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A woodland scene
Forest Resource Trust Program
Landowner Outreach RFP
Overview
Application/Contract Samples
Accomplishments
Goals
Landowner Outreach RFP
Landowner Outreach Request for Proposal (RFP)  for Lower Columbia and South Coast areas.
 
Respondents must mail (no fax or electronic submissions accepted) or deliver proposal materials to:  
 
Attention: Jim Cathcart
Oregon Department of Forestry
Private Forests Program
2600 State St., Bldg. D
Salem, OR 97310  
 
The close date has been extended to 06/04/08.
 
For more information about this RFP, please call Jim Cathcart at (503) 945-7493.

Overview
Forester and landowner viewing trust project site
Advisory Committee
In 2006, the Board of Forestry expressed continued support for the Trust by directing the department to reconvene the Forest Resource Trust Advisory Committee (FRTAC). It directed the committee to review the program and identify and recommend actions to improve its vitality, and to work with the department to simplify the process and make the program more attractive to landowners.
 
New rules were recommended by the Committee and adopted by the Board effective January 11, 2007. The committee also developed House Bill 2293 which addresses barriers preventing broader use of the Forest Resource Trust by creating new and amending existing provisions of the Forest Resource Trust statutes to incorporate efficiency, effectiveness and innovation in Forest Resource Trust programs.   
 
To learn more about the advisory committee, its members, meeting dates and times, go here.
 

Investing in Tomorrow's Forests Today
The Oregon Forest Resource Trust is a way to invest in one of Oregon’s most underutilized assets – the vast and unrealized potential of thousands of acres of widely scattered, underproducing forestland. Underproducing lands are lands that once had forests, or are capable of growing forests, but currently not occupied by a manageable stand of trees or seedlings. These are areas that might have been converted to farm or pasture, burned over by forest fires or poorly managed prior to the passing of the Oregon Forest Practices Act. Lands requiring reforestation following timber harvest are not eligible.
 
The 1993 Oregon Legislature established the Forest Resource Trust – the first program of its kind in the country. The legislature created the trust based on the recommendations of bankers, forestry analysts, private forestland owners, environmental organizations and public agencies – a group who came together in 1991 under the direction and inspiration of Secretary of State Phil Keisling. Lands reforested through the Forest Resource Trust provide many environmental, social and economic benefits to Oregon such as soil conservation, clean water, fish and wildlife habitat, future timber availability, scenic quality, job opportunities and recreation.
 
In 1999, $1.5 million dollars of carbon dioxide emission reduction offset monies were placed into the Forest Resource Trust by the Klamath Cogeneration Project. The idea is that the new forests created under the Forest Resource Trust remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as they grow (as trees sequester carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and store the carbon in forest biomass and wood products), thus offsetting a portion of the cogeneration project’s carbon dioxide emissions. By placing these funds in the Forest Resource Trust so that they can be used to assist landowners in creating new forests, the cogeneration project gets credit for the emission reduction accomplishments of these forests.
 
At the center of the trust’s success is the willing participation of non-industrial private landowners owning 10 to 5,000 acres of eligible underproducing forestland or up to 15,000 acres of low site underproducing forestland. In exchange for the direct payment of stand-establishment costs and favorable financial terms such as simple interest and repayment requirements only tied to profitable timber harvest, participating landowners release their rights to the carbon dioxide emission reduction offsets accruing to the newly established forest. The State Forester can then market these offsets as a means to raise additional funds for the Forest Resource Trust. Landowners choose when and if to harvest and if there is no harvest after 200 years the forest is free and clear of the trust contract. Landowners are encouraged to grow and manage healthy, vibrant forests and have the option to buyout of the trust contract at anytime by repaying trust costs plus 4 percent simple interest. Payments from buyouts are reinvested into the trust to reforest even more underproducing forestland.
 

More information on forestry carbon offsets is available here. For specific information on the Forest Resource Trust as a carbon dioxide emission offset program, see the article below: 


Application/Contract Samples
Program summary and how to apply (pdf)
Application form (pdf)
 
Contract "Samples:"
 
 

Accomplishments
Predominant Species
 
Species
Enrolled Acres
  Douglas-fir
ponderosa pine
western hemlock
hardwoods
840.0
116.0
  11.0
  16.0
      
Total

983.0



Active Projects
 
 
Year Enrolled
 
# Projects
 
Acres
 
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
 
9
0
0
0
1
4
5
2
1
1
2
2
4
 
341.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
18.0
102.0
191.0
  70.0
14.0
13.0
31.0
75.0
128.0
 Totals  32.0
 983.0

Goals
Encourage landowners to establish and maintain healthy forests on underproducing forest lands - lands capable of growing forests but currently in brush, cropland, pasture or very poorly stocked (and not subject to a reforestation requirement of the Oregon Forests Practices Act).
  • The Forest Resource Trust provides monies for the direct cost payments of site preparation, tree planting, seedling protection, competitive release activities and forestry consultant services.
  • The landowner commits to establishing a healthy “free-to-grow” forest stand and takes responsibility for seeing that the work gets done.
  • The stewardship forester provides technical assistance on how to complete the reforestation project and is available to provide direction with respect to the landowner’s project management responsibility.   
  • If timber is harvested from the forests created with trust monies, participating landowners repay the trust 50% of net receipts for partial harvests or repay all trust costs plus 4% simple interest for final harvest.
  • Eligible underproducing land must be at least 10 contiguous acres, zoned for forest or farm use, located in Oregon, and part of a private forestland ownership of no more than 5,000 acres or no more than 15,000 acres low site acres.
  • The trust can fund 100% of the reforestation cost up to $100,000 every two years.


 
Page updated: May 16, 2008

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