Oregon Counties Court Battle Continues
Oregon Court of Appeals heard arguments in late February on a 2019 jury decision appealed by the state that awarded $1.1 billion to 13 counties and 151 local taxing districts after the counties sued the state of Oregon and Oregon Dept. of Forestry, claiming officials reduced timberland management goals and violated the law that created much of the state’s forest system.
Legal language from 1941 when many counties returned timberland to the state required that the lands be managed for the “greatest permanent value.” The counties claimed the state reduced timber harvests in favor of other values and owed the counties for 20 years of missing timber revenues—and for future lost revenues through the year 2069.
According to the counties, the Oregon Dept. of Forestry adopted a rule in 1998 that redefined “greatest permanent value” to mean managing for sustainable ecosystems and environmental benefits in addition to economic revenues. The rule change violated the original law, the counties’ legal team argued, and cost the counties $674 million since 2001 and a projected $392 million in future damages through 2069 if the rule isn’t changed. A Linn County jury agreed.
The verdict has been under appeal since, collecting interest at 9% a year. A three-judge panel heard oral arguments from the two sides. The counties claim that timber production was the main objective in 1941 and remained so until the late 1990s. At that point, they say the state breached its contract with the counties when it adopted new administrative rules that included a broader definition of greatest permanent value. Since then, they contend, the state has shortchanged them by under-harvesting on state forests and undercutting their revenues.
The state appealed the verdict on a variety of grounds. The chief argument was that the statutory term in question—greatest permanent value—is not contractual, and even if it is, does not mean what the counties assert: that they have a right to maximum revenue.
Latest news
Enviva Gears Up For Lucedale Plant
Enviva Gears Up For Lucedale PlantEnviva reports that in July the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality Permit Board unanimously approved the air permit for the proposed wood pellet plant in Lucedale, Miss., which is the principal permit required to begin...
FutureMetrics Leads Vietnam Pellet Plant
FutureMetrics Leads Vietnam Pellet PlantFutureMetrics announced that a project that it has guided for over two years is now producing high quality pellets. Under the guidance of FutureMetrics’ operations expert, John Swaan, a new 120,000 metric ton per year pellet...
Global Wood Bio Trending Positive
Recent developments continue to underline the continued strong growth expected in global demand for industrial grade wood pellets, including: • In June 2019, the UK became the first major economy in the world to pass a law to bring GHG emissions to net zero by 2050,...
Find Us On Social
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
Wood Bioenergy News Online hits the inboxes of subscribers in the wood-to-energy sectors.
Subscribe/Renew
Wood Bioenergy is published and delivered worldwide 6 times per year. Free to qualified readers in the U.S. Subscribers outside the U.S. are asked to pay a small fee.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.