Friday, September 17, 2021 CapitalPress.com 3 Oregon ranchers fear bikes and cows don’t mix By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press PRINEVILLE, Ore. — Grazing cattle and speeding mountain bikes don’t seem compatible to rancher Shel- ley Santucci. For that reason, Santucci grew alarmed earlier this year when the U.S. Forest Service fl oated the idea of constructing a 52-mile sys- tem of mountain bike trails largely on her grazing allot- ment near Prineville, Ore. “It’s not just a bike trail, it’s a bike highway,” San- tucci said of the proposal. The possibility of a mountain bike crashing into a cow at high speed doesn’t seem safe to Santucci, who also worries who’d be held liable for such an accident. Aside from the immedi- ate threat of collisions, she’s concerned that the presence of bikers will drive her cattle from the uplands into ripar- ian areas. Santucci’s grazing allot- ment, which her family’s held for 33 years, is regu- larly monitored for distur- bances to waterways. Viola- tions could mean losing the grazing permit. “It’s tough enough to keep them in the uplands as it is, because cattle by their nature are roamers,” she said. Other neighbors of the proposed Lemon Gulch Trail System Project also worry about the height- ened risk of fi re from more visitors. Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Rancher Shelley Santucci discusses her concerns about the proposed Lemon Gulch Trail System in the Ochoco National Forest, which critics fear will confl ict with grazing cattle. Ann Dill, left, discusses the proposed Lemon Gulch Trail System in the Ochoco National Forest with Shelley San- tucci, center, and Don Vogel. They fear mountain bikers will confl ict with grazing cattle. The project would entail building three trailheads for up to 40 cars apiece, which critics fear would invite around 100 vehicles a day and greatly worsen traf- fi c on the gravel road lead- ing to the site in the Ochoco National Forest. These problems, as well as a potential culture clash between rural residents and urban mountain bik- ers, aren’t worth any eco- nomic boost from tourism — which would likely be nominal, said rancher Don Vogel. “They might stop by a brewery in town and eat a hamburger and drink a beer, but it’s not going to bring much money to this commu- nity,” Vogel said. Though the proposal was offi cially announced under a “scoping notice” Due to the concerns raised by critics, the Forest Service is hitting “pause” on the proposal, but it doesn’t plan to choose another site for the trail system, said Kassidy Kern, public aff airs offi cer for the agency. “We defi nitely pumped the brakes,” she said. The trail system would predominantly be located within the 50,000-acre Mill Creek Allotment. About 6% of that area — 3,000 acres — would be aff ected by the proposal, the agency said. Santucci’s permit allows her to release 340 head of cattle onto the allotment. The Forest Service is looking into reports of col- lisions between bikes and cattle on other trails but so far hasn’t found any, said Beth Peer, environmen- tal coordinator with the in March, the concept has been fermenting for about three years. Critics feel it’s now largely a fait accompli whose planning they were excluded from. “The Forest Service has a legal obligation to contact adjacent landowners and aff ected permittees. None of them were contacted,” said Ann Dill, a neighbor- ing rancher. Critics of the proposal are trying to muster politi- cal opposition to the project at the county, state and fed- eral levels, with the goal of having the trail system built somewhere else. “We’re not necessar- ily opposed to it. We’re opposed to it at the loca- tion proposed,” Vogel said. “We’ve asked them to go back to the beginning, to start the process over.” agency. The agency will be “managing public expec- tations” so that bikers are aware of cattle and manure on the trails. The agency will also rely on a “phased approach” so that there’s “time for monitoring and assessing” the project’s impacts, Peer said. “Mountain biking is a valid use of public land, as is grazing,” Kern said. “How do we balance those benefi ts? That’s what we’re working on right now.” As for complaints about the planning process, the Forest Service said it’s only taken an active role this year after receiving a submis- sion from the Ochoco Trails Strategy Group. That “collaborative” group is aimed at resolv- ing confl icts between rec- reational uses of public lands, such as those between mountain bikes and horses, Kern said. “They’re try- ing to deconfl ict themselves before they come to the For- est Service.” The agency began noti- fying landowners and started the scoping pro- cess once it had taken up the strategy group’s con- cept, she said. “When they brought us the project pro- posal, that’s when our wheels began to kick into motion.” It’s already common for mountain bikes to share trails with cattle, so it should be possible to resolve the concerns of the project’s critics, said Travis Holman, who represented the Central Oregon Trail Alliance in developing the strategy group’s proposal. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard of a mountain bike colliding with a cow,” Hol- man said. Trails that meander through “technical fea- tures” require bikers to slow down, while faster trails are designed to have a clear view so that bikers have no problem stopping for obstructions, he said. It’s possible that rerout- ing certain trails or reduc- ing the overall trail mile- age will alleviate critics’ concerns, Holman said. “We want to get with the ranchers and look at the specifi cs on the map,” he said. “We hope to work with them.” Biden administration accuses meat Judge: Washington Farm Bureau processors of pandemic profi teering can sue to stop capital gains tax The Biden administra- tion has released a report addressing concentration in the meat-processing industry, saying processors are generating record prof- its during the pandemic at the expense of consumers, farmers and ranchers. “The dynamic of a hyper-consolidated pinch point in the supply chain raises real questions about pandemic profi teering,” the report states. The top four beef, pork and poultry processors con- trol 82% of the beef mar- ket, 66% of the pork mar- ket and 54% of the poultry market, according to the report by the National Eco- nomic Council. “That consolida- tion gives these middle- men the power to squeeze both consumers and farm- ers and ranchers. There’s a long history of these giant meat processors making more and more while fam- ilies pay more at the gro- cery store and farmers and ranchers earn less for their products,” the report states. Large price increases for beef, pork and poultry are driving the recent price increases at grocery stores, constituting half of those increases. Since December, prices have increased 14% on beef, 12.1% on pork and 6.6% on poultry, the report states. Gross profi ts for some of the leading beef, pork and poultry processors are at their highest levels in his- tory, and net income for many of the companies is on pace to reach historic highs, the report states. “These record profi ts, income and margins under- score the role that meat processors’ dominant mar- ket position and power play in increasing meat prices,” the report states. “While factors like con- sumer demand and input costs are aff ecting the mar- ket, it is the lack of com- petition that enables meat processors to hike prices for meat while increasing their own profi tability,” the report states. At a White House press briefi ng on Sept. 8, Brian Deese, director of the National Economic Coun- cil, said the administration — with USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack in the lead — is focused on driving more price transparency and encouraging more compe- tition in the meat process- ing sector. Vilsack said the agency has two responsibilities — making sure farmers get a fair return and consumers get fair prices. USDA is strengthen- ing the Packers and Live- stock Act to identify and hold processors account- able for unfair and discrim- inatory practices, making sure there is adequate price discovery in livestock mar- kets, providing funding to expand processing capac- ity and maintain small and very small facilities, and making new rules on label- ing meat “Product of the USA.” The North American Meat Institute, which rep- resents processors, issued a statement saying meat and poultry processors have been and continue to be aff ected by the global pandemic and infl ationary trends. “American consumers of most goods and services are seeing higher costs, largely due to a persistent and widespread labor shortage. The meat and poultry industry is no dif- ferent,” said Mark Dopp, the Meat Institute’s COO. “Issuing infl ammatory statements that ignore the fundamentals of how sup- ply and demand aff ects markets accomplishes noth- ing,” he said. “Meat and poultry mar- kets are competitive and dynamic with no one sector of the industry consistently dominating the market at the expense of another,” he said. By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Washington Farm Bureau can challenge the state’s capital gains tax before it takes eff ect, rather than wait for farmers to be taxed, Douglas County Superior Court Judge Brian Huber has ruled. Huber rejected claims by the state attorney gen- eral that potential tax- payers can’t question the tax’s legality. Some farm- ers anticipate owing the tax and say it has already lowered the values of cap- ital assets, even though the tax won’t take eff ect until 2022. The attorney general argued that farmers were only speculating that they would owe the tax. Huber said farmers weren’t being “unduly speculative.” “The court fi nds no basis to suggest that these allegations are unreason- able,” Huber wrote in a rul- ing Sept. 10. The ruling did not touch on whether the capital gains tax violates the state constitution. It does, how- ever, allow the suit brought by the Farm Bureau and others to proceed. The tax’s legality likely will be decided by the state Supreme Court, but the issue will have its fullest hearing in Douglas County, an agricultural area in Cen- tral Washington. Huber denied a motion by the attorney general to move the case to Thurston County, where the capi- tal and most of the state bureaucracy are. The Farm Bureau and a conservative think tank, the Freedom Foundation, chose Douglas County to fi le separate law- suits. Huber said the state gave no valid reason for moving the case. “We were delighted. A win on all counts is a good win,” Farm Bureau CEO John Stuhlmiller said Sept. 13. Democrats this year passed a 7% tax on income over $250,000 from sell- ing certain capital assets. The tax won’t apply to farmland, but will apply to shares in business partnerships. Lawsuits claim the cap- ital gains tax violates the state constitution by taxing income unequally. Defend- ers say it’s not a tax on income, but rather a tax on transactions. Gov. Jay Inslee’s admin- istration sought to forestall legal challenges to the tax, claiming there was no dis- pute for courts to review until the tax was collected. Taxpayers could then apply for refunds, the state argued. Huber said it was well settled that courts have the power to rule on the consti- tutionality of tax laws. The Farm Bureau and Freedom Foundation’s lawsuits were merged into one case. WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! BAGS: • Seed Bags • Fertilizer Bags • Feed Bags • Potato Bags • Printed Bags • Plain Bags • Bulk Bags • Totes • Woven Polypropylene • Bopp • Polyethylene • Pocket Bags • Roll Stock & More! 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