EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, June 25, 2021 Volume 94, Number 26 CapitalPress.com 1 Farm Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Julie Wuesthoff , who has worked at Central Market for 15 years, puts a sign beneath the Dharma Ridge spin- ach to signify that it was grown locally in the Pacifi c Northwest. Simplified produce supply 9 chain $2.00 5 Distribution center 2 Loader 3 Transporter 4 Receiver 6 Loader 7 Transporter Retail destination 8 Receiver EDITOR’S NOTE In this two-part series, the Capital Press follows food from farm to retail store. This week’s story follows fresh fruits and vegetables. Next week’s story will follow the separate supply chain for groceries and other value-added products. Capital Press graphic SPINACH THE SECRET LIFE OF Following a pallet of produce from fi eld to retail store By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press P Zach Wailand, co-owner of Dharma Ridge Organic Farm in Quilcene, Wash. OULSBO, Wash. — Around 7 a.m. in the Central Market grocery store on the Friday before Memorial Day, a shopper pulled a bunch of spinach from a shelf, stuff ed it in a bag and dropped it into her cart. The sequence took seconds. But the story behind this bunch of spinach and how it got there is far from simple. The produce supply chain is an ensemble of parts and people working in concert to bring food to con- sumers’ tables. The size of the 2021 U.S. fruit and vegetable market, measured by revenue, is $5.3 bil- lion, according to market research fi rm IBISWorld. To take a snapshot of this system, the Capital Press followed a precise bunch of spinach from the farm where it was grown to the retail store. Following a lowly spinach bunch, in Lot No. 8525, opened a window into this complex system. DAY ONE Wednesday, May 27 Dharma Ridge Organic Farm Quilcene, Wash. 8 a.m. The spinach trail began in Quilcene, Wash., on the Olympic Peninsula. Here lies Dharma Ridge Organic Farm, a strip of land hemmed in by evergreen trees. Zach Wailand and his wife, Haley Olson-Wailand, started this farm in 2003. They began by selling to farmers markets. Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press See Spinach, Page 11 The view from inside the truck as Zach Wailand loads a pallet. FERC approves license transfer of Klamath River dams slated for removal By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. — The largest dam removal project in U.S. history is one step closer to becoming reality. Federal energy regulators have approved the transfer of operat- ing licenses for four hydroelec- tric dams along the Klamath River in Southern Oregon and North- ern California, handing ownership from Pacifi Corp to the nonprofi t Klamath River Renewal Corp. The KRRC plans to demol- ish the dams to help endangered salmon, opening approximately 400 miles of upstream habitat. “We view this as a big win for every stakeholder in the basin,” said KRRC spokesman Dave Meurer. “That includes the farm and ranch community.” The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued the order June 17 for J.C. Boyle, Copco 1, Copco 2 and Iron Gate dams, marking a key milestone in the eff ort to revive dwindling salmon runs in the Klamath Basin. Removal of the fi sh-blocking dams is currently slated to begin in 2023, with a project budget of $450 million — including $200 million from Pacifi Corp ratepay- ers, and $250 million earmarked from California Proposition 1, a $7.5 billion statewide water bond that passed in 2014. Jim Root, president of the KRRC Board of Directors, said the FERC decision is a “crucial and signifi cant step forward” in restor- ing a free-fl owing Klamath River. “I am deeply appreciative to all of the parties who have sup- ported this project over the years, and I wish to especially note the signifi cant and sustained eff orts of our tribal partners,” Root said in a statement. Getting to this point has taken decades of work, and overcoming setbacks that threatened to derail the plan, he said. The four dams were originally built between 1911 and 1962, with a total generating capacity of 169 megawatts. They do not pro- vide any irrigation storage or fl ood control. Eff orts to remove the dams See Dams, Page 11 Oregon ag overtime bill amended with $100 million price tag By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press A bill requiring Oregon farmers to pay higher overtime wages has passed a key legislative committee, though it now includes a hefty price tag that may hinder further progress. The House Rules Committee voted 4-3 to approve House Bill 2358 with an amendment that would phase out the agricultural overtime exemption over three years and allocate $100 million to help farmers make the transition. To put that amount in perspective, it’s more than twice the general fund tax dollars appropri- ated for the entire Oregon Department of Agri- culture during the most recent biennium. Before the House votes on HB 2358, it must fi rst clear the budget-setting Joint Committee on Ways and Means. The bill would then need to pass the Senate before the end of this year’s legislative session, which is constitutionally required to end by June 27. Under the amended version of HB 2358, farm Andrea Johnson workers would be owed one-and-a-half the reg- ular wage rate after 55 hours per week in 2022, A bill that would end the Oregon agriculture after 48 hours per week in 2023 and after 40 industry’s exemption from higher overtime wages has been amended to include $100 mil- See Bill, Page 11 lion to help farmers transition. Providing Financial ARLINGTON BOARD- BURNS Support for the MAN CONDON INDUSTRIES. AG ATHENA and COMMERCIAL CALDWELL Growing Generat ions ONTARIO 422 S. 9TH AVE 208-402-4887 Toget her! 435 SW 24TH ST 541-889-4464 S228586-1 MEMBER FDIC