Friday, May 27, 2022 CapitalPress.com 7 Forecast calls for elevated risk of wildfi res By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press PORTLAND — Continued hot and dry weather is expected to ele- vate the risk for large wildfi res this summer across parts of the North- west already dealing with severe drought. Fire offi cials in Oregon and Washington gathered May 24 for an open house at the Northwest Inter- agency Coordination Center in Port- land, which serves as the main hub for deploying resources to battle wildfi res throughout the region. John Saltenberger, fi re weather program manager for the center, pro- vided an outlook for the 2022 fi re season based on current conditions and a three-month forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. As of May 19, nearly 87% of Oregon is in some stage of drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. That includes about 13% in “exceptional” drought in cen- tral and southern Oregon, refl ect- ing below-average precipitation, warmer weather and inadequate snowpack over the last three years. In Washington, a little more than Oregon Department of Forestry A fi refi ghting tanker making a retardant drop over the Grandview Fire near Sisters on July 11, 2021. Forecasters say drought will elevate the risk of severe wildfi res in parts of the Northwest this summer. half of the state is listed in drought east of the Cascades. According to NOAA, the entire region will likely see below-average precipitation in June, July and August, while most of Oregon and Eastern Washington are likely to be warmer than usual. “That’s about as grim a report as I’ve seen NOAA put out,” Salten- berger said. Taking all factors into consider- ation, Saltenberger said there will be an above normal potential for signif- icant wildfi res beginning in central and south-central Oregon in June, and will gradually spread north and east into Washington by August. The wildfi re potential in West- ern Washington and Oregon’s Wil- lamette Valley is normal this sum- mer after the region benefi tted from a cool and wet spring. Already this year, more than 200 fi res have burned approximately 1,100 acres in the Northwest. While the fi res are mostly small now, Salt- enberger said the heat and drought means they could grow into larger blazes later in the year. A “large” fi re is defi ned as being 100 or more acres in timber, and 300 or more acres in grass or range- land. More than 2,700 Northwest fi refi ghters have been assigned to contain large fi res now burning in the Southwest. Angie Lane, wildfi re divi- sion manager for the Washington Department of Natural Resources, said cooperation between state, fed- eral and tribal agencies are key to a successful wildfi re season, partic- ularly as fi res are growing bigger, hotter and more destructive. “We know we can’t go it alone,” Lane said. “If we’re not doing it together, I don’t think we would be as successful, for sure.” Fire managers from the U.S. For- est Service, Bureau of Land Man- agement, Bureau of Indian Aff airs, National Parks Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Oregon Department of Forestry and Oregon State Fire Marshal’s Offi ce also attended the open house at the Northwest Inter- agency Coordination Center. Last year, there were 4,075 wild- fi res reported in Oregon and Wash- ington that burned more than 1.5 million acres. Those totals were 111% and 155% of the region’s 10-year average, respectively. The Bootleg Fire in Southern Ore- gon accounted for most of the burned acres in 2021, at 413,717. The largest fi re in Washington was the Schneider Springs blaze northwest of Naches, which burned 107,322 acres. Oregon rail-to-barge facility wins $2 million to expand capacity By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Sarah Bassing/University of Washington Offi cials say northeast Washington wolf pack with a history of predation has renewed its attacks on livestock. Washington wolf pack renews attacks on calves By DON JENKINS Capital Press A northeast Washington wolf pack with a history of attacking cattle has killed one calf and wounded another in the past week, the Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife said Friday. The Togo pack has been designated for lethal con- trol by Fish and Wildlife fi ve times in the past four years because of chronic attacks on cattle. The department has shot one wolf in the fi ve tries. Meanwhile, the pack has grown and expanded its ter- ritory in Ferry County. In the latest predations, wolves bit and clawed calves in two private pastures. The ranch checks the cattle sev- eral times a day, according to the department. Flashing colored lights were in the pasture where the calf was injured. The rancher and Fish and Wildlife are working with range-riders from two orga- nizations, the Cattle Pro- ducers of Washington and the Northeast Washington Wolf Cattle Collaborative, to patrol the area. Fish and Wildlife has now documented fi ve attacks on calves in the pack’s terri- tory in the past 10 months. Department policy calls for considering lethal control after four predations in 10 months. The previous three were in August. Fish and Wildlife staff members were meeting to make a recommendation to department Director Kelly Susewind, according to the department. According to the depart- ment, a rancher found a dead calf the evening of May 16 in a pasture about a half mile from the ranch’s headquarters. The next day, Fish and Wildlife investigators saw bites, cuts and holes on the dead animal’s hamstrings and hindquarters. They esti- mated wolves killed the calf one or two days earlier. On May 18, the same rancher found an injured calf in a diff erent pasture. The calf had been bitten, cut and clawed. Fish and Wildlife investigators estimated the wounds were three or four days old. Even before the most recent predations, the Togo pack territory was the only one that mets the depart- ment’s defi nition of a “chron- ic-confl ict” area because of its multi-year history of pre- dations. The area receives special attention from depart- ment in trying to prevent wolf attacks. Susewind has autho- rized removing one or two wolves in the Togo pack fi ve times, beginning in 2018. The department killed a Togo wolf in 2018, but didn’t remove a wolf the other four times. In response to a series of predations by the pack last summer, Susewind autho- rized removing one or two wolves. He issued the order nine days after the last attack. The department stopped looking for the pack four days later. The department said that kill- ing a wolf to change a pack’s behavior is most eff ective within 14 days of a predation. The Togo pack had seven wolves at the end of 2021, up from three wolves at the end of 2020, according to Fish and Wildlife counts. The pack last year expanded its territory to include most of an area pre- viously occupied by another pack in the Kettle River Range. A unique rail-to-barge grain facility at Oregon’s Port of Morrow is expanding with help from a $2 million grant recently approved by state transportation offi cials. The Morrow County Grain Growers coopera- tive has won approval from the Oregon Transportation Commission for funding that will cover about two- thirds of the $3 million proj- ect’s cost. “It’s worked great so far and we hope it will give us that much more capability,” said Kevin Gray, the coop- erative’s CEO, of the grain handling operation. Originally completed in 2019, the facility is the only one of its kind along the Columbia River that can unload grain from rail cars and then load it into barges headed for downstream export elevators. “It’s a time saver just because of the congestion on the railroads,” Gray said. The expansion proj- ect will install a new 600,000-bushel grain bin and associated conveyors that will connect it to the existing facility. Six grain bins already stood at the location when the cooperative built the $7.5 million rail-to-barge system, whose cost included installa- tion of a seventh bin. The project recently approved for Connect Ore- gon grant funding will bring the number of bins to eight, with room for fi ve more and a grain bunker left at the site. Gray said the additional bin is meant to improve the facility’s fl exibility, since until now it’s occasionally been forced to reject pro- posed grain loads because the existing bins were in use. Even if the bins have stor- age capacity left, they’re still limited to storing the type of grain each one already con- tains, he said. “You can’t put corn in the same bin you put wheat in.” Grain shippers bene- fi t from using the facil- ity because their loads can bypass backed-up rail traffi c in Portland, Gray said.