Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, October 15, 2021 Volume 94, Number 42 CapitalPress.com $2.00 TIDE GATE TIME BOMB unknown A tide gate at a dairy near Nehalem, Ore., was installed in 2017 at a cost of $460,000, improving drainage and complying with fi sh passage rules. Many tide gates are aging along Oregon’s coast but their replacements must comply with fi sh passage rules. SEE PAGE 9 FOR A GRAPHIC SHOWING HOW TIDE GATES WORK Aging structures, regulatory mandates threaten coastal farmland By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press M any of the tide gates that protect O r e g o n ’s coastal farm- lands from being inundated with saltwater have become relics of a bygone era. As these old tide gates deteriorate, the farmers who rely on them worry that their time may be running out as well. “As soon as a tide gate goes out, you can’t graze, you can’t raise hay. You’ve lost your land, basically. It’s not productive anymore,” said Craig Herman, who raises cattle and hay between Coquille and Bandon in southwestern Oregon. The aging tide gates block fi sh from swimming between the ocean and river estuaries, disrupting a crucial part of their life cycle. Though some tide gates still function despite being as much as a century old, they’re considered outdated under modern regulatory standards. New tide gates needed “They’re at the end of their lives, a lot of them, so the need to replace them is something we can anticipate will be happening,” said Irma Lagomarsino, senior pol- icy adviser with the National Marine Fisheries Service. Innovative new tide gates don’t obstruct fi sh but they’re much more expensive, poten- tially costing hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars, depending on their size and complexity. “That’s a lot of money for a small producer,” Herman said. See Gates, Page 9 unknown Steve Neahring, a dairy farmer near Nehalem, Ore., with cows in a pasture that’s protected by a tide gate. In 2017, Neahring installed a new tide gate with the help of a grant to improve drainage and meet fi sh passage requirements. Environmentalists attack farming, grazing, pesticides in Klamath refuges By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Environmental groups want to con- vince a federal appeals court that farm- ers and ranchers are overly favored in the management of Klamath Basin national wildlife refuges. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is considering arguments by several environmental nonprofi ts that claim the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice hasn’t suffi ciently scrutinized the impacts of livestock grazing, crop cul- tivation and pesticide spraying on the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Ref- uge Complex. Last year, a federal judge dismissed lawsuits fi led by the Audubon Society of Portland, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Western Watersheds Project, ruling that the agency had com- plied with several laws that govern the 200,000-acre refuge complex. Those three environmental groups have now challenged that decision before the 9th Circuit, which heard oral arguments in the case on Oct. 5. The Audubon Society focused on water management in the refuge sys- tem, claiming the agency has unlaw- fully prioritized agriculture over the welfare of bird species. Wetlands have gone dry and thou- sands of birds have died of disease out- breaks recently, said Maura Fahey, the nonprofi t’s attorney. “Meanwhile, com- mercial agricultural use has persisted.” The agency’s plan for the ref- uge complex is “arbitrary” because it doesn’t address the water shortages that are the most pressing problem for wild- life habitat, she said. “Here, where the rest of the refuge is almost entirely failing to support water- fowl because there’s no water for wet- lands, it’s not justifi able for the agency to continue 20,000 acres of commercial agriculture,” Fahey said. The Center for Biological Diversity opposed the agency’s authorization of pesticide usage on farmed land in the refuge complex, arguing that alterna- tive methods haven’t been adequately considered. See Klamath, Page 9 Holly Dillemuth/For the Capital Press Standing grain is left for migrating birds in the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex. Environmental groups have appealed a judge’s decision to dismiss their lawsuits against farm practices in the refuge complex. Biden administration stays course on wolf lawsuits By DON JENKINS Capital Press IDFG The Biden Justice Department continues to argue for the dismiss- al of lawsuits that seek to restore federal protection to wolves. suits brought by environmental groups. The suits claim the U.S. Fish TIME TO PLAN for next year. increase human-caused mortality.” The wildlife service, respond- ing to petitions by environmental groups, announced the 12-month review on Sept. 15. The administra- tion agreed that expanded hunting in Idaho and Montana could aff ect the species’ status in the northern Rockies. In court, the administration argues that based on information available in 2020, delisting wolves outside the northern Rockies was the right decision. See Wolves, Page 9 Bank of Eastern Oregon and Washington Specialize in Operating Lines of Credit and Term loans on Equipment and Land. Contact your local loan officer. We’re just down the road! OREGON BOARDMAN BURNS CONDON HERMISTON IONE ENTERPRISE HEPPNER IRRIGON JOHN DAY LA GRANDE MADRAS WASHINGTON IDAHO MORO COLFAX CALDWELL ONTARIO DAYTON PENDLETON PASCO POMEROY Member FDIC S228620-1 The Biden administration con- tinues to defend the Trump adminis- tration’s decision to remove wolves from the endangered species list, even as it evaluates whether hunt- ing in Idaho and Montana are grounds for restoring and expand- ing protection. In the fi rst court fi ling since the administration said it will review the status of wolves, the Biden Jus- tice Department on Oct. 8 asked a judge in California to dismiss law- and Wildlife Service prematurely removed protection from wolves outside the northern Rocky Moun- tains in 2020, during the Trump administration. Wolf advocates accuse the agency of “trying to get out of the wolf-protection business,” accord- ing to one court fi ling. The claim, according to the Jus- tice Department, is “not grounded in fact.” As evidence, the department noted that the agency will evaluate “recent actions by Idaho and Mon- tana that threaten to signifi cantly