in overtime pay for farm- workers. The threshold will be 40 hours a week in 2024. Before then, the thresholds will be 55 hours in The Washington House on April 9 passed a bill to give all farm- workers overtime pay. 2022 and then 48 hours in 2023. Farm groups had lobbied for a seasonal exemption, allowing a farm to choose 12 weeks a year to pay overtime after 50 hours a week. Labor groups and majority Demo- crats rejected the provision. Farm groups contend that with- out an allowance for agriculture’s uneven work schedule, farms will struggle and workers will see their hours limited and incomes cut. “We can say that until we’re blue in the face, but until it comes from workers who are disproportionately aff ected, the Legislature won’t act,” Washington Farm Bureau associ- ate director of government relations Breanne Elsey said Monday. The House passed the overtime legislation on a 91-7 vote Friday. The House made no policy changes to the bill passed by the Senate but lumped all provisions into one section. “We do expect the Senate to con- cur and for this version to move for- ward,” Elsey said. Before Friday’s vote, Vancou- ver Rep. Larry Hoff , the top-rank- ing Republican on the House Labor and Workplace Standards Commit- tee, said the seasonal exemption See Bill, Page 12 Welcome to our Caldwell, Idaho Team! 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