WORKING PAPER NO.  32
                    COLUMBIA RIVER BASIN PROJECT
            For Water Supply and Water Quality Management
                    WEISER RIVER BASIN (IDAHO)
               PRELIMINARY ECONOMIC RECONNAISSANCE
                AND ESTIMATE OF GROWTH, 1960-2010
DATE:   QCT301962                     DISTRIBUTION

Prepared by  RT.P.                         Project Staff_
Reviewed by 	                     Cooperating Agencies

Approved by 	                     General	
          U. S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE
                         Public Health Service
                               Region IX

           Division of Water Supply and Pollution Control
                       Room 570 Pittock Block
                         Portland 5, Oregon

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This working paper contains preliminary data and information

primarily intended for internal use by the Columbia River
                                   X.
Basin Project staff and cooperating agencies.  The material

presented in this paper has not been fully evaluated and

should not be considered as final.

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          WEISER RIVER BASIN (IDAHO)
     PRELIMINARY ECONOMIC RECONNAISSANCE
      AND ESTIMATE OF GROWTH. 1960-2010

             Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION                               1

Purpose of This Analysis                   1

Definition of the Area                     1

Study Period                               1

Limitations of This Analysis               1


PRESENT ECONOMIC BASE                      2

Population                                 2

Industry                                   3


ESTIMATED FUTURE GROWTH                    8

Factors Influencing Future Growth          8

Future Population                         10
Prepared by:  Economic Studies Group
              Water Supply and Pollution Control
                      Program, Pacific Northwest
              October, 1962

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                       WEISER RIVER BASIN (IDAHO)
                  PRELIMINARY ECONOMIC RECONNAISSANCE
                   AND ESTIMATE OF GROWTH, 1960-2010
INTRODUCTION

Purpose of This Analysis

This analysis is intended to provide a preliminary estimate of the  economic

potentials and anticipated growth of the subject area.


Definition of the Area

The Weiser River Basin, for the purposes of this study,  is defined  to

include those portions of eastern Washington and southern Adams Counties

that compose the following census districts in the Census of Population of

1950:  West Weiser, Weiser, Middle Weiser, Eas't Weiser,  Mann Creek, Midvale,

Cambridge, Goodrich, Council.


Study Period

The study period is the 50-year period 1960-2010, with an interim point

at 1985.


Limitations of This Analysis

Two limitations apply to this study.  The first is that  it is intended only

as a preliminary estimate of the outlook for the subject area's growth.

Subsequently, in connection with the Columbia River Basin Project for Water

Supply and Water Quality Management, an analysis will be made on an industry-

by-industry basis of the growth potential in the various sub-basins.   At  that

time, this preliminary estimate will be reviewed, and revised if necessary.

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                                                                      C-2

The second limitation is that this study is intended for use particularly

in assessing future water needs.  Emphasis has been placed on the  analysis

of those industries which make heavy demands upon the water resource.

Other industries have been considered only insofar as they may have a

significant effect on future population.  For this reason, this study  is

not submitted as a detailed industrial forecast.

PRESENT ECONOMIC BASE

Population

The Weiser River Basin contains about 75 per cent of the population of

Washington and Adams Counties, and about 14% per  cent of the population of

the eight-county Central Snake area outside of Ada and Canyon Counties.

Population is concentrated in four towns - Weiser, Midvale and Cambridge

in Washington County, and Council in Adams County.  Moderate growth of

these towns has kept the area's population nearly static over the  last

two decades, in spite of considerable contraction of rural population.

Table I indicates the distribution and trend of population in the  area.

                               Table I I/

              POPULATION TRENDS IN THE WEISER RIVER BASIN

Area                                       Population             Change
                                    1940      1950     1960     194~0-1960

Weiser                             3,664     3,961    4,208       +14.6%
Midvale                              262       231      285       +8.8%
Cambridge                            405       354      441       + 8.9%
Council                              692       748      827       +19.5%
Total Urban Population             5,023     5,-294    5,761       +14.7%

Rural Population I/                3,831     3,461  .  3,175       -17.0%

Total Population                   8,854     8,755    8,936       +   .9%
 I/  U. S. Census of Population 1950, 1960
 2/  Rural populations for 1940 and 1950 represent the populations of the
nine census districts, less the populations of the four townships.  For
1960 the figure is derived by subtracting town populations and a portion
of the Washington and Adams Counties' 1950-1960 population loss similar to
the region's 1940 to 1950 population loss.

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The course of population in the Weiser Basin is typical of the larger

Central Snake River Basin.  The whole area has seen rural populations drop

while town populations have risen modestly.  The fact that the .Central

Snake area has kept pace with Idaho's population growth is due largely to
                                         ^
the population influx in Elmore County as a result of emplacement of

Mountain Home Air Force Base and a related missile site.  Table II

summarizes population trends in  the Central Snake Basin.

                             Table II $1
        POPULATION TRENDS IN THE CENTRAL SNAKE RIVER BASIN
Area
Adams County
Washington County

Boise County
Elmore County
Gem County
Owyhee County
Payette County
Valley County

Central Snake Area

Idaho
Population
1940
3,407
8,853
2,333
5,518
9,544
5,652
9,511
4,035
1950
3,347
8,576
1,776
6,687
8,730
6,307
11,921
4,270
1960
2,978
8,378
1,646
16,719
9,127
6,375
12,363
3,663
Change
1940-1960
-12.6%
- 5.4%
-29.5%
+203%
- 4.3%
+12.8%
+30.0%
-10.1%
 48,853   51,614  61,249

524,873  588,637 667,191
+25.4%
+27.1%
J5/  U. S. Census of Population, 1950, 1960
Industry

The Weiser River Basin is a predominantly agricultural area.   In the portion

of the area that reaches into Adams County lumbering is pursued, with a

sawmill located in Council and logging carried out in Payette National Forest,

Agriculture, however, provided 31.3% of the total employment  in 1960, and

may be presumed to be the principal source of support for service industries.

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                                                                      C-4

Changing agricultural patterns have imposed shifts on the regional economy.

Increasing concentration of farm ownership, together with an increase in

farmland and greater attention to the grazing of cattle and sheep has,

assisted by the use of irrigation, resulted in a sharp rise in productivity.

Between 1954 and 1959 the value of agricultural products sold in Washington

County rose 42.2 per cent;  yet between 1950 and 1960 farm employment fell

24.6 per cent in the two-county area.  The agricultural change has been

two-sided.  On the one hand there has been far more attention to grazing

and sale of cattle and sheep.  On the other, added irrigation opportunities

have resulted in more diversified cropping:  production of oats, field

seeds, potatoes, sugar beets, and vegetables -- largely corn and dry onions  -

has increased;  while production of wheat, barley, dairy products and

poultry products has dropped off.  Wheat remains the chief crop of the area,

but sugar beets and potatoes have climbed close in terms of value of crops sold.

Major changes in the agricultural economy of the region are summarized in

Table III.

                                Table III -'

           TRENDS IN WASHINGTON COUNTY AGRICULTURE, 1954 - 1959

                                         1954           1959         Change

Number of farms                           776           .678         -12.6%
Land in farms (acres)                 566,729        659,270          16.2%
Average size of farm (acres)              730.3          972.4        33.2%
Land in irrigated farms (acres)       394,213        487,916          24.8%
Cropland harvested (acres)             73,766         66,230         -10.2%
Value of crops sold                $2,351,951     $2,903,200          23.4%
Pasture (acres)                       462,673        560,645         -21.2%
Irrigated pasture (acres)              13,385         23,228          73.5%
Value of livestock & products sold $3,469,641     $5,364,927          53.6%
I/  U. S. Census of Agriculture, 1959

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The town of Weiser, county seat of Washington County,  is the largest  of

the four towns in the area, and provides a major share of manufacturing

and service employment, as indicated in Table IV.

                                Table IV -/

 PROPORTION OF 1960 WASHINGTON COUNTY EMPLOYMENT IN SELECTED CATEGORIES
                            PROVIDED BY WEISER

Finance, insurance, real estate                                   83%
Personal service                           .                       70.2%
Public administration                                             67%
Wholesale & retail trade                                          66.8%
Manufacturing                                                     64.5%
Professional & related service                                    61%

All employment                                                    51.1%
21  U. S. Census of Population, 1960

Weiser has not developed a substantial manufacturing or processing

industry.  Most manufacturing units are small, and their products  are

largely consumed or employed in the immediate area. Food processing  is

the chief manufacturing industry,  with a flour mill, a bakery,  a beverage

bottling plant, and a producer of  potato chips located in the town.  Most

of the region's agricultural output, however, is routed to processing

plants in nearby Payette and Emmett.


Commercial and service occupations are the major source of employment

opportunities.  Besides the legal  and administrative services provided  by

county government, the town contains a stockyard, and  a grain warehouse.

Two bus lines and the Union Pacific Railroad serve it.  Weiser  contains,

besides retail establishments, eleven wholesale firms, a branch of the

Idaho First National Bank, Washington County's only, hospital, utility

offices, and grade and high schools.

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Cambridge and Midvale, located 31 and 23 highway miles,  respectively,  up-

river from Weiser, are largely service centers for the agricultural  country-

side.  Each contains a grain warehouse on a spur of the  Union Pacific, a

grade school, a high school, and retail establishments.   A glue  factory in

Cambridge employed 16 persons in 1960.


Council, the county seat and largest community in Adams  County,  is somewhat

larger than Cambridge or Midvale.  It serves as both an  agricultural service

center and as the focus of regional lumbering, being the location of a saw-

mill of Boise Cascade Corporation and three logging firms.   In addition to

the services provided by its smaller neighbors, Council  contains a stock-

yard, a hospital, and a branch bank.

Table V, which lists employment provided by various industries,  reflects  the

weight of agriculture on the region's economy.

                                Table V'^/
      NUMBER OF PERSONS EMPLOYED IN VARIOUS-INDUSTRY GROUPS,  1960
Industry                                 . Adams County        Washington  County
                                        number  %labor .force number  %labor force

Agriculture         .                      302      25.8%      1,019     30.8%
Forestry & fisheries                       29       2.5           4        .1
Construction                               63       5.4    .      176       5.3
Manufacturing                             155      13.3          320       9.7
Transportation, communication, utility     26       2.2          188       5.7
Wholesale & retail trade                  178      15.3          573     17.4
Finance, insurance, real estate            20       1.7           47       1.4
Business & repair service                   8        .7           66       2.0
Personal service                           61       5.2          175       5.3
Hospital & medical service                 32       2.7           51       1.5
Education                                  38       3.2          214       6.5
Other professional service                 39       3.3           92       2.8
Public administration                      39       3.3          118       3.6
Industry not classified                     8        .7           92       2.8
Total Employed                            998      85.6        3,135     95.1

Unemployed                                168      14.4          164       4.9

Total Labor Force                       1,166     100.0        3,299     100.0
3/  U. S. Census of Population, 1960

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Employment in the Weiser Basin has changed materially over the last decade

Agricultural employment has fallen off sharply, as previously noted,  and this

has been aggravated by an even steeper drop in forest products employment.

These have been only partially compensated by increased service  employment

and some development of manufacturing.  Although increased activity in food

processing, a second print shop in Weiser, moderate expansion of mercury

production in Weiser, establishment of a producer of trailers in Weiser, and

a glue factory in Cambridge, have added employment opportunities, the decline

in the region's two basic industries has resulted in loss of population, some

contraction in retailing in both counties, as well as heavy unemployment in

Adams County.


Major shifts in employment in Washington and Adams Counties are  summarized

in Table VT.  (It should be noted that 1960 was a particularly  bad year in

the cyclical lumbering industry, and that employment opportunities in forest

products industries may be somewhat less unfavorable than the figures indicate.)
                                            LI
                                   Table VI -'
                 SIGNIFICANT SHIFTS IN EMPLOYMENT, 1950 - 1960
Industry
Agriculture
Manufacturing:
                  Washington County
                  forest products
                  primary metals
                  transportation equipment
                  food & kindred products
                  printing & publishing  .
                  chemical & allied
Business & repair service
Education

Total
  Employment
 1950    1960

1,332  1,019
   66     36
    6     17
    0      9
                                                  65
                                                  19
                                                   0
                                                  98
                                                 114
         166
          38
          16
          66
         214
                                                                    Change
-313 (22.6%)
- 30 (45.5%)
+ 11 ( 183%)
+  9
+101 ( 155%)
+ 19 ( 100%)
* 16
- 32 (32.7%)
+100 (87.7%)

-121
57U. S. Census  of Population, 1960

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                              Table VI  (Continued)
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Indus try
                  Adams County
Agriculture
Manufacturing:  forest products
Construction
Transportation
Eating & drinking places
Finance, insurance, real estate
Business & repair service
Education

Total
425
239
33
32
30
5
45
50
302
151
63
8
46
20
28
38
-123 ( 297.)
- 88 (37.8%)
+ 30 ( 91%)
- 24 ( 757.)
f 16 (53.37.)
+ 15 (3007.)
r 17 (37.87.)
-"12 ( 247.)

-203
ESTIMATED FUTURE GROWTH

Factors Influencing Future Growth

Relying largely on agriculture for its economic livelihood, the Weiser Basin's

future development must be related to the evolution of agriculture in the

Central Snake River area.


Development of a substantial manufacturing industry seems most unlikely.  The

area is not favorably oriented to major markets for heavy manufacturing

industries.  The presently known mineral resources present little prospect

of intensive exploitation.  The absence of educational and cultural resources

general ly associated with industries employing advanced technology precludes

likelihood of establishment of science-based industries.


Increased irrigated agriculture holds the opportunity of off-setting the

recent trend of decreasing rural population.  An addition to irrigation is

included in the proposed Weiser Project involving, approximately, the stretch

of the Weiser River from Cambridge to Weiser.  Additional and/or alternate

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 irrigation opportunities are also under  consideration.  Preliminary estimates




 by the Bureau of Reclamation indicate that  the long range effect of such




 projects will be to stabilize the rural  population at about the present level.




 It is likely that food-processing activities  in the town of Weiser may exper-




 ience moderate expansion in the future as a side-effect of irrigation develop-




 ments.  Further irrigation will presumably  be followed by expanded and diversi-




 fied farm output.  It is anticipated, however, that existing units elsewhere




 will be able to process most of the additional output.






 Lumbering may be expected to provide another  source of growth  in the northern




 part of the area.  While a relatively minor part of the western lumber indis try,




 the area's timber resources are substantial,  and should receive considerable




 exploitation with exhaustion of expansion possibilities of supply in more ad-




 vanced lumbering 'areas.  In the more distant  part of the study  period, as oppor-




 tunities for agricultural expansion decline and lumber demand  rises, lumbering,




 and ancilary fabrication of forest products,  could become a relatively greater




 portion of the regional economy.






 A fourth possible source of growth - largely  in the northern part of the




 region - is expanded recreational use of the  Payette National  Forest and near-




by lakes and reservoirs.  Distance from population centers, however, limits




 the impact of recreational opportunities.    .






 The most likely course of development, then,  would see a leveling off of farm




 employment, perhaps even a minor rise to 1985, as a result of  increased irri-




 gation.  Service industries and service  employment may be seen to expand

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moderately as farm employment stabilizes and farm incomes rise.   Food


processing would appear to be the only likely source of more than the most


modest growth of manufacturing to 1985.  From 1985 to 2010,  however,  lumber-


ing may play an increasingly important role in the area.  Throughout  the


period, recreation may be expected to exert a slight but beneficial effect


on service industries and employment.



Future Population


Neither the recent history of the area nor the design pattern of economic


development outlined above suggests vigorous population expansion during the


study period.



The forecast of population is based on several assumptions suggested  by


consideration of the  evolving economic base: (1)  Rural population may be


expected to stabilize, largely as a result of irrigation.  (2)  Town  popu-


lation may be expected to continue to grow as a function of the  State's


over-all population growth, the broad tendency to urbanization,  and the


growth-in the ratio of service employment to "goods" industry employment.


The rate of growth of town populations is estimated at 1 per cent, compared


to .7 per cent in the period 1940 - 1960.  (3)  The study area's  economic


base will continue to be mainly based on agriculture;  and growth based on


agriculture may be anticipated to be less than that of the State as a whole.



Based on these assumptions, the forecast of future population for design


purposes is shown in Table VII.  (The indicated rate of population growth


for the area is .7 per cent a year, or about half that projected for  the

                  I/
State as a whole.   )


_!/  Based on estimates for  1980 and  2000 in Kerr Committee  Report No.  5,
Page  29,  Series II,  Migration Assumption No. 1.

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                                   Table VII

               ESTIMATED POPULATION IN THE WEISER RIVER BASIN

                                                  1960     1985      2010

Rural population                                 3,175    3,175     3,175
Urban population                                 5,761    7,475     9,500

Total                                            8,936   10,650    12,675


It is estimated that the major part of the population enlargement  will  occur

in Weiser and Council, with Council growing at a somewhat faster rate,

particularly in the later stages of the study period.


It must be recognized that this projection is for design purposes  only, and

that  in a region so small and sparsely settled very minor economic changes

would be sufficient to upset it.  For example, establishment of  a  moderate y

sized factory in the area would create conditions for expansion  of greater

.magnitude.    Conversely, failure oŁ new irrigation opportunities  might be

presumed to result in slower growth, or even decline.

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