REGION Thursday, May 13, 2021 East Oregonian A7 Mega-dairies are piping water onto Oregon’s shrub-steppe By DAWN STOVER Columbia Insight BOARDMAN — Cody Easterday is still waiting for the Oregon Department of Agriculture to approve his application, submitted in June 2019, for a Confined Animal Feeding Operation near the city of Boardman. Easterday, a 49-year-old rancher whose family owns a huge agricultural operation in Washington state, proposes to open a mega-dairy that would be the second-larg- est in Oregon. The Easter- day Dairy would have up to 28,300 animals and use more water than most cities in the state. The future of Easterday Dairy is in doubt, however. On March 31, Cody Easter- day pleaded guilty to a “ghost cattle scam” that defrauded Tyson Foods and another company out of more than $244 million by charging for the purchase and feeding of animals that never existed. The following day, a coali- tion of activists testified at an Oregon Senate Commit- tee on Energy and Environ- ment public hearing, voicing support for a moratorium on new or expanded mega-dair- ies in the state. Many of them pointed to the Easter- day Dairy proposal, as well as an earlier dairy cited for hundreds of environmental violations at the same loca- tion, as reasons to hit the pause button on dairies hous- ing 2,500 animals or more. At least four other mega-dairies have settled in the area around Boardman and nearby Hermiston over the past two decades. They include Threemile Canyon Farms, which has about 70,000 Jersey cows and supplies 2.2 million pounds of milk daily for the manufac- turing of Tillamook products familiar to all Oregonians and an expanding national consumer base. Threemile is Oregon’s largest dairy opera- tion and one of the two largest in the United States. This part of Northeast Oregon, known to water managers as the Lower Umatilla Basin, is a region that sees less than 9 inches of precipitation annually. It’s a desert that’s home to four of Oregon’s seven Crit- ical Groundwater Areas, so designated because of water supply problems. The Lower Umatilla Basin is also a state-desig- nated Groundwater Manage- ment Area, because of nitrate contamination typically associated with agricultural wastes and fertilizers. W hy are thirst y mega-dairies, many from out of state, drawn to a region where both water quantity and quality are threatened? Using more water than cities Surprisingly, mega-dairy farmers see the arid part of Oregon’s environment as a feature, not a bug. The Umatilla Basin is a place where enormous volumes of liquid manure and waste- water can not only be spread on flat, dry land with little danger of running off into nearby streams, but also used to grow profitable vegetable crops as well as feed for cows. “Mega-dairies put enor- mous, concentrated demands on Oregon’s water resources,” says Brian Posewitz, a staff attorney at the Portland-based conservation group Water- Watch, who testified at the recent hearing. The proposed Easterday Dairy “would use about 20 million gallons of water per day on an annual average, and that’s by their own estimates,” Posewitz says. “To put that in perspective, the city of Bend’s (population 100,000) munici- pal water supply system uses about 12 million gallons of water a day.” Dairies require drink- ing water for cows — about 3 gallons of water for every gallon of milk produced — as well as water for operations such as washing barns, clean- ing equipment and misting cows to keep them cool. But the biggest water demand at the mega-dairies in the Boardman area is for NASHCO/Contributed Photo Despite being home to four of Oregon’s seven Critical Groundwater Areas, the Lower Uma- tilla Basin has become a magnet for mega-dairies, such as Meenderinck Dairy, which began operations here in 2012. NASHCO/Contributed Photo The Columbia River Processing manufacturing facility in Boardman makes a variety of Til- lamook brand cheeses. For its milk supply, the factory relies on the mega-dairies that have sprung up in the Lower Umatilla Basin. day Dairy suggest water to irrigate crop- lands surrounding that water levels the dairies. This land there have contin- produces high-value ued to drop over the vegetable crops, past five years, even such as potatoes and in wells that are not onions, as well as being used. “There is Posewitz alfalfa and triticale not good news in the for cows. water level trend,” The land also plays an wrote a hydrogeologist with essential role as a waste the state’s Water Resources disposal site. Easterday Dairy Department in a September expects to generate more than 2020 internal memo. 40 million gallons of liquid “There is a massive manure and more than 88 amount of agricultural devel- million gallons of wastewa- opment out there,” says John ter annually — enough to DeVoe, executive director fill almost 200 Olympic-size of WaterWatch. “They’re mining water that is 20,000 swimming pools. Dairies in the Lower years old or more.” Umatilla Basin get their Tillamook transplant water from one or both of Despite its water woes, two sources: groundwater pumped from wells drilled the Lower Umatilla Basin into the desert floor, and has become a magnet for surface water piped from mega-dairies. Stand Up to local creeks and rivers, Factory Farms — a coalition namely the Columbia River. of local, state and national Both face constraints. organizations concerned The damming and diver- about the impacts of these sion of rivers has been detri- dairies — alleges that’s mental to salmon and other because Oregon has lax regu- fish throughout the Pacific lation compared with states, Northwest, and the Lower such as California, Washing- Umatilla Basin is no different. ton and Idaho. But the Lower Umatilla Mega-dairies also exploit stands out for its history of a loophole in Oregon’s over-pumping groundwater. water laws. A water right is In the absence of groundwa- required for most water uses, ter studies, the state contin- but the law has an exemption ued to issue groundwater rights in the basin until the early 1990s, when it became obvious that those rights could not be satisfied. The aquifers in the basin had become so depleted that the state had to create four Critical Groundwater Areas that are now tightly regulated. Some wells have been drawn down 500 feet or more. Most tap into basalt aquifers formed by ancient lava flows, which are productive for a while but recharge slowly if at all. Data from nine obser- vation wells in the deep basalt aquifer near Easter- for stock watering, and there are no limits on the amount of groundwater dairies can pump for animals to drink. A bill introduced this year in the Oregon Senate proposes to limit the exemp- tion for livestock watering to 5,000 gallons a day, but it is stalled. There’s another reason mega-dairies have come to the Lower Umatilla: a cheese factory. The Willamette Valley and the state’s coastal area dominated Oregon’s dairy market until about 20 years ago. That’s when the Tillamook County Creamery Associa- tion — a cooperative owned by about 80 families that operates a well-known cheese factory in coastal Tillamook County — built a second manufacturing facility at the Port of Morrow in Board- man. Called Columbia River Processing, the unmarked, windowless plant would not be recognizable as a Tilla- mook factory except for its stainless-steel milk silos and the double-tanker Milky Way trucks parked outside. Milk is Oregon’s offi- cial beverage and the state’s fourth most valuable commodity, worth about $552 million in 2019. Amer- icans are drinking less milk than they once did, but eating more cheese and yogurt made from milk. The Tillamook factory relies on mega-dairies for its milk supply. Foremost among them is Threemile Canyon Farms, which sprawls across approximately 145 square miles — an area the size of Portland — southwest of Boardman. The farm, which sells all of its milk to Tilla- mook, also grows alfalfa, potatoes, onions, corn, peas, blueberries and other crops. The farm is owned by the Fargo-based R.D. Offutt Co. — founded by Ron Offutt, the richest person in North Dakota. It uses a “closed-loop system” to recycle its own wastes — fertilizing fields with liquid and composted manure, feeding potato peels and other food-process- ing waste to cows, heating manure slurry in a digester tank to capture biogas that can be used for transportation fuel and using the digester’s dried leftovers as livestock bedding. What makes all this possi- ble is a partnership with Tillamook, which opened its Boardman cheese factory in 2001. Threemile Canyon Farms established its dairy that same year. Other mega-dair- ies followed: Sage Hollow Ranch, permitted for up to 8,700 cows, started building a dairy southeast of Board- man in 2009. The nearby Meenderinck Dairy, permit- ted for 3,000 cows, got up and running in 2012. Meanwhile, many smaller dairies around the state have closed their doors, reflecting a national trend of consolida- tion in the industry. In 1974, there were more than 4,200 dairies in Oregon, with an average of 21 cows each. Today, Oregon has 247 dair- ies, with an average of 877 cows each. Four large dair- ies in Morrow and Umatilla counties account for almost 40 percent of Oregon’s 216,614 dairy cattle. “Unchecked consolidation has led to geographical clus- tering,” says Tarah Heinzen, a senior staff attorney at Wash- ington, D.C.-based Food & Water Watch. Problem or poster child? The Stand Up to Factory Farms coalition is now lobby- ing for a moratorium on mega-dairies. The coalition fears the Easterday Dairy doesn’t have the resources to run a responsible dairy. They’re asking the state to deny East- erday’s application on the basis that it failed to disclose all relevant facts — specifi- cally, that Cody Easterday has admitted to perpetrating a massive fraud and using the proceeds to cover his commodity futures trading losses, and that two other Easterday family enterprises, Easterday Farms and Easter- day Ranches, have declared bankruptcy. “It’s a serious concern that an applicant would withhold information,” says Heinzen. The application is still under state review. Although proponents have repeatedly proposed legisla- tion to block permits for new or expanded mega-dairies, and the most recent Senate bill got a public hearing, there will be no further movement in the 2021 legislative session. Opponents of the bill say a moratorium on mega-dair- ies would have a negative effect on what Paul Snyder, executive vice president of stewardship at the Tillamook County Creamery Associa- tion, describes as an industry “success story.” As far as the industry is concerned, Threemile Canyon Farms (TMCF) is the poster child for best prac- tices. The Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy named TMCF as one of three dairy farms nationwide to receive its 2020 award for Outstanding Dairy Sustainability, citing TMCF’s closed-loop system and high standards of animal care. The farm has set aside 25% of its land as a wildlife conservation area, managed by The Nature Conservancy, along with the water rights for that land. TCMF says it adheres strictly to its goal of wasting nothing. The farm’s wastewa- ter is collected and injected into the irrigation system. The amount of water deliv- ered to crops is tailored to each field, and soil moisture is monitored in real time to prevent overwatering. Hoses hanging from the center-pivot irrigation system deliver low-pressure water through nozzles close to the ground, minimizing evaporation losses. “What we’re able to offer is a level of sophistication of water management that not every farm is able to bring to bear, just because of the scale that we have and the resources that we have,” says Tara May, spokesperson for Offutt, the farm’s parent company. Threemile Canyon Farms has two groundwater wells, each permitted to produce 2.7 cubic feet per second; this water is used for drinking water, flushing manure and other dairy operations. Irriga- tion water is pumped from the Columbia River through 231 miles of pipeline at rates up to 482 cubic feet per second. 541-276-5121 2801 ST. ANTHONY WAY • PENDLETON Use BE FAST to remember warning signs of stroke: B ALANCE: Sudden loss of balance E YES: Sudden loss of vision in one or both eyes. F ACE: Ask the person to smile. Does one 5/14 - 5/20 Cineplex Show Times side of the face droop? 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