Archives

February 28, 2022 - Lawmakers offer solution to farm overtime deadlock

By Representative Shelly Boshart Davis & Representative Daniel Bonham Representative Shelly Boshart Davis (R-Albany) is submitting an agriculture overtime proposal from agriculture communities to find a unique solution to meet the needs of Oregon’s farm employees and preserves the state’s agricultural sectors. This plan would offer state money to essential […]


February 24, 2022 - Grassroots process underway for 2023 Farm Bill

By American Farm Bureau Federation With the current Farm Bill set to expire in 2023, members of the American Farm Bureau Federation have begun to outline priorities for the next Farm Bill. Micheal Clements shares more about the grassroots process. Clements: Conversations are underway regarding the next Farm Bill, both […]


February 22, 2022 - Farmers urge compromise over overtime

By Oregon Farm Bureau, SALEM, ORE., 09 FEB. 2022 — Legislators heard from stakeholders last night about why a proposed bill setting a 40-hour overtime threshold for agriculture workers is not a workable compromise and would ultimately harm both family farmers and farmworkers. Oregonians provided more than three hours of […]


February 21, 2022 - Tax credit ideas aims to balance Ag overtime bill

By Natural Resource News Note, Oregon farmers could go bankrupt if the state Legislature approves a measure to require overtime pay for ag workers. The hotly contested measure, House Bill 4002, was referred to the House Revenue Committee because it offers tax credits to help farmers offset the increased costs […]


February 18, 2022 - Disappointment in court decision to relist gray wolves

By National Cattlemen’s Beef Association The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) and Public Lands Council (PLC) expressed opposition to the U.S. District Court’s ruling to remand and vacate the gray wolf Endangered Species Act (ESA) delisting announced by the Trump administration in 2020. “It’s disappointing that environmental activism carried more […]


February 16, 2022 - One of nation’s largest cannibals firms settles lawsuit

By Oregon Small Business Association Foundation Although a cannabis giant has settled a majority of the federal lawsuits it faced over high THC content in Curaleaf Select CBD drops sold in Oregon, the company still faces a wrongful death lawsuit. And the latest plaintiff to accept a $50,000 settlement offered […]


February 14, 2022 - Wildfire victim towns try to keep residents from leaving

By Oregon Small Business Association Foundation, Sixteen months after the Alameda Fire destroyed the Oregon town of Talent, city leaders are trying to help many of the displaced fire victims who have moved from one place to another during the past year. To that end, the city used more than […]


February 8, 2022 - Bureaucratic cover up on the dying of Lake Albert?

By Natural Resource News Note, A 64-square-mile lake in the high desert of south-central Oregon dried up again last year—and it’s possibly the fault of a dam erected upstream in 1994 using government subsidies. During an extremely dry and hot year in 2014, Lake Abert, the state’s only saltwater lake, […]


February 5, 2022 - Legislative Ag update: New licenses, organic growers, more

By Oregonians for Food and Shelter, Legislative Update The Legislature commenced the 2022 Legislative Session last week. Proceedings began on Tuesday, and immediately, the House elected Rep. Dan Rayfield as the new House Speaker. The first week was relatively drama free, as virtual committee hearings began. OFS is tracking and […]


February 4, 2022 - Cattlemen lay out four big goals for 2022

By National Cattlemen Beef Association, During the 2022 Cattle Industry Convention and NCBA Trade Show, the executive committee of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) approved the organization’s 2022 policy priorities with an emphasis on strengthening the economic, environmental and social sustainability of the cattle industry. NCBA’s policy priorities include: […]