Pendleton ag station funding back on chopping block
PENDLETON, Ore. — For the second consecutive year, the Columbia Plateau Conservation Research Center is at risk of losing nearly half its annual funding from the federal government.
Once again, the president’s 2017 budget calls for terminating one of two research programs at the station, which would cut $901,000 and eliminate three scientist positions.
The Columbia Plateau Conservation Research Center operates under the Agricultural Research Service, the primary research arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The facility is located on Tubbs Ranch Road north of Pendleton, and shares a building with the Columbia Basin Agricultural Research Center — though they are two separate programs.
Experiments conducted at the station provide data to improve farming practices for dryland crops, especially winter wheat, which accounts for more than $436 million and 2,600 local jobs throughout the Columbia Basin, according to Oregon State University.
Yet the President’s budget would ax research programs at Pendleton looking into tillage methods that conserve moisture and reduce soil erosion, in order to shift money to what have been identified as higher priorities within the Agricultural Research Service. The same cutbacks were proposed in 2016, before growers and Oregon congressional leaders successfully lobbied to keep the station’s funding intact.
Dan Long, station director, said there’s been no appropriation yet for 2017, though in the meantime the center has been asked to curtail its spending by 50 percent.
“It could very well be a repeat of last year, where we remain intact again,” Long said.
If not, significant budget cuts are in line at both Pendleton and the Agricultural Research Station in Corvallis. The president’s budget for the ARS calls for diverting more than $13 million from ongoing research across the country to fund higher priority environmental stewardship projects, such as adapting crops to climate change.
Soil scientists Steward Wuest and Hero Gollany, as well as hydrologist John Williams, would all be affected by cuts at the Pendleton station, though Long said all three would be given different jobs within the agency.
Nathan Rea, of H.T. Rea Farming Corporation in Milton-Freewater, serves as chairman of the liaison committee for the ARS station. He said the committee is reaching out to Oregon congressional delegates, including Democratic Sens. Ron Wyden, Jeff Merkley and Republican Rep. Greg Walden, all of whom backed fully funding the station a year ago.
In addition, Rea said they are working directly with scientists at the station to promote the work they do, and benefit to area farmers.
“Telling that story is where we need to do a better job at the national level, and with local growers as well,” Rea said.
Speaking from experience, Rea said growers have benefited from the station’s research into reduced-till farming, with an emphasis on soil water retention and improving efficiency.
“There’s a lot more direct seeding, and minimum tillage,” Rea said. “We’re entering a new world with our precision agriculture.”
Representatives for Sen. Wyden and Rep. Walden could not be reached Monday. A representative for Sen. Merkley said he knows the Pendleton ARS station is critical to Eastern Oregon, and will keep fighting for the funding it needs.