6 CapitalPress.com Editorials are written by or approved by members of the Capital Press Editorial Board. Friday, January 7, 2022 All other commentary pieces are the opinions of the authors but not necessarily this newspaper. Opinion Editor & Publisher Managing Editor Joe Beach Carl Sampson opinions@capitalpress.com | CapitalPress.com/opinion Our View Overtime mandates ignore economic realities hen the Oregon Legisla- ture meets next month, the question of ending the overtime exemption for farmworkers will again be on the agenda. In a perfect world, it would be diffi- cult to argue that the hours worked in the field shouldn’t be treated the same as those worked in the factory. But the imperfect truth is that differences exist and mandating farmworker overtime after 40 hours will inevitably lead to fewer farmworkers. The Fair Labor Standards Act, passed by Congress in 1938, estab- lished a federal minimum wage and provided for overtime pay for work over 40 hours. The act also provided 19 job classifications, including farm- workers, that are exempt from the overtime rule. W Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press File Workers load Christmas trees onto a truck. The Oregon Legislature is taking up whether farm workers should be paid overtime. Critics now argue that the exemp- tion was the product of racism and pan- dering to the needs of special interests — big, “corporate” farming concerns. Farmers of all sizes note that farm work is distinct from factory produc- tion. The nature of most farm work makes it difficult to schedule in eight- hour days and 40-hour work weeks. There’s no doubt that the world is a different place than it was in 1938. The state has raised the minimum wage and has mandated a host of protections for farmworkers. To many, an end to the overtime exemption seems like the next step. But one aspect of agricultural eco- nomics has not changed since 1938. Most farmers are still price takers, not price makers. Outside of the few who sell directly to consumers, they cannot simply pass along higher labor costs the way retailers and manufacturers, though limited by the impacts of com- petition, can. This is a frustrating reality that farm- ers struggle to make those outside of agriculture understand. Many who perform farm labor understand the economics better than Biden trade strategy must unlock new access for U.S. dairy Our View G Port of Los Angeles Container ships a quarter-mile long clog some ports and are too big for other ports to handle. Shipping industry needs to rethink its strategy t’s no secret that trans-Pacific shippers face steep obstacles these days. Problems range from a limited number of available containers to oversized vessels that have created chokepoints along the West Coast. This is a statement of the obvious, but if port operators, shippers and ship owners had been on the ball in the past we wouldn’t be mired in today’s traffic jam. This isn’t so much about the impacts of the COVID pandemic as it is a lack of planning. A handful of major ports are plugged with huge ships, many of which are three times larger than the ports were originally designed to handle. In Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif., which handle 40% of all containers entering the U.S., as many as 100 ships were anchored offshore at any given time last fall. Some waited nearly two months to be unloaded. Before the pandemic, that backlog averaged 17 ships — still a major problem. A key problem is the size of the ships. There’s a big difference between an older ship that carried 7,000 containers and one that carries more than 21,000 containers and is a quarter-mile long. The channels are not deep enough — the Port of Port- land, for example, can’t handle the largest ships — and other ports require massive dredging proj- ects that cost hundreds of millions of dollars. That alone has put a huge burden on port facil- ities. Add the fact that truck chassis are in short supply and warehouses are full, and you have a monumental snarl. It has also made obtaining and loading contain- ers for the westbound trip to Asian markets dif- ficult. Too often containers return to China and other destinations empty. This leaves many agri- cultural shippers scrambling to find containers I and book them on a ship. The problem is akin to that facing the airline industry a few years ago. Airlines had bought massive planes that could carry between 500 and 800 passengers at a time. They flew them only to major hub airports, where passengers had to catch other flights to their final destinations. What they found was they were swamping the hub airports and forcing passengers to take two or three flights to reach their destinations. Once airline managers figured out that flying more but smaller planes directly to destinations was cheaper and more efficient, many switched away from relying solely on jumbo jets for long- haul flights. Airports were less crowded and passengers reached their destinations quicker. In container shipping, the 10 largest compa- nies handle 80% of the traffic. They need to fig- ure out that they are swamping ports with their massive ships. When they supplement their fleets with smaller, more efficient ships that can call at smaller ports, bottlenecks at the large ports will ease. Ports such as Portland, Coos Bay and others along the West Coast will be able to accommo- date a significant number of ships. But that will take time. What’s needed is for port managers, shippers, vessel owners, truckers and longshore workers to sit down and discuss how to get past the current bottleneck at West Coast ports. Then they need to discuss what they can do to prevent ports from getting swamped in the future. Once they do that, they will quickly discover they are all on the same boat. And that boat will be smaller. READERS’ VIEW We need more dams, not fewer Common sense isn’t so common these days. I read all of the opinions on dam removal and the great cost it would impose on the taxpayer. Now consider the talk about cli- mate change, mega-droughts and dooms day all of the time. Seems to me we should be building more dams and water storage to capture and save all the the legislators and advocates who are pressing the case for overtime. They know that farmers facing tight margins will cut the workforce or move to less labor-intensive field crops that can be tended and harvested by machine. They also know that innovators are busy designing machines that can do intricate and delicate work such as picking fruit and pruning trees. Higher labor costs hasten that effort. We think everyone performing farm work should be paid as much as busi- ness conditions allow. But we know that mandating overtime won’t change the basic economics. Someone will eventually profit from an end to the overtime exemption for agriculture, but in the long run it won’t be farmworkers. Our bet is on the engi- neers and machinery manufacturers. water we can during good snow- pack years. I think the real endangered spe- cies in this country is a man trying to make a living. Randy Burns Vale, Ore. REEN BAY, Wis. — In early Octo- ber, we finally got a glimpse into the Biden administration’s approach to trade when USTR Ambassador Katherine Tai outlined a “New Approach to the U.S.-China Trade Relationship.” Tai made clear the intention to maintain sev- eral policies from the pre- vious administration, including keeping hold of tariffs and zeroing in on enforcement. The stated difference in the new approach is to simultane- ously build out more col- laborative efforts with our allies. This all sounded fine. But when pressed on whether the U.S. will move toward engaging in comprehensive trade negotiations, whether through a China Phase 2 agreement or with other partners, disappointingly there was no firm com- mitment. This has been reiterated time and again through the administra- tion’s actions with trading partners over the past sev- eral months. Most recently, the administration has been engaging with partners throughout the Indo-Pacific region, structuring what has been touted as an “eco- nomic framework.” While that might appear to be an approach to re-engage with our former Trans-Pacific Partnership partners, it has been made clear that the end goal is not a trade deal. This is disheartening, to say the least, for the U.S. dairy industry and farm- ers like me who are hop- ing for sustainable farm businesses that survive and thrive long-term for our families. Engagement in the global market has long been recognized as key for the health and vitality of our industry and rural communities. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, each dollar of exports stim- ulates $1.14 in economic activity. In 2020, Wiscon- sin alone exported more than $490 million worth of dairy products, contribut- ing another $560 million in economic activity across the U.S. But this isn’t just about dollars and cents. Good, comprehensive trade deals make markets fairer and more competitive. For U.S. dairy, this means ensur- ing that our partners don’t put in place restrictive bar- riers that reduce compe- tition and aren’t based on science. GUEST VIEW Brody Stapel Ambassador Tai has also said that part of the administration’s new approach to trade would not be in the traditional sense, that is, not neces- sarily focused on market access. In the dairy industry, we understand fully the importance of taking new approaches; our product innovation has been a suc- cess story, particularly in the global marketplace. But at the same time, the U.S. should not overlook what is currently working and consider how we can maintain momentum. Greater market access for dairy exports means more to the industry now than ever. Exports are essential for balance of the U.S. milk supply and demand, growth of the industry and, at the end of the day, dairy farmers’ milk checks. The expanding global demand for dairy products, notably across Asia, makes an exports push even more opportune. While we understand the administration’s focus remains on the domes- tic industry as we emerge from the pandemic — stat- ing that the key to our global competitiveness begins at home — we must also recognize that new trade agreements can sup- port those efforts. When done right, such agree- ments not only help open new markets for U.S. products, but they also create a business-friendly environment that attracts greater investment, fosters innovation and stimulates economic growth. So as the Biden admin- istration continues to engage in economic dia- logue with our part- ners, it is the hope of our dairy farmers and proces- sors — for the sake of the industry and rural Amer- ica — that the administra- tion embraces the value of expanding market access and finally begins real, good-faith negotiations. Brody Stapel is a dairy farmer in Wisconsin and president of Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative, which represents farm- ers throughout the Upper Midwest on federal dairy policy and is one of the top dairy co-ops in the country based on milk volume.