Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, October 1, 2021 Volume 94, Number 40 CapitalPress.com $2.00 Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Kim Garland Campbell, USDA Agricultural Research Service club wheat breeder. AN EXCLUSIVE CLUB Unique wheat variety popular among Asian customers By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press P ULLMAN, Wash. — With a keen eye, USDA club wheat breeder Kim Gar- land Campbell sur- veyed her newest varieties on a recent Septem- ber morning. She paused several times, inspecting this line or that, the plants glowing gold in the sun inside the greenhouse on the Washington State Univer- sity campus. Campbell talked excitedly about working with other breeders to develop variet- ies and pondered out loud why the fi rst farmers 10,000 years ago might have raised the odd-looking variety of wheat, whose club-like shape is unlike any other. She was brimming with enthusiasm about her subject. “I could stand and talk about club wheat all day,” she said. Club wheat is only grown Courtesy Art Bettge/ADB Wheat Co in the Pacifi c Northwest. The diff erence between club Farmers raise it when it com- mands a higher price com- wheat, on the left, and soft pared to soft white wheat, white wheat, is easily seen. the region’s dominant wheat. But customers overseas, par- ticularly in Japan, can’t get enough of it. Demand is strong and steady, but sup- plies are at a 12-year low after this summer’s drought. See Wheat, Page 9 Regulatory changes coming for Oregon hemp growers Revisions bring state hemp program into compliance with USDA By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press SALEM — New rules are com- ing for Oregon hemp producers as the state brings its Hemp Program into compliance with the USDA. The state Department of Agri- culture fi led draft revisions for the program on Aug. 30. A public com- ment period is now underway, with a deadline of Oct. 22. Once adopted, the agency will Sunny submit the plan Summers to the USDA for fi nal approval. The changes would take eff ect for the 2022 growing season, said Sunny Summers, ODA cannabis policy coordinator. “It’s really important to follow the requirements,” Summers said. “There are a lot of people looking at this industry, and you can’t aff ord to be naive to the requirements any longer.” Perhaps the biggest change, Summers said, is ODA’s new stat- utory authority to conduct back- ground checks on growers applying for a hemp license. Under the USDA hemp rule, any- one convicted of a felony cannot participate in growing or processing hemp for 10 years. But ODA previ- ously was unable to conduct back- ground checks into applicants’ crim- inal records. House Bill 3000 — a broad can- nabis bill signed by Gov. Kate Brown in July to crack down on illegal mar- ijuana operations — changed that, granting ODA the ability to conduct background checks in partnership with the Oregon State Police. “The background check is proba- bly one of the biggest, if not the big- gest, change that growers are going to need to anticipate,” Summers said. HB 3000 also gives ODA stron- ger authority to deny or revoke hemp licenses, Summers said. For example, if applicants have already planted hemp before their license applications are approved, the agency can require the crop be destroyed. “Just because you submitted an application to ODA does not mean you are legal to grow,” Summers said. “We’re trying to get that mes- sage out, that you have to have fully received your license.” See Hemp, Page 9 Upper Klamath irrigators challenge water transfer to wildlife refuge By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press to the Lower Klamath Wildlife Refuge for fi ve years. The California Waterfowl non- profi t had bought the water from a ranch in the Upper Klamath Founded in 1945 by Farmers and Ranchers. Who saw a need for Rural Lending. said the agency will review the petition but “generally does not comment on matters of pending litigation.” The petitioners argue that OWRD failed to account for return fl ows from irrigation, since much of the diverted water would normally fl ow back into the water- ways and contribute to the stream fl ows. By sending the water out of the See Water, Page 9 Hector Lopez and Michael Broeckel are Experienced Lenders with a focus on Agricultural and Commercial Loans and Operating Lines of Credit. PASCO, WA ALSO LOCATED IN PASCO: Daniel Rehm and Russell Seewald 5205 N. ROAD 68 / 509-545-6360 MEMBER FDIC / BEW IS A BRANCH OF BANK OF E. OREGON HECTOR LOPEZ Pasco, WA S228617-1 A lawsuit claims Oregon water regulators have authorized a water transfer to a wildlife ref- uge without properly analyzing the impacts on Upper Klamath irrigators. The state’s Water Resources Department in July approved a transfer of 3,750 acre-feet of water from the Wood River and Crooked Creek in the Upper Klamath Basin Basin in Oregon to convey to the national refuge in California to benefi t bird habitat under threat from the drought. However, the Fort Klamath Critical Habitat Landowners non- profi t and several irrigators in the Upper Klamath Basin have fi led a petition for judicial review chal- lenging the decision, which has the eff ect of automatically block- ing it under Oregon water law. Racquel Rancier, senior water policy coordinator with OWRD, MICHAEL BROECKEL Pasco, WA