More Logging and Biomass Burning Won’t Solve Job Woes

-  by Rob Handy, July 6, 2014, Reg­is­ter Guard

Dur­ing my tenure as a Lane Coun­ty com­mis­sion­er, I watched Lane County’s tim­ber har­vest rise from 337 mil­lion board feet in 2009 to 590 mil­lion board feet in 2012, report­ed con­cise­ly by the state Depart­ment of Forestry. In spite of this huge surge, a 75 per­cent increase, I nev­er wit­nessed the often-pre­dict­ed surge in jobs or revenues.

What I did wit­ness was a dis­tinct increase in clear-cut­ting, espe­cial­ly in the forests clos­est to Eugene. That was accom­pa­nied by rur­al res­i­dents in Tri­an­gle Lake being con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed from the aer­i­al spray­ing of for­est poi­sons and by the degrad­ing of such pub­lic waters as Quartz Creek, a vital McKen­zie Riv­er tributary.

I also noticed how increased burn­ing of log­ging slash made the val­ley murky with smoke. Iron­i­cal­ly, the Seneca bio­mass ener­gy facil­i­ty I con­test­ed, instead of reduc­ing slash burn­ing, has degrad­ed our air qual­i­ty fur­ther by increas­ing its allow­able pollution!

Yet our sher­iff and the Ore­gon For­est Resources Insti­tute, an indus­try lob­by­ing orga­ni­za­tion, say in their June 15 guest view­point that with increased log­ging, “Clean air and water are a given.”

Their col­umn says, “A low­er har­vest means few­er jobs.” That claim — that jobs are con­nect­ed to har­vest lev­els — isn’t sup­port­ed by the facts. The Ore­gon Depart­ment of Employ­ment report­ed that 142,100 total non­farm jobs in Lane Coun­ty in 2009 declined to 141,800 jobs by 2012. Dur­ing that same peri­od, log­ging near­ly dou­bled. Yet even wood prod­ucts man­u­fac­tur­ing jobs, report­ed at 3,300 in 2009, remained at 3,300 in 2012 in spite of the har­vest surge.

Log­ging went way up, yet jobs went down. Why is there this dis­con­nect between tim­ber har­vest and jobs?

A large part of the pri­vate tim­ber har­vest leaves Lane Coun­ty, much of it end­ing up in Asia. Wey­er­haeuser, the county’s largest pri­vate landown­er, con­trols more forest­land than the fed­er­al Bureau of Land Man­age­ment. The tim­ber giant, along with some oth­er large indus­tri­al for­est own­ers, is a major log exporter.

Could large increas­es in log­ging with­out increas­es in local employ­ment be due to log exports? Why don’t our lead­ers research and pub­licly dis­cuss this dis­con­nect between increased log­ging and decreased employment?

Com­par­ing har­vest vol­umes with Ore­gon Depart­ment of Rev­enue fig­ures shows a sim­i­lar dis­con­nect in tim­ber har­vest tax­es. In 2011, Oregon’s pri­vate forests account­ed for 77 per­cent of Oregon’s total tim­ber har­vest, with most of the vol­ume com­ing from indus­try lands. Yet the pri­vate for­est con­tributed only 11 per­cent to the total report­ed tim­ber har­vest rev­enues. Pub­lic lands account­ed for 23 per­cent of the har­vest, but paid near­ly all of the col­lect­ed rev­enues, a whop­ping 89 percent!

Why don’t our state and coun­ty lead­ers exam­ine this dis­con­nect as well? Inequitable prop­er­ty and har­vest tax exemp­tions are being giv­en with­out fair review to pri­vate for­est own­ers — espe­cial­ly to large own­ers of more than 5,000 acres, who no longer have to pay a har­vest “priv­i­lege” tax. The Rev­enue Depart­ment reports this one sub­sidy, grant­ed in 1999, costs us near­ly $60 mil­lion a year.

Giv­en the enti­tled way in which the tim­ber indus­try and its friends demand more log­ging, one would think they were big con­trib­u­tors to our econ­o­my. Yet the Depart­ment of Employ­ment reports wood prod­ucts man­u­fac­tur­ing jobs con­sti­tute only 2 per­cent of Lane’s over­all non­farm employ­ment. State econ­o­mists show this industry’s con­tri­bu­tion to Oregon’s gross domes­tic prod­uct being equal­ly small, only 2 percent.

We won’t fair­ly and just­ly resolve the sup­posed “prob­lems” of tim­ber sup­ply, jobs and rev­enues until the pri­vate for­est is held just as account­able as the fed­er­al for­est. To keep more logs, jobs and mon­ey at home, Lane’s large cor­po­rate for­est own­ers need to be taxed for their fair share.

In pri­vate industry’s con­stant demand for more pub­lic tim­ber, our rights of own­er­ship have been over­looked just as is the col­lat­er­al dam­age from indus­tri­al log­ging. Our more pro­tect­ed and still heav­i­ly tim­bered fed­er­al for­est, so cov­et­ed by indus­try, belongs to all of us, includ­ing future gen­er­a­tions. And in Ore­gon, beyond the for­est industry’s locked gates, we the peo­ple own the water, fish­eries, wildlife and clean air as well!

Let’s remind our lead­ers that cor­po­rate tim­ber doesn’t direct­ly vote them into office or pay their salaries. The fed­er­al log­ging increase they so nar­row­ly pur­sue is not fair to the major­i­ty of us and, if grant­ed, would serve most­ly to ben­e­fit only a wealthy few.

Rob Handy, a Lane Coun­ty com­mis­sion­er from 2009 to 2013, pre­pared this essay with tech­ni­cal assis­tance from Our Forests, a non­prof­it for­est research insti­tute not fund­ed by tim­ber harvesting.


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