A18 REGION Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, June 22, 2022 DEQ increases Port of Morrow fi ne to $2.1 million East Oregonian BOARDMAN — Ore- gon Department of Environ- mental Quality has increased the penalty against the Port of Morrow from $1.3 mil- lion to a little more than $2.1 million. State environmental reg- ulators levied the initial fi nes in January, accusing the port of excessively spreading nitrogen-rich wastewater as fertilizer on area farmland for years. DEQ announced in a statement Friday, June 17, the additional $800,000 is “for additional violations involving over applica- tion of wastewater contain- ing nitrogen to agricultural fi elds in the Lower Uma- tilla Basin, an area with longstanding groundwater contamination.” The Port of Morrow has been appealing the $1.3 mil- lion in fi nes. “The Port of Morrow recognizes groundwater contamination is a serious problem, and has been for decades,” port Executive Director Lisa Mittelsdorf said. “The port believes this is a community problem that will require a community solution. By the DEQ’s own East Oregonian, File Industrial facilities operate Jan. 11, 2022, at the Port of Morrow near Boardman. Oregon Department of Environmental Quality announced Friday, June 17, it increased the penalty against the port for nitrate pollution from $1.3 million to a little more than $2.1 million. analysis, the port’s industrial wastewater reuse program is responsible for less than 5% of the area’s nitrates. We will continue to work with DEQ to collaborate on a solution that will address what hap- pens to industrial wastewa- ter during winter months without shutting down the industries generating that wastewater.” According to the state- ment from DEQ, the Port of Morrow is one of many sources contributing to nitrate contamination in northern Morrow and Uma- tilla counties — an area known as the Lower Uma- tilla Basin Groundwater Management Area. The primary source of contamination in the area, about 70%, is from fertil- izer used on irrigated farm- land, according to the man- agement area’s action plan. Additional contributors are dairy and cattle farms (about 20%), food processing facil- ities, such as the port that reuse wastewater to irrigate fi elds (about 5%) and resi- dential septic systems and other sources (about 5%). The Port of Morrow col- lects wastewater from food processors, storage facilities and data centers in its indus- trial park outside Boardman. The port has a DEQ water quality permit that allows it to use the nitrogen-rich wastewater for irrigation on nearby farms, but the permit includes limits on how much nitrogen the port can apply to the farmland and how much nitrate and moisture can be present in soil prior to applications. “The amended notice cites the port for additional occurrences of applying wastewater containing nitro- gen to fi elds that already had too much existing nitrate or moisture in the soil,” accord- ing to the statement. “Having too much nitrate or moisture in the soil when applying wastewater increases the likelihood of nitrates fl ow- ing down into the ground- water rather than remaining in the soil for crops to use.” Interior to launch mental health program for wildland fi refi ghters By JACOB FISCHLER and AUDREY DUTTON Oregon Capital Chronicle BOISE, Idaho — The U.S. Interior Department will create a health and well-being program for wildland fi refi ghters and boost spending on fi refi ght- ing eff orts by $103 million in fi scal 2022, Secretary Deb Haaland said Friday, June 17. The additional funding, which Haaland announced at the National Interagency Fire Center, comes as part of the $1.5 billion in last year’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure law signed into law by Pres- ident Joe Biden that’s meant to address wildfi res, which also directed the creation of mental health services for wildland fi refi ghters. Most of the funding, $80.9 million, will be used to broaden and hasten work to manage fuels in fi re- prone areas and will help the department reach 2 mil- lion more acres than it did last year, a roughly 30% increase, according to Inte- rior. Another $19.4 million will be used to rehabilitate areas after they’ve burned. The programs are critical now, with climate change making fi res frequent and intense, Haaland said. “One thing is perfectly clear: That climate change will continue to make fi res in the West larger and that we must continue to invest in conservation of our eco- systems,” she said. “We must and we will continue to stay coordinated because the reality is that these days … it’s ‘fi re years,’ no longer ‘fi re seasons.’ Fire impacts “Hotter, drier conditions cause more extreme fi re behavior, and the increased frequency of fi res in urban areas impacts more homes, businesses and communi- ties each and every year.” The mental health and wellness program was also a product of the infra- structure law, which com- pelled Interior and the U.S. Department of Agri- culture to create programs to address mental health needs, including treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. The health program will hire people to respond to critical incidents that require stress management. It will also add health care capacity in four Interior bureaus — Indian Aff airs, Land Management, the Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Ser- vice — to establish a new system of trauma-support services focused on early intervention. Offi cials said the pro- gram will augment and better coordinate existing approaches to helping fi re- fi ghters stay resilient and recover from on-the-job trauma. They expect sev- eral millions of dollars of funding from the bipartisan infrastructure bill, but were unable to provide an exact funding amount during a press briefi ng Friday. “We have more support to expand on capacity we already have in the agen- cies, and that’s what we’re super grateful for,” said Grant Beebe, the fi re direc- tor for the Bureau of Land Management at NIFC. “So (we’re) not standing up a brand new program but actually bolstering one that we’ve had some experience with, and great success with, with our fi refi ghters.” In a statement ahead of the announcement, Haa- land said the aim “to pro- vide trauma-informed men- tal health care is critical.” t R E u T o N t f is WI e l e b D th t ’ n Do he COL in t Introducing Englander! Mattress Sale July 6th ORDER NOW! It’s time to place your wood burning stove orders Delivery: 12-14 week’s out ANTON’S HOME & SPIRITS 800 S. River Enterprise, OR • 541-426-9228 www.carpetone.com