Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, June 17, 2022 CapitalPress.com NEW GAME PLAN $2.00 Goats clear a pasture of weeds south of Spokane. Matthew Weaver/Capital Press By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press How targeted grazing on public lands is changing Volume 95, Number 24 S POKANE, Wash. — When Craig Madsen left his job as a range con- servationist for USDA to start his own goat grazing business, he recalls some people thought he was crazy. “It took a while to get people to realize it’s not a dumb idea to use goats to do vege- tation work,” said Madsen. When he started his Spokane-based busi- ness, Healing Hooves, in 2000, Madsen struggled to get work. Twenty-two years later, he’s so inundated with requests he turns many down. “There’s more demand than supply,” said Madsen. The past six years, the shepherd has seen increased interest in targeted grazing, espe- cially after goats were credited with help- ing save the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library from a California wildfi re in 2019 by eating fi rebreaks around the building. See Grazing, Page 9 LEFT: Craig Madsen in a pasture south of Spokane, where 200 of his goats get weeds under control. | RIGHT: Stacy Davies, manager of Roaring Springs Ranch. | BELOW: The crew at Roaring Springs Ranch herds cattle, with Davies riding center. Roaring Springs Ranch is working with the BLM on a pilot project that experiments with more fl exibility surrounding grazing regulations. Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Roaring Springs Ranch Groups fi le petition to reconsider Departures shake up leadership permit for large chicken farm at Washington Farm Bureau By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press SCIO, Ore. — Oppo- nents of a commercial chicken farm slated for the Mid-Willamette Valley are asking Oregon regulators to re-evaluate the facility’s permit, and either add new requirements to better pro- tect water quality or revoke their approval altogether. The state Department of Agriculture and Department of Environmental Qual- ity issued a Confi ned Ani- mal Feeding Operation, or CAFO, permit for J-S Ranch in Scio, Ore., on May 26. A coalition of groups petitioned the agencies on June 9 to reconsider the operation, citing potential risks to surface and ground water. J-S Ranch will raise about 3.5 million broiler chickens annually for Foster Farms. Kendra Kimbirauskas, who raises beef, hogs and goats on 70 acres in Scio, said the permit issued “does not ade- quately protect our water and wells from the inev- itable pollution from this mega-poultry operation.” “Instead, ODA must pro- tect our community, farms and water from this incur- sion of massive Foster Farms chicken operations,” she said. Kimbirauskas is an orga- nizer of Farmers Against Foster Farms, which formed last year to protest several proposed poultry CAFOs in Marion and Linn counties, including J-S Ranch. In addition to Farmers By DON JENKINS Capital Press USDA ARS Several groups have re- quested state regulators to review approval of a chicken farm planned for the Willamette Valley of Oregon. Against Foster Farms, peti- tioners include Willamette Riverkeeper, Friends of Family Farmers, Humane Voters Oregon, Food & Water Watch, the Center for Food Safety, Animal Legal Defense Fund and Center for Biological Diversity. See Farm, Page 9 Washington Farm Bureau’s top leaders for the past decade have left for other jobs in recent weeks as the organization shifts course under its new pres- ident, King County farmer Rosella Mosby. CEO John Stuhlmiller, Chief Financial Offi cer Enrique “Rick” Gastelum and director of government relations Tom Davis have departed, taking with them a total of 37 years of experi- ence with the Farm Bureau. The organization has yet to hire replacements. Mosby said Tuesday that all three chose to leave for other positions. The board is interviewing candidates to replace Stuhlmiller, who will have the title adminis- trative vice president, not CEO, she said. Mosby said she wanted to make changes at the Farm Bureau, but that she and the board are still work- ing on specifi cs. Mosby was elected pres- “We’re doing a lot of that refl ective work right ident in November at the now,” she said. “When I annual convention, defeat- ran for president, I ran with ing Kittitas County farmer the message that we need Brad Haberman, who had to pivot in our approach in been a state vice president how we deal with agricul- since 2016. LaPlant did not seek re-election. tural issues.” After two years Stuhlmiller had of COVID, peo- been CEO since ple came to the 2013 and was direc- convention with tor of government “pent-up ideas, relations for the pent-up emotions,” previous nine years. said Gastelum, who He is now execu- had been CFO since tive director of the Mosby 2013. “There was Washington State a groundswell of Water Resources Association, which rep- people who wanted to see changes,” he said. resents irrigation districts. Gastelum left in May Stuhlmiller said Tues- day he worked closely with to become the director of Grant County farmer Mike WAFLA, which recruits LaPlant, who had been foreign farmworkers for state Farm Bureau presi- its members. He said the dent for 10 years. Mosby job was a professional advancement and that he wanted change, he said. “There was a new direc- would have sought it under tion desired,” said Stuhl- any circumstances. Gastelum said he and miller, who signed an agreement not to criti- Stuhlmiller had been a cize the Farm Bureau. “It’s “one-two punch” for a really unclear to me what See Bureau, Page 9 that direction is.” EUGENE LIVESTOCK AUCTION, INC. 92380 Hwy 99 So. • Junction City, OR 97448 541-998-3353 www.eugenelivestockauction.com every Saturday Livestock Livestock Auction Auction every Saturday at 10:30am Horse Auction second Friday of every month. at 10:30am Feeder calf sale third Tuesday of every month Horses start at 5:00pm S258073-1 S206381-1