8 CapitalPress.com Friday, July 16, 2021 AgForestry leader to depart after six years By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Matt Kloes will leave the Washington AgForestry organization at the end of September after six years as its executive director. Kloes will be a senior market research analyst for Northwest Farm Credit Services, where he previously worked for Matt Kloes nine years. “It was an incredibly diffi cult decision because AgForestry is so close to my heart,” Kloes told the Capital Press. Kloes graduated from the leadership program in 2015. Farm Credit spon- sored him. The company is paying Kloes’ salary from July through September as an “in-kind” gift of Kloes’ time through the transition. The AgForestry lead- ership development pro- gram lasts 18 months. It includes 11 multi-day seminars. Participants also spend one week in Wash- ington, D.C., and up to two weeks in a foreign country. Participant cost is $6,000. The program spends approximately $20,000 per participant. The cost to each partici- pant is subsidized by part- ners and in-kind donations. Kloes is proudest of how the AgForestry team navigated through the COVID-19 pandemic, which he refers to as “our fallow year.” Traditional programming paused, and the program focused on improvements and a webi- nar series. AgForestry was founded WASHINGTON AGFORESTRY LEADERSHIP PROGRAM http://agforestry.org/ programs/ in 1978. Kloes said the pro- gram must continue to rec- ognize how the agriculture industry has evolved. “There were a very large number of mid-sized pro- ducers,” he said. “As the years have gone on, produc- ers have been forced to get larger in scale or stay small and fi nd a niche.” The leadership program was designed to develop future leaders who could eventually give back to it. “The game has changed,” Kloes said. “It is more diffi cult to fi nd pro- ducers to participate. Some of that is being afraid a little bit of the time commitment — they are doing more with less — and also simply a game of numbers, where there are just fewer people.” The organization is look- ing at ways to reduce the time commitment by using online resources. “But also, folks need to think about what AgFor- estry means to their development,” Kloes said. “Some of it is folks needing to realize the commitment is worth the time.” A search committee has convened to fi nd his replacement. Kloes said there’s no specifi c time- line to bring a new leader on board. He will continue to vol- unteer his time after Sept. 30. The organization’s board is also in the midst of a strategic planning process. Wikipedia The confl uence of the Walla Walla and Columbia rivers. Stakeholders continue work on plan for Walla Walla watershed By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Stakeholders are working on prior- ities for the 1,760-square-mile Walla Walla River watershed identifi ed in a strategic plan for improving the water- shed over the next 29 years. Over the last decade, stakeholders have worked to increase streamfl ows and protect the amount of water that farmers need, said Judith Johnson, for- mer chair of the Walla Walla Watershed Management Partnership. “What we’ve discovered is that, par- ticularly in a drought situation like this year, there simply isn’t enough water to meet both needs,” she said. The fact that the watershed includes stakeholders in both Oregon and Wash- ington adds an extra level of complex- ity. It includes the Touchet River and Mill Creek in Washington. The Walla Walla River fl ows from headwaters in the mountains of Ore- gon through Washington, where it empties into the Columbia River near Wallula. Water availability for people, farms, and fi sh is a problem in the sum- mer when demand is highest, accord- WALLA WALLA WATER 2050 STRATEGIC PLAN https://apps.ecology.wa.gov/publi- cations/documents/2112011.pdf ing to the Washington Department of Ecology. Adjustments need to be made to the regulatory framework to address diff er- ences in state laws, Johnson said. “What farmers are looking for are predictability and security in their water supply,” she said. “We have drought conditions in the Walla Walla every year; they’re just not always caused by drought, they’re caused by overallocation,” said Chris Marks, water rights policy ana- lyst for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla. “On the Oregon side we’re over-allocated, on the Washington side we’re over-allocated. We’re over-allo- cated on surface water, alluvial ground- water and basalt groundwater. It’s a very tenuous situation. The urgency is only growing.” Farmers relying on surface water could fi nd themselves draw- ing water from alternate sources, Marks said. That could be from the Columbia River or surface water reservoirs, said Scott Tarbutton, leader of the project for Ecology’s Offi ce of the Columbia River. The combined eff ort allows stake- holders to request federal, state and local funding, Tarbutton said. Costs vary depending on the strategy fol- lowed, he said, with estimates reaching up to $500 million. “These projects are expensive,” he said. “We’re all going to need to be speaking and cheering for the same things, and asking for funding that are focused on the same strategies.” Funding requests would likely begin in late 2022, Marks said. The Washington Legislature allo- cated $3 million for the 2021-23 bien- nium to help fund a groundwater study on the Washington side of the water- shed, continue the fl ow study that’s already begun and begin the move to Phase 2 of the plan, said Joye Red- fi eld-Wilder, communications manager for Ecology. Crop residue burning jumps in Idaho By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! BAGS: • Seed Bags • Fertilizer Bags • Feed Bags • Potato Bags • Printed Bags • Plain Bags • Bulk Bags • Totes • Woven Polypropylene • Bopp • Polyethylene • Pocket Bags • Roll Stock & More! HAY PRESS SUPPORT: • Hay Sleeves • Strap • Totes • Printed or Plain • Stretch Film (ALL GAUGES) WAREHOUSE PACKAGING: • Stretch Film • Pallet Sheets • Pallet Covers LOCATIONS: Albany, Oregon (MAIN OFFICE) Ellensburg, Washington CONTACT INFORMATION: Phone: 855-928-3856 Fax: 541-497-6262 info@westernpackaging.com ....................................................... CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR TOP PRIORITY! w w w. w e s t e r n p a c k a g i n g. c o m Idaho producers burned nearly three times as many acres of crop residue in the fi rst half of this year com- pared to the fi rst six months of 2020. “Last year, burn days were limited due to wildfi re smoke,” state Department of Environmental Quality Smoke Management Ana- lyst Tami Aslett said. That postponed some burns from fall, 2020, when peak wild- fi re season intensifi ed on high temperatures and high winds, to this year. Crop rotations also factor into year-to-year changes in total acres burned, she said. Aslett said agricul- tural producers burned just over 9,400 acres in the Jan. 1-June 30 period the depart- ment calls spring season. That’s up from just below 3,500 acres a year earlier and is the highest spring total since 2012’s nearly 15,000 acres, a record. The 2016-20 spring average is about 4,300 acres. Idaho DEQ A 2020 crop residue burn in Boundary County, Idaho. For all of 2020, acres of crop residue burned in Idaho exceeded 48,000. Aslett said fall season, July 1-Dec. 31, typically has higher volume. Burning usu- ally picks up in late July after harvest of early crops such as small grains and grasses. “A challenge is wildfi re smoke at the same time, so air quality is monitored very closely,” she said. Most burning involves wheat and barley stubble, Kentucky Bluegrass and corn, Aslett said. Pasture grass is among other crop res- idue that is burned. Farmers removing ground from fed- eral conservation programs S214636-1 BRENTEQUIP.COM GRAIN HANDLING PRODUCTS Harvest with the Power of Brent With more than four decades of experience, Brent ® grain handling products have built a reputation for innovation and quality. From the dual-auger Avalanche ® to the single-auger V-Series grain carts, The Grain Train ® wagons and more, we push the limits of technology to create products farmers can depend upon each and every harvest. Visit BrentEquip.com or see your nearest dealer for more information. UNVERFERTH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. | P.O. Box 357 • Kalida, OH 45853 • unverferth.com S232570-1 and putting it back into pro- duction also may choose to burn. “Bluegrass in our area has to be burned, or it won’t pro- duce seeds the next year,” Nezperce Prairie Grass Growers Association Presi- dent Greg Branson said. That usually occurs in August or September. “With the drought we are experiencing and all the wildfi res we have going on right now, I foresee bluegrass residue burning to be put on hold until some of this clears out,” he said. “And that will aff ect our bluegrass yields in a negative way. What we really need is some rain to put out the wildfi res and also to help us for the crops next year.” Branson, who farms in the Nezperce-Craigmont area of north-central Idaho, said burning “is one of the most economical ways to pre- pare our fi elds for seeding in the fall, and it also helps to manage herbicide-resistant weeds.” Idaho DEQ manages the program largely to minimize or reduce smoke-emission impacts, Aslett said. Field staff monitor site weather conditions, and smoke emis- sion and dispersal. “Burning crop residue produces signifi cant emis- sions if not managed prop- erly,” she said. Fields within three miles of an institution with a sen- sitive population, such as a school, hospital or assist- ed-living center, are sub- ject to specifi c permit con- ditions. Aslett said burning at those sites may be pro- hibited based on the direc- tion and speed of sustained winds.