A6 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, September 22, 2021 Biomass processor prevails in fire insurance dispute By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press WALLOWA, Ore. — A federal judge has ruled that an Oregon woody biomass pro- cessor is entitled to insurance compensation for business income lost due to a fire. In 2019, a fire caused exten- sive damage to buildings and machinery owned by Inte- grated Biomass Resources, a company in Wallowa, Ore., that makes heat logs, camp- fire wood, poles and electricity from forest project byproducts. The biomass company filed a lawsuit against the Dela- ware-based AIX Insurance Co. for refusing to pay for income lost due to suspended busi- ness operations in the fire’s aftermath. The complaint sought at least $670,000 in damages for the insurance company’s alleged breach of contract. AIX claimed the damaged equipment was covered under a portion of the insurance pol- icy that did not provide com- pensation for lost business income, but a federal magis- trate judge disagreed with that interpretation of the contract earlier this year. Capital Press A portion of the Integrated Biomass operation in Wallowa, Ore. It is now owned by Heartwood Biomass LLC. “The court finds no ambi- guity in the terms of the policy — business income coverage is provided for losses to those buildings, which includes per- manently installed machin- ery and equipment, and to per- sonal property located within 100 feet of the buildings,” said U.S. Magistrate Judge Patricia Sullivan. The insurance company objected to the magistrate judge’s findings and recom- mendations, arguing it had already paid for destroyed property under the policy but that its coverage didn’t extend to lost business income from damaged “out in the open” machinery. U.S. District Judge Michael Mosman has now rejected the insurance company’s objec- tions, ruling that he agrees with the magistrate judge’s “well-reasoned opinion” and adopts it as his own. Though Integrated Biomass Resources has prevailed in the dispute over insurance cover- age, the ruling does not decide the amount of damages owed to the company. Integrated Biomass Resources was started in 2009 with the goal of processing small-diameter logs after larger timber became unavailable in the region due to stricter envi- ronmental regulations. The company largely relies on woody biomass from wild- fire mitigation and forest health projects on federal lands in Northeast Oregon. Last year, it was bought for an undisclosed sum by Heartwood Biomass LLC. Treasure Valley Reload Center groundbreaking set By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press NYSSA, Ore.— Construc- tion of a rail reload center that will benefit the area’s onion shippers will get underway next month near Nyssa, Ore. The state-funded Treasure Valley Reload Center will move onions and other com- modities from trucks to rail- cars for shipment east. Greg Smith, of the Mal- heur County Development Corp., said he and the board in mid-September signed a 20-year operator lease with Americold Logistics LLC. The board also finalized an industrial track agreement with Union Pacific Railroad. In it, Union Pacific agrees to service a rail spur and provide construction and long-term maintenance of the rail cross- ing on Gem Avenue. The board advised Steve Lindley Contracting, of Union, Ore., to start site work follow- ing a groundbreaking cere- mony at 11:30 a.m. Oct. 1 at the site, east of Highway 201. Lindley in late August was selected from among four bid- ders. The company’s base bid was $5.2 million. Its “addi- tive-alternative” bid was $3.4 million. Smith said the first amount covers immediate needs; the second covers future work that will be approved and funded as demand warrants. Both bids were below engi- neers’ estimates. Earlier, the 14 area compa- nies that are part of the Trea- sure Valley Onion Shippers LLC reached an agreement with Americold on volumes and costs. Smith said rail, shipper and lease agreements “had to be completed sequentially in order to make it work.” Excavation “will be the first of four segments of devel- opment, with the goal to be ready to ship onions by the end of next summer,” he said. Other construction steps include laying gravel and aggregate, installing water and wastewater systems, plac- ing rock ballasts to support track and trains, and prepar- ing the building site and com- pleting the approximately 60,000-square-foot structure. “In year one, we anticipate more than 900 railcar move- ments out of the Reload Cen- ter,” Smith said. About 4.3 truckloads of onions fit into a railcar. For the project, the 2017 Legislature approved a $26 million Connect Oregon grant from the state lottery. The Ore- gon Transportation Commis- sion early this year approved it and started releasing funds. Smith said the 2021 Leg- islature approved an addi- tional $3 million for a water line from Nyssa to the build- ing. The line will go through the industrial park, which will also benefit. The cost estimates include about $10 million to $12 mil- lion for rail spur development, $6 million to $8 million for the building, $6 million for exca- vation and $1.5 million to $2 million for professional ser- vices including design and permitting. The lease calls for Ameri- Courtesy of Anderson Perry/Capital Press An artist’s rendering of the Treasure Valley Reload Center, which will be built near Nyssa, Ore. cold to pay Malheur County Development Corp. $2,500 a month and take ownership after 20 years. The county can charge additional fees if needed to cover costs such as depreciation or maintenance. Meanwhile, Americold is upgrading one facility each in the Midwest, on the East Coast and in the South to han- dle onions and store them. He said these investments, to cost around the same as the Reload Center building, mean new markets can open where trains may not stop otherwise. Southeastern Oregon and southwestern Idaho produce more than one-third of the country’s fall-winter storage onion crop. MT. VERNON PRESBYTERIAN Community Church SUNDAY SERVICE..............9 am SUNDAY SERVICE ...........9 am 541-932-4800 EVERYONE WELCOME Assembly of God 896 E. Main 330 W. Front St. John Day Prairie City Sunday Services 9:30 am 11am Prairie Baptist Church 238 N. McHaley Prairie City Sunday Service 10:30am St. Thomas Episcopal Church Join us on Facebook live Sunday 10am Like us on Facebook! Redeemer Lutheran Church Come Worship with us at Grace Chapel (EMC ) 154 E. Williams St. Prairie City, Oregon 541 820-4437 2 Corinthians 5:17 Every Sunday in the L.C. 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