Friday, March 4, 2022 CapitalPress.com 3 Oregon House votes to end agricultural overtime exemption By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — After an emotional three-hour debate, the Oregon House voted 37-23 on March 1 to end the state’s agricultural exemp- tion from higher overtime wages. The measure is awaiting a vote in the Senate. The overtime exemption would be phased out over fi ve years under House Bill 4002, and tax cred- its would cover some of the higher wages paid by farmers, But crit- ics claimed those provisions won’t prevent the inevitable loss of fam- ily farms. “They could be the nail in the coffi n for farmers who can’t absorb any more increased costs,” said Rep. David Brock-Smith, R-Port Orford. Many growers operate on razor- thin margins and would likely go out of business while waiting for the promised money from tax cred- its, since they can’t aff ord higher overtime payments, he said. Rep. Raquel Moore-Green, R-Salem, said House Bill 4002 also isn’t likely to help farmwork- ers, since their employers will likely seek to reduce weekly hours, switch crops or simply exit the industry. “They could reduce their opera- tion size or cease farming altogether and sell out,” she said. Supporters of HB 4002 cast the legislation as a matter of constitu- tional fairness and noted that if an ongoing lawsuit against the agri- cultural overtime exemption is suc- cessful, farmers won’t get assis- tance to ease the economic blow. “I believe it’s time to live up to the promise of equal protection of the law,” said Rep. Paul Holvey, D-Eugene. “We owe basic protec- tions to farmworkers and we owe it to farmers not to make a major change to their bottom line without a safety net.” Before approving HB 4002, the House voted 32-27 against remand- ing the bill back to a joint com- mittee to consider an amendment favored by Republican lawmakers. “There is still time to fi nd a more workable solution. An Oregon solu- tion,” said Rep. Shelly Boshart-Da- vis, R-Albany. The House chamber in the Oregon State Capitol. Under that amendment, farm- workers would receive overtime relief payments from the state gov- ernment after they’d worked more than 40 hours per week. Meanwhile, farmers would pay workers time-and-a-half over- time wages after a weekly thresh- old of 48 hours during most of the year and after 55 hours during an 15-week “peak labor period.” “It is more generous to farm- workers than any other policy,” said Rep. Daniel Bonham, R-The Dalles. “They won’t have their hours cut nearly as much and will still earn overtime wages after 40 hours.” Rep. Holvey said he opposed the amendment because the state over- time payments wouldn’t include contributions to social security insurance, unemployment insur- ance or worker’s compensation insurance. Farmworkers would also have to wait up to two months to receive the relief payments from the state gov- ernment, he said. The amendment was already thoroughly discussed and rejected by the Joint Committee on Farm Worker Overtime, Holvey said. “Sending the bill back to commit- tee would not end up with a diff er- ent outcome.” Under the version of HB 4002 passed by the House, the weekly threshold for farmworker overtime would begin at 55 hours next year and incrementally drop to 40 hours in 2027. Most farms will be divided into three tax credit tiers based on their number of employees: Growers employing fewer than Another buff er bill stalls in Washington Senate By DON JENKINS Capital Press OLYMPIA — A House bill to require publicly funded projects to benefi t salmon did not have enough support Monday to pass the Senate Ways and Means Commit- tee, blocking the legislation, which was opposed by farm groups. House Bill 1117 was scheduled for a vote by the Senate committee, but was skipped over. Commit- tee Chairwoman Christine Rolfes, D-Bainbridge Island, said in an email that the bill did not have the votes to pass. Although the bill is no lon- ger under consideration in the Senate, the House has set aside more than $14 million in its budget proposal to develop rules for achieving “net eco- logical gain” through publicly owned or fi nanced projects. If Senate budget nego- tiators come around to the House’s position, HB 1117 could be voted on by the Sen- ate before the Legislature adjourns March 10. The public will have no more chances to comment on the legislation or watch it take its fi nal shape. “The whole dis- cussion goes underground,” Washington Farm Bureau director of government rela- tions Tom Davis said. HB 1117 would make salmon recovery a goal for cit- ies and counties. All publicly owned or fi nanced projects would have to have “net eco- logical gain,” even if the proj- ect was not near fi sh-bearing waters. The bill would give the Department of Fish and Wild- life a free hand to determine what qualifi es as net ecologi- cal gain. Rep. Debra Lekanoff , a Skagit County Democrat who introduced the bill in the House, said the legislation was a vehicle for establishing riparian buff ers. Farm groups agree and Seastock The Nooksack River fl ows through Whatcom County in northwestern Washing- ton state. A second bill aimed at requiring buff er zones on some river banks has died in committee — for now. compare HB 1117 to Gov. Jay Inslee’s failed proposal to mandate riparian buff ers on farmland. Washington State Dairy Federation executive direc- tor Dan Wood said Monday that budget writers should increase funding for volun- tary conservation programs, rather than imposing “extreme regulations.” “Doing that would actu- ally harm salmon recov- ery because it would make it impossible for farmers to par- ticipate in conservation pro- grams,” he said. “There is no soundness to that approach at all.” Fish and Wildlife and envi- ronmental groups have testi- fi ed in support of the bill, say- ing it’s necessary for salmon survival. Some tribal offi cials have criticized leaving salmon recovery up to an undefi ned “net ecological gain.” Prior to Monday’s Ways and Means Committee meet- ing, Rolfes sponsored a strik- ing amendment — a rewrite of the bill that would have kept salmon recovery as a goal for local governments but dropped most references to net ecological gain. Rolfes said her proposal did not have enough support to pass and is no longer being considered. 25 workers would qualify for tax credits of 90% of their added over- time payments next year, which would decrease to 60% in 2028, after which they’d expire. During that time, the tax credit rate would shift from 75% to 50% for growers with 25 to 50 employees, and from 60% to 15% for farmers with more than 50 workers. Dairies would be treated dif- ferently due to their round-the- clock need for animal care. Those with fewer than 25 workers would be eligible for a permanent tax credit rate of 100% of overtime payments, while those with more employees would qualify for a rate that incrementally shifts from 75% in 2023 to 50% in 2028, its fi nal year. Rep. Andrea Valderrama, D-Portland, said that lawmakers heard from thousands of farmers and workers while deliberating the bill, but said she was most moved by the testimony of employees. Farmworkers testifi ed about enduring chemicals, dust and injuries while not having enough money to cover their rent, educa- tion and healthcare needs, she said. “Why is it the people who do the most sacred work are the most oppressed, the most exploited?” Rep. Andrea Salinas, D-Lake Oswego, said the agricultural exemption was created more than 80 years ago at the national level to appease Southern lawmakers who wanted to maintain segregated conditions for Black farmworkers. “It was not about economics back then, it was about race,” she said. EPA denies objections, bans chlorpyrifos use on food crops By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Environmental Protec- tion Agency affi rmed Friday that it will ban all residue of the pesti- cide chlorpyrifos on food, dismiss- ing objections by farmers, chemi- cal companies and several foreign countries. Food crops treated after Monday with chlorpyrifos will be considered adulterated and barred from inter- state commerce. Non-food uses will remain allowed, including applica- tions to fruit trees that won’t bear fruit within a year, according to the EPA. The EPA, meeting a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals deadline, announced the ban in August. Farm groups asked the agency to exempt crops particularly dependent on chlorpyrifos or to delay the ban to give growers time to use up stocks. Republican lawmakers also asked for a delay, as did Ecuador, Colombia and fi ve pepper-produc- ing countries in Asia that feared being shut out of the U.S. market. The EPA said Friday it couldn’t wait any longer to ban chlorpyrifos under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. Chlorpyrifos residue on food by itself is enough to ban the pesticide. The agency, however, concluded that potential aggregate exposure through food, residential and land- scaping uses and drinking water exceeded safe levels, particularly for infants and unborn children. The ban is unrelated to farm- worker safety, though in a press release an EPA offi cial implied that it was. “Today’s action shows how EPA continues to put the health and safety of the public fi rst, particularly that of children and farmworkers,” said Michal Freedhoff , assistant administrator for chemical safety. “After more than a decade of studying a large body of sci- ence, EPA is taking the next step towards the cancellation of the use of chlorpyrifos on food,” she said. Chlorpyrifos has been registered in the U.S. since 1965 and has more than 50 registered uses. The EPA estimated in 2021 that 43,430 farms use chlorpyrifos at least once a year. Anti-pesticide groups petitioned the EPA in 2007 to ban chlorpyri- fos. The Obama EPA resisted pres- sure from the 9th Circuit to rule on the petition, leaving the decision to the Trump EPA. The Trump EPA denied the peti- tion, but said it would continue to review the pesticide’s uses. In June, however, the 9th Circuit ordered EPA to ban or modify regis- tered uses within 60 days. In a notice due to be published Monday in the Federal Register, the EPA said evaluating chlorpyri- fos was complex, but the court was restless. It was simply not possible to leave tolerances in place for more growing seasons in light of the court’s impa- tience, according to the EPA. Some states had already banned chlorpyrifos and some pesticide companies had stopped manufac- turing it. Nevertheless, farm groups fought to retain the chemical. “It was on its way out,” Washing- ton Farm Bureau CEO John Stuhl- miller said. “Unfortunately, it still takes an important tool out of the toolbox. “The science was not as crystal clear as I would have liked to see,” he said. “It just became the unpop- ular thing.” Soybean farmers, sugar beet growers and tart cherry orchard- ists in Michigan asked EPA to hold hearings on the ban, as did Gharda Chemicals International. The EPA rejected the requests, saying no one off ered any new evidence to consider. At the least, farm groups hoped the agency would adopt a pro- posal the Trump EPA made in 2020 to reduce exposure by limit- ing chlorpyrifos to 11 crops in select states. 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