Factory or farm? Oregon may alter land use for chipmakers

Ben Clark, senior vice president of engineering of Inpria, talks to journalists at the company's lab in Corvallis, Ore., on March 3, 2023. Inpria is developing a method to make semiconductor chips have greater functionality. Oregon wants to attract more semiconductor-related businesses to Oregon and state lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow the governor to expand urban growth boundaries for chip factories. (AP Photo/Andrew Selsky)

Aaron Nichols next to his tractor on March 17, in the unincorporated community of Helvetia, Ore. Nichols believes that a bill in the Legislature that would allow the governor to unilaterally expand urban growth boundaries threatens farms. (AP Photo/Andrew Selsky)

NORTH PLAINS, Ore. — Aaron Nichols walked past rows of kale growing on his farm, his knee-high brown rubber boots speckled with some of the richest soil on earth, and gazed with concern toward fields in the distance. Just over the horizon loomed a gigantic building of the semiconductor chipmaker Intel.