Photo by Ellen Miller

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Oregon Completes Controversial Sales Of State-Owned Coastal Forestlands

Oregon Completes Controversial Sales Of State-Owned Coastal Forestlands

June 12, 2014 | OPB
  • The controversy over the sales of forestlands to private timber companies centers on the marbled murrelet.credit: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  • The controversy over the sales of forestlands to private timber companies centers on the marbled murrelet.credit: Sierra Club
The controversy over the sales of forestlands to private timber companies centers on the marbled murrelet. | credit: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service | rollover image for more
The state of Oregon has completed the sales of three parcels of public forestland to private timber companies.
The finalized sales of 1,453 acres from a coastal state forest were announced Thursday by the Oregon Department of State Lands. The agency says it netted and about $4.2 million through the transaction.
A lack of revenues from the Elliott State Forest were cited as the main reason for the sale. The state’s Common School Fund relies on revenues generated from state-owned lands.
Conservation groups are seeking to block one of the Elliott sales in state court, and to prevent logging on the other two in federal court.
Cascadia Wildlands, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Audubon Society of Portland have filed a lawsuit to prevent the sale of the East Hakki Ridge parcel based on a state law that says lands formerly part of the national forest system cannot be sold to private owners. It was formerly within Siuslaw National Forest.
The same groups filed a notice of intent to sue to prevent the taking of federally protected seabirds called marbled murrelets on the other two parcels (Benson Ridge and Adams Ridge 1). The birds are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
Cascadia Wildlands campaign director Josh Laughlin said the groups will wait until the timber companies harvest timber and then sue under the Endangered Species Act, given surveys confirming marbled murrelets in the forest.
“It’s critical that the laws are followed and upheld and the species is protected as outlined by the law,” Laughlin said.
He added that Oregon cancelled timber sales on the Elliott in 2012 when presented with similar evidence of the federally protected birds.
Julie Curtis with the Department of State Lands says the Endangered Species Act will still be observed on private lands.
“The companies that purchased the land are certainly well aware of what they need to do to comply with the law regarding the protection of endangered species,” Curtis said.
An additional 1,250 acres are expected to be sold off in the fall from the Elliott State Forest, which is in Southern Oregon’s Coast Range.
© 2014 OPB

Elliott State Forest Sale Closes Amid Controversy

Elliott State Forest Sale

Statesman Journal 
The Oregon Department of State Lands has completed the controversial sale of three parcels of Elliott State Forest totaling 1,453 acres to Seneca Jones Timber and Scott Timber Co.
The Wednesday sale fetched $4.2 million despite the promise from environmental groups to file a lawsuit to halt logging over the alleged existence of federally protected marbled murrelets in the parcels.
The East Hakki Ridge parcel was purchased by Seneca Jones Timber for $1.89 million, while Adams Ridge 1 was purchased by Scott Timber for $1.87 million. Benson Ridge was purchased for $787,000.
In December 2013, the State Land Board approved selling about 2,700 acres within the Elliott. Managing the Common School Fund land within this forest —which in recent years generated annual net revenues in the $8 million to $11 million range — cost the fund about $3 million in fiscal year 2013.
Losses are projected to continue in fiscal year 2014 and beyond, due to reduced timber harvest levels as a result of litigation over threatened and endangered species protection.
"The Land Board realizes the Common School Fund cannot continue to have a net deficit from managing these Trust lands," DSL director Mary Abrams said in a press release. "This first effort to sell three small parcels was to gauge interest in these properties, as well as determine the market value of land within the forest."
The sale, which will benefit the Common School Fund, represents less than two percent of the 93,000-acre forest near Reedsport.
Even so, the sales have become a flashpoint in the lingering dispute between environmentalists and timber companies.
"These parcels, which once belonged to all Oregonians, should never have been sold in the first place," said Noah Greenwald, endangered species director at the Center for Biological Diversity in Portland, in a press release announcing the notice to initiate a lawsuit. "Now that they've been sold, we're not going to allow them to be clear-cut and contribute to the extinction of the unique marbled murrelet."re