Friday, June 10, 2022 CapitalPress.com 9 Roylene: ‘She is proactive, she is positive, she is persistent’ Continued from Page 1 This is a great example of this.” Longest-serving conservationist Roylene, 52, is the nation’s current lon- gest-serving state conserva- tionist, having held the posi- tion in two states since 2005. Today, she steers the efforts of the Natural Resources Conservation Service in Washington state. NRCS tailors its pro- grams to farmers’ and ranch- ers’ needs to help them pro- tect and improve water quality and soil health and gain efficiencies. Partners include tribes, counties, con- servation districts and other agencies and land trusts that help finance farmers’ projects. “I love Washington’s atti- tude, we don’t talk about it — well, we do talk about it, but we do it, and we get it done,” said Roylene, who grew up in Montana. The old fence An old five-wire slip fence stands on the ridge above Roylene’s fam- ily ranch in northcentral Montana. Her great-great-grand- father built it nearly 100 years ago, she estimated. It divides her family’s ranch and land owned by the Blackfoot Nation, of which she is a member. When the reservation was formed, many members of the tribe did not know how to raise livestock, so others could use the land free of charge, bringing in sheep. Roylene’s family built the fence to keep sheep out and its horses in. The family still operates the original tribal allotment, owning and leasing 4,000 acres. The fence perfectly cap- tures Roylene’s devotion to her family, her tribe, the land, and to farmers and ranchers. “It is so cool to go up there and touch that wire and know that all of six gen- erations have worked on this fence and hard on this land to take care of it and ensure that we continue,” she said, visibly moved at the thought. Roylene’s father, Roy, was a rancher and her mother, Cynthia, is a retired science teacher. Their back- grounds made NRCS a per- fect fit for their daugh- ter, who has worked for the agency 33 years. She earned a bachelor’s degree in range management at Montana State University. Before arriving in Wash- ington, she was state conser- vationist in Rhode Island for three years. She longed to return to the West. “As a person who grew up in Montana, the moun- tains and the prairies are in my spirit,” she said. And Washington intrigued her, with its diversity of natural resources and crops. “I was asked by the (NRCS) chief in 2008 during the interview for the Washington state conser- vationist position, if I felt I could build and (strengthen) partnership,” she recalled. Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Washington State Conservationist Roylene Comes At Night beams while looking over solar panels installed with the assistance of the state Natural Resources Conservation Service on rancher Ben Merrill’s pasture. “Without a doubt, I said, ‘Yes.’” When she arrived, Wash- ington state’s NRCS bud- get was $9 million. Fund- ing increased as partners got involved through regional conservation programs and applied for more federal support. Today, the budget is $59 million. Before Roylene’s arrival, Washington State Conser- vation Commission mem- bers were frustrated, said Bahrych, the former com- missioner. The previous administration had left a huge backlog of grant appli- cations for major federal programs. Because it didn’t process the applications for shov- el-ready projects quickly enough, the state had to send money back to Washington, D.C., at the end of each fis- cal year, Bahrych said. “They were sending back like $1 million a year just because they couldn’t get their act together to get it out to the farmers and ranchers for the conservation prac- tices that they really wanted and needed to do,” she said. “And because we weren’t using all our money, the next year we got less.” Roylene pledged to use every dollar and access the extra funding that came back from other states. “Within a very short period of time, she had the backlog completely gone and ... she was the first in line to get more fund- ing from other states...,” Bahrych said. “She did that every year — she used every dollar we got, it all went on the ground for conservation, and she got more.” Doing right by the land Roylene comes by her love of the land naturally. Her father would often buy marginal land and revital- ize it. “One of the units he was so excited about, it was totally white, it had salts in it, and I was like ‘Dad!’” she remembered. “And he goes, ‘We’re going to rebuild it.’” The family still owns that piece of property, and it now produces “some of the most outstanding alfalfa,” she said. “It took about three or four years to do right by that land and restore it,” she said. Her father died in 2016. Courtesy photo Roylene has always had a passion for the Earth and sci- ence. Here, she competed in an international science fair in 1985, where she studied the migration patterns of deer mice. Her nephew took over and is the sixth generation to run the operation, which now raises cattle. She visits often, serving as an adviser and “absen- tee landowner,” she said, but remaining hands-off because of her role in NRCS. Her maiden name, Rides At The Door, has special meaning. “We earned the name because my great-great- grandfather actually stole medicine pouches from other tribes that hung out- side the tepee doors,” she said. “He also counted coup on other tribes (got close enough to touch an enemy without causing him harm, considered the ultimate act of bravery) by stealing horses from them. At one point he had 900 head of horses. The horse was who we were.” NRCS later told the fam- ily to sell all its horses and switch to calves. “That didn’t go over real well,” she said. “What I learned from us being in the programs is how they tried to change us to fit the program,” she said. “My goal is to make sure we change the pro- gram to fit the needs of the producers. They shouldn’t have to change something they’ve been doing for six generations.” ‘Tremendously compassionate’ With the help of the NRCS Environmental Quality Incentives Program, or EQIP, rancher Ben Merrill installed a solar-powered water pump and water troughs made out of two large tires at his Cheney, Wash., operation. The solar pump will help balance the grazing system, Roylene said, avoiding over- grazing in parts of the pas- ture where the plants already could get water and getting water to the plants that need it. The 12-foot-diameter tires hold 1,200 to 1,500 gal- lons of water for cattle. Participation in EQIP meant the pump and troughs cost roughly half of what they would have if he’d paid for them himself, Merrill estimated. “It turned out to be a good program,” he said. “It should last for years.” “This is why we do what we do,” Roylene said as she toured Merrill’s pasture. After a busy week in the office, she welcomed the chance to get back to a ranch. “Seeing our conservation projects change the land for the better so the producer can stay in business and continue or learn to better take care of the land is why I have stayed with NRCS for 30-plus years,” she said. She may no longer be directly involved in the implementation of those practices, she said, but she works to ensure Washington has the technical and finan- cial resources for staff and partners. “She’s always willing to help farmers if she can find funds and programs to fit,” said Colfax, Wash., wheat farmer Larry Cochran, who is a Palouse Conservation District supervisor. “A lot of times, (she) finds the money. She is willing to do whatever she can.” “She wants to understand what the issues are and then empower people to get a solution,” said Mark Clark, retired director of the con- servation commission. “She truly wants to work on rela- tionships and understanding what the problems are with everyone. She won’t shy away from that.” “She is proactive, she is positive, she is persistent,” said Bahrych, the former conservation commissioner. “She’s also tremendously compassionate. She brings that compassion to the land- scape, wildlife, tribes in the state, farmers and ranchers — to everyone.” Building bridges Roylene hopes another part of her legacy is as a bridge builder between cul- tures and communities. She’s conducted cul- tural awareness training for USDA for 28 years, leading many courses and training more than 10,000 people. She hopes that’s one of the reasons tribes have become more included in NRCS programs. “I don’t necessarily believe culturally we believe different, but I think legally, because of treaties and oth- ers, there are some compli- cations there that can cause a barrier or be a benefit,” she said. “I’m hoping that people will see it as a benefit.” She’s proudest of linking partners together in water- shed projects. “To me, conservation and Mother Earth are politically neutral,” she said. “We all want clean air, we all want clean water. Sometimes, it’s just getting the right people at the right time at the table.” “Being Native, a woman and a producer means that Roylene grew up with her feet in multiple worlds,” said Paul Ward, former manager of Yakama Nation Fisheries. “Roylene grew up on a tough landscape doing all the work that her father, brother and male cousins did. She is an accomplished horsewoman, which shows through in her patience and calm approach.” Ward calls her presence in Washington “fortuitous.” “Roylene has taken what can be a difficult bureau- cracy to navigate and really brought Washington NRCS to a place of working closely and productively with the collective conservation body across the state,” he said. “We have a long way to go in salmon and steelhead recov- ery and water security for all sectors, and Roylene’s lead- ership style fits well to the challenge we are facing in Washington state.” Roylene would like to see large national companies bring funding to the table. NRCS can figure out how to match any funding they’d provide with federal dollars, she said. “We have some of the lead corporations and com- panies in Puget Sound and in the state of Washington, but I have yet to see them come to the table and really be a main partner in what we’re doing,” she said. “I know there are conversations going on, but I still haven’t seen them come to the table com- pletely. I think we’re missing that opportunity together. We haven’t got there yet.” Sundancing Roylene is also a sun- dancer, participating in a cer- emony in which she dances from sun up to sun down. She fasts during the four- day ceremony, which is an offering to the Creator, ask- ing him to hear the prayers of the people, as well as her own. The ceremony includes collecting plants such as sage, sweetgrass, sweet pine, cedar and others to burn in a smudge as prayers are lifted to the Creator. The plants are collected in summer and pre- pared in winter for the fol- lowing summer’s ceremony. She also spends time with family and others in the tribe, teaching and leading ceremonies. Her husband, Michael Comes At Night, is also involved with spiritual leaders in the tribe. The couple hunts for buf- falo and elk, preparing the meat for ceremonies, which can draw up to 400 people. They attend other sun- dances hosted by other fam- ilies during the summer. “The next ceremony, we might be the family that pro- vides a meal, or we might be the family that helps to sing the songs, or we might be the person that helps the danc- ers,” she said. ‘Keep fighting the fight’ Roylene’s not planning to depart NRCS any time soon. “I’ll still be the lon- gest-standing (state conser- vationist) for a few more years,” she said. Farmers and ranchers are the foundation of who and what America is, she said. “As we know with his- tory, if agriculture fails, those countries fail,” she said. Her goal is to help farmers and ranchers continue their work as they pass their cul- ture and traditions on to new generations. Her message to them: “Keep fighting the fight, because I know days it gets tough, and I know days it’s hard, and I hope they will just keep hanging in there and keep helping us to build what they need to continue. With- out them, we’re nothing as a country.” Attack: A specialist spent several days Drought: California already monitoring area; wolves did not return buys one-third of its power from out-of-state sources Continued from Page 1 would apply for compensa- tion funds. The state Office of Species Conservation distrib- utes money for wolf-caused losses of livestock as verified by USDA Wildlife Services. The state Department of Fish and Game authorized Wildlife Services to conduct a control action in the area through the end of May but no wolves were killed. Jared Hedelius, state direc- tor for Wildlife Services, said the agency sent a wildlife spe- cialist to the site. The special- ist spent several days moni- toring the area and the wolves did not return. “Right now we are continu- ing to monitor the situation up there but do not have an active control action in that area any- more,” Hedelius told Capital Press June 2. “We know that wolves are present on the Boise Front” mountain range, Brian Pear- son, a Fish and Game regional spokesman, said in the release. The attack was in Game Management Unit No. 39, where wolves chronically kill livestock. “We have expanded sea- sons and methods of take” in the unit “and often have to address depredations using control actions,” Pearson said. Fish and Game officials said they are unsure whether the wolves were dispersing from a pack or whether a pack is in the Shaw Mountain area. Shirts could not immedi- ately be reached for comment. The sheep have since moved away from the area where the attack occurred. Wildlife Ser- vices typically removes five to 14 wolves annually from the Boise foothills in response to livestock depredation. Fish and Game estimates there are about 1,600 wolves in the state after pups are born in the spring. The popula- tion typically dips below 900 during late winter due to hunt- ing, trapping seasons and other causes of wolf mortality. Continued from Page 1 the EIA forecasts. Normally, hydroelectricity meets about 15% of the state’s summer energy needs. This year, it will pro- vide 8%, the EIA projects. To partially fill the gap, California will use more electricity generated by natural gas. The EIA estimated carbon emissions from the energy sector will increase by 978,000 tons, or 6%. Even then, the state will need to import another 2.9 million mega- watts-hours. California already buys one-third of its power from out-of- state sources. The EIA projected California will generate about as much hydro- power this summer as it did in 2015, another poor water year. The state, however, has less abil- ity than it did seven years ago to ramp up during peak demands to off- set the lost of hydropower, according to the EIA. California has added solar power and battery storage since 2015, but 58% of the state’s natural gas- fired power capacity was shut down. The EIA said droughts in Arizona and Nevada also could push up the cost of electricity. Prices could be held down if retail customers adjust and use less electricity during peak times, according to the report.