Friday, July 9, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Easterday Dairy application dealt setback By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press BOARDMAN, Ore. — A proposal to reopen Ore- gon’s second-largest dairy farm has hit an administra- tive snag. Easterday Farms, based in Pasco, Wash., purchased the former Lost Valley Farm near Boardman, Ore., in 2019, hoping to operate the facility with up to 9,700 mature dairy cows, 8,600 dairy heifers and 10,000 non-dairy cattle. Earlier this year, one of the farm’s co-owners, Cody Easterday, pleaded guilty to defrauding Tyson Foods of $233 million as part of a “ghost cattle” scheme, sell- ing more than 200,000 head of cattle that existed only on paper. Sentencing for Easter- day is scheduled for Aug. 4. He faces up to 20 years in prison for felony wire fraud. However, Cody Easter- day’s name is still listed as the operator of Easterday Farms Dairy on its Confi ned Animal Feeding Operation, or CAFO, permit, which was previously submitted to the Oregon Department of Agriculture and Department of Environmental Quality. Cody Easterday’s son, Cole Easterday, has since taken over as manager of Easterday Farms Dairy LLC after purchasing his father’s interest in the business. But according to Oregon state law, the name listed on the CAFO application must be the owner or operator of the facility. Accordingly, ODA and DEQ announced they are giving Cody Easterday until July 15 to withdraw the application or it will be denied. ODA spokeswoman EO Media Group File The former Lost Valley Farm outside Boardman, Ore., now the proposed Easterday Dairy. Andrea Cantu-Schomus said the current application can- not be transferred to another individual or entity, meaning Cole Easterday would have to submit an entirely new CAFO permit application. That includes detailed plans about how the farm will manage an estimated 5.4 million cubic feet of liquid manure, 5.9 million cubic feet of solid manure and 11.7 million cubic feet of processed wastewater annually. Cole Easterday declined comment when reached July 2. A coalition of environ- mental groups that opposes the dairy, called Stand Up to Factory Farms, released a statement supporting ODA’s decision, while also urging the agency to reject the proj- ect outright. “Oregon is in the throes of a record-breaking, cli- mate change-fueled heat wave and drought that will be worsened by a mega- dairy’s massive greenhouse gas emissions and water waste,” said coalition orga- nizer Kristina Beggen. Beggen said Oregon Gov. Kate Brown must step in and deny the permit “no matter who the applicant is.” The dairy in question began as Lost Valley Farm, under the management of California dairyman Greg te Velde. Within a year of open- ing in 2018, the dairy racked up more than 200 violations of its CAFO permit, includ- ing open-air lagoons over- fl owing with manure. The 5,390-acre property is in the Lower Umatilla Basin Groundwater Man- agement Area, designated by DEQ in 1990 for ele- vated levels of groundwater nitrates. Te Velde eventually declared bankruptcy and the dairy was taken over by a trustee who sold it at auction. Easterday Farms bought the property for $66.7 million, and promised to invest $15 million upgrad- ing the farm’s wastewater facilities. The sale did not include Lost Valley Farm’s cattle, and no animals are currently allowed on site. Farms and ranches owned by the Easterday family in southeast Washington were auctioned to pay off the company’s debts. An investment group with ties to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was the high bidder for more than 33,000 acres of Easterday land in Benton County, Wash. In a previous interview, Cole Easterday said he and his brothers, Clay and Cut- ter, are now the sole own- ers of Easterday Dairy LLC, and are not involved in East- erday Ranches. Wildfi re offi cials: Peak risk arrives early as drought expands By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Don Jenkins/Capital Press The Biden administration says it will propose new wa- ter-quality standards for surface water in Washington. Biden EPA to write water-quality rules for Washington By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Biden administration will set new limits on pol- lutants in Washington riv- ers, creeks and lakes, likely embracing standards the Washington Farm Bureau and other trade groups say will stifl e industries. The Environmental Pro- tection Agency pledged to propose water-quality stan- dards within nine months and fi nalize the rule within 18 months. The announce- ment disowned limits adopted by the Trump EPA. The standards aff ect dair- ies, food processors and other industries that have permits to discharge waste- water. The EPA said in a statement Thursday that it was committed to applying “sound science.” Farm Bureau CEO John Stuhlmiller said he expects the Biden EPA to revert to standards imposed on the state by the Obama EPA in 2016. “In nine months, you’re probably just rehashing what’s been developed,” he said. “We’re not happy about that, obviously,” Stuhlmiller said. “The political winds shift. That’s what we’re experiencing.” The Inslee adminis- tration welcomed EPA’s announcement. “As our partner in clean water, we are ready to work with EPA to get the right water-quality standards in place and working for Wash- ington,” Ecology Direc- tor Laura Watson said in a statement. Ecology’s position on water-quality standards has changed with who occupies the White House. In 2016, Ecology pro- posed standards that it said were based on “the best available science.” The Obama EPA disagreed and imposed stricter standards, brushing aside Ecology and using its power under the Clean Water Act. The Farm Bureau joined other trade groups in peti- tioning the Trump admin- istration to restore the stan- dards developed by Ecology. The Trump EPA granted the petition. Washington Attorney General Bob Fer- guson responded by fi l- ing his 39th lawsuit against Trump. The suit sought to repeal the water-quality standards once championed by Ecol- ogy, but now associated with Trump. The suit is still pending in U.S. District Court for West- ern Washington. On Wednes- day, the Justice Department moved to put the litigation on hold, while the EPA sets new water-quality standards. The Trump-approved standards — written by Ecology — “may not be based on sound science,” according to the motion. Ecology neither admits nor denies its science was unsound. The agency praised the EPA for mov- ing to end “years of uncertainty.” “This is a step in the right direction for protecting the communities most vulner- able to pollution, including tribal members who rely on fi shing for traditional diet and work,” Watson said. The Farm Bureau joined a coalition, led by the Northwest Pulp and Paper Association, that intervened in the lawsuit to defend the Trump, or old Ecol- ogy, standards. Coalition members met Thursday by phone and were discour- aged by how the case has turned, Stuhlmiller said. “We were very unhappy with what came out of the process (in 2016). Why would there be any diff er- ence?” he asked. “Now we have to face impossible standards.” Ecology’s old standards — the ones called inade- quate by the Biden EPA — purported to protect the health of a person who ate 6 ounces of fi sh caught in Washington every day for 70 years. The Quinault Indian Nation and Sauk-Suiat- tle Indian Tribe intervened in the lawsuit, claiming the Trump EPA was impair- ing treaty-reserved rights to catch and consume fi sh. Widespread and worsen- ing drought in much of the West prompted the wildfi re season’s high-risk period to arrive at least a month early. “We have active large fi res in all Western regions,” National Interagency Fire Center meteorologist Nick Nauslar said in a multi- agency news conference July 1. Prolonged extreme heat continues to bake built-up grasses and other fi ne fuels that dried early during an unusually warm spring. Some timber also dried early. Nauslar, who wrote much of the National Sig- nifi cant Wildfi re Potential Outlook for July through October, said the last few days of June brought a surge of monsoonal mois- ture to the Southwest, Col- orado and southern Great Basin. “We expect that shift (of risk) west to north due to the monsoon starting to ramp up,” he said. Meanwhile, more than 90% of the West is in drought, including extreme or exceptional classifi ca- tions in over half the region, Nauslar said. “And it has intensifi ed in the last hand- ful of months.” He said in the NIFC report that drought contin- ues to intensify in Califor- nia and parts of the Pacifi c Northwest, as well as in the Northern Rockies. It per- U.S. Drought Monitor The Western U.S. as of June 29. sists in the Great Basin and much of the Southwest. The report assesses the risk of large fi res. These typically are at least 300 acres in rangeland, 100 acres in timber, or require an incident-management team. Nearly all of the North- west faces above-average risk of large fi res into Sep- tember before that like- lihood drops in October, NIFC reported. But October risk likely will stay above normal in much of California, in the south from the mountains westward and in the north except in the northeastern area. In Southern Califor- nia, drought continued to worsen in June, and live fuels continued to dry — they are about a month and a half ahead of schedule. Climate outlooks call for above-normal tem- peratures through sum- mer in much of the West, the report said. Weather that’s hotter and drier than usual is expected through September in the Northwest and Northern Rockies. “We are currently facing the most challenging wild- fi re conditions we’ve seen in Idaho in a long time,” U.S. Bureau of Land Man- agement State Fire Man- JEWETT agement Offi cer Dennis Strange said. NIFC on July 1 said California reported eight large fi res, Oregon two and Idaho one. Nationally, acres burned to date are just over 1% ahead of a year ago. Big wildfi res July 1 included California’s Lava and Salt fi res in the Shas- ta-Trinity National Forest, and the Tennant fi re in the Klamath National Forest. Burned acres totaled 19,680 for Lava, 9,439 for Tennant and 3,800 for Lava. Oregon fi res included Wrentham Market near Dufur at 7,222 acres, and the new Sunset Valley fi re initially reported at 650 acres southeast of The Dalles. The Fritzer Fire west of Salmon, Idaho, stood at 139 acres. Inciweb, which reports wildfi res of all sizes, said un-contained fi res as of early July 2 totaled 11 in California, seven in Ore- gon excluding Sunset Val- ley, one in Idaho and none in Washington. CAMERON SEED WHOLESALE PRICES TO THE PUBLIC! GRAIN SEED GRASS SEED CLOVER SEED ANIMAL FEED Contract Production Opportunities Available Open Monday to Friday 7AM to 3:30PM 503-647-2293 WWW.JEWETTCAMERONSEED.COM 31345 NW Beach Rd. Hillsboro, OR. 97124 S241456-1 Best Prices on Irrigation Supplies Sprinklers • Rain Guns Drip Tape • Dripline • Filters • Poly Hose Lay Flat Hose • Micro • Valves • Air Vents Fertilizer Injectors ...and much more! Fast & Free Shipping from Oregon 1-844-259-0640 www.irrigationking.com 10% OFF PROMO CODE: CAP10 S232412-1