6 CapitalPress.com Editorials are written by or approved by members of the Capital Press Editorial Board. Friday, May 27, 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 Washington state’s solar steamroller A cross the nation, farm or- ganizations, conservation groups and others are working overtime to preserve agricultural land. It is a necessity if we as a nation are to maintain our food independence and help feed 8 billion hungry souls around the world. These efforts take many forms. Some are state agencies. Others are private nonprofits. Together, they represent a thin line between developers, many of whom view farmland as “shovel-ready” for the next restaurant, strip mall or other commercial development, and a healthy agricultural economy. It is a heavy lift. Developers equipped with a sharp pencil and a big wallet can make an impossible-to-refuse offer to farmers and ranchers who might be con- sidering retirement but don’t have a next generation interested in taking over the farm. One option is for the farmer to sell his land to developers. It is a straightfor- ward transaction but spells the death of another farm. Another option is to “cash out” the development value of the land. Farmers Getty Images An aerial view of a field of solar panels in farmland. can work with an agency or nonprofit and sell a conservation easement that protects the farmland and takes the pos- sibility of development off the table. The farm survives forever, and the farmer is able to retire or recapitalize his or her operation with proceeds from the easement sale. In many Western states, solar devel- opments are a pressing development threat to farms and ranches. Solar farms continue to be built covering thousands of acres, much of it arable farmland. One example is in Benton County, Wash., where a Canadian company wants to build a 3,000-acre solar farm — all on agricultural land. About 750 acres of it is irrigated. Our understanding of solar and wind farms is they were supposed to be built on land unsuitable for farming or ranch- ing and have no water available. That being the case, why is irrigated farmland now being sacrificed to the solar gods? In Washington, the state government has given the Energy Facility Site Eval- uation Council a superpower. It can override county and local governments that have laws or policies protecting farmland. In the case of Benton County, the county commission passed an ordinance late last year prohibiting anyone from building solar or wind farms on land zoned for agriculture. But the state site evaluation coun- cil, which answers to Gov. Jay Inslee, an alternative energy zealot, can approve the solar development despite the coun- ty’s ordinance. So much for local control. We worry that the people of Ben- ton County — and other counties across Washington state — will be similarly steamrolled as the governor and others push to get these solar projects built. We also worry that agriculture, which ODF’s proposed WUI rules need to be sent back to the drawing board Our View T Getty Images The State of Oregon changed its goals for managing forests. Timber accord the best deal industry could likely get Time will tell the length of ‘regulatory certainty’ O regon Gov. Kate Brown has signed legislation that makes the Private Forest Accord — a deal reached be- tween the timber industry and environmental groups — the law in the Beaver State. We understand why many segments of the timber industry have embraced the forest man- agement framework spelled out in the accord. Only time will tell whether it will provide the regulatory certainty that it promises. Representatives of timber and environmen- tal groups struck the deal last year after a year of talks mediated by the Governor’s Office. Brown convened the panel in 2020 to avoid competing ballot measures on forestry regulations. The legislation codifying the accord expands no-harvest buffers around streams, implements stricter requirements for road-building, priori- tizes non-lethal control of beavers and creates a new modeling system to avoid and mitigate the effects of landslides. The legislation is expected to set the stage for a federal Habitat Conservation Plan for the state’s private forests, which would shield land- owners from liability under the Endangered Species Act when harvesting trees. That would be a huge benefit to private timber owners. Support for the deal is not unanimous in the timber industry — critics argue that it compli- cates forest management, excludes excessive amounts of land from logging and was devel- oped without sufficient transparency and pub- provides food and fiber to Washingto- nians and others around the globe, will be crippled if arable farmland continues to be taken out of production. Interestingly, Washington also has an Office of Farmland Preservation within the state Conservation Com- mission. According to its website, the office “works to address the rapid loss of working farm and forest lands in our state.” Other state departments have also run afoul of the solar steamroller. The Wash- ington Department of Fish and Wild- life is trying to stop a solar farm planned for an area near the largest population of greater sage grouse in the state. These birds are the focus of concerted efforts around the West. Farmers, ranchers, government agencies and others have worked tirelessly to protect the birds in an effort to stabilize their populations. We wish these agencies, nonprof- its and organizations luck as they try to protect the land that feeds America and the world. We all need food — three times a day, in fact — far more than we need solar panels and wind turbines blotting out massive swaths of farmland. lic input. Some owners of smaller timber parcels could lose logging on up to half their land. But several forest product companies and the Oregon Small Woodlands Association signed onto the Private Forest Accord with the under- standing that it would provide more regulatory certainty and reduce the likelihood of disruptive lawsuits and ballot initiatives. “There are no certainties in life, but we have a negotiated agreement that’s supported by all sides,” said Eric Geyer, strategic business devel- opment director for Roseburg Forest Products. “I’m confident we will have regulatory certainty for the elements that were negotiated.” Detractors in the timber industry view “regu- latory certainty” as unrealistically optimistic. They might be right. Certainly, the timber industry will be held to the letter of the law and the rules that are devel- oped. We are willing to accept that the environ- mental groups that are parties to the accord will make a good-faith effort to live up to the spirit of the deal, but they are under no legal obliga- tion to be satisfied with the new framework. And what of non-signatories to the accord who might try to get more restrictions on the ballot, or the next legislature that wants to fur- ther tighten the rules? As Eric Geyer said, there are no certain- ties. The accord probably was the best deal the industry was going to get. We hope that it lasts. he Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) has had an open comment period since March 29 per- taining to new definitions of the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) in Oregon Administra- tive Rules section 629. These rules will soon go before the Oregon Board of Forestry at its June 8 meet- ing. These definitions are being updated as a result of Senate Bill 762 (SB762) from Ore- gon’s 2021 legislative session, and include mapping criteria for WUI identification. As a sheep farmer, timber owner and former professional wildland firefighter, the pro- posed new language is of con- cern to me for several reasons: The first is that the proposed new language includes any- thing 400 square feet or greater when considering buildings defined as “structures” in the rule, irrespective of the build- ing’s use. While I understand that the ODF has provided ver- bal assurance that the term “structures” will not be inter- preted to include structures out- side occupied buildings for regulation purposes, assur- ances often only last as long as the agency personnel who pro- vided them. When the Oregon Legislature enacted SB762 its focus was on preserving lives and the residences of the peo- ple of our state. The new definitions will also create a density standard of one structure per 40 acres for inclusion in WUI areas. The previous interpretation of WUI from SB360/Oregon Forest- land-Urban Interface Fire Pro- tection Act used 4 homes per 40 acres as the threshold for inclusion in the WUI. This was consistent with Oregon’s Rural Residential zoning of one home per 10 acres. While the new rules will aggregate struc- tures on a given parcel (making them count as one for the pur- pose of WUI identification), it would include a shop, barn or hay shed in a WUI area even if there were no residence on that piece of land. These two crite- ria of themselves set the stage for a wide net of regulatory authority in all Western Oregon and many parts of Central and Eastern Oregon. Additionally, I am con- cerned that croplands will be considered part of “vegeta- tive fuels,” which the new lan- guage defines as a plant that constitutes a wildfire hazard, potentially requiring crops be removed for wildfire risk mit- igation where they meet farm GUEST VIEW Matthew Brady homes and infrastructure, if in “high” or “extreme” risk classi- fied zones in the new rules. I have pastures within 30 feet of my residence that would fall under the definition of “vegetative fuels” as pro- posed in this rule making. All the vegetation in my pastures has value as feed for my sheep, and any fuel mitigation require- ments for removing hazards as a result of this rule will be an undue burden on my live- lihood. I do not believe that the legislature or ODF intend this result, but it would be eas- ily allowed under the defini- tions and mapping proposed. This new definition of “vegeta- tive fuels” should exclude cul- tivated crop lands and range- lands in active production. There are several other concerns that I have with the new rules proposed by ODF which space does not allow me to elaborate on, including an incomplete understanding of how classified forestlands are utilized across the state, an incomplete concept of wildfire fuels in the rules, a new sys- tem of classifying wildfire risk categories, and the fact that the WUI definitions set forth in this new language will be uti- lized in areas outside of ODF’s jurisdiction by the Office of the State Fire Marshal. I encourage you to read the proposed rules for your- self. They can be found on the Oregon Department of Forest- ry’s website under the “About ODF” tab, where you will then see “Senate Bill 762.” While trying to make a liv- ing with and fighting wild- fires in Oregon safer and more holistic is a laudable endeavor, I believe that ODF is widely missing the mark with these new rules and failing to con- sider the diversity of the fire landscape in Oregon. I hope that the Board of Forestry sends them back to the drawing board. Matthew Brady is a sheep, timber, hay and pumpkin farmer in Azalea, Ore. He worked for 21 years as a wild- land firefighter for the Douglas Forest Protective Association in Douglas County and serves as the representative of Doug- las and Lane counties on Ore- gon Farm Bureau’s Board of Directors.