Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, July 29, 2022 Volume 95, Number 30 CapitalPress.com $2.50 ‘A RUDDERLESS SHIP’ Irrigators struggle with Oregon water policy By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press H OOD RIVER, Ore. — Years of work and millions of dollars invested in rais- ing Kingsley Dam in Ore- gon’s Hood River Valley are about to pay off . At least, that’s the hope of the Farmers Irrigation District, which oversaw the proj- ect and footed much of the bill. Though the reservoir is nearly ready to store more water, the irrigation district fears it may only seldom be used at full capacity. “We’ve built a $5.5 million reservoir expansion that we may not be able to fi ll,” said Les Perkins, FID’s general manager. The project was partially funded by a $3 million state government grant, which has some complicated strings attached. As it turns out, those hurdles may be so high that the additional reservoir volume will likely remain unfi lled in many years. The irrigation district couldn’t have expected that possibility when it obtained the grant six years ago, Perkins said. “You just don’t know. It’s a giant black box,” he said. Agricultural organizations worry such restrictions not only thwart the purpose of Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Les Perkins, general manager of the Farmers Irrigation District, explains the expansion of the Kingsley Dam and associated reservoir, on which the dis- trict’s farmers rely for irrigation in Oregon’s Hood River Valley. the grant program but more broadly hin- der the state’s investments in water supply development. Complications in way “Oregon has a way to make the funding more complicated than it needs to be,” said April Snell, executive director of the Ore- gon Water Resources Congress, which rep- resents irrigation districts. The possibility of encountering expen- sive and restrictive obstacles can discourage irrigators from seeking state government funding, even when they lack other options, she said. “If we want more innovative projects, there have to be fewer surprises,” Snell said. The case of Kingsley Dam is illustrative of the problems cited by critics. Because the irrigation district accepted the grant money, its new storage water right is subject to stricter environmental conditions. Additional water can only be diverted into the reservoir during winter if aff ected stream levels rise above thresholds set by state regulators. This “seasonal varying fl ow” require- ment is intended to protect fi sh. Elevated water levels are needed for adult fi sh to swim upstream and for juve- niles to move downstream. High fl ows also fl ush unwanted sediments from spawn- ing habitat and maintain stream channels, among other functions. The Farmers Irrigation District knew the grant money entailed “seasonally vary- ing fl ows” and other requirements, such as devoting 25% of the newly stored water for in-stream uses. However, the irrigation district could not have predicted the exact fl ow thresholds until the Oregon Water Resources Depart- ment completed its analysis of stream data. While the OWRD’s experts believe the reservoir’s chances of being fi lled every year top 90%, the irrigation district is skeptical See Water, Page 9 Farmers Irrigation District Before the project started, the Farmers Irrigation District Kingsley Reservoir held 715 acre-feet of water. The expansion nearly doubles the volume. Groups worry anti-ag bias clouding housing debate By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press As Oregon’s government agencies contemplate upgrad- ing farmworker housing rules, the agriculture industry is worried whether an inherent bias has stacked the debate against growers. Farmworker housing is likely the next front in the battle over Oregon’s regula- tions for agricultural employ- ers, raising concerns about mounting production costs for labor-intensive crops. Recent comments by a state employee have also led agriculture groups to question if their perspectives are given a fair hearing. “It’s a very obvious bias the agencies are allowed to show that is going unchecked by their superiors,” said Mary Anne Cooper, vice president of government aff airs for the Oregon Farm Bureau. More stringent farmworker housing standards would fur- ther increase expenses for spe- cialty crop growers who are already contending with the phase-in of higher agricultural overtime wages, Cooper said. Combined with other costly labor requirements imposed in recent years, the fi nancial burden will proba- bly prove too heavy for many orchardists and other farmers who depend on hand labor, she said. “We’re really hitting that tipping point,” Cooper said. George Plaven/Capital Press Each room at Wafl a’s farmworker housing facility in Mt. Angel, Ore. has two beds, with 45 total beds available. The debate over increasing farmworker housing stan- dards and enforcement in Oregon has raised concerns about an anti-agriculture bias in the state government. “I think we’re going to see a massive loss of fruit and veg- etable production in Oregon.” This summer, a task force started by Oregon Gov. Kate Brown has begun discussing recommendations for increas- ing compliance with farm- worker housing rules. The task force will also make recommendations for capital improvements to farm- worker housing, which would potentially be funded with grants, tax credits, or low-in- terest loans. Changes to zoning regula- tions, water rights and other “barriers” to better housing conditions for farmworkers will be considered by the task force as well. The task force is an oppor- tunity to make recommenda- tions that may seem “way out there,” said Tim Mahern-Ma- cias, community and stake- holder engagement special- ist for the Oregon Housing and Community Services Department. Such recommendations may including altering the state constitution and revis- ing rules for “urban growth boundaries” and “exclusive farm use” zones, Mahern-Ma- cias said during a meeting June 16 with farmworker advocates. A video of that meeting was posted on the agency’s website July 6. “As for ideas, the sky is the limit,” he said. “Don’t feel boxed in. Don’t feel like this is just another run-around.” For example, one con- cept may be to “compensate a farmer for part of their land” and use it to “build communi- ty-based housing” instead of having it run by the employer, See Housing, Page 9 ‘Murder hornets’ get a new name By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Entomological Society of America on Monday asked scientists, government offi cials, media and pub- lic to call Asian giant hornets, popu- larly known as “murder hornets,” by a new name. The society adopted “northern giant hornet” as its common name for the world’s largest wasp. Washington State Department of Agriculture ento- mologist Chris Looney proposed the name. “Northern giant hornet is both sci- entifi cally accurate and easy to under- stand, and it avoids evoking fear or discrimination,” Entomological Soci- ety President Jessica Ware said in a statement. Until now, the hornet, scientifi - cally known as Vespa mandarinia, Karla Salp/WSDA An Asian giant hornet, now known as a northern giant hornet. has not had an offi cial common name, though Asian giant hornet has long been established in scientifi c papers. Entomologists have generally shunned “murder hornets,” saying the name’s sensationalistic, though the name has caught on. The society has been review- ing names of insects. The society’s guidelines discourage names linked to geography or ethnicity, or that would make people view the insect as loathsome. Last year, the society dropped “gypsy moth” in favor of “spongy moth,” the fi rst product of its Better Common Names Project. The society also accepted Loo- ney’s proposal to name Vespa soror the “southern giant hornet.” It does not have a popular name, though it is also described in scientifi c papers as a giant hornet. The two large hornet species over- lap in southern China. The northern giant hornet ranges north to Japan and the Korean Penin- sula. The southern giant hornet ranges south to Vietnam and Cambodia. Northern giant hornets have been found in northwest Washington and just across the border in British Columbia, but nowhere else in North America. Offi cials in both countries are trap- ping for the invasive species and hope to keep it from being established. The hornets swarm bee hives during what scientists call their “slaughter phase.” Eff orts to reach Looney for com- ment Monday were unsuccessful. In an earlier interview, he said that he proposed “northern giant hornet” to avoid confusion with yet a third hor- net species, Vespa veluntina. That hornet has reached Europe and is commonly known there as the “Asian hornet.” The similarity between “Asian giant hornet” and “Asian hornet” apparently led a Washington resident to report an Asian giant hornet sight- ing on a United Kingdom website. The confusion delayed fi nding and eradicating a nest in Whatcom County in 2020, according to the state agriculture department.