Friday, July 9, 2021 CapitalPress.com 7 Oregon agriculture weathers pandemic-constrained legislative session By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — While every legislative session has its idiosyncrasies, this year may stand out because Oregon lawmakers conducted much of their work during video conferences. Despite a lack of in-per- son hearings, farmers and ranchers still made them- selves heard on bills aff ect- ing their livelihoods, some- times while contending with technical problems. “We are impressed and grateful how much the community showed up in a challenging virtual envi- ronment,” said Mary Anne Cooper, vice president of public policy for the Oregon Farm Bureau. The session, which ended June 26, also benefi ted from the eff orts of six lawmak- ers who work in agriculture and were able to eff ectively communicate the industry’s concerns to their colleagues, she said. “It was a huge blessing to have those folks in the build- ing,” Cooper said, referring to Reps. Shelly Boshart-Da- vis, R-Albany; Vikki Bre- ese-Iverson, R-Prineville; Jami Cate, R-Lebanon; Bobby Levy, R-Echo; Mark Owens, R-Crane, and Sen. Chuck Thomsen, R-Hood River. As usual, the farm indus- try had to play defense against legislation it consid- ered dangerous, so its vic- tories consisted of defeated bills as well as those that were approved. Following is a summary of the major natural resource proposals before lawmakers in 2021. USDA ARS A fi re burns sagebrush in eastern Oregon in this fi le photo. The Oregon Legislature passed measures this session to mitigate wildfi re. Bureau’s policy counsel. “The bill kicks a lot of what needs to be done to rule-making,” she said. Water Capital Press File Ag overtime exemption A proposal that would require farmers to pay their workers higher overtime wages, House Bill 2358, was subject to emotionally charged debate. The bill’s advocates claimed racism had motivated the current agricultural exemption and argued that decency and fairness meant it should be eliminated. Farmers overwhelm- ingly opposed the bill, alleg- ing it would not only hurt their economic interests but also prove harmful to work- ers who’d face reduced hours and ultimately receive smaller paychecks. Markets dictate crop and livestock prices, so farmers would have to reduce their labor expenses rather than pass them along to consum- ers, critics said. The proposal survived legislative deadlines by moving to the House Rules Committee, which ended up approving HB 2358 with an amendment that would phase out the exemption over several years. The amendment also included a $100 million tran- sition fund that would help farmers aff ected by higher overtime costs. However, the proposal didn’t receive a hearing in the budget-setting Joint Ways and Means Com- mittee before the legislature adjourned on June 26. The farm industry hopes that an economic study will inform further discussions on the proposal, which will probably keep percolating among lawmakers and may be reintroduced during the 2022 short legislative ses- sion, said Jenny Dresler, lob- byist for the Farm Bureau. “We’re committed to continuing the discussion,” she said. A hemp plant. The Oregon Legislature created a hemp commission. derness. Areas designated this way could be sub- ject to stricter “defensible space” regulation depend- ing on location-specifi c risk classifi cations. A last-minute revision meant that defi nition will be set by the Oregon Depart- ment of Forestry while pro- viding landowners with input on the process. Provisions that will allow landow"ners to chal- lenge their risk classifi ca- tion or their inclusion in the “wildland-urban inter- face” has helped defuse some of the controversy, though implementing the bill will take time, said Samantha Bayer, the Farm The Legislature agreed to spend a collective $538 million on improvements to water infrastructure in sev- eral bills and agency bud- gets, including investments in increasing water supplies and improving monitoring technology. Regarding water rights enforcement, House Bill 2244 changes the procedure for the “automatic stay” pro- vision of state law, which shields irrigators from water shut-off s if they challenge state regulators in court. The bill originally aimed to eliminate the “auto- matic stay” provision after the Klamath Tribes com- plained that junior irriga- tors had repeatedly stopped enforcement by fi ling law- suits. In its fi nal version, the bill changed the process to ensure that aff ected parties are timely notifi ed of law- suits. Regulators must also hold a hearing within three weeks if they override an “automatic stay” to enforce senior water rights. A program that allows water transfers within irriga- tion districts to occur without formal approval from state regulations was extended until 2030 under Senate Bill 130. Before the program was enacted, there was a backlog of such requests that stalled irrigation decisions. Under House Bill 3103, stored water can be changed to a diff erent use — for example, from agricultural to municipal — with approval from state regulators. Farm groups were split on the proposal. The state Farm Bureau and Oregon Water Resources Congress pushed for more comprehensive changes to stored water law while the Oregon Cattlemen’s Associ- ation and Oregon Associa- tion of Nurseries supported the bill. New regulations for well drilling were also approved under House Bill 2145, which was supported by the Oregon Ground Water Asso- ciation but criticized by some well drillers for containing more restrictive and onerous requirements. Food safety, water and livestock fees The maximum fees on transactions related to food safety, water and livestock will go up due to several bills approved by lawmak- ers, though in some cases the farm industry convinced them to scale back the hikes. For example, maximum food safety fees that aff ect dairies, food processors, bak- ers and others will rise by 7% in mid-2022 and 7% in mid- 2023. They’d initially been proposed to increase by 15% each year under Senate Bill 33. Likewise, the maximum brand inspection fee per head of cattle will increase from $1 to $1.35, but not to the $1.50 originally proposed in Senate Bill 32. Hemp commission A hemp commission was approved on its fourth attempt before the Leg- islature. Growers will be assessed 1.5% of their hemp crop’s value to pay for the commission, which will fund research into growing meth- ods and co-existence among cannabis crops, among other subjects. While the proposal gener- ally hasn’t faced fi erce oppo- sition, it previously died in committee due to legisla- tive shutdowns over contro- versial climate legislation. The idea was also criticized as untimely, since the hemp industry has undergone major growing pains with an oversupply and uncertain regulatory future. Predator control The ability of landown- ers to tax themselves to pay for predator control will end next year because House Bill 3167, which would have repealed the sunset date, died in committee. The program was created in 2015 and allowed Doug- las and Coos counties to cre- ate predator control districts that raised money for trap- pers from USDA’s Wildlife Services. Though repealing the sunset was approved 41-17 in the House, the bill was criticized by animal rights groups and didn’t receive a committee hearing in the Senate. The bill’s demise does not mean existing predator control districts must disband but they can- not collect revenues. Another attempt to repeal the sunset is likely next year. Animal agriculture Proponents of Senate Bill 832 claimed that mink farm- ing should be banned due to its potential to spread the coronavirus, which was vig- orously debated before the Senate Natural Resources and Wildfi re Recovery Committee. The bill’s crit- ics argued that the pandemic was just an excuse by animal rights activists to shut down an industry they oppose. The bill ultimately died in committee, as did Sen- ate Bill 583, which would have prohibited dairy farms with more than 2,500 cows. Though the Senate Energy and Environment Commit- tee didn’t vote on the bill, the prospect of banning certain livestock sectors was alarm- ing to agriculture groups. Wildfi re prevention In the aftermath of record-breaking wildfi res in 2020, it was widely agreed that lawmakers would need to take action to mitigate the threat in years to come. The $220 million proposal that eventually passed, Senate Bill 762, raised some seri- ous concerns along the way among rural lawmakers who feared it would entail expen- sive and unpopular vegeta- tion removal in fi re-prone areas. A key source of contro- versy was the defi nition of the “wildland-urban inter- face,” where human devel- opment intersects with wil- S219922-1