10 CapitalPress.com Friday, June 24, 2022 Ukraine online video platform every other Friday. They are also available on You Tube. Project coordinators will provide updates to donating companies upon request, Gry- nyshyn added. Continued from Page 1 said. As they retreated, they placed mines in the farm fields. Despite the dangers, farmers are still producing, he said. “They still go into the fields.” Grynyshyn estimates 99% of the nation’s farmers remain in Ukraine. “They have secured their fam- ilies, but they themselves have returned,” he said. It’s hard to say how many have been killed because that informa- tion is not readily available, he said. Some farmers have been killed by mines in the fields, and others have died while serving in the army. Stolen crops About 20% of Ukraine is occupied by Russia. In south- ern Ukraine, Russian adminis- trators forced farmers to provide information about their farms, including all data and crop stor- age locations. “When the farmers did this, in a couple of days, the commodi- ties were just vanished,” Gry- nyshyn said with a Ukrainian accent. “So in fact they were ask- ing for address where to steal it from.” Farmers were told they could plant a crop this year only if they signed papers giving 70% of their harvest to Russia, he said. Civilians “are being tortured in the basements and police stations by Russians because they are active patriots,” he said. “There are even moments that a Russian soldier stops a person in the street and says, ‘Tell how great Russia is, how thankful you are, because if I don’t believe you, I will kill you.’” Grynyshyn spoke with the Capital Press June 7 at Wash- ington State University’s Whit- man County Extension office in Colfax. The day of the interview, Gry- nyshyn had heard of Russian troops stealing 11 rail cars of grain and taking them to Crimea, a territory Russia took from Ukraine in 2014. Two days later troops burned Ukraine’s second largest grain terminal, which was filled with sunflower meal. When leaving a village, Rus- sian soldiers steal anything pos- sible, Grynyshyn said, including carpets, computers and livestock, which they tie to the top of mili- tary vehicles. “At some point, I’ve heard you would not even be able to say whether it is a tank or armored vehicle, because there is so much packed on top of it,” Grynyshyn said. In setting up farmer exchanges Grynyshyn has traveled to the U.S. roughly 40 times. Upward of 400 Ukrainian farmers and rep- resentatives of agricultural busi- nesses have visited the U.S. over the years through Grynyshyn’s 10-day program. As part of the program, he’s worked with Steve Van Vleet, a WSU Extension educator, since 2009. Van Vleet has also traveled to Ukraine to work with farmers there. Seeking help for Ukrainian farmers, Grynyshyn has been visiting his contacts in Europe Current picture 123rf whose website is https://lifenets. org/. Victor Kubik is a LifeNets Online: https://www.wrru.org/ board member. His wife, Beverly, is the board president. Kubik said his parents were Ukrainian ref- ugees after World War II and he and North America. He visited still has family there. Washington state this month was “It is such a horrible situa- headed to North Dakota, Canada tion over there,” Kubik told the and Wisconsin. Capital Press. “Ukraine ought to Help offered be leaders in the world but right In Germany, a client and friend now they are under such oppres- sion. ... It’s an astounding crisis who is the largest sweet corn of humanity, of agriculture, of farmer in the nation hosted Gry- nyshyn. The friend’s daughter everything. We shake our heads asked Grynyshyn to give 1,000 as we see people being killed euros she had raised in her school every day and the world being to Ukrainian farmers who are in held hostage, blackmailed, with need. nuclear action.” That led to the formation of Before aid is authorized, farm- ers must open their houses and the fundraising project, World farms to inspection by WRRU to Rebuild Rural Ukraine, or coordinators. Priorities are recon- WRRU, to help farmers. The struction of houses, greenhouses, website is https://www.wrru.org/. barns or stables and replacing WRRU will use the funds machinery or lost livestock. to rebuild farmers’ homes and WRRU will not provide replace machinery and out- buildings that have been cash. damaged or destroyed. “Aid is about the actual They have no access to objects that are recon- structed or the machinery government programs or units or the farm animals, anywhere else to turn. and no upgrade,” Gry- Those farmers who nyshyn said. “If the farmer have lost a relative, have had a tractor by Belarus Stephen a sick or disabled family member or who have chil- Van Vleet: (that is) 120 horsepower, dren are given priority. “We have to he will not get a 350 horse- Ordinarily, farmers be able to power John Deere.” WRRU’s board of would be first to help oth- support the ers in need, “but now they Ukrainian ambassadors — Van are at the edge of survival Vleet is a member — are themselves,” Grynyshyn people as a “respectful” citizens from democratic countries outside Ukraine said. Every 10th household nation that who support the project has been destroyed, he grows crops and will approve the bud- very similar get. Five project coor- estimated. dinators in Ukraine are to ours. WRRU was formed two months ago, Gry- What would responsible for all stages nyshyn said, and hopes to we do if it of reconstruction and find- raise funds exclusively to happened ing third-party experts, if help farmers. to us? We needed. “Western Ukraine has Van Vleet, with WSU cannot al- enough labor, materials, Extension, is a WRRU ambassador. He said it’s low Russia bricks, cement, every- to win in thing. All we need is “deep in my heart,” and Ukraine.” money to start doing this not just because he’s vis- ited Ukraine several times job,” Grynyshyn said. to teach farmers and students He hopes to partner with there. co-ops, service providers, sup- pliers and machinery companies, “We have to be able to support among others. the Ukrainian people as a dem- ocratic nation that grows crops A company that makes a dona- tion to WRRU can assign an very similar to ours,” Van Vleet ambassador, who will oversee said. “What would we do if it how the funding is spent and has happened to us? We cannot allow the right to veto decisions, Gry- Russia to win in Ukraine.” nyshyn said. WRRU emphasizes transpar- ency, Grynyshyn said. Donations The project offers a free online are made through the nonprofit update on the war, Ukraine’s ag organization LifeNets Interna- industry and exports and recon- struction efforts on the Zoom tional, based in Batavia, Ohio, WORLD TO REBUILD RURAL UKRAINE Before the war, Ukraine’s farms could feed up to 600 mil- lion people. “We can feed about two popu- lations of the United States,” Gry- nyshyn said. Ukraine has similar soil and climate to Washington state, Van Vleet said. The country’s top crops are corn, wheat and sunflowers. About 20 million to 25 million metric tons of last year’s crops are stuck in storage, Grynyshyn said. Ukraine had a total storage capacity of roughly 57 million metric tons, Grynyshyn said. Rus- sia has destroyed the biggest ele- vators, but farmers also had stor- age. About 30% to 40% of land is unavailable for planting due to the war, he said. As of June 1, approximately 6.98 million people had fled Ukraine, and more than 7.13 mil- lion people were internally dis- placed as of May 30, according to the Central Intelligence Agen- cy’s World Factbook. At least 8,900 civilian casualties had been reported. Ukraine farming Ukraine has about 375,000 square miles, making it slightly smaller than Texas. It has a pop- ulation of nearly 44 million, according to the CIA. About 71.2% of land is agri- cultural, with 56.1% arable, 13.6% permanent pasture and 1.4% permanent crops. About 16.8% is forest, and 12% is other. Agricultural corporations work about 20% of the land, pri- vate farmers 45-50% and small or family farmers 25-30%, Gry- nyshyn said. He said there are “millions” of the small farmers. Russia’s invasion Grynyshyn calls the southern city of Kherson “Ukrainian Cal- ifornia,” because it produces veg- etables, berries and watermelons. It had the biggest irrigation sys- tem in the former Soviet Union, and housed a university that developed irrigation technology. Russian soldiers destroyed all paper and data at the univer- sity, he said, as well as attacking a seed bank in Kharkiv. “Even Germans in World War II left it because they knew they would use it,” Grynyshyn said of the seed bank. “Russians burned it down. It proves they don’t care about anything Ukraine.” ‘Everything is there’ Food and security in the world are changing beyond Ukraine, Grynyshyn said. “It’s whether it stays the same, where ... human rights prevail and the law prevails, or the terrorists come into action and those who have more power start terrorizing their neighbors,” he said. Grynyshyn believes weapons will allow Ukraine to fight back “to the last soldiers, and to the last square foot of our land — it’s one of the two.” “How long it will take, how much we will pay in lives, in “Western Ukraine has enough labor, materials, bricks, cement, everything. All we need is money to start doing this job.” — Roman Grynyshyn infrastructure, I don’t know,” he said. “But the longer it lasts, the more consequences the world will feel, in all the factors, not only fuel or energy sources cost.” Grynyshyn said he’s asking U.S. farmers to pledge support for their peers in Ukraine. “Unless we stand, the whole world will have a food crisis,” he said. The world cannot afford to do nothing about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Van Vleet said. “We have to address it now,” he said. “Agriculture is what brings yourself out of depres- sions, recessions, war time. It’s always been the solve.” Grynyshyn and his family have refugee status in Germany. He “definitely” wants to return to Ukraine. “Everything is there — my home, my business, my clients, my family,” he said. “People in Ukraine respect and know me as the one who is bringing technolo- gies to Ukraine. Right now, I am outside the country, but at the first ability, I will go back. ... After the victory, I will be the first to invite anyone willing to show how beautiful my country is.” Farmers worldwide know how to tackle the difficulties that Mother Nature brings to their fields, Grynyshyn said. “The difficulties and the dam- ages that the human brought into the fields of Ukraine, this is much more devastating, much more dangerous,” he said. “But Ukrainian farmers don’t give up.” Fire: Oregon forestry officials rate properties for elevated risk Groundwater: Continued from Page 1 perfect,” Shaw said. “There will be adjust- ments in the future. This is a great first step.” The Oregon Farm Bureau has worried about adverse impacts to agriculture since lawmakers began negotiating comprehen- sive wildfire legislation last year. The Legislature ended up passing Sen- ate Bill 762, which the Farm Bureau crit- icized for its “top-down” approach to wildfire mitigation. The group favored a “bottom-up” strategy of consulting with rural communities proposed in another bill. To get the bill over the finish line, law- makers eliminated SB 762’s definition of wildland-urban interface, or WUI, and instead directed the Board of Forestry to set the parameters based on “national best practices.” However, the Farm Bureau and other critics believe the board’s WUI criteria are nonetheless overly broad. The vast acreage likely included in the designation will leave people “shocked,” said Lauren Smith, the group’s director of government and national affairs. “Our legislators will be very surprised when they start getting constituent calls,” she said. “When you get a WUI that is nearly the size of the State of Oregon, it sort of defeats the purpose.” Properties will only be subject to regula- tion if they’re both within the WUI and have a hazard rating of “high” or “extreme” wild- fire risk. Roughly 250,000-300,000 properties fall The Legislature ended up passing Senate Bill 762, which the Farm Bureau criticized for its “top- down” approach to wildfire mitigation. The group favored a “bottom-up” strategy of consulting with rural communities proposed in another bill. into the “high” and “extreme” risk catego- ries, but ODF doesn’t yet have an estimate of how many are also in the WUI. The Farm Bureau expects a great deal of overlap, which will have a drastic effect on rural areas, Smith said. “You’ll see large swaths of entire com- munities pulled into high or extreme risk WUI,” she said. “There’s a lot of regulation going on focused on this map and all these rural communities, and not a lot of represen- tation by them.” The defensible space regulations require fire-prone fuels to be cleared from 50-100 feet around certain structures, depending on the hazard rating. It’s not yet clear that cultivated cropland will be excluded from that requirement, with the matter currently being considered by Gov. Kate Brown’s Wildfire Council, Smith said. It’s also unknown whether the requirement will apply to rural facilities, such as small hydroelectric plants. “Nobody has been able to answer those questions,” she said. The State Fire Marshal’s Office has exempted agricultural buildings uninhab- ited by people from the defensible space rules for vegetative fuels, though the Farm Bureau fears that could change under new leadership. “We’re sort of at the whim of that agency now,” Smith said. Over the longer term, areas subject to regulation will have to meet stricter building codes, adding expense to new or replace- ment dwellings, she said. “It’s going to be harder to develop in these communities with these higher standards.” The Farm Bureau believes many instances of over-regulation could be pre- vented if the ODF crafted a narrower defi- nition of WUI. As it stands, the criteria applies to areas with at least one structure larger than 400 square feet per 40 acres, if more than half the surrounding land consists of vegetative and “wildland” fuels. The Farm Bureau expects that rural prop- erties will widely be swept into that defini- tion by default, Smith said. “If you don’t have any other structures, what else is going to be on that land? Our anticipation is that’s going to be most of rural Oregon,” she said. “There are all sorts of unintended consequences when you start regulating at this scale.” Regulators want stricter standards for Oregon Continued from Page 10 in areas where the impact to aquifers is unknown — even before the new regula- tions are finished. “It’s concerning because the existing rules would seem to be the reason for the situation we’re in,” said Woody Wolfe, a farmer and commissioner. That sentiment was echoed by Meg Reeves, a retired attorney and the com- mission’s chair. “I would be in favor of exploring what can be done in the interim,” she said. Waterwatch of Oregon, an environ- mental nonprofit, believes that current laws and regulations allow OWRD to “default to no” when wells are pro- posed in areas with limited groundwa- ter data. “We don’t think there’s any new pro- cess needed to do this,” said Lisa Brown, the nonprofit’s attorney. Brown said her organization appre- ciates the OWRD’s regulatory direction but urged the agency to act quickly. “We’re still seeing those default-to- yes issuances going through the system,” she said.