Friday, May 21, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Lower USDA wheat projections reflect lack of rain Farm groups ask Inslee By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press USDA is projecting lower winter wheat production and yields this year compared to 2020’s bumper crops across the Pacific Northwest. The region’s wheat com- mission executives say that’s to be expected, given the lack of rain this spring. “Certainly with less mois- ture so far this year, we would expect yields to be down in Wash- ington,” said Glen Squires, CEO of the Washington Grain Com- mission. Glen “ ( We ’ r e ) Squires hoping that some timely rains will occur this month and into June to help the crop along.” Idaho farmers are in much the same position. “Idaho had record yields last year for winter wheat and we did not expect to match those yields for a second year, so it is not surprising that the production estimates are lower,” said Casey Chum- rau, executive director of the Idaho Wheat Commission. “Considering the dry con- Matthew Weaver/Capital Press File Northwest winter wheat production and yields are pro- jected to be lower this year, according to the USDA. ditions around the state, we would be happy with only a 3 percent decrease as predicted in this report.” Idaho farmers planted slightly more winter and spring wheat acreage, Chum- rau said. “If prices remain high, we may see an increase in planted acres in the fall. Wheat becomes a lot more attractive at $8 (per bushel),” she said. “But input costs are also going up so growers will need to lock in those costs and pencil it out.” Drought in much of Ore- gon will have a “significant” impact on expected average yields. “Without changes in weather, I would expect to see it down even further,” Casey Chumrau Amanda Hoey Oregon Wheat CEO Amanda Hoey said. Washington acreage may be slightly down from last year, but 2020 was the highest acreage since 2006, Squires said. The Northwest’s overall wheat acreage is unchanged from last year, he said. The USDA projects: • Washington farmers will harvest 1.69 million acres, down 3.4% from 2020. Pro- duction will be 108 million bushels, down 19% from 2020. • Oregon farmers are pro- jected to harvest 705,000 acres of winter wheat, down 2.8% from 2020. Produc- tion is pegged at 39.5 mil- lion bushels, down 15% from 2020. • Idaho farmers are expected to harvest 680,000 acres, up 3% from 2020. Pro- duction is expected to be 64.6 million bushels, down 3% from 2020. Yields are also expected to be down. Washington’s aver- age yield is expected to be 64 bushels per acre, down from 72 bushels per acre in 2020. Oregon’s average yield of 56 bushels per acre would be down from 64 bushels in 2020. Idaho’s yield is expected to average 95 bushels per acre, down from 101 bushels per acre last year. Nationwide, production is expected to be 1.28 billion bushels, up 10% from 1.17 billion bushels in 2020. The yield was forecast at 52.1 bushels per acre, up 1.2 bushels from last year. Grow- ers planted an estimated 33.1 million acres in the fall of 2020. Figures are based on May 1 conditions, according to USDA. La Nina gone, but may return again for next winter By DON JENKINS Capital Press A La Nina that brought a healthy snowpack to Washington has ended, but may return later this year for a another winter, the National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administration said Thursday. NOAA’s Climate Pre- diction Center reported that Pacific Ocean temperatures have warmed to normal and likely will stay that way through the summer. The warming broke a link between the sea and atmo- sphere that had created a La Nina since last fall. La Nina winters are generally cool and wet in Washington, but are warm and dry farther south. Forecasters at NOAA and Columbia University’s Cli- mate Institute placed a 53% chance on La Nina prevail- ing again next winter, com- pared to 40% for neutral conditions and 7% for an El Nino. Some past El Nino win- ters have led to low snow- packs and summer droughts in Washington, including in 2015. This year, the state’s La Nina-swollen snowpack has held up through a dry, but not hot, spring. Washington Department of Ecology drought coordi- nator Jeff Marti said Thurs- day that conditions are look- ing favorable for irrigated farmland, but not so for unir- rigated farmland. “It’s an interesting set of conditions right now. We had a really good snowpack and still do for most of the state, but we’ve had a really dry spring, especially in the Columbia Basin,” he said. Several weather stations in the basin had their driest April on record, following a dry March, according to the Office of the Washington State Climatologist. The U.S. Drought Mon- itor on Thursday classified 20% of Washington in a “severe drought,” the second driest of four drought catego- ries. Another 33% of the state is in “moderate drought.” In Western Washington, parts of Clark and Cowlitz counties are in a severe drought. The dry spring, however, has made farming conditions good west of the Cascades, according to the USDA’s weekly crop report. to repeal housing rules By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — Two farm groups petitioned Gov. Jay Inslee on May 14 to immedi- ately lift emergency COVID restrictions on housing sea- sonal farmworkers, argu- ing the rules are out of step with new federal advice on masks and social distancing for the fully vaccinated. The governor has seven days — through May 21— to repeal the rules or explain to the Washington Farm Bureau and Wafla why he won’t. The groups say the rules are unnecessary, especially after Inslee said Thursday that businesses will fully reopen June 30. Inslee’s announcement trailed the Centers for Dis- ease Control and Preven- tion’s new position that immunized people can safely interact indoors or outdoors without masks or socially distancing. Washington’s farm- worker housing rules call for masks, social distancing and isolating workers, even if fully vaccinated. The rules will be in effect until Sept. 6 unless the Inslee administra- tion changes course. Wafla CEO Dan Fazio said vaccination rates among farmworkers exceed those of the public, making farmworker housing safer than other settings cited by the CDC. “We are 90% vaccinated with a goal of 100%, and we have these ridiculous reg- ulations in place,” he said. “There is no emergency once you have 90% of the people vaccinated. That’s what the CDC is trying to say.” The governor’s office declined to comment, say- ing it was waiting to hear from the Department of Labor and Industries. An L&I spokesman Thursday said the agency was review- ing the rules. The Farm Bureau and Wafla, a guestworker sup- plier, have been pressing L&I and the Department of Health for months to loosen the rules, or plan ahead for when farmworkers are vaccinated. The rules, a year old, reduced housing capacity, imposing hardships on farm- ers and forcing more work- ers to live in the community, where they are more likely to contract COVID, accord- ing to the farm groups. Farm Bureau CEO John Stuhlmiller said he hasn’t seen a sign from the admin- istration that the rules will change. “We need these eco- nomically crippling restric- tions lifted like the gover- nor is doing for the rest of the state,” he said. “All the facts point to having them go away now.” The Farm Bureau and Wafla challenged the rules in a lawsuit filed in February in Yakima County. The groups won a few concessions. The state, however, was granted a change of venue to Thur- ston County, stalling the suit’s progress. The case is not currently before a judge. The farm groups con- tinue to ask for the science behind limiting bunk beds to shelters with no more than 15 workers. The workers must be isolated in “pods.” Vaccinated pods can mingle on buses and kitch- ens with other vaccinated pods, providing workers wear masks and socially dis- tance. The CDC says masks and social distancing are not needed, the farm groups note. The farm groups also complain the rules let union and legal aid representa- tives visit farmworker hous- ing, even if they’re not vaccinated. State law allows groups to petition the governor to repeal emergency rules. YOU’D NEVER USE A PIG AS YOUR BANK. And you’d never use just any fungicide to prevent white mold. When you need effective and reliable protection for your canola and dry bean fields, Endura ® fungicide is a no brainer. Always read and follow label directions. Endura is a registered trademark of BASF. © 2021 BASF Corporation. All rights reserved. S241414-1