8 CapitalPress.com Friday, September 10, 2021 AgForestry interim executive director: ‘So much at stake’ By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Vicky Scharlau has been named the interim execu- tive director of the Washing- ton AgForestry leadership program as the organization develops its new strategic plan. Through her nonprofi t association management company 501 Consultants, based in Cashmere, Wash., Scharlau is also executive director of the Columbia Basin Development League, Washington Winegrowers Association and Washington Wine Industry Foundation. She will continue in those roles with her team. Scharlau replaces Matt Kloes, who will leave at the end of Sep- tember after two years as executive director. T h e AgForestry program Vicky focuses on Scharlau developing leaders in agriculture, for- estry and natural resources. The AgForestry leader- ship development program lasts 18 months. It includes 11 multi-day seminars. Par- ticipants also spend one week in Washington, D.C., and up to two weeks in a for- eign country. The cost to participants is $6,000. The program spends approximately $20,000 per participant. The diff erence is subsidized by partners and in-kind donations. Class 44 will begin in October 2022. Scharlau is a graduate of Ag Forestry’s Class 10. The need for the program has never been greater, she said. “We have so much poten- tial and so much at stake,” she said. “If we don’t train those who are in the indus- try and people who we want to stay in the industry for tomorrow, we’re never going to survive here.” Scharlau grew up on a dairy farm in Wisconsin. Her bachelor’s degree is in agri- cultural economics and agri- cultural journalism from the University of Wisconsin and her master’s degree is in pub- lic administration from the University of Washington. She worked for the Wash- ington Department of Agri- culture, then for the Wash- ington Apple Commission and Washington Horticul- tural Association — now merged into the Washington State Tree Fruit Association — before realizing there was a need for the management company, which she founded in 1994. “Smaller organizations don’t have enough bud- get or the infrastructure to hire fi ve diff erent staff peo- ple,” she said. “What we provide is that ability to be everything to a small-ish organization.” The management com- pany provides a spectrum of services to nonprofi t organi- zations, and no organization has to pay full price for any- thing, she said. “They’re not buying all of my time as executive direc- tor, they’re only buying a portion of it,” Scharlau said. The company is “very, very intentional” about work- ing with organizations about what they want to accomplish and how much money they have to invest in their goals, Scharlau said. About 50% of the compa- ny’s time is spent consulting, including strategic planning, grant writing and manage- ment, training for boards of directors and coaching for executive directors, Schar- lau said. “Really any kind of a spot need or spot issue that a non- profi t might have, we can usually help them,” she said. How long AgForestry’s strategic planning takes will determine the time Scharlau is in the interim position, she said. The biggest challenge is attracting the industry’s future leaders today. “Right now the board has to determine where the orga- nization needs to grow in terms of meeting the needs not only of our core sup- porters of Ag Forestry, those people who have been with us from the beginning,” she said. “But we also have to recognize that the millennials and younger are the future of our natural resource industry. We have to understand how to help them build a future as a leader.” Vietnam poised to reduce or eliminate tariff s on U.S. wheat, corn and pork By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Vietnam is poised to reduce or eliminate tariff s on wheat, corn and pork imports from the U.S. As part of bilateral meet- ings with Vietnamese lead- ers, Vice President Kamala Harris said Vietnam is con- sidering a U.S. proposal to eliminate or reduce Most Favored Nation import duties on wheat, corn and pork products. This would allow farmers and pork producers greater access to Vietnam’s markets, according to a fact sheet from Harris’ offi ce. An announcement on whether the tariff s will be further reduced or eliminated is expected in September, said Steve Mercer, vice pres- ident of communications for U.S. Wheat Associates, the overseas marketing arm for the industry. “It defi nitely is an import- ant market and has the poten- tial to grow,” Mercer told the Capital Press. “The mill- ing industry and wheat foods industry is one of the fast- est-growing in the world.” Vice President Kamala Harris Vietnam particularly wants soft white wheat, which is primarily grown in the Pacifi c Northwest, Mer- cer said. Vietnam is the last remaining Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pa- cifi c Partnership (CPTPP) country applying a tariff against U.S. wheat imports but not against Canadian and Australian wheat, making the announcement “particularly noteworthy” for U.S. wheat growers, Mercer said. The U.S. was a member of the original TPP trade agree- ment with 11 other countries. President Donald Trump withdrew from TPP in Janu- ary 2017, emphasizing bilat- eral agreements instead. The newly announced reduction follows one in July 2020, when Vietnam reduced its tariff on imported U.S. wheat — excluding durum — from 5% to 3% in a revi- sion of its Most Favored Nation tariff rates, according to U.S. Wheat. U.S. Wheat worked with USDA’s Foreign Agricul- tural Service to reach out to Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance. Citing rising prices and a tighter wheat supply, the industry told the minis- try that reducing or eliminat- ing the tariff would benefi t Vietnamese residents, Mer- cer said. Vietnam imports an aver- age of more than 3 mil- lion metric tons of wheat per year, primarily from Australia. Despite the tariff s, Viet- nam’s imports of U.S. soft white, hard red winter and hard red spring wheat exceeded 500,000 metric tons in the 2020/21 market- ing year, according to U.S. Wheat. Vietnam went from importing a high of 93,500 metric tons of U.S. soft white wheat in 2017-2018 to 157,000 metric tons last year, Mercer said. “That’s been a pretty steady increase,” he said. “We are very excited to see this tariff being lifted between Vietnam and the U.S., and we commend the Administration, FAS and Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance for their diligence to aid both the U.S. and Viet- nam,” Chandler Goule, CEO of the National Association of Wheat Growers, said in a press release. “We are eager to see all of the doors this will open for both countries.” Enhanced Vietnam market access is one of the National Pork Producer Council’s top trade priorities, said Jim Monroe, assistant vice presi- dent of communications. Vietnam’s tariff s on U.S. pork were temporar- ily reduced for six months in 2020 and farmers enjoyed a “signifi cant increase” in exports there, Monroe said. Dairy West Karianne Fallow of Dairy West, left, Idaho Gov. Brad Lit- tle and Erin Fitzgerald of U.S. Farmers and Ranchers in Action. Little proclaims ‘Decade of Ag’ in Idaho By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Gov. Brad Little has declared 2020-30 the Decade of Agriculture in Idaho. He is the fi rst governor to issue such a proclamation. U.S. Farmers and Ranch- S219937-1 ers in Action, a national coa- lition of agricultural busi- nesses and organizations, spearheaded the eff ort after forming more than two years ago. The group calls on agriculture and food sys- tem leaders to endorse a shared vision of economic and climate-related sustain- ability. More than 60 Idaho ag businesses and organi- zations supported Little’s proclamation. Dairy West CEO Kari- anne Fallow said in a release that the economic, social and environmental demands of a growing global popu- lation require resilient, cre- ative solutions. Idaho agri- culture, as the backbone of the state’s economy and a national leader, plays an integral role in an econom- ically and ecologically sus- tainable future, she said. Many climate-related ini- tiatives that focus on emis- sions have deadlines of 2030 or 2050, “and in order to advance those, action really needs to start now,” Dairy West Senior Vice President Kristi Spence said in an inter- view. The U.S. dairy industry aims to be at net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. She said the industry has made progress, and is evalu- ating its emissions as well as current and future technol- ogy that could help it reach the goal. “And dairy in our region has a history of not only being a leader, but also in collab- orating with the greater ag sector,” Spence said. Little, a Republican rancher from Emmett, said in the proclamation that Idaho as an agricultural leader is engaged in sus- tainable practices and in investing in much-needed research. The state is well positioned to “further invest in the potential of its agri- cultural community and commit to being part of an economically viable and sustainable future.” Necessary growth of agri- culture could be impeded by episodic weather events, environmental and climate stressors, loss of farmland from urbanization, regula- tory complexity and declin- ing revenue, his procla- mation said. The sector currently accounts for 18% of economic output, 26% of exports, and 1 in 8 jobs in Idaho.