Friday, June 4, 2021 CapitalPress.com 7 Washington Grain Commission passes $7.3M budget By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Washington Grain Commission board members recently passed a $7.3 million budget, up from $6.3 million last year. The biggest funding increase was in public relations and transportation-related activities, in the com- mission’s own public education spending and through its contract with the Washington Associa- tion of Wheat Growers. Glen “Certainly there is Squires more pressure on the transportation system — primarily the navigation system,” said Glen Squires, commission CEO. The commission expects assessment income for the current year to be approx- imately $7.6 million for wheat and barley combined. Growers are assessed .0075% for wheat and 1% for barley net receipts col- lected at fi rst point of sale. COVID-19 pandemic impacts led to reduced travel, conferences, trade teams and consultants, Squires said. “We have tried to compensate with vir- tual meetings where feasible,” he said. Research eff orts continued with adjust- ment to account for COVID protocols. All research projects proposed for funding were supported and most included slight increases due to increased wages. Roughly 67% goes to breeding related projects. Squires said. “Even the Wheat Week education eff orts had to adjust due to lack of class- room in-person teaching,” Squires said. The board voted to add $400,000 from cash accounts to an assigned reserve fund balance at the beginning of the 2022 fi s- cal year, bringing the total to $5.4 mil- lion. There is also an assigned mar- keting reserve fund balance of $1.35 million, bringing total reserved fund bal- ance accounts of $6.75 million for the fi s- cal year. Fiscal year 2022 programs are funded by assessments collected during the 2021 crop year. Silvia Rondon appointed director of Oregon Integrated Pest Management Center By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press HERMISTON, Ore. — When Silvia Rondon fi rst arrived in Hermiston, Ore., in 2006, local farmers were struggling with a surge of potato tuber moths dam- aging their crop. Rondon, a professor and ento- mologist at Oregon State Uni- versity’s Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center, was just establishing her program focused on integrated pest man- agement for irrigated row crops in the Columbia Basin. After studying the pernicious insect, Rondon and her team learned the moth’s larvae pre- fer to feed on the leaves of young potato plants. Rather than spray- ing up to eight pesticide applica- tions throughout the growing sea- son, farmers could spray once or twice closer to harvest before the foliage shrivels and dies. “That is the critical time,” Ron- don said. “Once the foliage, which is the preferred feeding host of the pest, is gone, that’s when they start attacking the tubers.” Over the years, Rondon has helped grow- ers in north- east Oregon and southeast Wash- ington battle a Silvia variety of infes- Rondon tations, includ- ing potato psyllid, potato beetle and lygus bugs. Her experience has led Ron- don to a new position as director of OSU’s Integrated Pest Manage- ment Center, helping farmers across Oregon and the Pacifi c Northwest improve their production. The Integrated Pest Manage- ment Center — formerly known as the Integrated Plant Protec- tion Center — is based at OSU’s main campus in Corvallis, though Rondon said she will remain in Hermiston for the time being and continue to oversee the station’s entomology program. Rondon was selected by an 11-person search committee con- sisting of members from OSU, the state Department of Agriculture and industry groups. Her appoint- ment is eff ective July 1. The Idaho Department of Water Resources has sent a curtailment notice to about 129 water users represent- ing approximately 136 ground water rights in the Magic Valley and eastern Idaho. The notice warns water users that IDWR will cur- tail their water use if they’re not members of a water district with an approved mitigation plan. Water shutoff s were to begin on June 3, according to the notice. The Upper Snake River Basin, like much of south- ern Idaho, experienced a dry winter with below-nor- mal snowpack. The Army Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation May 1 coordinated stream- fl ow runoff forecast pre- dicted a 2.1 million acre- foot runoff volume in the Snake River from May through July, which is approximately 74% of normal. The curtailment notice aff ects ground water users whose water rights have a priority date junior to May 30, 1989, and are within the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer area. The notices are related to a 2011 water delivery call by the Surface Water Coalition. IDWR has approved mitigation plans in relation to this delivery call submitted by the Idaho Ground Water Appropri- ators, the Southwest and Goose Creek irrigation dis- tricts, the Coalition of Cit- ies and the A&B Irrigation District. Aff ected ground water users can avoid curtail- ment as long as the owners of those rights are covered by an approved mitiga- tion plan or are members in “good standing” with an Idaho Ground Water Asso- will help to strengthen the cen- ter, “enhancing our strategic goal to help our industries compete in their markets, domestically and globally.” Being based in Hermiston has given Rondon a broad ground- ing. The Columbia Basin, with its loamy soil and climate consisting of hot days and cool nights, grows more than 200 irrigated crops, each of which poses its own chal- lenges and opportunities. Umatilla County leads the state in production of vegetables, mel- ons and potatoes, according to the most recent USDA Census of Agriculture, with sales topping $111 million. “My specifi c program here in Hermiston will continue to be driven by the needs of local growers,” Rondon said. “I am extremely appreciative for all the support they have given me.” While her background is in entomology, Rondon knows she has more to learn in her new role. Integrated pest management involves not only insects, but plant pathology and weed and livestock management, she said. Anderson Ranch Dam expansion delayed By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press A plan to increase the capacity of Anderson Ranch Dam will take long than anticipated. A fi nal environmental impact statement and record of decision initially expected to be released this year will instead come out in 2023, following a detailed design analysis that will outline any reservoir-restriction require- ments during construction. The Idaho Water Resource Board and U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which would share the estimated $83.3 million cost equally, said the new schedule provides more time for analy- sis while keeping the project on track to meet Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act requirements. That federal law requires initiation of a fi nal design by Dec. 16, 2021. Raising the dam, which is on the South Fork Boise River northeast of Mountain Home, would provide southwest Idaho with more water for irrigation and other uses while increasing the fl exibility for managing the three U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Anderson Ranch Dam in Elmore County, Idaho. Boise River dams. “This pause on the Environmental Impact Statement allows our subject-matter experts to complete further design on the dam and associ- ated features so we can better identify impacts and corresponding mitigation in the fi nal EIS,” said Christine Schuldheisz, a Reclamation pub- lic aff airs specialist in Boise. The bureau will work with the Idaho Water Resource Board on mitigation for irrigation dis- tricts and other water users, according to Rec- IDWR sends curtailment notices to water users Capital Press “I am super excited about this position, and the new challenge ahead of me,” Rondon said. “I think my expertise fi ts really well.” Integrated pest management is about more than pesticides. It takes into account things like crop selection, mechanical controls, biological agents such as harness- ing benefi cial insects and regular fi eld monitoring. These practices work in tandem to keep pest popu- lations at manageable levels. The center has four signature projects, including pesticide risk management and safety education and pest and weather modeling. The fourth project is working with researchers and growers to put inte- grated pest management plans into action. Rondon said she is looking forward to expanding the center’s infl uence, and improving commu- nication within those networks. “A lot of people do fantastic work within their own niches,” she said. “Better communication will really connect the dots.” In an email announcing Ron- don’s appointment, Alan Sams, dean of the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences, said she ciation ground water dis- trict or another party with an approved mitigation plan. To stay in “good stand- ing” with a ground water district, water users must be current in paying all district assessments, which the districts use to fund their mitigation activities. IDWR offi cials encour- age junior ground water users receiving curtailment notices to join a ground water district near them to receive the benefi t of the approved mitigation plan and avoid curtailment. Under the curtailment order, water users have 15 days to join a ground water district. Most, but not all, junior ground water users in the region have already joined a district for mitiga- tion purposes. “If a ground water user receives a notice of curtail- ment, that means neither IDWR nor the watermaster has received notice from IGWA that an approved mitigation plan covers the user’s water rights, or that they’re a participant in good standing with a ground water district that has an approved mitigation plan in the ESPA region,” said Mat Weaver, deputy director of IDWR. The curtailment notice warns recipients that IDWR’s watermasters will curtail their ground water rights unless the water users send proof of participation in a ground water district and mitigation plan to the watermasters of Water Dis- tricts 100, 110, 120, 130 or 140. Ground water rights for single-family domestic and small stockwater uses are exempt from the curtailment order. For more information, contact the IDWR water dis- tribution staff at 208-287- 4800 or 208-736-3033. lamation regional public aff airs offi cer Michael Coff ey. The reservoir can hold 413,000 acre-feet of water. Raising the 456-foot dam by six feet as proposed would add about 29,000 acre-feet of storage capacity. Treasure Valley Water Users Association Executive Director Roger Batt said he met with Reclamation offi cials May 25. The association represents irrigation, canal and ditch districts that provide water to about 300,000 acres from Boise to Parma, where the Boise River fl ows into the Snake River. “Our folks basically said the sooner we know of the mitigation plan, the better off we’re going to be to do our risk-benefi t anal- ysis so that we know how much water we can deliver to our patrons,” he said. Association members need time to put together their own plans and work with customers. 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