OFF PAGE ONE Thursday, July 29, 2021 Dryland: Continued from Page A1 “Dryland wheat farmers are the most innovative folks you will ever meet,” Hagerty said. “We need to fight for the good work our growers are doing.” The funding also marks a dramatic change of fortune for the station after years of fighting for its budgetary life. Grower-led initiative Established in 1931, CBARC is one of 11 research centers run by OSU in differ- ent growing regions around the state. The USDA also shares space at the station, which it calls the Columbia Plateau Conser vation Research Center. Though technically separate, they have similar missions to enhance dryland farming in the arid Columbia Basin. However, the center faced a crisis in 2016 and 2017, with budget cuts threatening nearly half the annual fund- ing on the USDA side. The Oregon wheat indus- try lobbied to save the center’s funding, but Greg Goad, a Pendleton-area farmer, said more was needed to find a stable injection of resources. “It became clear to us that this was not a good long-term strategy for dealing with the problem,” Goad said. Goad, who describes himself as semi-retired, serves on a grower liaison committee that works with both the USDA and OSU research programs. He said their focus became identify- ing proposals that could catch the eye of Congress and poli- cymakers — hence the focus on climate change. “We could see where we could be a help on carbon, and at the same time help the growers,” Goad said. The $2 million Resilient Dryland Farming Appro- priation was approved by Congress in 2019, and the $1.5 million soil carbon research appropriation was announced earlier this year. Amanda Hoey, CEO of the Oregon Wheat Grow- ers League and the state’s Wheat Commission, said the projects will provide much- needed data specific to the Columbia Basin’s unique climate and growing envi- ronment. “It will assure data specific to the regional differences in Oregon and will ultimately lead to increased profitabil- ity and crop yield — good for our agricultural economy, our environmental stewardship George Plaven/Capital Press Eric Orem, a wheat farmer in Morrow County, behind the wheel of his combine during harvest. and our rural economies,” Hoey said. Region-specific data Wheat is Oregon’s sixth- most valuable agricultural commodity, with farmers harvesting nearly 47 million bushels worth more than $294 million in 2020. The vast majority of that production comes from Umatilla and Morrow coun- ties, which together have roughly 61% of the total wheat acreage. Annual precipitation varies by location. For exam- ple, the Pendleton station, nestled along the Blue Moun- tains, gets as much as 18 inches, while areas farther west get as little as 8 inches. As a result, most dryland farmers rotate their fields between growing a crop one year and leaving it fallow the next to rebuild soil moisture. Francisco Calderon, CBARC station manager with OSU, said research must be tailored to this particular system. “We cannot use data from the Midwest,” Calderon explained. “The answers to our questions about soil carbon have to be developed locally.” Calderon knows the differ- ences all too well. He came to OSU after 18 years work- ing for the USDA in eastern Colorado. Despite both regions producing dryland wheat, climatic differences mean Colorado farmers receive more moisture in the form of summer thunderstorms, as opposed to the Pacific North- west, where most precipita- tion falls in the winter. The timing allows farmers in Colorado to rotate wheat with other summer crops, such as corn or sorghum. Mother Nature does not give farmers in Northeast Oregon that option. In turn, different farming practices and crops impact the amount of carbon that can be sequestered in the soil. “There is no cookie-cutter recommendation,” Calderon said. “You have to weigh the local precipitation, conditions and soils to develop different recommendations for differ- ent regions.” Team science The new federal appro- priations, Calderon said, will work hand-in-hand to answer those questions. Under the soil carbon research program, OSU and the USDA will evenly split the $1.5 million, combining expertise from both teams across several disciplines. OSU also will receive one-quarter of the $2 million dryland farming appropria- tion to do the plot work for cropping trials. Hagerty, who is the project leader for OSU, said it is an opportunity to conduct “team science,” breaking out of their individ- ual research “silos.” “We can have a much better, broader impact for the growers,” Hagerty said. “No more one scientist, one bench.” Surge: Continued from Page A1 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian An abandoned shopping cart sits Wednesday, July 28, 2021, near the corner of Southwest Dorion Avenue and Sixth Street in Pendleton. The Pendleton City Council recently passed a local law requiring businesses to post signs to give the city enforcement authority over aban- doned shopping carts. Carts: Continued from Page A1 By ram added that Pendleton police would be willing to work with stores on providing protec- tion when retrieving carts and encouraged them to contact him with ques- tions. “My door is always open,” he said. “I answer my emails. My phone is always on.” Byram said the impe- tus for the new ordinance was an uptick in calls about abandoned carts in 2019. While most of the calls came from a small group of individuals and “99%” of stores complied when asked to retrieve their property, Byram said police couldn’t ignore their reports, especially when a store was slow to react to an abandoned cart. Byram said they try to handle each call about carts on a case-by-case basis, especially when some- one still is using it. Byram said the police response is different when its a senior using the cart as their only means of transporting food or goods home. Ultimately, Byram said he doesn’t anticipate invok- ing this ordinance often, but it provides the city “teeth” when it needs to get a store’s attention. Turk said he worked at an Ace in Baker City prior to managing the Pendleton location and the Baker store would sometimes find a cart in a nearby river. Even if it’s not a problem now, Turk said he wants to preserve the Pendleton Ace’s carts, not only because they’re expensive to replace, but also because he considers shopping carts an import- ant service for customers. Health officials say the surge is largely due to social gatherings and large summer events that have ensued since the state lifted all pandemic restrictions on June 30. Infection is spreading almost entirely among unvaccinated people, health officials say. Less t ha n 40% of Umatilla County residents have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, accord- ing to federal data. Hospitalizations spike The masking recom- mendations also come as COVID-19 hospitalizations surge statewide and at some regional hospitals. More than half of all patients currently hospi- talized at CHI St. Anthony in Pendleton have tested positive for COVID-19, according to a hospital spokesperson. The hospital has reported a “significant uptick” in positive COVID-19 cases over the past week, nearing peak numbers last winter, the spokesperson, Emily Smith, said in an email. Fourteen people have been hospital- ized with the virus over the past seven days, with eight hospitalized on July 26 alone. Local hospitals will sometimes refer critically ill patients to other facilities for a higher level of care. But regional hospitals have been “unable to accept transfers” because they are full with patients, Smith said. For one patient in need of a transfer, health care work- As part of the dryland far ming appropriation, Hagerty said studies are underway both at the station and at Starvation Farms in Lexington, which is in a lower rainfall zone in Morrow County. She highlighted trials to determine whether certain types of cover and rotational crops — such as winter peas, barley or canola — can natu- rally improve soil health, break up soil-borne diseases and minimize erosion with- out sapping too much water from the farms’ cash crop. “What we’re trying to understand here is, do the benefits outweigh the cost?” she said. The soil carbon program, meanwhile, is still being finalized, but Calderon said it breaks down into three general objectives. First is maintaining exper- iments to see if different growing practices sequester carbon. Second is seeing how weeds and plant diseases interact with changes in soil carbon, and third is analyz- ing the system’s total carbon footprint. “That goes beyond just quantifying how much carbon stays in the ground, but how much reducing fertilizer applications, till- age or other things affect the carbon cycle,” Calderon said. Stewart Wuest, a USDA research soil scientist at the Pendleton station, is one of the project leaders on the soil carbon sequestration study. Additional funding will allow the agency to hire four new scientists, including a bioinformatics expert to do statistical work, and an agri- cultural economist. For now, Wuest said he is skeptical of how much more carbon can be sequestered in soils given the limitations of the dryland wheat-summer fallow rotation. “We want to avoid poli- cies that are unrealistic and ask farmers to do something that can’t be done,” he said. “The main point is to be real- istic.” Carbon offsets In 2019, the Oregon Legis- lature seemed poised to pass cap-and-trade legislation requiring large produc- ers of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases to buy “allowances” for every metric ton of carbon they generate. Such a market place would have allowed farm- ers to generate credits by sequestering carbon. Companies also could purchase those carbon cred- ers reached out to 15 different hospitals before finding one with an available bed, Smith said. “We’re seeing a big surge,” Fiumara said. “And if they’re already having issues with having enough room and being able to trans- fer people out when appropri- ate, that doesn’t speak well for if this surge continues.” On July 23 and July 24 alone, approximately 40% of patients who came to the hospital with COVID-19 symptoms tested positive. None had been vaccinated against COVID-19. The emergency depart- ment’s physician director on July 26, reported a threefold increase in patients testing positive in the department during the past five days, Smith said. Good Shepherd Medi- cal Center in Hermiston said they are also seeing an increase in hospitalizations and positive COVID-19 tests. Five people have been hospi- talized with COVID-19 at the facility in the past week as more patients are coming to the emergency department and Good Shepherd Urgent Care with COVID-19 symp- toms, according to Caitlin Cozad, the hospital’s spokes- person. The hospital’s testing positivity rate has also more than doubled since earlier this month. From June 29 to July 12, 9.3% of tests came back positive. And from July 13 to July 26, that number jumped to 23.5%. Fiumara said he expects hospitalization rates to continue to climb, as is common when infection East Oregonian George Plaven/Capital Press Darren Padget, a wheat farmer and president of the U.S. Wheat Associates, stands along one of his fields in Grass Valley. George Plaven/Capital Press Francisco Calderon is the station manager of OSU’s Columbia Basin Agricultural Research Center, Adams. He previously spent 18 years working for the USDA in eastern Colorado. its to offset greenhouse gas emissions. Senate Republicans ulti- mately blocked the bill by staging a walkout, though Democratic Gov. Kate Brown followed up last year by signing an executive order targeting ambitious greenhouse gas emission reduction goals — at least 45% below 1990 levels by 2035, and at least 80% below 1990 levels by 2050. Freya Chay, a policy associate for Carbon Plan, a nonprofit organization based in Santa Cruz, Cali- fornia, said offset credits for soil carbon sequestration currently exist in voluntary markets, though they are not yet well defined. “It’s pretty opaque,” Chay said. “It takes some real trac- ing to figure out how a ton (of carbon) was quantified.” Chay said local research like that at CBARC is cr it ical. Wit hout t hat data, she said indepen- dent registries will strug- gle to quantify and credit soil carbon sequestration. A7 Meanwhile, farmers say they are in a wait-and-see mode. Dar ren Padget, who farms in Grass Valley, and is chairman of U.S. Wheat Associates, the national organization that serves as the industry’s overseas marketing arm, said the cost of inputs such as fuel and fertilizer are only going up. “The question is whether any credit that we get will offset our increase in inputs,” Padget said. “We hope it’s a net positive, financially. If it isn’t, then it’s going to be a pretty hard sell.” Extreme drought Amid lingering uncer- tainty, farmers across the West are feeling the effects of extreme drought, under- scoring the urgency of the research. Eric Orem, a Morrow County farmer, plans to harvest about 2,500 acres of wheat this year. He antici- pates his yield may be down by as much as half in some of his fields, where just 6 inches of precipitation has fallen since planting last fall. Combined with a heat wave in June that pushed temperatures as high as 118 degrees, Orem said the crop’s quality may be affected. Most wheat grown in the Pacific Northwest is a lower-protein variety predominantly exported to Asia, where millers use the flour to make noodles, sponge cakes and crackers. Heat stress tends to create higher protein levels in wheat. If the percentage goes too high, Orem said customers pay less for the product. “Conditions have just been tough,” he said. “It’s going to be crop insurance year.” Orem said he has already done several things to make his operation more efficient. He adopted no-till farming, which saves him money on fuel, and uses variable rate seeding on his seed drills and avoids over-spraying fertilizer and herbicides to save on inputs. Orem has contributed 10 acres for OSU to trial differ- ent mixes of cover crops. The partnership between growers and researchers in the area has been great, he said, with both sides collab- orating for a common good. “ L o ok i ng at t he s e programs and seeing what farms can do to benefit our soil health and the environ- ment is great,” he said. “It’s a win-win for everybody.” Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Registered nurse Heather McLeod dismantles medical equipment while clearing out a negative pressure room after discharging a COVID-19 patient on Tuesday, July 27, 2021, at CHI St. Anthony Hospital, Pendleton. skyrockets. Just a few weeks ago, CHI St. Anthony’s tested 73 people. Five of those tests came back positive, amount- ing to a positive test rate of 6.8%. But in the past seven days, the hospital has tested 107 people with 28 coming back positive. That’s a posi- tivity rate of 26.1% — a number that doesn’t include the patients who come to the hospital known to have COVID-19. The hospital reports between 25% and 30% of its daily visits now are due to COVID-19, which Smith said “has risen dramatically in the last week.” Since the pandemic began, Umatilla County has reported 9,395 COVID-19 cases. That’s roughly 12% of the county’s population.