Friday, July 30, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Willamette Valley wine achieves global brand milestone Region receives formal recognition from European Union By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press PORTLAND — The Wil- lamette Valley wine industry may be only 56 years old, but it continues to gain a notable reputation around the world. In its latest feat, the Wil- lamette Valley became just the second American Viticul- tural Area — along with Cal- ifornia’s Napa Valley — to be granted “Protected Geo- graphical Indication” status by the European Union, link- ing certain iconic products to their unique place of origin. Other examples include Champagne and Barolo wine, which legally can only come from the Cham- pagne region of France or the Barolo region of Italy, respectively. As a reg- istered Pro- tected Geo- graphical Indication, or PGI, Harry the Willa- Peterson- mette Val- Nedry ley name is now secured throughout the EU’s market of 27 countries and 450 mil- lion consumers, said Stavros Lambrinidis, EU ambassador to the United States. “For the EU consumer, the PGI is the guarantee of authenticity, that every bot- tle meets the quality standard set by the Willamette produc- ers,” Lambrinidis said. Geographical indica- tions are the cornerstone of EU wines, spirits, food and other agricultural goods, Lambrinidis said. Products with a PGI certificate attract higher prices, which in turn can entice bad actors to forge counterfeits. “Any operator seeking to sell non-originating wine using the registered Ore- gon name, or using labeling devices to evoke ‘Willamette Valley’ in the mind of the consumer, will be stopped,” Lambrinidis said. The Willamette Valley is home to more than 500 win- eries, and is known for pro- ducing high-quality Pinot noir. It was classified as an American Viticultural Area, or AVA, in 1983, noted for its distinctive climate, soils and water — collectively known as terroir. Harry Peterson-Nedry considers himself part of the “second wave” of wine pio- neers in the Willamette Val- ley. He started Ridgecrest Vineyards in 1980, which would become the first vine- yard located in the Ribbon Ridge AVA, a sub-appella- tion of the Willamette Valley in Yamhill County. By 2002, Peterson-Ne- dry said, the industry was becoming more intent on protecting its name and winemaking style. “Our viticultural areas, whether it’s Oregon or the Willamette Valley, we con- sider almost sacrosanct,” he said. “We don’t want other people using ours.” The reason, Peterson-Ne- dry said, is twofold. First, the Willamette Valley may lose its exclusivity in the marketplace if just anyone is allowed to appropriate the name. Second, consumers may also lose confidence in the product if it does not con- sistently meet the region’s quality standards. “It recognizes the unique- ness of a specific place,” Peterson-Nedry said. “And that uniqueness is not very Organic Valley weighing options after fire at Oregon creamery By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press McMINNVILLE, Ore. — Despite heavy damage from an April 20 fire, there are still signs of activ- ity at the Organic Valley creamery in McMinnville. Trucks arrive at what remains of the facility to load and unload milk, which is then transported to other processing plants around the North- west. While flames destroyed the main 25,000-square-foot building, other assets including storage tanks, the milk dryer and butter churn all survived the blaze. Before it burned, the McMinnville creamery handled 4 million pounds of organic milk per week to make butter and milk powder. The question now is whether Organic Valley, the nation’s largest organic farming cooperative, plans to rebuild in McMinnville or look else- where to recoup its processing capacity. “We have to consider our options at this point,” said Steve Pierson, a fourth-generation dairy farmer in St. Paul, Ore., and president of the co-op’s board of directors. “We have to decide what incentives will be available to us, to stay or to go.” Pierson, of Sar-Ben Farms, said Organic Valley remains committed to the Pacific Northwest. Oregon rep- resents the second-largest pool of milk for the co-op, with 25 farmer-members along the coast and in the Willamette Valley. Sar-Ben Farms has 320 milking cows and has 175 irrigated acres about Organic Valley While flames destroyed the main 25,000-square-foot building at Organ- ic Valley’s creamery in McMinnville, Ore., other assets including storage tanks, the milk dryer and butter churn all survived the April 20 blaze. 30 miles south of Portland. The oper- ation went organic in 2005. Pierson is the first person outside Wisconsin to be elected board president. Organic Valley acquired the McMin- nville creamery from a local co-op, the Farmers Cooperative Creamery, in 2016. It was renovated and reopened the following year. After the fire, Pierson said, “It became very apparent how tenuous processing is in the Northwest,” with Organic Valley sending milk as far as Idaho and California. “I think at first there was a little bit of consternation about what Organic Valley was going to do,” he said. “(Pro- ducers) understand how important our footprint here is.” Pierson said the co-op has gone the extra mile to ensure members their markets are secure. Organic Valley has continued to buy milk, and taken a financial hit for transporting it longer distances. “Primarily, it’s covered by our busi- ness interruption insurance,” Pierson said. “But there is a limit to that. We can’t do that forever.” He said the co-op plans to hire a firm to help the board analyze its options for adding Northwest processing capacity. Rebuilding the McMinnville creamery, he said, is one option. “We are not looking to leave McMinnville,” he said. “We’ve been very happy with the city, the employ- ees and our neighbors.” In an earlier interview with the Cap- ital Press, Mark Pfeiffer, Organic Val- ley’s vice president of internal opera- tions, estimated the co-op spent up to $23 million renovating the McMinn- ville plant since 2016. Lawsuit targets new USDA rules for biotech crops By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press A coalition of bio- tech critics is challenging the legality of new USDA rules that allow develop- ers more leeway in deciding how genetically engineered crops are regulated. The agency eased restric- tions last year so that bio- tech developers can decide whether crops altered with various methods come under the agency’s jurisdiction. The National Family Farm Coalition and five other organizations have filed a complaint alleging that USDA’s regulations violate several federal laws and will endanger farmers and wildlife. The lawsuit alleges that genetically engineered, or GE, crops will “now effectively be left to the devices of their manufac- turers” who can grow and sell them “without any fur- ther oversight” by USDA, “regardless of their agro- nomic risks” or their “risks to soils, waterways, native ecosystems, and endangered species.” Traditionally, biotech crops that posed the risk of becoming plant pests, such as those modified with agro- bacterium, had to be “dereg- ulated” by USDA, which involved extensive environ- mental analysis. Until they were dereg- ulated, developers had to obtain permission for these crops to be field tested or moved across state lines. If another method was used that didn’t involve plant pests, such as gene editing or a gene gun, then the biotech devel- oper still had to confirm the crop wasn’t subject to the time-consuming deregula- tory process. Under the new rules, though, biotech developers can decide for themselves if their crops are exempt from the deregulatory process. If they decide a crop isn’t exempt, the USDA will eval- uate it for six months to deter- mine if it’s a “plausible” plant pest risk. If not, the crop can be commercialized. Only if the agency finds that a crop plausibly poses such a risk does the deregulatory process apply. In the past, critics filed a lawsuit against USDA alleg- ing the deregulatory pro- cess was insufficient, which complicated the commer- cialization of such crops as alfalfa and sugar beets that were genetically engineered to withstand glyphosate herbicides. The plaintiffs claim that USDA enacted the regula- tions contrary to the Endan- gered Species Act by failing to “consult” with other agen- cies about potential harms from releasing genetically engineered crops without an environmental analysis. The complaint alleges that USDA violated the National Environmental Policy Act by ignoring the regulation’s cumulative impacts and by refusing to study reasonable alternatives to the new rules. unique if you can do it any- where else.” California’s Napa Val- ley was the first AVA to be recognized by the EU in 2007. Two years earlier, six global wine regions, includ- ing Oregon and California, signed on to what is now known as the Wine Origins Alliance, fighting to pro- tect regional names in the marketplace. Jennifer Hall, the alli- ance’s director, said grant- ing PGI status for the Willa- mette Valley is a major step forward for the entire wine industry to ensure consum- ers are not being misled. “This decision is an acknowledgment that loca- tion truly does matter when it comes to wine,” Hall said. Morgen McLaughlin, executive director of the Willamette Valley Wineries Association, said PGI recog- nition is a big achievement for a relatively young wine region. “The Willamette Valley’s first vines were planted in 1965, and since then sev- eral generations of growers and vintners have put their imprint on the world wine map,” McLaughlin said. Peterson-Nedry, who led the PGI effort, said it took 13 years of start-and-stop work to reach the finish line. The main document submitted to the EU contains 30 pages of detailed descriptions about the region’s geography, wine varieties, growing practices and industry accolades. “This is a hard-won, important designation that provides protection for the name ‘Willamette Valley’ in wines as they are marketed around the world,” Peter- son-Nedry said. “And it puts us in a marketplace where we’re all watching each oth- er’s back.” Feds protest law firm’s bill in Easterday bankruptcy By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Justice Department has objected to a $3.8 mil- lion legal bill submitted by a Los Angeles law firm overseeing the liquidation of the bankrupt Easterday ranches and farms in the Columbia Basin. The bill, with others to follow, covers work that lawyers with Pachulski, Stang, Ziehl and Jones did between Feb. 1 and May 31. Hourly rates averaged $1,053, with one attorney charging $1,695 an hour, according to court records. The rates far exceed what local lawyers involved in the case are seeking and are substan- tially higher than fees attorneys recently col- lected in a more compli- cated bankruptcy case in Eastern Washington, according to Assistant U.S. Trustee Gary Dyer, the government watchdog in the bankruptcy proceeding. The L.A. firm’s bill, submitted this month to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Whitman Holt in Yakima, fails to justify the fees, Dyer stated in an objection filed Friday. The firm vaguely described its services, had too many nonparticipating lawyers attend court hear- ings and over-billed by miscalculating hours, Dyer claimed. He asked Holt to reduce the fees and perhaps withhold them until the L.A. firm provides fuller descriptions of its work. Efforts to reach the firm’s lead attorney on the case, Richard Pachulski, were unsuccessful. The firm specializes in bankruptcies and was hired by new Easterday directors shortly after Cody East- erday resigned as head of Easterday Ranches and Easterday Farms. Cody Easterday, 50, later pleaded guilty to defrauding Tyson Fresh Meats and another com- pany of $244 million by billing them for buying and feeding cattle that didn’t exist. He agreed to pay restitution and is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 5 on one count of wire fraud. He faces up to 20 years in Cody prison. Easterday Sepa- rate from restitution in the criminal case, the Easterday com- panies — owned by Cody Easterday, his wife and mother — owe millions of dollars to creditors. Farmland Reserve Inc., owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, will buy several Easterday farms for $209 million, but the money has to be allocated. The Pachulski firm was one of three law firms involved in the bank- ruptcy proceedings that submitted a first round of legal bills this month. In a court filing, Pachulski defended its rates as reasonable, say- ing its lawyers overcame objections and organized an auction that maxi- mized the value of the Easterday properties for creditors. Dyer unfavorably compared hourly rates sought by Pachulski to other attorneys’ fees. Senior members of a law firm that restructured Astria Health, a Yakima County health-care pro- vider, billed $800 an hour, Dyer noted. Liqui- dating farm properties will be simpler, according to Dyer. Two Seattle firms also are working on the Easter- day bankruptcy. The lead attorney for Davis Wright Tremaine charged $800 an hour, while the lead attor- ney for Bush Kornfeld billed $450 an hour. By contrast, Isaac Pachulski presented an hourly rate of $1,695. He worked on the case for 1.6 hours, adding $2,712 to the bill. His brother, Richard Pachulski, reported work- ing 224.7 hours at $1,592 per hour for a total of $358,396. Hourly rates charged by firm attorneys were at least $695 an hour. Late frost, drought reduce Pacific Northwest canola yields By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press A late frost followed by drought have taken a toll on the Pacific Northwest canola crop, cutting into yields. May frosts reduced win- ter canola yields more than anticipated, said Karen Sow- ers, executive director of the Pacific Northwest Canola Association. “That’s something you can’t really see until when you get to harvest,” she said. Some Palouse farmers are seeing a third to half of last year’s yield, Sowers said. Spring canola farmers in Walla Walla County, Wash., normally would get a yield of 2,000 pounds per acre, but are expecting 800 pounds this year. On the Palouse, growers can get up to 3,000 pounds per acre, but are expecting 1,000 to 1,200 pounds per acre this year. Cold or hot weather can cause canola flowers not to produce a pod or produce a misshapen pod. Sowers has heard of instances of sprouted seeds in the pod. “That’s a drought response, the hormones are all out of balance in the plant and they’re triggering some- thing that’s making the seed sprout,” she said. “That’s con- Karen Sowers/PNW Canola Association Canola grows on the Palouse in Washington state. sidered damaged seed, and it can also be a challenge for storage.” Sowers recommends growers scout their fields and speak with the facility they plan to sell their crop to. They should also contact a crop insurance agent, she added. New canola growers need four years to establish their yield for insurance purposes, or else they must rely on county average yields, Sow- ers said. “It’s important to get your own yield on your own farm, rather than the county aver- age,” she said. Prices are above 30 cents a pound. Sowers estimates the cost of production is about 18 cents per pound. Planted acres are up 20%, Sowers estimated. Last year Washington farmers raised nearly 80,000 acres, Idaho farmers nearly 47,000 acres and Oregon farmers roughly 3,800 acres. Washington canola is 63% spring-planted; Idaho is 74% spring-planted; and Oregon is 58% fall-planted. She attributes the growth to high demand for oil, meal and renewable diesel, with three new facilities in Canada and several plants being retro- fitted for production. She also cited poor weather conditions in Can- ada and North Dakota, where most canola is grown. “Harvested and produc- tion will definitely be a differ- ent story,” she said. The drought will also affect planted winter canola acreage in the fall. “You have to plant into moisture,” Sowers said. “It’s just not there in most situa- tions. We need rain.”