A3 THE ASTORIAN • THuRSdAy, SEpTEmbER 1, 2022 Megan Farmer/KUOW Rachel Kidd, in blue, gathered with other members of the Chinook Indian Nation and allies on the steps of the Henry M. Jackson Federal Building on Monday in Seattle. Capital Press A crop duster sprayed a potato field with fungicide. Ag groups claim regulators misrepresent pesticide data Requests for more context By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital press Oregon regulators have come under fire from agricul- ture and forestry advocates for allegedly misrepresenting information about pesticides in waterways to the public. A new online data viewer displays information about pesticides detected in 12 river basins by the state’s Department of Environmen- tal Quality and Department of Agriculture. The state government pro- moted the interactive tool as helping “Oregonians who want to know what pesticides are in their local streams,” but several natural resource orga- nizations say that’s an inac- curate characterization of the data. “We dug into what the tool is showing and how it is being presented, and it is so mislead- ing,” said Mary Anne Cooper, vice president of government affairs for the Oregon Farm Bureau. “It has a high like- lihood of being used against producers on the ground.” The tool invites data to be taken “out of context” and “will surely result in unjusti- fied concerns over water qual- ity,” according to the Oregon Farm Bureau, Oregon Asso- ciation of Nurseries, Ore- gon Forest Industries Council and Oregonians for Food and Shelter agribusiness group. “The presentation is almost what we’d expect from activist groups,” Coo- per said. The problem is not that the data is incorrect or that it’s being disclosed, since the information has always been publicly available, she said. Rather, the online tool fails to explain that data was col- lected at highly targeted loca- tions and times when pesti- cides were more likely to be detected, said Katie Murray, executive director of Orego- nians for Food and Shelter. “This is a very biased data set — intentionally biased,” Murray said. The data was gathered as part of the state’s Pesti- cide Stewardship Partnership, which was formed by the Department of Environmen- tal Quality, the Department of ‘dEQ IS ACTIVELy pRESENTING THIS dATA AS IF WE CAN GENERALIZE FROm IT AbOuT THE SAFETy OF THE WATER ANd WE CANNOT. THEy’RE ENCOuRAGING pEOpLE TO mISuNdERSTANd THIS dATA.’ Katie Murray | executive director of Oregonians for Food and Shelter Agriculture and other agen- cies in 2000 to support vol- untary improvements to pes- ticide practices. By taking samples imme- diately downstream from farms after spring rains, for example, the program seeks to maximize detections, according to industry groups. Pesticide users can then see if their strategies to keep chem- icals out of waterways are proving effective. To monitor for pesticides on a watershed-scale, how- ever, samples would need to be taken at random sites and times, with the data likely reflecting less frequent pesti- cide detections at lower con- centrations, they said. With- out these caveats, though, the government’s online data viewer creates an exaggerated impression of pesticide levels and health risks. “That’s not what that data meant. It’s telling the wrong story,” Murray said. “DEQ is actively presenting this data as if we can generalize from it about the safety of the water and we cannot. They’re encouraging people to misun- derstand this data.” A stakeholder advisory committee raised concerns about such misperceptions, which government officials seem to have ignored, crit- ics say. The Pesticide Stew- ardship Partnership relies on cooperation from farmers and other pesticide users, but the online tool threatens to under- mine that trust. “Nobody knew that is how they’d use the data 10 to 20 years down the road,” Mur- ray said. The Pesticide Steward- ship Partnership’s data-driven education has been more effective at reducing water pesticide levels than stan- dard regulatory approaches, Cooper said. In recent years, however, the program hasn’t engaged as closely with indi- vidual farmers. Now, the data viewer will likely serve as a cudgel in legislative disputes over pes- ticides, particularly since it implies “even the agencies acknowledge this is a prob- lem” with waterway pollu- tion, she said. “You’re just going to inflame situations,” Cooper said. “It makes it hard to see how they will explain the full picture to lawmakers and the public.” When asked about these concerns, the Department of Environmental Quality said the tool provides “additional context” for the “current and historic monitoring data,” such as federal benchmarks for protecting “the health of aquatic life and humans.” “To aid the public’s under- standing of the data, and to address concerns that the raw data could be misinterpreted or misused, DEQ displays the data in the manner consis- tent with how DEQ and ODA interpret the data to manage the program,” the agency said in an email. The Department of Agri- culture said the data tool is “not intended to be a compre- hensive source of pesticide distribution in state waters,” but helps pesticide users and other partners achieve “measurable environmental improvements.” In response to feedback from stakeholders, a pop-up explaining the context and scope of the data now appears when the online tool is accessed, the agency said in an email. The data viewer was developed by Department of Environmental Quality to provide transparency and eas- ier access to program data, and the Department of Agri- culture is “committed to working with DEQ to peri- odically update” the tool, the agency said. Chinook Indian Nation members rally for federal recognition Protest held in Seattle By SCOTT GREENSTONE KNKX SEATTLE — Mem- bers of the Chinook Indian Nation rallied on Monday on the steps of a federal building to raise awareness for their long fight to get federal recognition. Tony Johnson, the tribal chair- man, said his great-great-grand- father and other leaders first hired lawyers to sue for their lands back in the 1890s. Federal recognition would mean access to federal dol- lars for health care and housing for the Chinook, who are based in southwest- ern Washington state, par- ticularly Pacific County. The rally was the start of a campaign by Chinook lead- ership, they said, to pressure U.S. Sen. Patty Murray and U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell — Washington state Dem- ocrats — to use their influ- ence in Congress to get the Chinook recognized. For a brief time 20 years ago, the Clinton adminis- tration recognized the Chi- nook Indian Nation, but the Bush administration revoked that decision in 2002 after another Indig- enous nation in Washing- ton state, the Quinault, appealed to the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs. Johnson said during a speech on Monday that the Chinook Indian Nation, which is made up of five tribes — the Cathlamet, Clatsop, Lower Chinook, Wahkaikum and Willapa — refused to sign a treaty that would force them to lose their land and there- fore was never moved to a reservation. “That place where I drove from this morning with my wife and two of my five kids is the place where our sovereignty springs from,” Johnson said. “We are a sovereign nation, regardless of the govern- ment’s confusion, and our sovereignty comes from the land and our ancestors.” Johnson’s son Tahoma Johnson was there as well, and he said opportuni- ties for work and hous- ing in Pacific County are scarce. He lives in a trailer on someone else’s property, according to his father. “That really bugs me because a recognized Chi- nook (nation) would have an opportunity to provide him housing,” Johnson said. Rachel Cushman, the secretary-treasurer for the Chinook, said she was just 15 in 2002 when she heard the news of the Bush administration’s revocation of her tribe’s status. After crying with her mother, she still had to get on the bus and go to work — at the Bureau of Indian Affairs, where she was apprenticed to a fish biologist. “I didn’t want to go into a space that made me feel less than, because that’s how I felt my whole life,” Cushman said. “I felt less than. And I was made to feel less than. I went into an office full of Native people feeling less than.” Cantwell did not imme- diately respond to a request for comment. Zack DiGre- gorio, a spokesperson for Murray, said in a statement that she understands how important tribal recogni- tion efforts are and “how critical it is that all voices involved be heard” but didn’t commit to making any changes. “She will continue to do her best to serve as a voice in the United States Sen- ate for Washington’s tribal governments and tribal people,” DiGregorio said via email. Surgical care, close to home At Providence Seaside, your health is our priority. That’s why we have a dedicated team of specialists to care for you and your family. 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