Friday, April 16, 2021 CapitalPress.com 9 New ag complex a giant leap forward for Chemeketa Community College Idaho lawmakers hear pitch to absorb three-fourths of Oregon By MITCH LIES For the Capital Press By KEITH RIDLER Associated Press SALEM — Since 2004, Phil LaVine, instructor in Chemeketa Community Col- lege’s AgriBusiness Manage- ment Program, has taught out of modular classrooms with limited capacity. Come next fall, providing COVID restrictions are lifted, LaVine and other CCC agricul- tural sciences instructors will be working out of a state-of-the-art complex that could more than double his classroom sizes. The 20,000-square-foot sig- nature building of the Cheme- keta Agriculture Complex is expected to be open for business next month. Already, students are working in the outdoor labs adjacent to the building, which serves as a feature draw of the 8-acre complex. And LaVine couldn’t be happier. “This is a boon for us in terms of being able to get 60 farms (150 people) in the same classroom together” for his agribusiness management pro- gram, he said. LaVine added that he reg- ularly has been forced to turn away farms that wanted to par- ticipate in the program. “We’ve never been able to overcome the small class- room sizes,” he said. “We were limited to around 15 to 20 new farms a year and we had upwards of 40 to 60 that wanted to participate.” Joleen Schilling, program chair of the college’s horticul- ture program, said moving from her old classrooms into the new building will be like entering the 21st century. “This is an amazing oppor- tunity,” Schilling said. “It is going to dramatically change what we can off er students and what we can off er industry. “I think it is really going to attract more students to our pro- gram,” she said. “It is creat- ing so many diff erent teaching opportunities, from the outside classrooms to the inside class- rooms. It is creating opportu- BOISE — Idaho lawmakers appeared intrigued but skeptical on April 12, when pitched a plan to lop off about three-fourths of Oregon and add it to Idaho to cre- ate what would become the nation’s third-largest state geographically. Representatives of a group called Move Oregon’s Border For a Greater Idaho outlined their plan to a joint meet- ing of Idaho lawmak- ers from the House and Senate. The Idaho Legislature would have to approve the plan that would expand Idaho’s south- western border to the Pacifi c Ocean. The Ore- gon Legislature and the U.S. Congress would also have to sign off . Supporters of the idea said rural Oregon voters are dominated by liberal urban areas such as Port- land, and would rather join conservative Idaho. Portland would remain with Oregon. “There’s a long- time cultural divide as big as the Grand Can- yon between northwest Oregon and rural Ore- gon, and it’s getting larger,” Mike McCar- ter, president of Move Oregon’s Border for a Greater Idaho, told Idaho lawmakers. If everything falls in line with Oregon, sup- porters envision also adding adjacent portions of southeastern Wash- ington and northern Cal- ifornia to Idaho. Back- ers said residents in those areas also yearn for less government oversight and long to become part of a red state insulated from the liberal infl u- ence of large urban cen- Mitch Lies/For the Capital Press First year horticulture student Kahlan Fowler of Salem takes soil samples in an outdoor lab at the Chemeketa Communi- ty College’s new Agriculture Complex. nities for us to apply for grants that we probably wouldn’t have been able to apply for previ- ously, just because we have so many more resources available to us.” The complex, four years in the making, dating back to when the Oregon Legislature allocated funding for the proj- ect, is expected to serve as a hub for students, industry pro- fessionals and the community, according to Holly Nelson, Chemeketa’s executive dean of Regional Education and Aca- demic Development. “From high school students and college partners to small family-owned farms and large grass seed companies, this will be the place for one of the Wil- lamette Valley’s largest indus- tries to come together in one learning space,” Nelson said in a press release. In addition to state invest- ments, grants and Chemeketa Community College funds were used to support the project. The complex will include several outdoor laboratory areas, including an orchard, a half-acre that will be put into vegetable production, a woody ornamental lab that will be sep- arated from the vegetable lab by a hedgerow, three hoop houses, an arboretum, a low-water xeric garden and a large bioswale that will be part of the col- High psyllid pressure expected in potato fi elds this year lege’s classroom experience, and a greenhouse yet to be con- structed that will include 3,000 square feet of growing area. Construction of the green- house, which was made pos- sible by a $200,000 donation from Northwest Farm Credit Services, is expected to begin in June. Plants that dot the complex’s landscape “were very strategi- cally selected,” Schilling said, “so that they can be utilized in plant identifi cation courses.” As for the 20,000-square- foot signature building, it includes three community classrooms, a science lab class- room, a lab preparation room, two conference rooms, a stu- dent resource room, faculty offi ces and a work area. The work area, or open study area, comes with two garage doors that fold up to cre- ate an open-air environment on sunny days. The complex, on the north- east corner of the Salem cam- pus at the intersection of 45th Street and Fire Protection Way, will be open for use in May, according to LaVine, but due to COVID restrictions, won’t be used for classes until the fall at the earliest. “We now have a lot of potential for growth,” LaVine said, “and I’m looking forward to it.” Greateridaho.org/La Grande Observer Greater Idaho would combine parts of Oregon and California with Idaho. ters that tend to vote Democratic. “Values of faith, fam- ily, independence. That’s what we’re about,” said Mark Simmons, an east- ern Oregon rancher and former speaker of the Oregon House of Rep- resentatives. “We don’t need the state breath- ing down our necks all the time, micromanag- ing our lives and trying to push us into a foreign way of living.” President Joe Biden easily won Washington, Oregon and California in November, while Presi- dent Donald Trump car- ried Idaho with 64%. The Idaho House and Senate each have supermajori- ties of Republicans. The group’s strategy has been to get advisory votes in Oregon coun- ties likely to make the switch. But last Novem- ber the group had mixed success with two coun- ties opting to join Idaho but two wanting to stay a part of Oregon. Support- ers blamed the setback on the coronavirus pan- demic and an inability to get their message out. Five more Oregon coun- ties are expected to vote on the matter in May. The county votes carry no weight, but are intended to potentially sway lawmakers to ulti- mately approve the plan. Republican Rep. Ben Adams, one of Idaho’s more conservative law- makers who gave a fi ery speech on the House fl oor last week revolving around freedom, said his interest was piqued but wondered why Oregon lawmakers would agree to the plan. “How is it being received right now by the state of Oregon?” he asked. “How hard would they be fi ghting to make it not happen? Most states don’t like to lose their resources to their neighbors.” McCarter said he’s had no contact with the state government but expects supporters will make themselves known eventually. “I believe that there are a lot of people stand- ing on the sidelines watching this particular issue,” McCarter said. “Is there any traction to it? Is there anything behind it?” He said the votes coming up in the fi ve counties in May could be an indicator. How do you make the best even better? Start with revolutionary design features, like a By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press split-box configuration, higher capacity, and Washington potato farm- ers can expect high pressure this year from psyllids, the insects that can carry zebra chip disease, researchers say. Potato psyllid popula- tions fl uctuate from year to year, said Rodney Coo- per, temperate tree fruit and vegetable research leader for the USDA Agricultural Research Service in Wapato, Wash. The psyllid populations that occur in potatoes in late summer correlate with psyl- lid populations that occur on matrimony vine, a non-na- tive shrub, in early spring. When researchers cannot fi nd psyllids on matrimony vine in March, the psyllid pressure in potatoes remains low. During years research- ers fi nd psyllids on matri- mony vine in March, psyl- lid pressure can be high in potatoes later in the summer, Cooper said. “This year, we are see- ing a very large number of potato psyllid in matrimony vine,” Cooper said. “In fact, we are seeing perhaps three times more psyllids on mat- rimony vine than we did leading up to the 2016 potato psyllid outbreak. If 2021 follows the same trends we have seen over the last fi ve or six years, then grow- ers can likely expect a high psyllid pressure this year.” Matrimony vine was fi rst brought to the Pacifi c North- west by homesteaders in the late 1800s or early 1900s. The vine is the fi rst potato psyllid host plant to leaf out in the spring, Cooper said. Psyllids can complete at least one generation on mat- rimony vine before the emer- gence of potatoes. The plant survives the hot dry condi- tions of summer by going into dormancy, which forces the psyllids to disperse in speed for greater accuracy. Then, add practical innovative feeder cups that meter by shaft technology like DrillCommand ® and hydraulic drive to execute variable-rate and prescription mapped seeding effortlessly from the tractor cab. As a result, you end up with the most productive, versatile, and operator-friendly box drill ever produced – the Great Plains BD7600. Rodney Cooper/USDA ARS An adult potato psyllid on a leaf next to two eggs. Researchers say early psyllid populations on matrimony vine indicate increased psyllid pressure for potato farmers later in the year. search of new host plants, including potatoes. It appears that matri- mony vine is a source of psyllids arriving in potato in the region, Cooper said. But the plant does not appear to be susceptible to the zebra chip pathogen and therefore is not a source of infective psyllids. In fact, psyllid popula- tions seem to lose the zebra chip pathogen when reared on matrimony vine in the laboratory, Cooper said. “While matrimony vine might be a source of psyl- lids arriving in potato, matri- mony vine might also be the reason why zebra chip dis- ease is rare in our region,” Cooper said. “Without mat- rimony vine, potato psyllids might utilize less favorable non-crop hosts that have potential to be reservoirs of the zebra chip pathogen.” Even though the region’s zebra chip infection rates in psyllids are lower com- pared to other areas, about 1 in 10,000, years when there are more psyllids still increase the risk, said Carrie Wohleb, regional vegetable specialist. “Harvest Starts Here.” Visit GreatPlainsAg.com for more information and check out our BOLD new financing programs! New Features. New Options. Endless Possibilities. Ensure that your farm has the best – ask your Great Plains dealer about the BD7600 today! ©2021 Great Plains Mfg. S238893-1