Friday, January 7, 2022 CapitalPress.com 9 Counties, state battle over more than timber Court set to hear appeal of $1B verdict By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press If most arguments over money aren’t really about money, the lawsuit brought by several “timber” counties against the State of Oregon over forestry revenues is no exception. In 2019, a jury in Linn County held the state lia- ble for breaching contracts with 14 counties and numer- ous taxing districts by log- ging an insufficient amount of timber from state forests, reducing their share of prof- its. It awarded the plaintiffs $1 billion. As the state government seeks to overturn the jury’s verdict, it has exposed a broader rift between itself and the predominantly rural communities. “This is a lot bigger issue than a $1 billion judgment. It’s about rural jobs and eco- nomics — and a way of life,” said Roger Nyquist, a com- missioner for Linn County, the lawsuit’s lead plaintiff. The dispute goes beyond the stereotypical conflict between the survival of rural sawmills and the survival of protected species. It’s a legal conundrum that’s also about power: The counties want to stick up for themselves, while the state wants to protect its preroga- tive to set forest policy. “We’ve been residing on opposite planets,” said John DiLorenzo, attorney for the counties. The disagreement cen- ters on timber revenues from 700,000 acres of state forestlands, most of which were donated to the state by county governments in the 1930s and 1940s. Counties and other tax- ing bodies are entitled to a share of logging revenues, and historically these mon- ies have been a big part of their budgets. The state is required to manage the forestlands for their “greatest permanent value.” The state’s interpre- tation of that concept has evolved since the land first changed hands. In recent decades, the state has reduced timber har- vests to protect wildlife hab- itat and enhance recreational opportunities. The plaintiffs and the state disagree on what was promised when the counties gave up the land. The state claims the law- suit shouldn’t have even gone to a jury, since the counties lack an enforce- able contract governing the land’s management. The county governments argue they never would’ve given up such massive swaths of forestland if the state could simply reduce logging levels and timber revenues at will. “Who in their right mind would have done that?” asked DiLorenzo. On Feb. 22, the Ore- gon Court of Appeals will hear arguments to decide which of their perspectives is legally correct. A key question in the lit- igation is whether the coun- ties have the ability to chal- lenge the state’s forestry decisions, since they’re subdivisions of the state government. While the state’s attor- neys argue the counties lack this power, the counties say they have a right to enforce their contract with the state. “What’s the point of a contract if the state doesn’t have to live up to it?” Nyquist asked. It’s an “absurd notion” that the counties can’t chal- lenge the state in court over the matter, said Rob Bovett, legal counsel for the Associ- ation of Oregon Counties. “If the state can walk away from its contracts, then we’ve got nothing,” he said. “Then we would have a partnership that’s not only broken, but not a partnership at all. It would be master and servant.” More than two decades ago, the state’s Board of For- John DiLorenzo Joshua Bessex/EO Media Group Logging in the Clatsop State Forest in 2016. estry enacted a definition of “greatest permanent value” that emphasized “healthy, productive and sustainable forest ecosystems” that gen- erate “social, economic and environmental benefits.” The counties contend that state foresters have cur- tailed logging as a result, depriving local govern- ments of roughly $1 billion in past and future revenues needed for law enforcement, schools, libraries and other services. After a month-long trial in 2019, a jury in Linn County Circuit Court deter- mined the state government had violated its contrac- tual obligation to maximize timber revenues for the counties. “You can call this a breach of contract, but it’s a broken promise,” Bovett said. “It is a direct promise from the state to the counties.” Though the judgment amount has since been accu- mulating roughly $260,000 in interest per day, the state government has opted against settling the lawsuit. Oral arguments are expected to take place in early 2022 but the timeline for a ruling is unknown, in light of the case’s complexity. The state government is urging the Court of Appeals to reverse the jury verdict, arguing the judge presid- ing over the case should not have allowed it to get that far. The donated forestlands are governed under a spe- cific 1941 statute and the counties cannot enforce a “statutory contract” related to “matters of statewide public concern,” according to the state. “At least when it comes to matters affecting a state- wide interest, a county can- not seek compensation for losses caused by the state’s breach of a statutory con- tract,” according to the state. Under Oregon law, state forestlands must be man- aged for the “greatest per- manent value of those lands to the state,” which is a mat- ter that’s within the discre- tion of the Board of For- estry, the state said. “The State of Oregon gets to decide the great- est permanent value for the State of Oregon,” said Ralph Bloemers, an attorney for fishing and conserva- tion groups that oppose the lawsuit. “There’s nowhere that says: Timber first, then everything else. It’s every- thing. It’s multiple uses. It’s what people enjoyed back in those days and today.” Bloemers doesn’t think the $1 billion judgment has a high chance of surviving the Court of Appeals, given the multitude of legal weak- nesses identified by the state government. “There are numerous errors that infected the deci- sion,” he said. “It has a lot to choose from.” Private landowners had abandoned their “logged over” forest properties and stopped paying taxes on them, which is how they were acquired by the county governments, Bloemers said. The counties didn’t want to deal with the forestland so they handed it over to the state, which has heavily invested in improving and managing the property, he said. The legal problem of Oregon’s political subdivi- sions suing the state gov- ernment can be explained in familial terms, he said. “It’s like a kid suing his parents for not getting Rob Bovett enough allowance, when the parents have taken care of school, taken him to the den- tist, made sure he’s safe,” Bloemers said. “It’s easy to pick on the state and say the state isn’t doing enough.” The plaintiffs say they realize that counties can’t simply legally challenge any state policy they dislike, such as marijuana legaliza- tion. However, they argue local governments can’t per- form public health functions and carry out other tasks on the state’s behalf if they can’t rely on contracts. “That would completely blow up the delivery of ser- vices in the state as we know it,” Nyquist said. Critics of the lawsuit point out that Oregon cannot ignore federal laws, such as the Endangered Species Act and Clean Water Act, which restrict logging under cer- tain circumstances. There’s no argument that state law requires coun- ties to share in timber reve- nues, but it’s still allowed to take environmental and rec- reation considerations into account, said Bob Van Dyk, Oregon and California pol- icy director for the nonprofit Wild Salmon Center. “That doesn’t mean it has to maximize timber revenue at the cost of other values,” he said. “Those are perfectly legitimate interests but they need to be balanced against other interests.” Tillamook County, one of the plaintiffs, is dedicated to environmental preservation but doesn’t believe it con- flicts with other values, said David Yamamoto, vice chair of the county commission. “People think that if you manage for timber, you Roger Nyquist Ralph Bloemers don’t care about the envi- ronment,” he said. “That’s absolutely wrong.” The problem isn’t that Oregon follows environ- mental laws, it’s that state foresters have restricted log- ging beyond what’s legally required, said DiLorenzo, attorney for the counties. That management strategy has now resulted in Endan- gered Species Act lim- itations that have further decreased logging. “There is nothing in ESA that makes you create hab- itat if it’s not already there. They created ESA hab- itat by allowing trees to age,” he said. “They cre- ated the habitat, then blamed their inability to harvest on ESA.” The claim that inadequate logging on state forestlands has harmed counties finan- cially is a “red herring” and “misdirection” from the real problem: Tax breaks for large timber companies, Bloemers said. If major timber compa- nies paid more in taxes, it would benefit public ser- vices much more than increased logging on the tiny fraction of forestland owned by the state, he said. When the $1 billion judg- ment is struck down, it’s only going to bring attention to that issue. “I’m expecting it’s going to be a pretty big backfire,” Bloemers said. Van Dyk of the Wild Salmon Center said he’s also glad that Oregon decided against settling the lawsuit and is optimistic about the state’s chances on appeal. “One way or another, it should get cleared up,” he said. John Deere Dealers See one of these dealers for a demonstration Slow Ride. Make it Easy. Reduce crop and root damage with high-crop axle clearance. Travel as slow as you need with a creeper transmission in a tractor that’s easy for any operator to use. The John Deere 6120EH High-Crop Tractor is your complete solution. Belkorp Ag, LLC Modesto, CA Campbell Tractor & Implement Fruitland, ID Homedale, ID Nampa, ID Wendell, ID Papé Machinery, Inc. Clear your crop in comfort with the John Deere 6155MH High-Crop Tractor. You’ll get the crop clearance you need in a comfortable, customizable cab. Whether you’re a sugar cane or high-value crop producer the 6155MH gives you everything you need and nothing you don’t. 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