Friday, July 22, 2022 CapitalPress.com 9 9th Circuit rejects arguments against farming in Klamath wildlife refuges By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press A federal appeals court has rejected claims that irri- gation, pesticides and graz- ing in several Klamath Basin national wildlife ref- uges are managed in viola- tion of environmental laws. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has also dismissed arguments by farm representatives that agriculture is too strictly regulated in the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Ref- uge Complex. Last year, a federal judge threw out multiple lawsuits filed in 2017 against a “com- prehensive conservation plan” for five refuges within the complex, which strad- dles the Oregon-California border. A unanimous panel of three 9th Circuit judges has now upheld that deci- sion, ruling that the Fish and Wildlife Service’s plan com- plies with all the laws gov- erning the 200,000-acre ref- uge complex. “Given the extensive evi- dence in the record support- ing the choices made by the Service, the panel saw noth- ing that authorized us, as the reviewing court, to make different choices,” the 9th Circuit said. More than 20,000 acres in two of the refuges are leased for crop cultivation, which environmental advo- cates complained is priori- tized over wildlife habitat. The 9th Circuit has dis- agreed with that argu- ment, ruling that the Fish and Wildlife Service’s plan struck the appropriate bal- ance between agriculture and wildfowl management as required by refuge man- agement statutes. Environmental advo- cates also claimed the fed- eral government violated Don Jenkins/Capital Press File A Foster Farms processing plant. Foster Farms has ‘no plans’ to reopen Oregon chicken plant By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press CRESWELL, Ore. — Officials at Fos- ter Farms say the poul- try company has no plans to reopen its shut- tered chicken process- ing plant here, despite applying with state reg- ulators to renew the facility’s wastewater management permit. The Oregon Depart- ment of Environmental Quality intends to reis- sue the permit, which was last issued in 2015. It allows the plant to dis- charge treated wastewa- ter into an unnamed trib- utary of Camas Swale Creek in the Willamette River watershed. However, Foster Farms has not operated the 35,000-square-foot plant since 2006 and has “no plans to do so in the immediate future,” according to a company statement. Jason Gentemann, Pacific Northwest Divi- sion manager for Foster Farms, said the permit outlines what practices and improvements to infrastructure would be needed to maintain envi- ronmental compliance if the plant ever does reopen. “Having an opera- tion that, even though it is old and shut down, you’re probably going to choose to at least keep it permitted and make sure on paper it’s compliant and up to snuff,” Gen- temann explained. The permit renewal also coincides with three new proposed chicken farms in the Mid-Willamette Val- ley that would raise millions of birds every year for Foster Farms. Opponents are fighting the projects, arguing they will endanger pub- lic health and safety in local communities. Gentemann said there is no correlation between those develop- ments and the Creswell permit. “This is a completely separate situation,” he said. “It has no connec- tion whatsoever to the fact that we’re build- ing new chicken barns in the state of Oregon. It just happened to be coincidental timing.” Creswell plant At its peak, the Cre- swell plant processed roughly 7 million broiler chickens per year, producing 29.5 million pounds of meat. Foster Farms bought the site in 1987, and for over a decade it was the primary processor for all of the company’s chickens raised in Ore- gon, Gentemann said. Then in 1998, Fos- ter Farms built a newer, HOW TO COMMENT Comments for the proposed water qual- ity permit renewal at Foster Farms’ Creswell processing plant may be submitted by mail, fax or email to Trinh Hansen, DEQ water quality permit coordi- nator, at 4026 Fairview Industrial Drive SE, Salem, OR 97302, or trinh.hansen@deq. oregon.gov. The deadline for comments is 5 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 4. larger chicken pro- cessing plant in Kelso, Wash. The Creswell plant continued to oper- ate at a reduced capac- ity until 2006, when the decision was made to shut it down and send everything to Kelso, Gentemann said. The DEQ water qual- ity permit allows the plant to discharge waste- water between Nov. 1 and April 30. During the summer, wastewater would be used for sprin- kler irrigation. The permit regu- lates several pollutants, including E. coli, chlo- rine, pH, oil, grease and total suspended solids left over from processing. Before operations at the plant could resume, Foster Farms would be required to submit an updated engineering report evaluating the facility’s wastewater infrastructure. “The study must systematically evalu- ate the entire waste- water system and the ability to operate as designed and not create nuisance conditions or odor problems, while consistently meeting the required waste dis- charge limits,” the per- mit states. Foster Farms would also have to develop a wastewater irrigation plan, approved by DEQ. A public comment period for the Creswell facility’s permit is now underway, ending Aug. 4. DEQ says it will schedule a public hear- ing if it receives written requests from at least 10 people, or from an organization represent- ing at least 10 people. Piva Rafter P Ranch Custer County, ID 1,410 Acres | $13,000,000 the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to con- sider scaling back agricul- tural leases on refuge lands. However, the agency properly explained that it didn’t consider this option because farming helps waterfowl populations by providing them with food, the 9th Circuit said. Also, reducing farmed acreage in the refuges would not make more water avail- able for wetlands, since it would instead go to more senior irrigators elsewhere, the ruling said. In developing the man- agement plan, the Fish and Wildlife Service was “con- strained by a complex sys- tem of water rights that is largely beyond its control,” the 9th Circuit said. The government’s rules for pesticide spraying also came under fire from envi- ronmental advocates, who claimed the govern- ment should have evalu- ated heightened chemical restrictions. The 9th Circuit has found that argument “unavailing,” since the Fish and Wildlife Service reasonably decided that further restricting pes- ticide usage wasn’t feasible, the 9th Circuit said. “FWS adequately explained that some amount of pesticide use was nec- essary on the Refuges to ensure sufficient crop pro- duction, on which Refuge waterfowl now depend,” the ruling said. Similarly, the govern- ment didn’t have to evalu- ate livestock curtailments in one of the refuges, since it considers grazing necessary to control weed species and promote sage grouse habitat, the 9th Circuit said. “Overall, FWS concluded that the negative effects of the limited, managed graz- ing program on sage-grouse were outweighed by the pos- itive effects of the program,” the ruling said. While most objections to the refuge management plan centered on environ- mental concerns, restrictions on crop production were also challenged by sev- eral farms and agricultural organizations. These plaintiffs claimed the management plan vio- lated federal laws by increas- ing the acreage devoted to wetlands and unhar- vested grain, among other requirements. The 9th Circuit disagreed that farming is “automati- cally consistent” with proper waterfowl management and thus limits on agriculture are unauthorized. Federal refuge manage- ment statutes “unambigu- ously prioritize” wildlife over agriculture, which must be consistent with waterfowl objectives, the ruling said. CoBank: Supply chains still fractured By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press While easing of sup- ply-chain bottlenecks and overall improvements in U.S. logistics have grabbed headlines over the last quar- ter, CoBank analysts are less impressed with the progress made to date. “Supply-chain improve- ments have been much more modest than the headlines suggest. And there is no fast lane ahead,” said Dan Kowalski, vice president of CoBank’s Knowledge Exchange. “While commodity prices have declined mean- ingfully and lineups at Cal- ifornia ports have shortened, supply chains are broadly still mired in dysfunction,” he said in the latest “CoBank Quarterly” report. Various metrics indicate supply-chain performance has improved, both domes- tically and globally. But that improvement is due to fewer and faster export shipments from China due to COVID lockdowns there and slightly lower transportation price inflation, he said. “The latest data show that warehouse and inventory costs are still rising at near- peak levels, and transporta- tion costs are still rising at a much higher rate than before the pandemic,” he said. Agricultural supply chains reflect this marginal and inconsistent improve- ment as well. Grain rail car availability was at a multi- year low and prices were at highs in Q2 and improved only recently. But those recent savings in rail rates Succor Creek Cattle Ranch Chilly Valley Lifestyle Estate Klamath County, OR 27 Acres | $3,250,000 Holly Dillemuth/For the Capital Press Standing grain is left for migrating birds in the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Ref- uge Complex. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has rejected several lawsuits over farming in the refuge complex. Malheur County, OR 1,052 Acres | $5,900,000 Rio Vista Ranch Okanogan County, WA 114 Acres | $3,350,000 www.HaydenOutdoors.com have been partially offset by a dramatic increase in fuel surcharges, he said. Grain export vessel rates are also flirting with multi- year highs. And despite efforts to improve agri- culture’s access to vessels returning to Asia from Cal- ifornia, the share of vessels leaving port empty was still 70% in Q1, the latest avail- able data, he said. Truck rates have shown the most consistent decline, but are still far above pre-pandemic levels. Truck availability, however, is markedly improved, he said. “We do expect that as consumer purchases of goods continues to soften, supply chains will slowly recover,” he said. If the oncoming recession in Europe is a harbinger of things to come in the U.S., the decline in demand for goods will accelerate, fur- ther enabling supply chains to heal. But labor constraints will continue to hamper the recovery either way, mak- ing the return to an efficient supply chain agonizingly slow, he said. Despite financial mar- kets’ all-consuming focus on inflation, the U.S. econ- omy continues to advance. Labor markets are strong and consumers are still spending. Price inflation is still raging but a sag in commodity prices is rais- ing hopes of smaller price increases, he said. For now, though, the Federal Reserve is poised to raise rates until it believes inflation has been tamed. The Fed is now singularly focused on price stability, and that is elevating the risk to economic growth, he said. “The drop in commodity prices and recent bond yield inversions are sending up red flags about slowing eco- nomic activity and a poten- tial oncoming recession,” he said. Monetary policy is not a perfect science and the “softish” landing that the Fed desires will be a diffi- cult needle to thread. Most economists are now pro- jecting a better-than-even chance that the U.S. will be in recession by mid-2023, he said. “We echo those projec- tions, and while agriculture and energy are likely to con- tinue performing well due to the Ukraine conflict, several other sectors will slow in coming months, just as the Fed intends,” he said. WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! BAGS: • Seed Bags • Fertilizer Bags • Feed Bags • Potato Bags • Printed Bags • Plain Bags • Bulk Bags • Totes • Woven Polypropylene • Bopp • Polyethylene • Pocket Bags • Roll Stock & More! HAY PRESS SUPPORT: • Hay Sleeves • Strap • Totes • Printed or Plain • Stretch Film (ALL GAUGES) WAREHOUSE PACKAGING: • Stretch Film • Pallet Sheets • Pallet Covers LOCATIONS: Albany, Oregon (MAIN OFFICE) Ellensburg, Washington CONTACT INFORMATION: Phone: 855-928-3856 Fax: 541-497-6262 info@westernpackaging.com ....................................................... 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