Forestry Smart Policy  By  cover art

Forestry Smart Policy

By: Oregon Forest Industries Council
  • Summary

  • Providing context on topics impacting Oregon forest management. We are unapologetic advocates for the forest sector who believe forestry is part of the solution to Oregon’s biggest challenges. We’re subject matter experts who take pride in our ability to distill complex forestry topics into manageable information. We may challenge what you think you know. You may not like what you hear, and we’ll talk about issues that make us uncomfortable, too. Trust our information is grounded in science, facts, and practicality about the forest sector. Send questions to podcast@ofic.com.
    Oregon Forest Industries Council
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Episodes
  • Busting the top six myths about the timber industry
    Mar 8 2024

    This episode with Sara Duncan, Director of Communications for the Oregon Forest Industries Council, takes on the top six myths about the timber industry, including:

    1. Tree farms are not forests, and the timber industry only plants a monoculture of Douglas-fir.

    2. Clearcuts are unnecessary, you could just thin forests instead.

    3. Logging is the number one source of carbon emissions in Oregon and older trees sequester more carbon than young trees.

    4. The timber industry cuts down trees for toilet paper.

    5. All timber companies in Oregon are owned by out-of-state, wall street investors like TIMOs and REITs.

    6. The listing of the spotted own didn't cause as many job losses as the industry said, it was actually automation.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • The 2024 Wildfire Funding Proposal: Getting the Story Right
    Jan 24 2024

    In this episode, Senator Elizabeth Steiner, Senate co-chair of the full Ways and Means Committee in the Oregon Legislature, discusses a work group she convened that OFIC's Kyle Williams participated in after the end of the 2023 legislative session. The work group was tasked with exploring ways to address Oregon's wildfire funding crisis that has been building for years, and resulted in a concept that will be put forward as a bill (House Bill 4133) under consideration in the upcoming 2024 legislative session. Sen. Steiner and Kyle discuss the elements that led to formation of the work group, who participated and why, how they developed ideas, and the details of the proposal (including one element that will not move forward). Toward the end of the episode, Sen. Steiner also addresses the incomplete reporting about the workgroup by the media.

    Two short clips (part 1, part 2) can be found on our YouTube channel.


    Table of Contents

    Background

    4:23 – 13:33 The history (and context) that lead to creation of the workgroup.

    13:34 – 16:03 Where fires are starting and where acres are burning.

    16:04 – 21:04 What happened at the end of the 2023 session that resulted in not continuing the $15 million landowner offset?

    21:05 – 23:40 Why have conversations on wildfire funding failed in the past?

    23:41 – 29:44 How the workgroup came together, who was involved and the process/guidelines for the workgroup conversation.

    29:45 – 33:56 Why weren’t there more people involved in the conversation?

    33:57 – 45:52 How the proposal came together, the three principles that lead to consensus.

     

    The proposal

    45:53 – 50:24 One piece of the proposal that isn’t moving forward.

    50:25 – The pieces of the proposal that are moving forward in the bill (HB 4133).

    56:14 – 59:04 What the $10/tax account wasn’t paying for and how landowner rates would be reduced.

    59:05 – 1:00:20 The primary driver that will reduce landowner per acre rates.

     

    Responding to media coverage

    1:00:21 – 1:03:25 Did Sen. Steiner do this for political reasons, because she is running for Treasurer?

    1:03:26 – 1:08:09 Did contributions to Sen. Steiner’s PAC influence the proposal? Was it a quid pro quo?

    1:08:10 – 1:15:10 Does this proposal shift the financial burden for wildfire from big corporations to average Oregonians?

    1:15:11- 1:17:28 How does wildfire funding in Oregon compare to other states?

    1:17:29 – 1:20:56 Did one company “write the proposal”/did one entity have more influence over the proposal than others?

    1:20:57 – 1:23:15 Sen. Steiner’s experience with two reporters who have covered this issue.

     

    1:23:16 – 1:25:11 Concluding remarks/what’s next.

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    1 hr and 26 mins
  • Free to Grow: How pesticides help trees grow
    Oct 5 2023

    This episode with Katie Murray, executive director of Oregonians for Food and Shelter, and Seth Barnes, director of forest policy for the Oregon Forest Industries Council covers all things related to pesticide use in forestry, including: how pesticides (primarily herbicides) are applied either aerially or with a ground crew roughly two to four times in the first few years of a new forests’ life to hold back invasive species and noxious weeds. We also cover the regulations in the Oregon Forest Practices Act related to reforestation and water quality protection (including new protections put in place by the Private Forest Accord), what happens when applicators don’t follow the law, the process for notifying the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) and neighbors about forest activities, water quality monitoring studies, how the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) assesses health risks and registers pesticides, what’s on a pesticide label, the carcinogenicity of glyphosate (Roundup), and impacts to pollinators.

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    1 hr and 12 mins

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