Wildlife Agencies Propose Overhaul of ESA’s Petition Process for Species Listings

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service (“the Services”), the two agencies that administer the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”), recently published a proposed rule designed to improve the content and effectiveness of the species listing petition process. The proposed rule seeks to streamline the petition process for the Services and increase the quality of petitions by eliminating multi-species petitions and requiring petitioners to coordinate with the state agencies in locations where each species lives.

For more info click on their link:

http://www.natlawreview.com/article/wildlife-agencies-propose-overhaul-esa-s-petition-process-species-listings

Washington ranchers wary of grouse agreement

By; Matthew Weaver

Capital Press

Published:May 5, 2015 9:46AM

Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Creston, Wash., rancher Dawn Nelson stands in front of one of her pastures April 30 to show two weeks of regrowth after allowing her cattle to graze it. Nelson is leery of signing a candidate conservation agreement with assurances to protect the sage grouse, currently in the draft process, because of a rotational grazing requirement she says would require her to reduce her herd of 120 by half.”The place I figure these birds are happiest are behind a cow,” she said. “A pile of cow manure has so many bugs, it has to be seventh heaven for those birds.”

Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Creston, Wash., rancher Dawn Nelson and neighboring rancher Loren Brougher look to one another April 30 while standing on what is normally a lake on Nelson’s property, but is dried out months earlier than normal due to drought conditions. Nelson and Brougher are leery of signing up for a candidate conservation agreement with assurances to protect the sage grouse, currently in the draft process, because they say its requirements don’t factor in situations like drought, among other concerns.

 CRESTON, Wash. — Four Eastern Washington ranchers say they’re concerned they will lose their private property rights if they sign a voluntary agreement designed to protect them from legal repercussions if something happens to a sage grouse on their property.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is finalizing a Washington state candidate conservation agreement with assurances — called a CCAA — for ranchers to take measures to protect sage grouse on their property. Consultation and conservation planning division manager Bridget Moran said the agency is negotiating with the state Department of Fish and Wildlife and Washington Cattlemen’s Association to finalize the agreement for publication and public comment.

Creston, Wash., rancher Dawn Nelson says she would have to reduce her herd of more than 120 by roughly half if she were to sign up because of a rotational grazing requirement in the CCAA.

“They say it’s voluntary to sign up, but if you don’t sign up and you happen to have a bird die on your place or an accidental take, they can come back and sue you,” Nelson said.

Other sticking points in the draft agreement for Nelson and her neighbors include:

• Avoiding vehicular activity unless essential within 4 miles of occupied “leks,” an area where birds gather during the breeding season to attract mates, between February and July.

• Avoiding harvest within 4 miles of active leks between April and August.

• Limiting activity two hours before sunset and two hours after sunrise within 1.5 miles of an active lek.

• Allowing the department to access the farmer’s land with prior notification.

Nelson said the agreement may work for some ranchers, but she and several neighbors are not inclined to sign up.

“That’s a great idea, but I don’t know how they can enforce that on private landowners,” she said. “I would rather be the owner of my land and not a permittee. Within seven pages of this draft, you become a permittee on your own private ground.”

Moran said the plan uses an example found to be successful in Oregon. The agency has made adjustments to its drafts based on feedback from ranchers, she said.

“Many from the ranching community in other parts of the range have found them to be something they can incorporate into their business practices without tremendous difficulty,” she said. “We’re hoping we’re able to do that here as well.”

Washington Cattlemen’s Association executive vice president Jack Field said the latest draft is an improvement over original drafts and focus more on landowner concerns.

Field said the agreements have to provide enough protection and assurance to justify the expense for ranchers.

“We want to make sure we can create the best possible tool to provide the greatest level of protection not only to landowners but also to the bird,” he said.

Incidental take is a concern if the sage grouse are eventually protected under the Endangered Species Act, Field said.

“‘Take’ doesn’t have to mean a dead bird, take could simply mean adverse modification of habitat,” he said.

Nelson wonders who makes the determination over whether a farmer’s activity within range of a lek is needed.

“They call it ‘unnecessary,’ but who decides what’s unnecessary?” Nelson said.

“What farmer does anything unnecessary?” asked Dennis Jessup, one of Nelson’s neighbors in the Wilbur-Creston area. Jessup runs 200 cows, but said he’s not sure how much he’d have to cut until he knows for sure what the agreement seeks.

“Everybody wants the sage grouse to be around,” neighboring rancher Michele Rosman said. “I think what we know works and what they think works is two completely different things, and we’re not going to bend over for that. If we thought they could manage theirs, that’d be different. But they can’t manage theirs, so what makes them think they can manage ours?”

“I don’t think the cattle is the problem here,” Nelson said, noting there are coyotes, wolves, hawks, owls and eagles all around. “They’re going to have to be able to control the predators and keep these grouse alive. You can’t put this on the cow, because I have never seen a cow eat a sage grouse. Ever.”

June Ketch Pen Article‏

May has been a busy month for the legal field, especially with the Yakima Dairy Litigation coming to an end. As many know, Charlie Tebbutt was successful enough at Summary Judgment to force the Yakima dairies involved in the suit to resolve the remaining claims and enter a consent decree which is filed with the Court. Many will ask, what does this have to do with me? Well, quite a bit if you are in the ag industry. In the short term the consent decree only concerns the dairies that are listed. Those dairies will now be forced to double line all lagoons, increase ground water monitoring, install and maintain a certrifuge manure separator, pressure test and/or video inspect all transmission lines, install concrete aprons along all water troughs, locate silage areas away from impervious surfaces, a pilot project dealing with compost operations, follow a schedule to reduce nitrates in the soil, and provide bottled drinking water to identified homes in the area.
 This is a huge list at huge cost to already overburdened agriculture. It is thought that Tebbutt will then take the order to the Department of Ecology and try to use this order on other areas of ag. The win here for Tebbutt is that he can try and use government entities to enforce his agenda. The first order of business is for him to try and get this list included in the new CAFO permit process that is in the works RIGHT NOW!  To try and make sure that agency action is economically feasible to those in ag, it is important for all in agriculture to comment on the CAFO permitting process through Department of Ecology. Please pay attention to what is going on and make sure and comment on agency action that could potentially erode private property and water rights, and add increased costs to management and production in ag.
Department of Ecology is updating the nonpoint source pollution plan. Ag is considered a nonpoint source of pollution into water. Anyone involved in ag should try to review this proposed plan and make comments.
State Nonpoint Source Plan: http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/nonpoint/NPSplan.html…
The link to the actual draft plan is under the picture on the right.
Ben Rau is the contact for this plan and his email is on this webpage. His phone number is 360-407-6551.
This plan, once complete, will be sent to the EPA. More information concerning this plan, and updates, can be found on my facebook page.
WCA continues to try and monitor and comment on agency actions like the ones I have listed above, and other agency action such as continued listing of alleged endangered species, changes to WDFW policy, DNR policies, the list goes on and on. It is very hard to keep up on everything as well as time consuming. Luckily Caroline Lobdelll with the Western Resource Legal Center has agreed to allow WCA to have another intern for the summer term to help draft comments which follow WCA policy, monitor the Federal Register, write white papers, and help review legal issues. Jack and I both come up with projects for the intern and help with intern oversite and work review. The intern we had last spring was amazing and did a fantastic job. Right now we are between interns and need work done, so Caroline has given us another student to work with to help work on issues due before our intern comes on board. I cannot say enough how much this intern has helped us in the last few months. When the intern project first started I do not think we fully grasped what we had, now that we do, we use up all of our allotted hours plus some. We share the intern with PLC and NCBA, but I feel that we probably have the most hours. Our intern will be helping to draft the WCA comments to the proposed new CAFO permitting process as well as the nonpoint source plan with DOE. Even with our internship program and the help of WRLC, the amount of hours needed to work on the water and private property issues are astounding. WCA has a very active board and membership and for that I am thankful, but please remember that even with WCA, individuals need to comment and act as well. Please pay attention to what is going on in our state.
The next DOE advisory group meeting is June 4 at Sprague. The meeting starts at 1 pm and I would ask that anyone with time to come and listen to what is going on. Vic Stokes has been a great co-chair and he will be at this meeting. If WCA members have questions or concerns that need to be brought up at this meeting, please let me know as I am the representative for WCA.
The overall theme of my article this month seems to be that we need membership involvement. Every paragraph I have asked for members to comment, pay attention, or become involved with one thing or another. I am also still asking for funding for our nonprofit groups like WRLC, WALF, Washington Farm Bureau Legal, and PLF. All of the groups that are out there working everyday to protect our private property and water rights. In last months issue I talked about the challenge that Franklin County issued for the other counties to donate to WALF and FB. I am once again reminding the counties of this challenge. WCA actually approved a line item for WRLC, PLF, and WALF. These groups are necessary to assist in the fights that non-ag groups keep throwing our way. We have a court date in June to hear argument on the EPA case that WCA has intervened on. Hopefully I will be able to have a positive article next month on how great it went, but no matter what, the positive message is that we will continue to fight to protect what is ours.

Tyson Foods

Meat of the Matter: The cost of doing business?

Tyson Foods is appealing to the Supreme Court a class-action judgement ordering the company to pay employees for time spent gearing up for work. But even if they win, they stand to lose.

Tyson Foods is petitioning the Supreme Court to overturn a judgment in a long-running court case in which employees claimed they were not fully paid for time spent donning and doffing protective gear before 2010. Plaintiffs in the case include current and former employees at a Tyson pork processing plant in Storm Lake, Iowa.

The employees won their case in U.S. District Court and were eventually awarded $5.8 million in damages and attorney’s fees. But Tyson appealed the judgment to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, based in St. Louis, which upheld the district court’s ruling.

Tyson is now appealing to the Supreme Court, arguing in its petition that the circuit court incorrectly certified the employees’ lawsuit as a class action case. The Supreme Court agreed to consider hear the appeal and in the process clarify wage-and-hour verdicts against Tyson and Wal-Mart Stores as to how large class action suits are certified by the courts.

As is the case with most legal battles, this one started years ago.

In 2007, line workers at the Tyson pork plant in Storm Lake, Iowa, sued the company, claiming that they were not being paid for the time required each day to put on and take off mandatory safety gear and sanitation items, such as boots, aprons, hair nets and gloves, nor for the time it took to prepare and sanitize equipment before and after their shift.

Tyson paid its line employees at the plant an extra four to seven minutes’ pay a day to compensate for time spent preparing for their shift. But the employees’ attorneys argued that the required activities routinely took much more time, in some cases up to 30 minutes a day, including time often spent waiting for company personnel to issue required equipment. In 2010, Tyson increased the time allowed for so-called “donning and doffing” to 20 to 22 minutes of paid “time per shift for all hourly employees.

The argued that Tyson violated the federal Fair Labor Standards Act and Iowa’s Wage Payment Collection Act by failing to pay line employees for time worked and for failing to pay overtime when actual time worked was in excess of 40 hours in a week. A federal court certified the case as a class action, and that’s where the company’s legal appeal has focused.

As a reported by Reuters, Tyson’s legal representatives argue that the lower courts did not adhere to the Supreme Court’s 2011 decision in Wal-Mart v. Dukes by allowing the plaintiffs — the Storm Lake line employees — to demonstrate injury to a subset of employees and then extrapolate them to the entire class in order to calculate damages.

A better way to go

As a legal argument, that stance may prove to be a solid one. As an analysis on Lawyersand Settlements.com noted, Tyson’s brief filed with the Supreme Court argued that the Storm Lake plaintiffs should not have been certified as a class because there were differences in the amount of time that group of employees spent putting on and taking off their protective gear.

And in fact, the courts have treated such lawsuits with varying degrees of acceptance. Most jurisdictions lean toward compensatory, rather than punitive judgments, reasoning, correctly, that employers should be accorded the presumption that their workplace rules are designed to promote efficiency and protect product integrity.

Truthfully, one of the complicating factors in donning and doffing suits on behalf of meat and poultry employees has been the increasingly stringent sanitation measures both industry and regulators have imposed on processing operations. With the focus on fail-safe final product sanitation, the amount of time spent putting on and taking off sanitary clothing and equipment — and making sure those items are properly collected at the end of a work shift—has increased significantly, a factor many courts have failed to acknowledge.

Unfortunately, the majority of federal judges ruling on these donning and doffing cases also have no clue what life is like for the actual people represented in the class-action suits that appear on their dockets. I doubt if any of them ever would, or could, spend a day on the job in the typical meatpacking or poultry processing plant. They have no clue how hard the work is, how difficult the working conditions are and most importantly, how little each employee takes home at the end of the week.

As of 2014, Tyson was litigating nine different lawsuits involving donning and doffing and/or uncompensated overtime pay for employees at plants in Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Tennessee. The attorneys’ fees for the plaintiffs in such cases typically run as high as $4 or $5 million — and that’s not counting the layers of appeals as the cases wind through the federal system — so you can imagine what Tyson’s attorneys are billing.

Tyson Foods has created an enviable business legacy, a track record of success in a highly competitive industry sector that has left many a formerly big-time player distressed and ultimately dissected or even dissolved. And I understand the logic that says fighting these cases, rather than letting jury verdicts or forced settlements set a precedent, could actually end up being less expensive in the long run.

But there’s a reason Tyson is fighting on multiple fronts in several different states on related issues of time paid for donning and doffing requirements: Such activities add significantly to an employee’s work day, and it’s just not fair. They’re earning a rock-bottom wage as it is, and for performing difficult, dangerous work.

Rather than squeezing the employees as tight as possible, then fighting every step of the way in the courts, it would be far better, more equitable and ultimately better for all concerned to negotiate a compensation agreement that could obviate these lawsuits.

The bottom line is pretty straightforward: Tyson needs to do the right thing and pay for the time its employees spend keeping both the food products and the work force safe.

Dan Murphy is a food-industry journalist and commentator

EPA finalizes WOTUS rule, GOP pledges to continue efforts to stop the rule

By Mary Soukup May 27, 2015 | 3:19 pm EDT

The Obama administration, on Tuesday, May 27, finalized its controversial proposal to redefine the features that fall under jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act. While the administration asserts the intent of the rule is to clear up confusion regarding its jurisdiction over certain streams, wetlands, ponds, and other land and water bodies, opponents of the rule remain unconvinced.

“This rule will provide the clarity and certainty businesses and industry need about which waters are protected by the Clean Water Act, and it will ensure polluters who knowingly threaten our waters can be held accountable,” said President Barack Obama.

House Speaker John Boehner issued a blistering statement shortly after the rule was released, saying the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) final rule is a vast expansion of federal authority. The House recently passed legislation to force EPA and the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers to start over on the proposal.

“The administration’s decree to unilaterally expand federal authority is a raw and tyrannical power grab that will crush jobs,” said Speaker Boehner. “House members of both parties have joined more than 30 governors and government leaders to reject EPA’s disastrous WOTUS rule. These leaders know firsthand that the rule is being shoved down the throats of hardworking people with no input, and places landowners, small businesses, farmers, and manufacturers on the road to a regulatory and economic hell.”

Speaker Boehner wasn’t alone in his criticism, with the chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works saying the final rule actually goes further than the proposal and adding that EPA and U.S. Army officials admitted the proposal was “flawed, inconsistent and ambiguous,” and said their agencies would address the concerns of states, local governments and agriculture.

“Despite their assurances, it appears that EPA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have failed to keep their promises to Congress and the American people,” said Chairman Inhofe. “In fact, instead of fixing the overreach in the proposed rule, remarkably, EPA has made it even broader.

“The EPA has set themselves up to increase federal control over private lands, and I will not allow it,” he promised, pledging to consider legislation (S. 1140) this summer to stop the rule from moving forward.

EPA and the Corp received more than 1 million public comments on the proposal and made some changes to the final rule. The final rule further defined “adjacent waters and wetlands” as features that are adjacent to jurisdictional waters within a minimum of 100 feet and within the 100-year floodplain to a maximum of 1,500 feet of the ordinary high water mark.

The proposed rule defined tributaries as a water feature with a bed, banks and ordinary high water mark, and flow downstream. Under the final rule, the agencies will “evaluate for adjacency” wetlands and open waters that do not have beds, banks and high water marks.

Additionally, the final rule added language to regulate additional isolated, regional features, including Prairie Potholes, Carolina and Delmarva bays, vernal pools in California and costal prairie wetlands in Texas. These features would be evaluated to determine if they have a significant nexus to a navigable water.

In the final rule, the agencies continued to cite a 2006 Supreme Court ruling in the Rapanos v. United States case regarding federal jurisdiction to regulate isolated wetlands under the CWA. The case resulted in a split decision, with Justice Antonin Scalia writing for the plurality opinion that reinforced the limits on “waters of the United States”  by stating that “waters of the United States” include “only those relatively permanent, standing or continuously flowing bodies of water” like streams, rivers and lakes. Justice Scalia specifically noted that “waters of the United States” do not include channels that only hold water periodically, and are only wetlands with a continuous surface connection to bodies of water that are “waters of the United States.”

EPA and the Corp. however, have opted to ignore Justice Scalia’s opinion and instead follow Justice Anthony Kennedy’s separate concurring opinion, which said an isolated water does not have to have a surface water connection. Under the final rule, an isolated water body could be consider jurisdictional if that wetland “significantly affects the chemical, physical, or biological integrity” of a navigable water.

With regard to agriculture, the agencies continue to claim the rule preserves specific exemptions for farming and ranching. “The rule does not create any new permitting requirements for America’s farmers. Activities like planting, harvesting, and moving livestock have long been exempt from Clean Water Act regulation, and the Clean Water Rule preserves those exemptions,” according to EPA.

Agricultural organizations aren’t taking any chances, with the American Farm Bureau Federation and the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association saying they will evaluate the final rule for themselves.

“We are undertaking a thorough analysis of the final WOTUS rule to determine whether the Environmental Protection Agency listened to the substantive comments farmers and ranchers submitted during the comment period,” said American Farm Bureau President Bob Stallman. “Based on EPA’s aggressive advocacy campaign in support of its original proposed rule—and the agency’s numerous misstatements about the content and impact of that proposal—we find little comfort in the agency’s assurances that our concerns have been addressed in any meaningful way.

NCBA President Philip Ellis questioned the ability of the agencies to consider the more than 1 million comments submitted on the proposal and prepare a final rule in just six months and continued to criticize EPA’s aggressive outreach campaign on the issue.

“The former Obama campaign officials that received political appointments at EPA are apparently putting their activist knowledge base to use,” said Ellis. “Soliciting endorsements and support is a far cry from simply educating the public, as EPA officials claim.”

The Agencies estimate the rule will cost as much as $306 million annually. The WOTUS rule will be effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.

May Ketch Pen article

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Funding of our fight to protect water rights continues. Franklin County Cattlemen has generously donated $2500.00 to Washington Ag Legal Foundation AND an additional $2500.00 to Washington Farm Bureau Legal Foundation. Franklin County Cattlemen asked to challenge all other counties to make similar donations to continue with the fight to protect private property and water rights. Please contact me for where to send the funds.

    DOE has finally started their assessments. DOE has been through Whitman County and we are waiting for their conclusions. We have asked to be informed as to whom they are sending the letters to prior to the sending of those letters and have been told that we will be informed. That request has been made to multiple people within DOE by multiple parties. It is important that WCA know who will be receiving these letters so that we can reach out to assist our members and anyone else that needs help. Through the DOE Advisory Group we are making headway with our requests to DOE to be more transparent in their efforts and set specific goals so that landowners know what DOE is looking for in water quality. Clearly there is a long way to go in our efforts to protect our rights as landowners, but we are making progress with DOE to make it so landowners feel that they can use their property. Our next DOE Advisory Group meeting will be June 4, 2015 at Sprague, WA. As always, spectators are welcome to come and listen to the issues that we are dealing it.
    The biggest issue, in my mind, is the Guidance document that the DOE subcommittee is working on. This document is based on Tip Hudson’s Risk Assessment Tool, but in the months that we have been working on it, it has really changed. We had a charged meeting on language April 16, 2015 due to the act that certain members of the group want it to read much stronger than the ag groups. Luckily ag groups are well represented on the subcommittee, as is common sense. I do not know if the Guidance document will be out for review at the next meeting, but we are getting close. With that said, WCA is in favor of having this document out for producers to have some document to look to in making management decisions, but we do not support the document in its entirety. This is a compromise document that should be used only for guidance in making decisions.
    The second biggest issue is the redrafting of the CAFO permits. This is an issue that clearly impacts agriculture and anyone that has to obtain a permit for their operation. During the redrafting process, WCA as well as stakeholders, have an opportunity to comment and try to make positive changes to the process. Please speak out if you have an issue. Let someone at WCA know or come to a meeting and talk about the process with us.
    On April 18, 2015 I had the opportunity to speak at the WSDCC Agriculture and Rural Caucus meeting on water law. This was a great opportunity to talk to a group that I do not see in my everyday life. Continuing to educate, discuss, make aware, and just meet people, bringing awareness of these issues really has been my goal and continues to be my goal. There was a great turnout and a great response to my discussion. Afterward quite a few people came and spoke to me about the issues that they see facing them in their lives. I always welcome the opportunity to talk to people about water law. This same group was able to tour the George Deruyter Dairy the day before, so got to see one of the top working dairies that we have in Washington.
    As always, continuing to fight for property and water rights is very time consuming, but the last year has shown some positive improvements that keep the fight going. Please remember that even though there are lots of volunteers, like me, there are still costs to this fight and all donations, big or small, are very welcome and needed.
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Wills and Estate Planning

I have not had a tip in a white, but, here is one that most people do not want to think about but need to do:

  • Estate planning is for everyone. While most people do not like to think about death, it is a reality and typically unplanned. It is a lot easier on everyone, especially if you have a spouse, children and/or any relatives, if you draw up your own will and testament.

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DOE Agriculture and Water Quality Advisory Committee meeting October 21, 2014

Meeting number 5 was in Lacey, WA on a very rainy day. Meetings usually last from 1-4, but this meeting needed an extra 30 minutes due to the long agenda we had all received. The meeting began with a presentation from Ginny Prest of WSDA on the Dairy Nutrient Management Plan.

internationalwater
WSDA has two major goals- 1) to protect water and keep it clean and 2) to promote a healthy agri-business climate. The Dairy Nutrient Management Plan (DNMP) is governed by RCW 90.64 which is for permitted CAFOs both dairy and non-dairy. All dairies must have a nutrient management plan that is certified by the local conservation district. The WSDA tries to work in a clear, concise manner to educate, guide, and provide technical assistance. They work to promote good communication with the industry, related agencies, and other stakeholders. Equitable enforcement that is consistent and fair to all. Inspections take into consideration soil analysis, record keeping, etc. During an investigation, if an event has occurred, the investigator reviews the records, takes pictures, works with stakeholders. WSDA then sends their recommendation to DOE for comment, and once receives those comments moves forward with enforcement if needed. WSDA enforces “substantial potential to pollute” and actual discharge. 95% of all enforcement is addressed through informal action (warning letter, notice of correction) resulting in compliance. When a penalty is issued, many penalties end up going through a settlement process with a mitigation action and a lowering of the penalty.
WSDA has a Memorandum of Understanding with DOE to clarify rules and responsibilities. WSDA works within a penalty matrix that can be viewed at WAC 16.611. The CAFO permit itself is issued by DOE, so the CAFO itself is regulated by DOE. WSDA only does the DNMP part. WSDA does routine inspections every couple of years and has a good working relationship with the dairies.
The second presentation was by Bill Dewey on the Clean Samish Initiative. Bill Dewey works for Taylor Shellfish Farms and has shellfish beds himself. The Clean Samish Initiative is a cooperative effort to recover a watershed. Washington state leads the country in shellfish production. There are approximately 47,000 acres of tidelands which went into production in the late 1800s. There are currently 3+ million oyster and clam sales in WA. Shellfish are regulated by the Washington State Department of Public Health. Marine Fecal Coliform levels must not exceed 14 mpn/100 mL. For growing water there are 4 classifications- approved, conditionally approved, restricted, and prohibited. In prohibited areas, growers can only grow seed. The Clean Samish Initiative began in 2009. This was a multi-agency effort to address fecal coliform pollution in the Samish. Fecal was coming from every source. Human sources are a big threat. Issues include septic, rain events, wildlife, animals, etc. This initiative includes working with landowners in the area to fix problems. To take it a step further, they also implemented Pollution Identification and Correction Program (PIC) which is local agencies working together to identify and correct problems. Agencies include Skagit county, Conservation District, Samish Indian Nation, DOE, WA State Health, and Puget Sound Partnership to name a few. Currently there are over 100 Ag BMP projects completed, 110 septic systems repaired, and other projects which have led to fecal coliforms lower in the bay and less closures. They are also adding a chemical tracer to the current tools used in this project. Bill Dewey finished his presentation by stating that volunteer can work when everyone works together.
DOE then presented their idea of putting together a guidance document drafted to articulate good and risky behavior for livestock producers. This document will be drafted by the DOE advisory group and DOE, then presented to the group. This document will contain an overview of the law and the key principles to help promote compliance with water quality law. This document will recognize the importance of ag. This document will contain the criteria that DOE inspectors use so that ag can be assured consistency and be informed as to what is being looked at in determinations. This document will not be an absolute, but gives a good idea and direction for livestock production. A subcommittee was formed within the DOE advisory group and a few outside sources such as Ginny Prest and Tip Hudson. This document will be brought before the December meeting.
Kelly Susewind then talked about the watershed work DOE has been doing. This watershed work became known about when DOE sent the 30 letters to producers last year. These 30 letters and the outcry that followed partly led to the start of the DOE advisory group. One of the purposes of the DOE advisory group was to tell DOE how to do things differently. DOE has determined that there are 10 crucial steps that need to be done differently by listening to the DOE advisory group. Key changes are:
1) Increased education and outreach in the watershed.
2) Increase efforts to work with conservation districts.
3) Increased engagement with producer groups.
4) Letters to be specific on pollution.
5) Clear timeline for producers to contact DOE.
6) Letter to include offer access to records and information on pollution and DOE site visit.
7) DOE will send letters out within 60 days of observances.
8) DOE will give 30 days to make initial contact.
9) After 30 days, if no response, will send second letter.
10) DOE will send letters to the lessee if DOE can verify a lease.
These changes do not take away DOE’s rights and ability to send out their letters.
The last presentation on the Oct 23 meeting was by Heather Bartlett on the CWA required work and CAFO work. She started with the CWA as Section 319 for nonpoint source management needs to be updated. The EPA wants to know how effective state management of nonpoint source pollution is. This plan needs to be updated every 5 years and the Washington plan has not been updated in much longer than that. The updated plan must be turned in to EPA by June 30, 2015 or 319 money will stop. This plan will cover all nonpoint sources of pollution including livestock. The focus of the plan is on implementation and strength of partnerships- better coordination with state programs. The public is allowed to participate in the drafting of this plan through webinars which will begin at the end of 2014, public meetings in 2015, comments, and then the plan will be submitted to EPA. Currently DOE gets approximately 3 million in 319 money. Ben Rau is in charge of putting this plan together for DOE.
The last segment was on the redrafting of the CAFO permits. The CAFOs had a coverage up to 2011 which have been administratively extended to current. The current issues are how to determine which facilities are covered? How to make the permit more efficient and effective? The CAFO meetings with stakeholders will start Nov/Dec of 2014 with a preliminary draft of the document out in the spring of 2015. The final permit should be out Jan 2016. Jon Jennings with DOE is in charge of drafting and working on the CAFO permit.
Overall this was one of the most productive meetings we have had. There is still room for improvement, but we seem to be getting the point across that ag is a good thing, both for the environment and for the economy.

States Split On Scope, Fate Of EPA’s CWA Agriculture ‘Interpretive’ Policy

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Posted: September 5, 2014

States appear split on how to resolve concerns over EPA’s Clean Water Act (CWA) “interpretive” rule exempting many farming practices from permit requirements, with some states seeking agency guidance on how to implement the policy while others want EPA to scrap the rule due to concerns it unlawfully expands CWA exemptions.

The divisions — outlined in comments ahead of EPA’s July 7 deadline for public input on the rule — highlight ongoing disagreements about the rule, which took effect March 25. It exempts 56 agricultural conservation activities, such as brush management, herbaceous weed control, and fencing in crops, from CWA section 404 permit requirements by specifying they are “normal farming” measures exempt from dredge-and-fill permits.

The rule, which EPA issued alongside its proposed rule on the scope of the water law, has already drawn charges that it would impose new regulatory requirements on farmers. The rule prompted criticism because EPA issued and finalized it before taking public comment. EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy has suggested dropping the measure if it can agree with critics on an alternative approach.

In the early comments on the interpretive rule, some states, including South Dakota and Alabama, charge the list of exemptions is too narrow and would hinder farmers’ ability to use conservation measures that may yield environmental benefits.

Alabama’s Department of Agriculture and Industries says in July 7 comments that it “fears a great number of former NRCS’ practices will no longer be considered ‘normal farming practices’ by reducing the number of practices to 56.”

But other states, such as Washington and Michigan, say the list of 56 practices is too broad and would exempt some operations from 404 permits even if they may harm federally protected species and impair water quality.

“Some practices do not result in water quality protection and have the potential to significantly affect wetlands and other waters,” Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) says in July 3 comments on the rule.

And Washington Department of Ecology (Ecology) says in July 3 comments that the rule could potentially create “more questions and less certainty” that state waters and their beneficial uses, such as use by fish and aquatic life listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), will be adequately protected.

“Without more specific agency guidance on when and where the exemptions are appropriate, we believe there is a real risk of undoing decades of salmon recovery efforts in the Pacific Northwest,” the comments say.

‘Flawed’ Rule

While Michigan DEQ urges withdrawal of the rule, Ecology says that while the rule is “flawed,” it is ready to aid in crafting a revised rule in cooperation with state and federal agencies that would “result in compliance with federal water quality protection” while giving landowners and farmers streamlined options.

The rule says that to qualify for the exemptions, such practices must be in compliance with Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) standards. That requirement has prompted criticism from a broad range of stakeholders and other observers — including Senate Democrats and environmental groups — that it would shift NRCS into an improper enforcement role and create citizen suit liability for farmers and ranchers.

The New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets and New York State Department of Environmental Conservation say in July 7 comments that the NRCS practices are not regulatory thresholds and therefore should not be used as the basis of regulatory exemptions, that the rule will deter voluntary adoption of conservation practices, but also that it would exempt some practices that are not “normal” farming.

Under section 404(f)(1)(A) of the water law, “normal farming, silviculture, and ranching activities such as plowing, seeding, cultivating, minor drainage, harvesting for the production of food, fiber, and forest products, or upland soil and water conservation practices,” are not required to obtain 404 permits.

The New York agencies say in their comments, however, that 10 of the 56 practices listed in the rule, including wetland restoration, wetland enhancement, aquatic organism passage, land reclamation: currently mined land and others, are outside the scope of what the state considers “normal farming, ranching and silviculture.”

Moreover, the state agencies say, those activities do not fall within EPA and Army Corps of Engineers guidance that the exemption is limited to “the activities named in the statute and other activities of essentially the same character as named . . .” and precludes those that are not of the same character.

But at least one state, New Jersey, is suggesting in undated comments submitted by the state’s Department of Environmental Protection on the rule that EPA and NRCS should “issue clear guidance to farmers, specific to each State, on how the interpretive rule will affect them” to ensure that the industry is clear that exemptions from 404 permitting do not necessarily void obligations under other state and federal laws, such as the ESA.

New Jersey says EPA should issue “Detailed guidance on the roles of the federal agencies in carrying out the interpretive rule as well as the definitions,” according to the state’s comments.

Rulemaking Process

While states are split over the scope and fate of the interpretive rule, many commenters want EPA to withdraw it and argue that the agency should instead pursue the policy through a new notice-and-comment rule.

South Dakota’s Department of Agriculture says in July 7 comments that the exemptions list is “too narrow” to cover a number of voluntary conservation practices, and asks EPA to withdraw the rule.

And a number of state attorneys general (AGs), led by Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning (R), in a July 7 letter to McCarthy urge the agency to withdraw the rule.

The argue that it is unlawful because it seeks to “establish new policies intended to bind decision-making by the Agencies and influence actions of the regulated community” and therefore must go through a formal notice-and-comment rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA).

The letter comes as the Supreme Court is preparing to review an appellate ruling that would require EPA and other agencies to follow notice-and-comment procedures when they amend interpretations of their rules — which could create difficulties for the agriculture rule. The justices in June accepted certiorari in the linked cases Thomas Perez, et al. v. Mortgage Banking Association (MBA), et al. and Nickols, et al. v. MBA, et al, which test whether agencies must follow notice-and-comment rulemaking to revise their existing interpretations of rules.

The AGs’ letter says that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 2010 held in a ruling in Catholic Health Initiatives v. Sebelius that an interpretive rule must “‘derive its proposition from an existing document whose meaning compels or logically justifies’ its requirements.”

The AGs say, “In the present case, it cannot be argued that limiting the ‘normal farming activity’ exemption for conservation practices to those specifically identified by the Agencies and conducted in accordance with NRCS standards requirements derives from or is logically justified by any prior statutory text or regulatory provision.”

Hiring 3rd party professionals

This is a good article from Dairy Herd Management on hiring 3rd party professionals- like an attorney:

http://www.dairyherd.com/dairy-news/Tips-for-Hiring-Third-Party-Professionals-275358611.html

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