8 CapitalPress.com Friday, September 17, 2021 Wheat crop insurance harvest prices announced Counties’ predator control tax running out of time By CRAIG REED For the Capital Press ROSEBURG, Ore. — Live- stock owners in Douglas and Coos counties are hopeful the predator control district tax bill will be rein- troduced in the Oregon Legislature next year. The tax pro- gram has been a voluntary method for landowners to support predator control for the past fi ve years in the two southwestern Mark Oregon counties Dowdy by paying up to $1 per acre. The pro- gram was also being considered by a couple other Oregon counties. But the program was not re-ap- proved by the state Legislature in June. Its last day will be Dec. 31, 2021. Wildlife Services also receives funds from the counties, the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Oregon Department of Agri- culture and the USDA. But fund- ing from some of those sources has been decreasing. Ron Hjort, an Oakland, Ore., area sheep and cattle rancher, is optimistic if the predator control district tax bill is reintroduced it would pass both the House and Senate if there are no added con- ditions. The bill was held up most recently in the Senate Rules Com- mittee as it was tied to a bill ban- ning coyote hunting contests in Eastern Oregon and to a bill that would give the state Department of Fish and Wildlife the ability to Courtesy of Wildlife Services Mark Dowdy checks a spot in a fence line where coyotes were enter- ing a livestock pasture despite branches blocking the opening. After 20 years of working as a Wildlife Services specialist, Dowdy retired at the end of July because of the program’s funding issues. regulate predator management. Eventually, none of the three bills moved forward or were revived. “I don’t see why anybody would be against a tax that is vol- untary and is not out of the gen- eral fund, but from those involved themselves,” Hjort said. Jim Carr, chairman of the Coos County Predator Damage Control District Advisory Committee, said the program was working in Coos County. “We’re not using public funds,” he said prior to the bill going to the legislature earlier this year. “It’s a landowner self-assessment.” The Coos County assessment total has been about $85,000 a year. Most of that money comes from large timber holdings because bear damage to trees in the Coast Range is a major problem. In Douglas County, the assess- ment total has been about $35,000 annually. Most of that money has come from livestock owners with small acreages while timber own- ers haven’t contributed as much because they haven’t experienced as many bear issues. Mark Dowdy, a 20-year Wild- life Services specialist in Doug- las County and one of two spe- cialists in the county, retired at the end of July because of the funding uncertainty. There is funding for two specialists in Douglas County through June of next year. Beyond that month, funding sources are questionable or unknown at this time. Dowdy believes livestock and their protection play important roles in providing safety for the public. “A whole lot of people don’t understand the importance of agri- culture in this county,” Dowdy explained. “Without predator con- trol, sheep operations are likely to end entirely or they won’t be able to run their sheep out as far. Then predators will work on calves and goats and those people will feel the pain. With deer numbers down and less predator control, those pred- ators will be right here in town looking for dogs and cats. “Ranches and farms with their livestock are providing a buff er for towns,” he added. “It’s always been a struggle to communicate that.” With predator damage being a key reason, the number of sheep in Douglas County has decreased to about 24,000 head from 125,000 back in the 1960s and 1970s. Cat- tle, which are a little better at hold- ing off predators, have increased to about 61,000 head in the county. As a Wildlife Services special- ist, Dowdy has helped to protect the local livestock industry by tak- ing an estimated 2,000 coyotes and a couple hundred cougars during the past 20 years. By fi guring half of those coyotes as females and the average litter size being six, he said the coyote population would explode with no Wildlife Ser- vices program, or a diminished one. With cougar litters averag- ing three, he said their populations would slowly grow with no preda- tor control. “Even though it’s been my job to control coyotes, I abso- lutely respect them,” Dowdy said. “They’re the smartest animal out there. For me, the most chal- lenging wildlife was always the coyote.” Agency will not adjust early August prices higher By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Food insecurity fell since 2020, but still higher than pre-pandemic By SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press Thirty-eight million Americans lived in food-in- secure households last year, a 9% increase over the 2019 level of 35 million, accord- ing to the USDA. About 7.5% of U.S. households with children — 3 million families — didn’t always have ade- quate, nutritious food for their kids last year. That’s up 6.5% compared to 2019, the agency found. “Food insecurity” is measured as not having enough food over a sev- en-day period. Prior to Wednesday’s report, COVID-19’s impact on food insecurity had only been measured anecdotally Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Susan Blachnik, manager at the Creswell, Ore., Food Pantry, picks up a box to put in a car truck in 2020. and in smaller samples. This is the fi rst complete federal data available for- mally documenting the full extent of hunger and food hardship. “While hunger was already a massive, sys- temic problem in all 50 states before COVID- 19 hit the U.S., domes- tic hunger surged during the pandemic,” said Joel Berg, CEO of Hunger Free America, a nonprofi t that tracks and addresses hun- ger in the U.S. In the midst of the cri- sis, USDA’s domestic food aid spending also reached a historic high of $122.1 bil- lion in 2020 — a spend- ing rate of $232,305 per minute. Aid programs, funded by relief packages, included the USDA Farm- ers to Families Food Box Program. The good news, how- ever, is that food insecu- rity has trended down- ward since the peak of the pandemic. Food insecurity nation- wide fell nearly 30% between spring 2020 and spring 2021, according to data from the Urban Insti- tute, a think tank. The institute, based on its survey, attributed the drop in food insecurity to an improved employment rate, a temporary 15% increase in the maximum benefi t for the Supplemen- tal Nutrition Assistance Program, the introduction of new food donation pro- grams, larger unemploy- ment benefi ts and govern- ment relief payouts. But food insecurity lev- els are still higher than pre-pandemic levels, stud- ies show. A recent sur- vey by Feeding Amer- ica, a nonprofi t, found that while 2021 hunger levels are lower than 2020’s lev- els, more than half of food banks reported increas- ing or steady demand this summer. USDA and groups such as Farmers Ending Hunger continue to work to combat food insecurity. FLAT CARS- THE BETTER BRIDGE • Lower Cost • Custom Lengths up to 90' • Certified Engineering Services Available • Steel Construction ASSOCIATION HEALTH PLANS - in - Contractor License # 71943 P.O Box 365 • 101 Industrial Way, Lebanon, OR 97355 OREGON & SW WASHINGTON Office: 541-451-1275 Email: info@rfc-nw.com www.rfc-nw.com S235780-1 SPECIAL RATES FOR MEMBERS • Farmers • Ranchers • Food Producers • Nurseries • Landscapers • Beverage Companies 20+ Medical & Dental Plans TO LEARN MORE & GET A FREE QUOTE: Available through Leonard Adams Insurance, a fourth generation family-owned company, meeting insurance needs since 1933. S259514-1 S258354-1 503-922-4868 | kristic@lacoinsurance.com The USDA Risk Man- agement Agency has announced the crop insur- ance harvest prices for wheat. The agency will use a price of $9.86 per bushel for winter wheat and $9.21 per bushel for spring wheat. Earlier in August, some Washington farmers expressed concern over the prices USDA used to deter- mine crop insurance. Farmers and grain mer- chandisers said the Port- land soft white wheat export bid price range is too wide, and questioned whether the lower end of the range accurately refl ected market value. Michelle Hennings, executive director of the Washington Association of Wheat Growers, said she’s hearing from some Walla Walla County farmers who still feel that pricing issues during the Aug. 2-11 period may have kept the fi nal harvest price 25 cents lower than it should be. WAWG is working with RMA to investigate the pricing calculation during that period and prevent something similar from happening in the future, Hennings said. The organi- zation will also work with the agency to address price discovery in future farm bills. The agency published Frequently Asked Ques- tions in response to grower concerns. The winter wheat har- vest price is calculated from daily prices during August, according to the agency. Only bids from partici- pating elevators that export soft white wheat to other countries are captured and reported by USDA’s Agri- cultural Marketing Ser- vice. Bids from other ele- vators are not included, and the harvest prices issued by RMA are not designed to refl ect local prices at any particular elevator. Factors that impact prices at a local elevator can include its location, which can determine how far an elevator may need to ship grain to end-users or export elevators; whether that’s by train, rail or barge; and unique growing condi- tions that aff ect production and quality. “It is important to use a price for crop insur- ance that is designed to be refl ective of the market as a whole, and not any single local elevator,” the agency states. In accordance with the crop policy, RMA will use the values reported by the Agricultural Marketing Service and will not adjust higher the prices reported by AMS in early August, according to the agency. No further action is planned, said Ben Thiel, director for the agency offi ce in Spokane, which serves Idaho, Ore- gon, Washington and Alaska. Crop insurance is vital for farmers, Hennings said. “It’s important that it’s funded at the national level because of years like this,” Hennings said. Farmers this year face a double whammy of drought that has reduced yields and raised the protein levels in some varieties, prompting elevators to pay less. For many farmers, the result is less wheat to sell at lower prices. WAWG is looking to include high-protein wheat in a national disas- ter ad-hoc program, Hen- nings said.