Field burning phaseout wins Ore. Senate OK

Field burning phaseout wins Ore. Senate OK

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By BRAD CAIN Associated Press Writer

SALEM, Ore. (AP) - A bill to phase out most field burning by Willamette Valley grass seed farmers was approved Thursday by the Oregon Senate in one of the most contentious environmental debates of the 2009 session.

The measure passed 16-14 after backers said the smoke causes health problems, particularly for people with asthma. Opponents, mostly Republicans, called it an unjustified anti-business move against Oregon's grass seed industry.

The measure, which now advances to the House, would phase out field burning by 2010, meaning grass seed farmers could not burn fields next summer. But it would allow burning to continue on as many as 15,000 acres of steep terrain, largely in the hills outside of Silverton, Stayton and Sublimity, where fine fescue is grown.

Oregon's grass seed growers say field burning helps them maintain their competitive edge in worldwide markets by producing some of the purest grass seed available.

Earlier this session, people who live downwind from the field burns testified the smoke makes it tough to breath and causes health problems.

"Too many people have suffered for too long because of the smoke that gets trapped in the valley," said Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene.

But Senate Republicans argued the phaseout will cause financial harm to grass seed farmers and that said proponents of the bill haven't produced scientific data to show how many people are made ill by field burning.

"We need to back off the grass seed industry," Sen. Jeff Kruse of Roseburg said. "They are good neighbors who practice conservation."

The debate over field burning intensified after a 1988 chain-reaction traffic wreck near Albany that claimed seven lives after a field burn blazed out of control, enveloping Interstate 5 with dense smoke.

The public furor over the accident prompted the 1991 Legislature to approve a phased reduction of burnable acreage. Since the law was fully implemented, the number of acres burned each year has been limited to 65,000, from a high of 320,000 acres in 1972.
     
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)

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