Opposition to Oregon canola bill continues in Senate
SALEM — Opponents of a proposal to extend canola production in Oregon’s Willamette Valley want to stop the bill in the Senate after its resounding win in the House.
House Bill 3382, which would allow 500 acres of the crop to be grown in the region for an additional three years, passed the House 42-16 and is now being considered by the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources.
A six-year moratorium on canola production in the Willamette Valley was established under 2013 legislation, but 500 acres were allowed to be cultivated for the first three years as part of an Oregon State University study.
Proponents of HB 3382 say that extending production on a limited acreage for the full six years will avoid disrupting their market, but opponents who fear cross-pollination with related seed crops argue the bill will double the “seed bank” of potential volunteers.
“It’s unnecessary and should be rejected,” said Nick Tichinin, president of the Universal Seed Co., during a May 11 hearing.
Leaving the Willamette Valley free of canola for the final three years of the moratorium was intended to provide insights about problems with volunteers, he said.
Opponents say that canola seeds have been shown to persist in the soil and remain viable for several years.
Tichinin said canola threatens specialty seed production in Oregon just as it did in France, Italy and Britain, which were dealt a severe blow as seed buyers decided to source product from elsewhere.
Allowing additional canola production undermines the carefully crafted legislation from 2013 and “jumps the gun” because OSU’s study is still incomplete, according to opponents.
Supporters of HB 3382 counter that the legislation wouldn’t have a negative impact on the specialty seed industry.
“Five hundred acres is a drop in the bucket in the Willamette Valley and I don’t think it will hurt to continue for three more years,” said Eric Bowers, a farmer near Harrisburg, Ore.
Tomas Endicott of Willamette Biomass Processors argued that canola poses no bigger threat to related brassica seed crops than turnips or radishes, which are grown without any regulation in the area.
Halting canola production in the Willamette Valley will prevent Endicott’s company from using its full oilseed crushing capacity and delay any possible investment in expanding the facility, he said.
Scott Setniker, a farmer near Independence, Ore., said he already grows closely related crops like chard and sugar beets without cross-pollination problems.
While canola opponents say their market is threatened, the current system is already harming farmers who want to grow the crop for its rotational and financial benefits, Setniker said.
Canola supporters say the crop gives them more weed treatment options when grown in rotation with grasses and is more easily marketable as a commodity compared to other seeds, which are produced under contract and typically aren’t paid for as quickly.
“I can’t have all my eggs in that one basket,” Setniker said.