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Commentaries and editorials

Zippy Duvall: American Farm Bureau President
Speaks on Issues Crucial to NW Farmers

by Matthew Weaver
Capital Press, September 10, 2021

I would hope people evaluate the value those dams have, carrying agricultural products
out to the rest of the world or to bring inputs up to the farm so they can grow those products.

Graphic: Recent Downriver Grain Shipments on the Snake River (2000 - 2019) LEWISTON, Idaho -- Zippy Duvall recently got an up-close look at the Lower Granite Dam, one of four dams Pacific Northwest farmers say are critical to their livelihoods.

Duvall, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, toured the area to learn more about the lower Snake River dams and offer his support to the region's farmers.

The dams are at the epicenter of a roiling debate over their impact on the region's economy. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, has called for tearing out the dams, while most of the region's farmers adamantly oppose it. They say the dams provide irrigation water, electricity and make the river navigable for the huge barges transporting wheat downriver to export terminals on the Columbia River.

The dams are just one of many issues impacting agriculture that draw Duvall's attention. As leader of the Farm Bureau, Duvall represents the interests of nearly 6 million farm families. The grassroots federation includes 2,800 county and state Farm Bureaus in all 50 states and Puerto Rico.

Duvall, 65, is a third-generation farmer in Greensboro, Ga., about 75 miles east of Atlanta. He raises beef cattle, broiler chickens and hay.

First elected in 2016, he expects to run for a new term as president in January at the organization's annual convention in Atlanta.

Duvall spoke with the Capital Press about the Snake River dams and other topics important to farmers, including a new Farm Bill, climate change and farm labor.

The interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Capital Press: What odds would you give any proposal to remove the Lower Granite, Little Goose, Lower Monumental and Ice Harbor dams on the Snake River? Is it 100%? Zero? Somewhere in between?

Duvall: I think it's somewhere in between. I would hope people evaluate the value those dams have, carrying agricultural products out to the rest of the world or to bring inputs up to the farm so they can grow those products.

And (they can) also evaluate the intense work they have done to protect the movement of fish up and down that river, through fish ladders and all the ways they've helped make that successful.

CP: Did you learn anything new about the dams?

Duvall: I had no idea that 10% of all U.S. agricultural exports went down that river, and I had absolutely no idea of the extent they went to to make sure that salmon could come up the river, and the juvenile fish could return back out to the ocean.

CP: Lasting impressions from your visit?

Duvall: Here in Washington (D.C.), we have a lot of discussion around climate and policy. We talk about climate-smart farming, renewable energy, electric vehicles.

Just to think, in all that discussion that's really dominating the conversation here in town, that we would on the side have a conversation about tearing out dams that have been very successful in protecting the fish flow, and adding 150,000 trucks to the road or over 30,000 train cars to haul the same agricultural products down to the river that are being barged right now. Who knows what it would take to bring inputs back up the river?

(bluefish notes: the CRSO EIS knows the answer here. Very little commodities move up past Ice Harbor dam. The Draft EIS leads the reader to believe that petroleum is an important upstream product, but those shipments turnaround on McNary pool below Ice Harbor dam. Downstream shipment, especially of wheat that could be moved by train, is the big concern if Lower Snake Reservoirs were to be emptied.)
It just seems like we're saying one thing about climate on one hand, and turning around and trying to do something just as detrimental on the other hand. That just doesn't make sense to me.

CP: What priority do you give crop insurance in the Farm Bill?

Duvall: Crop insurance is the cornerstone of our Farm Bill. ... It is vital that we continue to make crop insurance a strong piece of the next Farm Bill, and look for ways that we might improve it.

CP: Other Farm Bill priorities?

Duvall: We continue to see disasters across the country, and to find some way to be able to react faster. The hurricane that came through the southeast and through my home state, it took almost 18 months or two years for farmers to get some relief from that disaster. A lot of those farmers were already out of business because of the disaster before they even got any kind of help. When you have a disaster, you need help then, not two years later.

CP: What's the best thing the Biden administration is doing, and the worst thing?

Duvall: They're doing a good job of listening to us. If you look at some of the things they've drafted, like “30 by 30” (the plan highlights the role agriculture and forestry can play in countering climate change) and some of the executive orders that came out (in July), all of those are our talking points. Not all of them, but they've had a huge influence on the wording and principles in some of those documents.

Of course we all understand that the devils are always in the details, and those documents are very broad, so we're waiting to ... make sure they continue on the right road that fits our policy and takes agriculture in a positive direction.

I'd say them listening is a good thing. I think the appointment of Secretary (Tom) Vilsack was an absolutely brilliant selection. ... If anyone can walk into a problem, put it to work and get it done, he can. ...

Now my concerns, on the other hand, are WOTUS, the Waters of the United States, and the repeal of the Navigable Waters Protection Rule. We worked really hard with the previous administration to make sure we got rid of a rule that was so complicated that farmers and ranchers had to hire lawyers and consultants to be able to stay within that rule. ... To think they're going to repeal it gives us great concern.

The second big concern is how are they going to pay for all the money they're investing into infrastructure for pandemic relief? We know that's got to be done in taxes, and the direction they're taking taxes in, talking about doing away with stepped-up basis and making capital gains payable at death, would be terribly destructive to our family farms. We would not be able to pass our farms on to the next generation and be able to continue to produce the food and fiber for this country and a lot of the world.

I know there's some talk about a cut for agriculture, but that's just putting that tax liability off to a later generation. We need to make sure the food security of this country is protected by going in and handling the situation and making sure stepped-up basis is always there.

CP: What do you see regarding climate legislation?

Duvall: We have been really involved in that. We knew that regardless of who won the presidential election, Capitol Hill was going to have a discussion about climate. So we kind of tackled this from a little different direction and partnered up with some other organizations that sometimes we don't really agree with.

Some environmental, food, forestry and agriculture groups got together and created an alliance, the Food and Agriculture Climate Alliance. ... We agreed on three different principles, and from those principles, we developed 40 recommendations that are all supported by our Farm Bureau policy developed by our farmers and ranchers. That process generated those recommendations that went to Capitol Hill, and actually have dominated the conversation. ...

So there is a way to find common ground, and there is a way to lead the conversation. So far we've been very successful, and we hope to be able to continue that, especially as they start implementing things.

CP: Are farmers today better off than they were five to 10 years ago?

Duvall: In 2011, we were approaching a couple of seasons of the highest commodity prices we've had on record. Ten years ago, we were coming into some good times, and right now grain prices are up, so we have come into some better times now.

The tools we have at our fingertips are a lot better than they were 10 years ago -- the traits we have in our seeds, the ability to conserve water, the ability to do precision agriculture is so much better than it was 10 years ago.

That brings me to another concern -- the lack of broadband (high-speed internet). We have to seize the moment with all this discussion around broadband, bringing it to our rural communities for education and healthcare. We need to make sure we reach outside of our urban communities into the rural parts of our country so farmers and ranchers can utilize the technologies coming to them that are going to require broadband, so they can collect the data and make smart decisions whether planting, taking care of, harvesting or marketing crops.

As an organization, we depend on our grassroots to be engaged, telling their story across their community to their neighbors that aren't involved in agriculture, but also communicating with congressmen and senators. ...

Today, (compared to) 10 years ago, our farmers and ranchers are in tractors and barns toting smart phones. Within the matter of just a minute, they can make that communication. I think we're in a lot better position to be more engaged than we ever have been.

CP: Anything else?

Duvall: Farm labor is the biggest limiting factor agriculture has. Not just agriculture, but small businesses across America. We have to create an environment where people want to go back to work. We've already discovered over the last two decades that Americans don't go to school and college to come home and work on a farm.

We have to have some way for people here who want to work and don't mind working on a farm. That means a guestworker program that works for farmers who are employers and employees who want to come here and work for us, that's fair to both. Fair to the farmer that he can continue to stay in business and provide that job, and fair to the worker, because that's the right thing to do. And something that fits year-round agriculture.


Matthew Weaver
Zippy Duvall: American Farm Bureau President Speaks on Issues Crucial to NW Farmers
Capital Press, September 10, 2021

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