NURSERY SPECIAL SECTION | INSIDE Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER CapitalPress.com Friday, August 6, 2021 Volume 94, Number 32 $2.00 BORROWED WATER In times of crisis, some Oregon farmers transfer and trade water By SIERRA DAWN Mc CLAIN Capital Press T ERREBONNE, Ore. — Matt Lisignoli was run- ning out of water. Nearby Wickiup Res- ervoir had hit 75-year record lows for June and July, so North Unit Irrigation District cut patrons’ water allocations fi rst in half, then to 32%, of the usual and announced deliveries would end in mid-August. “I’m in trouble,” Lisignoli said. His Central Oregon farm, Smith Rock Ranch, grows seed, wheat, hay, squash and has an annual pump- kin patch and corn maze. It’s a pop- ular destination because of its back- drop: towers of rust-colored basalt rising like cathedral spires out of the high desert overlooking the Crooked River. Without water, Lisignoli would have to cancel his pumpkin patch for the fi rst time in 20 years. Desperate, he scrambled for a solution. First, Lisignoli applied through the Oregon Water Resources Depart- ment to transfer water from his other property in the neighboring Central Oregon Irrigation District. But that was too complicated. Then he found a North Unit neighbor who had postponed a planned cover crop and now had a water allotment for 18 acres to spare — water Lisignoli off ered to pay for. “This fell out of the sky and was just perfect,” he said. The farmers participated in a dis- trict-level transaction called a tem- porary water transfer, sometimes called a lease or trade, a tool to move water to areas of critical need. Unlike a permanent transfer or sale of water rights, a temporary transfer is, as its name implies, tem- porary. It typically lasts for one year, allowing the original owner to keep the water right. According to the Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute at the See Water, Page 11 Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Jim McKay and Kathy Bridges talk about the temporary water transfer, duck hunting and farming history in the Willamette Valley. Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Jim McKay and Josh Kraemer walk beside pipes they are installing along with a drip irrigation system to irrigate McKay’s hazelnut orchard. E. Oregon counties raise objections to River Democracy Act By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press ENTERPRISE, Ore. — At least two counties in rural Eastern Ore- gon are raising objections to the River Democracy Act, an ambi- tious federal bill that would add nearly 4,700 miles of wild and sce- nic rivers across the state. The Wallowa County Board of Commissioners opposed the leg- islation in a resolution passed July 21, citing impacts to ranching, for- est management, public access and recreation. Commissioners in neighbor- ing Union County also sent a letter July 6 to the bill’s architects, Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, out- lining similar concerns. Representatives for Wyden and Merkley will meet Aug. 10 with the Eastern Oregon Counties Asso- ciation to brief commissioners on the bill. The association’s members include Baker, Crook, Deschutes, Grant, Harney, Jeff erson, Klamath, Malheur, Morrow, Sherman, Uma- tilla, Union and Wallowa counties. Created in 1968, the National Wild and Scenic River System calls for preserving certain rivers with “outstanding natural, cultural and recreational values.” Oregon currently has 2,173 miles of rivers designated as wild and scenic, or 2% of all rivers statewide. The River Democracy Act would roughly triple that number. It was developed based on more than 15,000 nominations submitted Courtesy of Nick Smith AFRC Bear Gulch in Southern Oregon was nominated as a Wild and Scenic River under the Riv- er Democracy Act introduced by Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley. Eastern Oregon counties oppose the bill. See River, Page 11 This drought like no other, NOAA scientist says By DON JENKINS Capital Press The West has been so dry and so hot for so long that its current drought has no modern precedent, according to a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration meteorologist. For the fi rst time in 122 years of record-keeping, drought cov- ers almost the entire Western U.S. as measured by the Palmer Drought Severity Index, said Richard Heim, a drought historian and an author of the U.S. Drought Monitor. “It’s a very simple ‘yes,’ in terms of this drought being unprecedented,” Heim said. The Palmer index estimates rela- tive soil moisture based on tempera- ture and precipitation records. Unlike the Standard Precipitation Index, which measures water supply, the Palmer index also takes into account heat-driven demand for water. In June, about 97% of the West — Arizona, California, Idaho, Mon- tana, Nevada, New Mexico, Ore- gon, Utah and Washington — was in water-defi cit territory, according to the Palmer index. Utah was never drier, while Ore- gon and California were at their sec- ond driest on record. Idaho and Ari- zona were at their third driest ever, and Nevada was at its fourth driest. Washington was at its 10th dri- est, while Montana and New Mexico, where recent monsoons have brought relief, were at their 17th driest. Oregon and Washington state climatologists gave their qualifi ed endorsement for calling this drought “unprecedented.” “I’d be slightly cautious about calling it ‘unprecedented,’ but that’s probably a fair description,” Oregon State Climatologist Larry O’Neill said. “It’s borderline unprecedented, or at least among the worst.” The cumulative eff ects of the West’s current drought, illustrated by low major reservoirs, gives credence to calling it unprecedented, Washing- ton State Climatologist Nick Bond said. “I don’t have any real quarrel with using that term,” he said. The Drought Monitor, a partner- ship between NOAA and the USDA, has been mapping drought in the U.S. See Drought, Page 11 Our Caldwell, Idaho Team Founded in 1945 Becky Temple, Alan Bullard, Logan Schleicher, and Gaye Doanato by Farmers and Ranchers. Experienced and ready to serve Western Idaho, with a focus on Agricultural and Commercial loans. 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