Photo by Ellen Miller

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Board of Forestry Seeks Better Financial Management

Board of Forestry Seeks Better Financial Management 

The Oregon Board of Forestry, frustrated with the performance of the Northwest Forest Management Plan for the Tillamook and Clatsop State Forests, assigned a Subcommittee to present options to the full Board that can improve the financial performance of the forests while also enhancing the recreational and conservation opportunities on the once County-owned forestland.

The State took over management of the forests from the Counties decades ago but the revenue generated from forest management is shared with the Counties.

In 2001, the BOF adopted a new strategy for the forests in an effort to develop forests that produced timber revenue while providing habitat for wildlife species that favored a multi-layered forest canopy.

The 2001 plan, dubbed Structure-Based-Management, has never produced the volume of timber called for. Frequent windstorms along the north coast have wreaked havoc for the Structure-Based-Management Strategy since the trees that were left after management frequently blew down.

The Stakeholders' group met on November 11th and reviewed alternative forest management strategies. Some group members were annoyed when the group struggled to identify tactics that could lead to increased timber revenues.

The two timber representatives, Dave Ivanoff, Hampton Affiliates and Ray Jones, Stimson Lumber Co. and Tillamook County Commissioner Tim Josi see a direct link between improved forest management activities, including timber harvesting, and increased revenues.

The Stakeholders invited two forest analytical experts, Terry Droessler and Mark Rasmussen, to identify the biological and economic outcomes of the various strategies being considered. The group will meet at least two more times before presenting their recommendations to the BOF Subcommittee.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Legislator Views Modern Logging Practices


 Legislator Views Modern Logging Practices
 
Rep. Jeff Reardon, Bob Luotto, Andrea Salinas

State Representative Jeff Reardon, D-Happy Valley, spent a day with logger Bob Luotto, Cross & Crown, Jim Geisinger, Associated Oregon Loggers and Ralph Saperstein, timber industry spokesman visiting an active unit that Luotto’s company was logging for Stimson Lumber Co.

Rep. Reardon was interested in seeing the Oregon Forest Practices Act in action. The Stimson tract, outside of Cannon Beach, was smack in the middle of Cannon Beach’s water supply. Stimson forester Tim Shiel described the coordination with the City and the details necessary to conduct the logging of the unit.

It is not an understatement to say that that Rep. Reardon was impressed with the detail that went into logging the tract. Previously, Reardon had worked out in the woods for Weyerhaeuser in the 1960s.


Bob let Rep. Reardon climb up to the cab of his log yarder/processor to see a high tech version of machinery that has been around a long time. Bob’s processor operator reports that operating a modern high tech helicopter is less complicated than controlling the log processor.