Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, August 27, 2021 Volume 94, Number 35 CapitalPress.com $2.00 Geo A row rge Plaven/Cap it o auctio f equipment al Press n yard in the Auctio ns in at J. Stout Wash. Washo previe Bidders ca ugal, n w three d items in p still erson a y s bef tual au ction b ore the vir- egins. LIGHTS, CAMERA, AUCTION More equipment auctions going online By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press W ASHOUGAL, Wash. — Like many businesses impacted by COVID- 19, last year marked a crossroads for J. Stout Kasey Steendam Auctions. The company, which specializes in sell- ing heavy equipment for construction and agriculture, could no longer have in-per- son crowds at its auctions due to pandemic restrictions. Quarterly auctions hosted by JSA in Spokane and Washougal, Wash., would routinely draw up to 1,000 bidders from across the Northwest. That’s when JSA and owner Jake Stout began a digital transformation, pivoting exclusively to online sales for public health and safety. “It was nerve-wracking for everyone,” said Kasey Steendam, the company’s mar- keting manager. “We weren’t sure how it was going to be done.” JSA held its fi rst online-only auction on April 29, 2020, using live-streaming web- cams to broadcast over the internet. Though it wasn’t perfect — the video was too dark, and the sound quality was less than ideal — Steendam said they were pleasantly sur- prised to see no decline in the number of reg- istered bidders or item values. By November, with a return to pre-pan- demic life still uncertain, JSA made the George Plaven/Capital Press See Online, Page 9 The studio at J. Stout Auctions was designed to look like a television newsroom. Emergency worker protections put Oregon farms to the test SALEM — Farm- worker advocates are so far pleased with emergency rules adopted by Oregon OSHA to protect workers from extreme heat and wild- fi re smoke, though they say more education is needed to make sure everyone is aware of the new mandates. On July 8, the state’s workplace health and safety agency announced a rule requiring employers to pro- vide suffi cient shade and drinking water when the heat index exceeds 80 degrees Fahrenheit, and regular rest periods when the heat index exceeds 90 degrees. The rule came on the heels of a “heat dome” that enveloped the Pacifi c Northwest in late June, with temperatures above 100 degrees. One farm- worker, 38-year-old Sebas- tian Francisco Perez, died of an apparent heat stroke in 104-degree weather June 26 at Ernst Nursery and Farms in St. Paul, Ore. Oregon OSHA wasn’t done there, adopting two more rules on Aug. 2 estab- lishing safeguards for work- ers in heavy smoke and high heat in employer-provided housing. The smoke rule requires farms and businesses to provide outdoor workers with N95 masks when the Air Quality Index, or AQI, exceeds 201. AQI is a mea- sure of air particle pollu- tion using a scale from 0 to 500 — anything below 50 represents good air qual- Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press File The new emergency rules adopted by Oregon OSHA are intended to protect workers. ity, and anything above 300 represents hazardous air quality. As for worker housing, farms must provide cool- ing areas for workers if they cannot maintain an indoor temperature of 78 degrees or less. All rules are temporary and will remain in place for 180 days. An advisory com- mittee is now working with Oregon OSHA to adopt per- manent heat and smoke protections. Reyna Lopez, executive director of the farmwork- ers union Pineros y Camp- esinos Unidos del Noroeste, or PCUN, said the rules are having a positive impact. During the week of Aug. 9, which brought another multi-day, triple-digit heat wave, she said they did not hear of any more heat-re- lated fatalities or injuries. “The tone was just a lot more positive than it was that week of the heat dome,” Lopez said. PCUN recently con- ducted surveys with 50 farmworkers in the Willa- mette Valley to assess how well they felt employers were complying with the rules. The vast majority, Lopez said, indicated they were being provided with enough water and shade during the extreme heat. “Overall, people feel like there are steps being taken to follow the rules,” she said. Since July 9, Oregon OSHA has fi elded 971 workplace complaints from across the state, according to the agency’s records. Of those, 136 were marked as “heat-related.” A Capital Press review found that, of the 136 heat-related complaints, 18 complaints were made against 12 diff erent farms and food processing com- panies. Complaints ranged from not providing access to water or breaks, to workers not being trained to recog- nize the signs of heat-related illnesses. Each of those complaints See Heat, Page 9 Biden EPA to ban pesticide chlorpyrifos By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Environmental Pro- tection Agency informed a federal court Aug. 18 that it will ban the pesticide chlorpyrifos, a crop-protec- tion chemical widely used in agriculture for more than 50 years. The EPA said it could not determine that aggregate exposure to chlorpyrifos meets the safety standards of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. “Accord- ingly, EPA is revoking all tolerances for chlorpyri- fos,” the EPA stated in a rule expected to be pub- lished Aug. 19 in the Fed- eral Register. The ban will become eff ective in six months. The decision grants a petition fi led in 2007 by two anti-pesticide groups that Founded in 1945 by Farmers and Ranchers. Who saw a need for Rural Lending. MEMBER FDIC sought to ban chlorpyrifos. The Obama EPA tentatively proposed a ban, but resisted court pressure to fi nalize it, leaving the decision the Trump administration. The Trump EPA denied the petition, but said it would continue to study whether chlorpyrifos meets safety standards. The 9th U.S. Circuit of Appeals has consistently sided with ban advocates and pushed the Obama and Trump administrations to rule on the petition. Ban advocates said chlorpyrifos causes brain damage in infants and unborn children. The EPA, under both Obama and Trump, questioned the evi- dence for that claim. Household use of chlorpyrifos, unless in child-proof packaging, was banned two decades ago. Farm groups and the Obama USDA defended chlorpyri- fos’ use in commercial agri- culture as safe and eff ective. American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall on Wednesday crit- icized the Biden EPA for departing from how pes- ticides are reviewed and registered. “This administration has See Ban, Page 9 Jed Myers and Nial Bradshaw are Experienced Lenders with a focus on Agricultural and Commercial Loans and Operating Lines of Credit. CALDWELL, ID ONTARIO, OR 422 S. 9TH AVE. 435 SW 24TH ST. 208-402-4887 541-889-4464 JED MYERS Ontario, OR NIAL BRADSHAW Ontario, OR S228607-1 By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press