Friday, July 23, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Easterday sale gets green light in bankruptcy court By DON JENKINS Capital Press YAKIMA, Wash. — Two major creditors have dropped their opposition to the sale of Easterday farms, clearing the way for the Mormon church to buy an Eastern Washington family farm brought down by debt and fraud. Prudential Insurance Co. and Equi- table Life Insurance agreed to withdraw their objections during a mid-hearing break July 14 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Yakima. In return, they are guaranteed to receive most, if not all, of the millions of dollars owed them by Cody Easterday, his wife, mother and their companies. The parties, returning from the closed conference, outlined the agreement to Judge Whitman Holt, settling a dispute that had threatened to block the $209 million acquisition by Farmland Reserve Inc., affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. How sale proceeds will be divided among creditors and the Easterday fam- ily will be decided later. Farmland Reserve does business in Washington as AgriNorthwest and already owns 100,000 acres. It’s poised to add 18,000 acres, including 12,000 irrigated acres, in Benton County. Most of the Easterday properties bor- der AgriNorthwest land, according to the church-affiliated organization. “Our successful bid reflects our long- term commitment to Columbia Basin agriculture. We will be growing crops on these fertile fields for decades to come,” Farmland CEO Doug Rose said in a statement. The Easterdays filed for bankruptcy in February as Cody Easterday faced a federal investigation that he schemed to George Plaven/Capital Press File Cody Easterday defraud Tyson Foods and another com- pany by billing them to buy and feed nonexistent cattle. Farmland Reserve outbid a company associated with Bill Gates for proper- ties commonly known as the Cox Farm, Goose Gap Farm, Nine Canyon Farm, River Farm, Farm Manager House and Storage Complex. The sale will involve dozens of par- cels owned by Easterday Farms, Easter- day Ranches or individual Easterdays. Complex partnerships threatened to stall the sale. Prudential and Equitable had claimed that the proposed bankruptcy sale included privately held property not eli- gible to be sold free of liens in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy, meant to reorganize busi- ness holdings. According to court records, the East- erdays borrowed $50 million in 2020 from Prudential to operate their busi- nesses, putting up various properties as collateral. Prudential, in court records, said that with interest the Easterdays owed $57 million. Equitable said in a court filing it was owed about $29 million. Late Wednesday, Prudential for- mally objected to the sale, echoing an objection filed in June by Equitable. Both argued the judge should block the sale unless Prudential and Equi- table were guaranteed to be paid in full, including at a higher interest rate charged to loans in default. The attorney spearheading the sale, Richard Pachulski, said bundling the properties would maximize their value and that ownership and allocation issues could be worked out later. Under the agreement outlined in court, Prudential and Equitable will be repaid at the higher default inter- est rate, though Easterday Farms and Easterday Ranches reserved the right to seek to regain some of the money later. Burned acres well above year-earlier levels By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Idaho’s Snake River Com- plex Fire and Oregon’s Boot- leg Fire — the nation’s largest — have helped push the total number of acres burned more than one-third higher than the 2020 year-to-date total. The National Interagency Fire Center July 19 reported 80 large wildfires burning more than 1.17 million acres in 13 states. Current large fires included 18 in Idaho, 20 in Montana, 8 in Oregon, and 7 each in California and Washington. From 2020 to 2021, the number of large fires from Jan. 1 to July 19 increased from 29,008 to 35,086, NIFC said. Burned acres jumped from 1,809,976 to 2,537,744. Ten-year averages to date were 31,774 fires and 3,347,133 acres. The Bootleg Fire late July 19 stood at 364,113 acres and the Snake River Complex at 107,433 acres on July 20. In California, the Beck- wourth Complex was at 105,348 acres late July 19. In Washington, the 71,512- acre Lick Creek Fire south- west of Asotin was the larg- Inciweb A DC-10 jumbo jet drops fire retardant on the Bootleg Fire. est. The Chuweah Creek Fire, at 36,177 acres, was the sec- ond largest as of July 19. All were lightning-caused. The Bootleg Fire, north- east of Klamath Falls, Ore., was 30% contained as of July 19. “We have a recurring pat- tern of extreme fire behavior in this incident where the fire travels up to five miles in a single burn period,” said Mar- cus Kauffman, public infor- mation officer with the Ore- gon Department of Forestry Incident Management Team 1. The fire in the past day added about 40,000 acres. Multiple tree stands burn- ing at once in their crowns, and various winds from clouds and weather the fire creates exemplify extreme behavior. Such weather con- ditions can prompt the main fire to advance, throwing embers and spotting. “And since it’s critically dry, the spots start a new fire,” Kauffman said. “Then it will spot across a control line and we have to go chase.” Crews have had some tough days, but have done a great job “putting in line and holding it in some amazingly difficult conditions,” he said. The three-fire Snake River Complex was 70% contained on July 20. Public Informa- tion Officer Deana Harms said crews aimed to build on recent progress. “They have already kind of connected the dots where they put in dozer line or where they have planned the easi- est way of connecting that to hopefully achieve contain- ment,” she said. Dozers and other heavy equipment dig fire lines or remove nearby fuels. Ground crews increase a line’s effec- tiveness by burning additional fuel. “They are going in and try- ing to work in more fire so it doesn’t push too hard against the line,” Harms said. Fire- fighters have burned mainly at night, but slightly cooler weather July 17-18 created “some windows where day operations could put some fire on the ground,” she said. Fish and Wildlife Service withdraws critical habitat rollbacks for spotted owl By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service is proposing to withdraw a Trump-era rule that would have sig- nificantly rolled back crit- ical habitat protections for the northern spotted owl in Oregon, Washington and California. Instead, the Biden administration has put for- ward a new rule that would maintain much of the habi- tat protections, which offi- cials say are needed to pre- vent the species from going extinct. Martha Williams, prin- cipal deputy director for the USFWS, said the revised rule “will allow fuels man- agement and sustain- able timber harvesting to continue while support- ing northern spotted owl recovery.” Advocates for the timber industry argue the decision illegally restricts logging on more than 1 million acres of federal land that is not actually spotted owl habi- tat, and hinders the type of forest management needed to repel increasingly large wildfires. A 60-day public com- ment period begins July 20. The northern spotted owl was listed as threat- ened under the Endangered Species Act in 1990. At the time, the USFWS desig- nated 6.9 million acres of “critical habitat” to be man- aged for species recovery. That was later expanded to 9.5 million acres in 2012. Timber companies, the American Forest Resources Council and several local counties pushed back in 2013 with a lawsuit challeng- ing the habitat expansion. The sides reached a set- tlement agreement on April 13, 2020, with the agency agreeing to propose addi- tional areas for exclusion from the critical habitat designation. On Aug. 11, 2020, the USFWS proposed a habi- tat reduction of just 204,653 acres. But the final rule — released days before Trump administration left office in January — called for 3.4 million acres to be removed, more than 16 times the orig- inal amount. The rule was supposed to take effect March 16, but Biden’s Interior Depart- ment delayed and ultimately nixed the order, saying the reductions were arbitrary and excluded public input. The latest proposal calls for just 204,797 acres of crit- ical habitat rollbacks for the northern spotted owl across 15 Western Oregon coun- ties. That includes 184,476 acres of lands managed by the Bureau of Land Man- agement, of which 172,430 acres are located within the Oregon and California Rail- road Revested Lands. Another 20,000 acres is located within tribal land recently transferred under the Western Oregon Tribal Fairness Act to the Confed- erated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siu- slaw Indians, and the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians. In a statement, Williams, with the USFWS, said the Service continues to work closely with federal, state and tribal partners to use the best available science and evaluate conservation needs to protect the northern spot- ted owl. The announcement was welcome news for envi- ronmental groups that have pushed for increased protec- tions for the species. “To use the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s own words, Trump’s rule, which slashed critical hab- itat for northern spotted owls, was insufficiently jus- tified, insufficiently ratio- nal, defective, filled with shortcomings and factually inaccurate,” said Kathleen Gobush, Northwest director for Defenders of Wildlife. Court upholds Trump water rule By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press The U.S. District Court of South Carolina last week dismissed a challenge to the Trump administration’s Navigable Waters Protec- tion Rule, which in 2020 replaced the Obama admin- istration’s controversial 2015 Waters of the United States rule known by the acronym WOTUS. The Biden administra- tion announced its intentions to revise the definition of waters of the U.S. under the Clean Water Act on June 9, with the Department of Jus- tice filing a motion request- ing remand of the Trump rule. Led by the South Caro- lina Coastal Conservation League, the environmen- tal groups asked the court to vacate the Navigable Waters Protection Rule based on what they said were the indisputable facts, including lost protection for waters. That would have elim- inated the Trump rule and allowed the WOTUS rule to remain in effect. The court’s decision allows the Trump rule to remain in effect until the Biden administration finalizes a new rule. The Coastal Conserva- tion League’s challenge is one of 15 cases nationwide opposing the Trump rule. National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, along with other agricultural groups, is engaged in litigation across the country to defend the Trump rule and considers last week’s decision a key legal victory. The decision ensures regulatory certainty while the Biden administration moves through the lengthy rulemaking process, said Scott Yager, NCBA chief environmental counsel. The gravy on top was the judge’s outright dismissal of the entire case, as it was the leading case in opposition to the Trump rule — farther ahead procedurally than the other cases, he said. He thinks other judges will see the decision as influ- ential and put the other cases to bed as well, he said. “This is the latest example of courts, by and large, see- ing the Trump rule as legally defensible,” he said. That’s in contrast to the Obama WOTUS rule, which has been struck down by multiple courts as being ille- gal under the Administrative Procedures Act and the Clean Water Act, he said. “This decision overall is a great legal victory for land- owners and land users across the country,” he said. NCBA knows the Biden administration is going to come up with its own rule, but the court’s decision gives the organization another year or two to work with the administration and Congress, he said. NCBA’s message to Biden is that he create a new rule that doesn’t hinder produc- ers’ ability to make invest- ments in their land and care for their cattle. EPA’s Office of Water held a call with agricultural stakeholders the day after the announcement of its inten- tion to revise the Trump rule, and there was a short oppor- tunity for stakeholders to chime in on the call, he said. “It was good that they did the outreach, but what we heard was concerning. They’re posturing to repeal the Trump rule and replace it with a more expansive Biden rule,” he said. Before you see the fruits of your labor, there’s the humble beginning. Every new producer has to start somewhere. And it’s far from easy. We help give young, beginning and small farmers and ranchers a leg up with special financing options, educational opportunities, and hands-on, strategic advice to help you get started. So if you’re ready to start cultivating your dream, give us a call. We’d be happy to help. 800.743.2125 | northwestfcs.com S222030-1