Photo by Ellen Miller

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Enviro Lawsuit May lead to sale of State Forest


Oregon’s State Treasurer Ted Wheeler is troubled that he is not meeting the financial responsibility of managing one of the most valuable assets of the Common School Fund. Wheeler, along with Governor John Kitzhaber and Secretary of State Kate Brown are charged with overseeing the 95,000-acre Elliott State Forest in Southwestern Oregon.

Cascadia Wildlands has filed an Endangered Species Act lawsuit challenging the ESF’s plan for protection of the marble murrelet, a seabird that spends most of it’s life at the ocean. This has led to the cancellation of most of the timber sales from the ESF.

State Land Board (Kitzhaber, Wheeler and Brown) staff told a legislative budget committee on March 21st that timber revenues from the Elliott State Forest have dropped from $11 million in Fiscal Year 2012 to $2.5-3.0 million for the first six months of Fiscal Year 2013.

The Common School Fund benefits all of the public schools in Oregon. As trustees for the CSF, the State Land Board has a legal responsibility to return revenue to the CSF. The current lawsuit does not eliminate the responsibility to the CSF.

If a school district challenged the state for not meeting the trust’s financial duties, selling the ESF to a private forest landowner might be the only option available.

In other words, should Cascadia Wildlands continue with their suit, they might find that the Elliott State Forest will be sold to a private forest landowner in order to return revenue to the Common School Fund.

1 comment:

  1. Senator Joanne Verger can say it much better than I can: "The Oregon Constitution requires that the Elliott State Forest be managed for the maximum revenue possible. This was because the funds are used for schools and this was the wisdom of those who were trying to protect Oregon's educational system. It has not been in compliance with the Constitutioln for years with Judges, not legislators, not the Land Board determining the management of the Elliott. It is no longer an asset for the schools or the state and the fault lies at the feet of those who operate under the guise of doing good."

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