6 CapitalPress.com Editorials are written by or approved by members of the Capital Press Editorial Board. Friday, April 15, 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 Poaching wolves only makes matters worse I f anyone wanted to help out the animal rights crowd in its efforts to reinstate federal Endangered Species Act protection to all wolves, all he would have to do is randomly kill the predators. Since wolves were reintroduced into parts of the West, the activ- ists have been hollering that, unless wolves are fully protected under the ESA, they could be indiscriminately killed. In a few parts of Eastern Oregon, that appears to be happening. In the past two years, eight wolves were poi- soned and seven were shot and killed. This was not someone protect- ing himself or his livestock. This was someone poaching and breaking the law. Animal rights and environmen- tal groups are pushing right now try- ing to convince the federal govern- Oregon State Police A wolf that was found dead Jan. 8 south of Wallowa, Ore. ment to reinstate ESA protections for wolves in the Northern Rockies. Just last week, we published a column by two members of the U.S. Senate mak- ing the case for state management of wolves in Idaho and Montana. The senators are correct. Idaho, Montana and other states where wolves have been imposed on ranch- ers and others have done their best. Reinstating federal protections would take management decisions out of the states’ hands. If you think there are problems with wolves now, wait until management decisions are returned to the hands of federal bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. No one has been more vocifer- ous than the Capital Press in criticiz- ing how the reintroduction of wolves has been managed. Time and again, we have stood up and pointed out the shortcomings of federal wildlife man- agers and the unfairness their actions have inflicted on ranchers, whose live- lihoods depend on their ability to raise cattle and sheep. The basis of those criticisms was that wolves have been allowed to run roughshod through portions of the rural West, attacking cattle, sheep, wildlife and other animals such as working dogs. We argued that ranch- ers also were the victims but were Inflation and war threaten global food security Our View he combination of Russian aggression and rising inflation has the potential to lead the world into a food crisis. The USDA should shift into high gear. The U.S. should be as keen to sup- ply future food relief as it is to supply Ukraine with mil- itary supplies. The USDA should be taking a lesson from the COVID crisis by imple- menting aggressive purchase orders, designed to scale up production of shelf-stable food products in anticipation of the need for foreign aid. Is Mars ready to produce 500 million nut bars? The USDA is working off the old play book of foster- ing exports and responding to extreme weather events. We need to be filling our own stra- tegic food reserves, perhaps funded with sales from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. We cannot let foreign pow- ers dictate geopolitics through food, having done so with oil. Acting aggressively now gives us a chance to boost farm productivity and mitigate a potential food crisis. Russia has chosen to wage war with the West, and China is standing at its side. This is not a time for half measures when it comes to ensuring food security for us and our allies. I am a blueberry and hazel- nut grower in Oregon. Bud- gets created four months ago are becoming obsolete as costs spike in every category — fertilizer, labor, fuel, ship- ping and equipment repair. Inflation begets more infla- tion and it ultimately works its way through different layers of the economy. I know when I send my crop on to a food processor they are facing the same increases in energy and labor costs, as will the grocery store. If prices do increase in the nut or berry market, that increase is split three ways, and farmers are the desig- nated price taker. Most crops are not seeing “wheat like” price increases, and as of now, those spikes are just volatil- ity, not money in the bank for farmers. So, in this environment, any rational actor is going to look to cut expenses in every category possible. If a farmer cuts fertilizer, yields decline. If weeds are not addressed, yields decline. If equipment is not maintained, yields decline. If workers are not paid a fair wage, the crop is not harvested. Cutting expenses will usu- ally lead to lower farm pro- ductivity. I think an iteration of these decisions is working T EO Media Group File A proposed lithium mine near the Nevada-Oregon border is at the center of a controversy that has environmentalists on both sides. When environmental priorities collide, part 2 P olitical leaders who want to wean Americans from fossil fuels envision a day when everyone drives electric cars, has solar panels on their roofs and wind generators are providing the bulk of their power. Often times, environmental groups find themselves on opposite sides in disputes over the siting of “green” energy facilities and the infrastructure necessary to support them. Late last year, a 2,390-acre solar farm was supported by environmentalists who want more such facilities, but was opposed by environmentalists advocating for the Greater sage grouse. Conflicting environmental priorities are colliding in southeast Oregon and north- east Nevada, where what’s being billed as one of the world’s largest lithium deposits is located. Effective storage is necessary to ensure a power supply when the sun isn’t shining and the wind isn’t blowing. All of that will require a lot of raw materials that need to be dug out of the ground and processed. Lithium is the key component in lithi- um-ion batteries used in electric cars and to store the electricity generated by solar panels. An Australian mining company has plans for an 18,000-acre open-pit lithium mine in an area controlled by the Bureau of Land Management known as Thacker Pass. Those supporting increased domestic battery pro- duction and “green” energy are hailing the development as an important step in lessen- ing the country’s dependence on fossil fuels. Other environmental interests, however, willing to follow the law. Ranchers have worked hard to use non-lethal means of separating wolves from cattle and sheep. But all of that is for naught when irresponsible parties take the law into their own hands. It accomplishes nothing — except to put law-abiding ranchers on the defensive. We’ll say it again. We are unim- pressed by how federal wildlife man- agers have done their jobs manag- ing wolves. From the beginning, they needed to do more to keep wolves away from livestock. But we are 100% opposed to ille- gally poaching wolves. Doing that only gives the animal rights and environmental crowd more ammunition in the court of law — and the court of public opinion — to criti- cize ranchers. Stop the poaching. It only makes matters worse. say the mine will despoil the land, poison the water and degrade wildlife habitat. Addition- ally, bands of the Paiute and Shoshone tribes say the project will encroach on historic and cultural sites important to native peoples. Green energy environmentalists find them- selves on opposite sides from other environ- mentalists who have filed a lawsuit to stop the project. It’s quite the conundrum. Farmers and ranchers who rarely have environmentalists as partners to litigation might not know who to root for in this par- ticular dispute. But anyone who supports the responsible harvesting of vital natural resources has to side with the mine. At present, many of the materials needed to make batteries and solar cells are in the hands of either unfriendly or unstable nations. Labor and environmental protections in those countries are either lax or non-exis- tent. The despots who run those countries are more than happy to despoil their lands and gouge others for the necessary minerals. The United States has deposits of these minerals, and plenty of laws, rules and regu- lation to mitigate the potential environmental impacts and protect miners. An 18,000-acre pit and the ensuing tailings will be a mess and an eyesore. We wouldn’t want it in our backyard, that’s for sure. But if the country is determined to pursue “green” energy policies, it shouldn’t be willing to push the negative impacts off on the third world. What’s a committed environmentalist and enthusiastic alternative energy advocate to do? We can’t wait to see how this plays out. GUEST VIEW Jim Hoffmann across every farm, dairy and ranch in America. As harvest progresses, and crop prices do not justify the cost to bring it to market, we will see disturb- ing pictures of produce left in the field and milk or apples dumped into ditches. The current inflationary environment seems set up to reduce production at a time the world needs it to increase, to feed the world and to com- bat inflation. With reduced supplies, food inflation may spiral out of control and in some less prosperous parts of the world, potentially caus- ing political instability. Have we ever not been drawn into such a crisis? What might a for- ward-thinking administration do in this scenario? There is no magic wand to elimi- nate inflation; it will come in waves as a payback for an unconstrained monetary policy that enabled multi- ple administrations’ deficit spending. The only question is how to mitigate the damage. Iron- ically, the answer is probably higher prices in the near term. The great danger is food scar- city. The USDA should want farmers operating at maxi- mum capacity and achieve this by securing available food, trying to establish price signals to spur maximum planting and harvest, direct the private sector to pull for- ward demand with contracts for shelf-stable foods. It may be that every calorie will count. There is still time to orga- nize increased storage facil- ities, finesse immigration, manage transportation bottle- necks, redirect water — but only if the government oper- ates with war time urgency. These are constructive mea- sures that mitigate inflation. The Biden administra- tion also has to start the pro- cess of sensitizing Americans to the age-old concept of con- servation; it is the best return on investment in times of scarcity. Jim Hoffmann is the owner of Hopville Farms in Indepen- dence, Ore. He transitioned into farming in 2012 following a long career in investment management. He attended the University of Wisconsin-Mad- ison with degrees in econom- ics and real estate investment analysis. He is a resident of Monterey County, Calif.