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Winemakers try to stem crisis

Oregon winery owners scramble after buyer cancels contracts over wildfires

By ANDREW SELSKY, Associated Press
Published: October 5, 2018, 6:00am
2 Photos
Vines spilling down toward the Willamette Valley in Amity, Ore. Joseph B.
Vines spilling down toward the Willamette Valley in Amity, Ore. Joseph B. Frazier/Associated Press files Photo Gallery

SALEM, Ore. — Some Oregon lawmakers and winery owners are scrambling to help a dozen vineyards owners who face having 2,000 tons of grapes wither on the vine, unsold, after a California winemaker abruptly canceled contracts to buy them, claiming they were tainted from some from the summer’s wildfires.

Rep. David Gomberg said Thursday the unexpected crisis has led to other Oregon winemakers to help out the vineyard owners in Southern Oregon by buying a lot of the grapes.

Gomberg, a Democrat, was among those who pitched in to harvest grapes on Thursday.

Christine Clair, winery director of Willamette Valley Vineyards, which is buying some of the grapes, said the cancellations of the contracts is one of the most devastating hits on Oregon’s wine industry.

She said tests show the grapes have not deteriorated because of smoke.

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