Friday, December 31, 2021 CapitalPress.com 5 Judge discards most wage claims against Washington dairy By DON JENKINS Capital Press YAKIMA, Wash. — A federal judge has dismissed most allegations that a Cen- tral Washington dairy under- paid its workers, ruling that claims against the dairy were “largely baseless.” Mensonides Dairy in Mabton committed “techni- cal violations” and owed 22 workers a total of $24,646 for missed meal breaks, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Whitman Holt ruled Dec. 20. The dairy didn’t discour- age or cut short meal breaks, but was careless by not mak- ing sure employees recorded meals on their timecards, Holt wrote. Holt tossed out the other claims, including one that sought retroactive pay for walking or riding a company vehicle one-quarter of a mile from the parking lot to the time clock. “Simply because the dairy permitted its employ- ees to use company vehi- cles to make the trip does not transform the travel time into ‘hours worked,’” Holt wrote. California law fi rm Mar- tinez Aguilasocho & Lynch claimed workers were owed a total of $518,488 for missed meal and rest breaks, and unpaid work time. Holt said the fi rm’s calcu- lations were “unclear, diffi cult to follow, aggregated with nonviable theories, and in many instances not possible to reconcile with the court’s own work.” Eff orts to obtain com- ment from attorney Charlotte Mikat-Stevens, who argued the case for the workers, were unsuccessful. The dairy fi led to reorga- nize under Chapter 11 bank- ruptcy in 2018. The law fi rm fi led a claim on behalf of workers employed by the dairy between 2015 and 2018. Holt heard testimony from 21 workers over nine days, spread out in October 2020 and May 2021. Holt described some of the testimony as evasive and con- tradictory. He said one work- er’s testimony was “bizarre, confusing and downright nonsensical.” Nevertheless, the judge went through the time cards, identifi ed missing meal breaks and did the math himself. The number of missed meals was relatively small, Holt said, and it was com- mon for workers to take two- hour meal breaks for what- ever reason. Because workers self-re- ported meals, they probably took meal breaks while on the clock, he wrote. Eff orts to obtain comment from the dairy or its lawyer were unsuccessful. Holt also rejected claims that workers weren’t given rest breaks. The dairy allowed workers to decide when they needed a break, Holt observed. The awards to individual workers were based on the number of missed breaks and ranged from $3,004 to $36.75. Holt awarded a matching $24,646 to attorneys representing the workers. Potato Inslee to push for mandatory riparian buff ers market outlook mixed for 2022 By DON JENKINS Capital Press to their survival,” said Inslee, at an event in Skagit County hosted by the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community. The proposal sounds like ones previously opposed by farm groups, he said. “It’s a big, dumb buff er,” he said. The buff ers are part of a $187 million salmon plan that Inslee said he will present to lawmakers. The Legislature convenes for a 60-day session Jan. 10. Inslee rolled out the plan joined by tribal lead- ers. He called his salmon bill the Lorraine Loomis Act. Loomis was chairwoman of the Northwest Indian Fisher- ies Commission and died in August. WIN THE BEGINNING GIVE YOUR GARBANZO BEAN CROP ITS BEST START A good harvest begins with sound crop establishment. LALRISE ® START SC increases Phosphorus availability in the rhizosphere by 28% and improves root biomass by up to 20% for improved nutrient access. 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Microbial By Nature www.lallemandplantcare.com S273725-1 Potato producers will have to weigh strong demand and prices against high input costs and a still-uncertain economy as they decide their 2022 plantings. “There’s a lot of optimism in the mar- kets right now,” Ben Ben Eborn Eborn, agri- cultural economist and owner of North American Potato Market News, said in a University of Idaho Ag Outlook presentation Dec. 16. “Whether or not that can stay is dependent upon the overall economy.” Risks include U.S. and international government responses to COVID-19 and its variants, he said. Eborn, who is based in eastern Idaho, said the U.S. crop fell short of expec- tations overall this year, dragged in part by pro- longed above-average heat in many Idaho, Washington and Oregon growing areas. Global supply is tight. European production dropped. And although Canada produced its big- gest potato crop ever, “moving them around where they’re needed is extremely diffi cult,” he said. Also in Canada, the recent Prince Edward Island quarantine for potato wart has added to the larger market’s supply and logis- tics challenges, Eborn said. But demand for fries in the U.S. and internationally is “sky high” as foodser- vice demand increases, so processors will want more potatoes planted in 2022, he said. As tight supplies boosted prices, input costs have increased, Eborn said. “And those input costs just add a tremendous amount of risk and make decision making very diffi - cult,” he said. Even if processors want more potatoes grown in 2022, “how much are we going to increase (acres) if costs of production have skyrocketed like this?” Eborn said. He estimates most grow- ers’ operating costs have increased at least 20%, “and maybe as much as 30%” not including likely higher fi xed costs such as equipment depreciation, overhead and land rent. Availability of products and labor also remains a challenge. “How do you plan when prices jump like that in a year?” Eborn said. “What are they going to be by the time you need to purchase your fertilizer, and can you lock your prices in? It’s not an easy thing to do unless you have a lot of leverage.” Eborn said some other crops’ higher prices in 2021 could also hold back potato acreage in 2022. Don Jenkins/Capital Press The Chehalis River fl ows past farmland in southwest Washington. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee has proposed mandatory buff ers along waterways statewide. soil By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press Washington Gov. Jay Ins- lee will ask lawmakers to impose mandatory setbacks along waterways to protect salmon, a proposal that could eliminate farmland and stifl e rural development. Inslee said Dec. 14 his plan was the result of two years of talks between his offi ce and tribes. The “riparian protec- tion zones” will keep water cool for fi sh, he said. “There is nothing more Washingtonian than celebrat- ing salmon and committing “There is nothing that more unites us,” he said. Washington State Dairy Federation policy director Jay Gordon said the governor’s proposal will renew a battle over buff ers. “Good, grief, I thought we got past that,” he said. The governor’s offi ce has not released the text of the bill. According to a policy brief, the setbacks would be statewide and would be based on the height of trees along banks. Gordon said farm groups weren’t privy to the talks between Inslee and tribes.