Friday, August 27, 2021 CapitalPress.com 9 Heat: Survey found most workers not aware of the new rules Continued from Page 1 are “in progress,” according to Oregon OSHA. The PCUN survey found that most workers, however, were not aware of the new rules and had not been trained by their employer. “That part seemed to be lacking a lot,” Lopez said. Another gap, Lopez said, is whether workers are willing to take safety breaks. While hourly workers said they had no problem with rest periods, piece rate workers paid based on how much they harvest were less willing. “Every minute they weren’t out there, it meant money lost,” she said. Jenny Dresler, a lob- byist for the Oregon Farm Bureau, said the biggest challenge for farms boils down to timing. “Particularly family farms and ranches, what I’m hearing is just a sense of being overwhelmed and overloaded,” she said. “We are asking the world of these small employers, and giv- ing them very little time to accomplish what is man- dated in each of these rules.” For example, Dresler said farms in Southern Oregon were struggling to find N95 masks on short notice as the AQI rose above 200 because of nearby wildfires. “I was just getting endless calls saying they couldn’t find these masks,” she said. “People just panicked.” Lesley Tamura, who grows 42 acres of pears at her family’s orchard near Hood River, Ore., said the rules are also costing money, such as buying window air conditioners for workers liv- ing in on-farm housing. “Because the rules are constantly changing ... it’s definitely difficult to keep up, and it’s definitely a financial burden,” Tamura said. “At the same time, we have to figure out what we can realistically do to protect (workers).” Ban: ‘Today, we celebrate this huge victory alongside the men and women who harvest our food’ Continued from Page 1 repeatedly made commit- ments to abide by science, yet the EPA decision on chlorpyrifos strays from that commitment and takes away an important tool to manage pests and insects,” Duvall said in a statement. “The integrity of the reg- istration review process and commitment to using sound science must be pri- oritized in a decision of such far-reaching consequences,” he said. With the EPA reluctant to declare all uses of chlorpyr- ifos unsafe, many environ- mental and labor groups continued to press for a ban through the 9th Circuit. The court in April issued another order to EPA prodding the agency to ban chlorpyrifos. “Today, we celebrate this huge victory alongside the men and women who harvest our food, who have waited too long for a ban on this pes- ticide,” United Farm Work- ers President Teresa Romero said in a statement. Online: ‘Once COVID hit, we really had to change our way of doing auctions’ Continued from Page 1 decision to go fully virtual, investing in a state-of-the-art production studio at its Wash- ougal facility. “Once COVID hit, we really had to change our way of doing auctions,” Steen- dam said. “That’s where we’ve had to evolve to what we have here now.” Online trend JSA is part of a burgeon- ing trend of auction compa- nies that have either added online options or switched entirely to digital formats for their agricultural equip- ment sales. Industry experts say the pandemic has sped up that technological shift as large, in-person gatherings were banned. Despite the upheaval, Steendam said JSA expects to double its revenue by reaching more buyers, with registered bidders in all 50 U.S. states and 30 countries. “We want to go from regional to national to worldwide,” Steendam said. Stepping into the JSA studio itself is like going through a time warp. The exterior is a replica Old West town, complete with rustic bath house, jail, saloon and horse-drawn carriages. But inside the faded wooden “bank” building is a 21st century studio with six cameras, bright lights and anchor desk illuminated by four wall-mounted screens. Steendam said the goal is to bring high-end produc- tion values not previously seen in equipment auctions. He compared their now- monthly broadcasts to those run by the collector car company, Barrett-Jackson, which televises auctions all over the U.S. “We believe we’re the only ones doing this right now in the heavy equipment world,” Steendam said, referring to the unique stu- dio setup. Even before the pan- demic, JSA had a virtual component in its live events. Bidders could use one of two online platforms — Prox- ibid and Equipment Facts — to participate alongside those who were at the auc- tion yard. JSA has since added a third platform, BidSpotter, to the mix and committed to the live virtual format. The first auction in the new stu- dio was April 21, broadcast over the three online plat- forms as well as YouTube and Facebook Live. The auction host and auc- tioneer sit at the main anchor desk, calling the action in real time while four “ring men” representing Proxi- bid, Equipment Facts, Bid- Spotter and absentee bidders field bids coming in from anywhere in the world. Behind the scenes, a director in the control room runs the broadcast and airs a pre-recorded video of each piece of equipment as it reaches the auction block. “We want to show every- thing working on screen,” Steendam said. Buyers can also still visit the yards in Spokane and Washougal up to three days before auction day and check the equipment in person. “We still get people come preview day,” he said, “but the fact is that they don’t have to wake up at 6 a.m., Getty Images Online sales may be gaining in popularity, but Hannes Combest, CEO of the National Auctioneers Association, says she believes there will al- ways be a place for the classic, live auction. Live auctions J. Stout Auctions A recent virtual auction hosted by J. Stout Auctions. Bidders use one of three platforms, including Proxibid, Bid- Spotter and Equipment Facts, to purchase heavy equipment and agricultural machinery. come down to the auction yard and wait for an hour to five hours. Now they can (bid) at home, or in their truck, or in their office. There’s no disruption to their day.” son, the company’s sales director for the U.S. West, which includes an auction yard in Chehalis, Wash. Before the pan- Scott demic nixed large Musser gatherings, Johnson estimated 70% of Higher prices sales were already online. Greater convenience The switch to online-only means more people can par- happened over one week- ticipate, which in turn helps end in March 2020, and the fetch higher prices for items number of registered bid- at auction, according to data. ders has since increased “It’s purely mathemati- 44% for auctions at Cheha- cal,” said Scott Musser, of lis, he said. Musser Bros. Auctions in “We went from having Pasco, Wash., which has an auction with in-person been conducting auctions bidders to next week we online for years. “More were fully online,” Johnson checkbooks equals more said. “Bidder registrations money. Anything we can do were going up. ... It made to engage our audience and us realize this was defi- make it more convenient for nitely successful. Not only our bidders to participate is a could we logistically do it, but we were seeing things good thing.” One of the largest equip- gain steam.” ment auction houses in the On Aug. 18, Ritchie country, Ritchie Bros. Auc- Bros. released its latest tioneers, has seen the same market trends report, which trend since it went fully vir- shows higher prices for all tual last year. types of equipment. Ritchie Bros. began For U.S. customers, offering online options to its prices for large earthmoving live auctions as far back as equipment were up 8% over 2002. Since then, online par- 2020 for the three-month ticipation has grown expo- period ending July 31. nentially, said Matt John- Prices for medium earth- moving equipment and skid steer loaders were up 27%, up 31% for truck tractors that pull trailers and up 26% for vocational trucks such as dump trucks. “I would expect that we would see this trend con- tinue,” Johnson said. ‘Total paradigm shift’ In 2009-10, while pres- ident of the National Auc- tioneers Association, Musser predicted that more than half of all per- sonal property auctions would be online by 2015. It was a bold take, he said, and one that earned him some blowback at the time. “I think I was dead on,” Musser said in a recent interview. The forecast was based on what he was seeing at his family-owned busi- ness, which has auc- tion yards in Washing- ton, Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. Musser Bros. started simulcasting live auc- tions on the internet in the mid-2000s. By 2013, the company had started conducting all of its sales online. “We had already seen a dramatic shift in the dig- ital space,” he said. “It’s been a total paradigm shift in our industry and our business.” About six years ago, Musser had an epiph- any. He remembers talking with a farmer in the Columbia Basin who described how he was able to bid on equipment while sitting on his John Deere sprayer in the middle of a corn field. “That’s why we do it,” he said. “These guys, they’re busy, they’re run- ning crews. They don’t have time to come stand around all day at an auction.” Musser estimates the move to online-only led to a tripling in the num- ber of registered bidders for Musser Bros. Today, he said 74% of their customers bid directly on their smart- phones, which he described as “mind-bending.” The pandemic has accelerated the adoption of many companies going to an online model by sheer force, Musser added. “When COVID hit, we really didn’t miss a beat,” he said. “We were already there.” Online sales may be gaining in popularity, but Hannes Combest, CEO of the National Auctioneers Associ- ation, said she believes there will always be a place for the classic, live auction. “I know there are more and more going to online auc- tions everyday,” Combest said. “There are certain times and places, though, where the live auction will never disap- pear. It’s great fun, and it’s a great business transaction.” The association, based in Overland Park, Kan., rep- resents 2,900 auctioneers nationwide spanning a vari- ety of commodities, from equipment and real estate to intellectual property. Accord- ing to the NAA, over a quar- ter-trillion dollars in goods and services are sold at auc- tion every year in the U.S. Combest said auction- eers have done a fabulous job adapting technology to weather the pandemic. However, certain types of in-person events such as galas, benefits and non- profit fundraisers still have their place. “People enjoy it so much. It’s a great way to do busi- ness. It’s very transparent,” she said. “You can still gen- erate excitement through online auctions, but it’s not necessarily the same excite- ment of a live auction.” Musser agreed that live auctions will continue to thrive for specialty events. But for commodity-type pur- chases, like farm equipment and implements, he sees no going back — at least not anytime soon. “That’s all going to be online,” Musser said. Johnson, with Ritchie Bros., said the company may consider resuming in-per- son auctions at their yards, depending on customer demand and public health guidelines going forward. For now, Johnson said the online format is going smoothly and garnering pos- itive results. “We continually evalu- ate customer feedback and try to make improvements based on that customer experience,” he said.