INNOVATIONS Special section Pages 10-12 Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, July 22, 2022 Volume 95, Number 29 CapitalPress.com $2.50 Brad Carlson/Capital Press Paul Arrington, Idaho Water Users Association executive director and general counsel. KEEPING THE WATER FLOWING Idaho’s irrigators, other users depend on Paul Arrington By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press P aul Arrington lasted one day as a farmhand. “We picked rock out of a fi eld,” the Idaho Water Users Association executive direc- tor and general counsel said, referring to his introduction to farming as a 12-year-old near Twin Falls in 1989. The farmer “called Mom and said it’s not going to work out.” But the memorably tough day helped confi rm Arrington enjoys being around other people — a key to his success advo- cating for farmers and other water users for the past 18 years and counting. “I enjoy interacting with folks,” he said. “I really enjoy learning what makes peo- ple tick and learning about how people view the world from diff erent perspectives. I enjoy learning about and hearing diff erent things.” Arrington’s people skills and enthusiasm help him keep water a top-of- Garth mind issue in the quickly Taylor growing state as he leads the 300-member association. “This job is 99 percent about building and developing relationships,” he said. Association members include surface water and groundwater users, and support providers such as engineers and attorneys, equipment providers, chemical companies, and headgate and pipeline manufacturers. Arrington, 45, said members and others in the sector can be negotiating or litigating one day and fraternizing the next. “It’s pretty amazing to watch.” PAUL ARRINGTON Title: Executive director and general counsel, Idaho Water Users Association Age: 45 Water is key Water is the linchpin of Idaho’s agricul- tural economy. “There would be virtually no agriculture in southern and eastern Idaho without irri- gation,” said Garth Taylor, a University of Idaho agricultural economist. Those regions would have some range cattle and sheep as well as some forage and cereal crops, but otherwise “would look a lot like Wyoming.” “All agriculture as we know it in south- ern and eastern Idaho is created by irriga- tion,” he said. Benefi ciaries include the state’s large dairy, potato and sugar beet industries. See Arrington, Page 13 Hometown: Twin Falls. Lives in northwest Boise. Education: Twin Falls High School, 1995; associate degree in business admin- istration and management, Brigham Young Universi- ty-Idaho, 2000; bachelor’s degree in business and human resources manage- ment, Boise State Universi- ty, 2002; Gonzaga Universi- ty School of Law, 2005. Family: Wife, Michelle; four children. Suit invites federal judges to change wolf control in Washington By DON JENKINS Capital Press A lawsuit pending in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals could upend for the worse how wolves are man- aged on federal land in Eastern Wash- ington, according to the Washington Cattlemen’s Association. The suit claims the Forest Service dodges its duty to prevent wolf-live- stock confl icts in the Colville National Forest, leading state wildlife manag- ers to kill wolves. In a court fi ling, environmental groups off er a formula for breaking the cycle: “No cattle = no cattle dep- redations = no lethal wolf removal.” The stakes are high, according to the cattlemen’s association. If the suit succeeds, environmental groups can sue federal agencies for the actions of Washington wildlife managers. “Consequently, this case threat- ens to have signifi cant precedential impact on the management of wildlife on federal lands, including grazing allotments,” according to an amicus brief fi led by the cattlemen. WildEarth Guardians, Western Watersheds Project and Kettle Range Conservation Group fi led the suit against the Forest Service. The Dia- mond M ranch, which grazes cattle in national forest, intervened. A U.S. district court judge in Spo- kane last year dismissed the lawsuit, ruling she didn’t have jurisdiction to address the wrongs alleged by wolf advocates. Wolves in Eastern Wash- ington are not federally protected. The environmental groups appealed, and the 9th Circuit may hear the case this fall, giving the court its fi rst chance to rule on how Wash- ington balances wolf recovery and ranching. Wolf advocates have sued in state courts to stop Fish and Wildlife from ODFW See Wolf, Page 13 A gray wolf. Study calls for smarter land use planning to curb farmland loss By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press BELLINGHAM, Wash. — The Pacifi c Northwest stands to lose more than half a million acres of farmland to urban sprawl by 2040 unless cities make smarter devel- opment choices, according to a new report by the American Farmland Trust. The report, “Farms Under Threat 2040: Choosing an Abundant Future,” also high- lights threats to farmland by rising sea lev- els due to climate change, and the acceler- ated expansion of solar projects needed to Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press File meet zero-carbon energy mandates. Barns on farmland with Mount Adams in the back- Addie Candib, Northwest regional ground. director for the American Farmland Trust in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, said the fi ndings are part of a multi-year eff ort to come up with solutions for preserving farmland nationwide. “In order to be eff ective, we needed to have good data about what was happening to farmland,” Candib said. Other partners in the “Farms Under Threat” program include the USDA Natu- ral Resources Conservation Service, Con- servation Science Partners and the Uni- versity of Wisconsin-Madison’s Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment. The initiative, Candib said, is “really an eff ort to quantify and map where Bank of Eastern Oregon Specializing in Founded in 1945 offers Operating Lines of by Farmers and Ranchers. Credit and Term loans on Agricultural & Who saw a need for Rural Lending. Equipment and Land. Commercial Loans. 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