A3 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 2021 Logging industry blasts new taxes as profi ts soar By TONY SCHICK and ROB DAVIS Oregon Public Broadcasting and The Oregonian Thirty years after Oregon lawmakers began giving the state’s timber industry tax cuts that cost rural counties an estimated $3 billion, industry lobbyists warned them not to follow through on efforts to reinstate the tax this year. Legislators are consider- ing whether to add to taxes paid by the logging industry after an investigation pub- lished last year by Oregon Public Broadcasting, The Oregonian and ProPublica found that timber companies, increasingly dominated by Wall Street real estate trusts and investment funds, ben- efi ted from the tax cuts at the expense of rural counties struggling to provide basic government services. During hearings last week, a parade of industry lobby- ists and supporters said now would be the worst possible time to reinstate the tax. What they didn’t tell lawmakers: Lumber prices are at record highs. The huge demand for lumber and the accompany- ing high prices have helped to boost stock prices and profi ts for some of Oregon’s biggest timber companies. The coronavirus pandemic and record wildfi res, which burned hundreds of thousands of acres of private timberland last year, put the timber indus- try “up against the ropes,” lob- byist Chris Edwards said in testimony last week. Edwards is a former Dem- ocratic state senator who now represents the Oregon Forest & Industries Council, a lob- bying group for the state’s biggest timber companies. He suggested that if lawmakers restored the tax, companies might be forced to cut rural jobs or withdraw from a land- mark accord struck last year with Oregon environmental groups to negotiate tighten- ing the state’s logging laws, which are weaker than those in California and Washington. “This all comes from the same pot of money,” Edwards said. “Additional taxes right now could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.” Despite the wildfi res and the pandemic, lumber pro- ducers are “generating unbe- lievable margins right now, record margins and profi ts,” said Brooks Mendell, presi- dent of the forest investment consultancy Forisk. Small-scale timber own- ers who lost most of their timber in last year’s wildfi res suffered major fi nancial hits. Brooke Herbert/The Oregonian Recent logging near Wheeler. According to Brooks Mendell, president of the forest investment consultancy Forisk, lumber producers are ‘generating unbelievable margins right now, record margins and profi ts.’ Others lost valuable equip- ment. But large corporations and lumber manufacturers are thriving, Mendell said. “You can see it’s show- ing up in their fi nancial state- ments, and the publicly traded guys and the private guys are doing really well,” Mendell said. “They’re investing in their mills and they’re just doing extremely well.” A spokeswoman for the industry council, Sara Dun- can, didn’t directly address questions about record lum- ber prices. In an email, she instead pointed to the impact that restoring the tax would have not on the council’s large member companies but on smaller forest landowners who also testifi ed. “There are over 65,000 forest landowners in Ore- gon, many of whom lost land in the Labor Day fi res, and all of whom would be nega- tively impacted by new tim- ber taxes,” Duncan said. The stock price for the larg- est timber company in Ore- gon, Weyerhaeuser, is sitting at a three-year high. The Seat- tle-based investment trust — which owns 1.6 million acres in Oregon, three times more than the next-largest land- owner — saw 125,000 acres of its timberlands burn during the Labor Day wildfi res that scorched more than a mil- lion acres across Oregon. The company didn’t respond to requests for comment. Despite losing $80 mil- lion to the fi res, the company reported net earnings of $797 million last year, its highest mark since 2016. Weyerhaeuser executives sounded bullish in their Jan. 29 earnings release. The com- pany’s CEO, Devin Stock- fi sh, called its 2020 perfor- mance “remarkable” and said he was increasingly confi dent that demand would continue to bolster the housing mar- ket, which uses the compa- ny’s lumber. Charles Gross, a Morn- ingstar senior equity analyst who follows Weyerhaeuser, said the company’s earnings last year showed “a huge net increase. It’s one of the best years they have on record.” Wildfi re losses for Wey- erhaeuser and other large investment companies “pales in comparison to how much they gain from high lumber prices,” Gross said. “This is especially true for Weyerhae- user,” which not only owns forestland but also owns mills that turn logs into lumber and other products, he said. Gross said he did not fore- cast any signifi cant fi nan- cial effect on the companies if lawmakers reinstated a severance tax of 5%, which would be assessed based on the value of trees at the time they’re cut down. For decades, private tim- ber owners in Oregon paid a severance tax. But in the 1990s, lawmakers passed a series of tax cuts that phased out the severance tax, which in turn lowered the funding provided to schools and local governments. Then they elim- inated the tax for all but the smallest timber owners, who can opt to pay it in exchange for reduced property taxes. If the tax were reinstated, Gross said, companies would adjust prices and shift the cost to consumers. “I don’t think there would be any net impact to the tim- ber industry over time for profi tability,” Gross said. “This wouldn’t harm the long-term profi tability of a company like Weyerhaeuser.” Since cratering at the beginning of the pandemic last year, lumber prices have tripled, setting a record as wildfi res reduced supplies and low interest rates helped fuel a strong demand from the housing market. Prices soared so high that in January home builders asked Pres- ident Joe Biden for help as they struggled with lumber costs and delivery times. High prices for lumber, wood that has been milled, have not boosted prices for logs in all of the country’s wood-growing regions, like the South, where production is higher than it’s ever been, said Rocky Goodnow, vice president of North Ameri- can Timber Service at Forest Economic Advisors. sultant, said his fi rm fore- casted Oregon’s timber pro- duction to change little over the next 20 years, seeing a decline of perhaps 2% based on wildfi re damage and estimates of when most of the state’s trees will be old enough to be logged. “Markets are really strong right now,” Goodnow said. “We think the demand for forest products is going to remain strong.” Proponents of the sever- ance tax told lawmakers that the industry’s strong position means there’s no better time to restore the tax. Jody Wiser, founder of Tax Fairness Oregon, a tax watchdog, told state rep- resentatives that fi res that burned 3% of the state’s pri- vate timberlands were no rea- son to delay restoring taxes that could fund sheriff’s dep- uties, mental health workers and economic development offi cers in rural counties that bore the brunt of the cuts. “Those are the kinds of jobs rural communities have lost because they lost reve- nue,” Wiser said. “They are also good-paying rural jobs, which should be restored with a robust severance tax.” Disagreement exists about where the money should go if a tax is reinstated. The pro- posal to restore the tax, intro- duced by state Rep. Paul Holvey, a Eugene Democrat, would institute a 5% tax to be its fi rst hearing last week. Meanwhile, small land- owners with less than 5,000 acres, which together own about a third of Oregon’s pri- vate forests, have protested the use of tax revenue to pay to prepare private homes for wildfi res. “These costs should be shared by all citizens. We are very happy to support OSU forestry and the Depart- ment of Forestry and pay our share for fi re,” Sarah Deum- ling, whose company man- ages 1,300 acres in Polk County, told lawmakers, “but please think twice before trying again to tax us out of business.” The Association of Oregon Counties, representing the 36 counties that once received the tax revenue, echoed the timber lobbyist’s statements about the timing being wrong to raise taxes and urged law- makers to delay beyond the 2021 session. Speaking on behalf of the association, John Sweet, a county commissioner from coastal Coos County, which has lost an estimated $208 million in severance tax pay- ments since 1991, told state lawmakers they should not restore the tax without tak- ing time to study it. If they do act now, Sweet said, they should direct the money where it once went, to local governments and schools, not to state responsibilities like fi refi ghting. DURING HEARINGS LAST WEEK, A PARADE OF INDUSTRY LOBBYISTS AND SUPPORTERS SAID NOW WOULD BE THE WORST POSSIBLE TIME TO REINSTATE THE TAX. WHAT THEY DIDN’T TELL LAWMAKERS: LUMBER PRICES ARE AT RECORD HIGHS. THE HUGE DEMAND FOR LUMBER AND THE ACCOMPANYING HIGH PRICES HAVE HELPED TO BOOST STOCK PRICES AND PROFITS FOR SOME OF OREGON’S BIGGEST TIMBER COMPANIES. But the rise in lumber prices has increased the cost of trees harvested in western Oregon, the state’s dominant tree-growing region, Good- now said, where log prices are up about 40% since the early days of the pandemic. A severance tax would reduce Oregon’s competitive- ness with other timber-pro- ducing regions and “on the margin lead to less produc- tion,” Goodnow said, partic- ularly if the market for lum- ber weakens. Mendell, the forestry con- paid by timber owners. Half of the money would fund wildfi re fi ghting and a quarter of it would return to the coun- ties where the logging occurs. The rest would go to the Ore- gon Department of Forestry and research projects at Ore- gon State University. Counties want to see all of the money returned to them. But lawmakers have sidelined two early bills to restore a severance tax that would serve entirely as local government revenue, while Holvey’s proposal received Sweet said that while tim- ber companies are seeing strong returns now, lawmak- ers still need to be careful in their efforts to restore the tax. “This may be a reasonable tax,” he said. “I don’t want it to be imposed when we’re shooting from the hip.” Sweet has received $29,000 in campaign contri- butions, nearly 20% of what he’s raised in nine years, from timber interests including Weyerhaeuser. He said the contributions did not infl u- ence his position. Waterfront: Some caution that plan should balance tourism, industry, manufacturing Continued from Page A1 “It’s my opinion that the central waterfront boasts some of the best views in all of Astoria,” said Will Isom, the Port’s executive direc- tor . “So I think at this point, the Port is really motivated to redevelop that area, which ultimately doesn’t just ben- efi t the Port, but it bene- fi ts the city as well as the community.” The master plan will look at land use, design, transpor- tation, economic opportuni- ties and a conceptual design of how to revamp the Chi- nook Building. John South- gate, a consultant brought on by the city to help fi nd a consulting fi rm to create the plan, said having a uni- fi ed vision is key to attract- ing private investment. “I’m hoping that at the end of this process — in the next year, year and a half — we have a vision that gets a lot of private-sector inter- est,” Southgate said. Port commissioners and city councilors, cognizant of the region’s need for high- er-paying, nonseasonal employment, cautioned that the plan should bal- ance tourism, industry and manufacturing. “Ideally, I would see this as a mixed-use area, as it somewhat is now, but vastly underutilized right now,” City Councilor Joan Herman said. “So ideally, it would be somewhat (industrial), rely- ing on the Columbia River and ocean so nearby, as it is now somewhat. But also bringing in more of the pub- lic, not just tourists, but the community at large.” Economists with the mas- ter-planning fi rm will look at what pencils out econom- ically from industrial and traded-sector businesses to tourism, Southgate said. “Don’t think of ourselves as being boxed in by, ‘Well, it’s probably going to be pri- marily tourists,’” he said. The partnership with the city comes as the Port has drastically improved its reputation with local and state partners. The agency recently fi nished a strate- gic plan to guide its fi nan- cial resurgence over the next several years, and a capi- tal facilities plan prioritizing the repair of properties. The plans open the door for more fi nancial support from Busi- ness Oregon, the state’s eco- nomic development agency and a main lender to the Port . The Port is looking for more locally based, sus- tainable economic oppor- tunities after losing most of its dockside revenue. Log exports fell to trade wars between the U.S. and China. The cruise ship season in 2020, and through most of this year, has been halted by economic restrictions meant to stem the spread of the coronavirus. Isom recently reintro- duced a waterfront master plan from 2007 that the Port spent six fi gures on despite Volunteer Pick of the Week Astrid & Irene Bonded pair of female Tabbies Magical things happen when you multiply by two, especially with these sweet girls. Read more on Petfinder.com Sponsored By C LATSOP C OUNTY A NIMAL S HELTER 1315 SE 19 th Street, Warrenton • 861 - PETS www.dogsncats.org Noon to 4pm, Tues-Sat never adopting. The plan envisioned a mix of public parklands, tourist shopping centers and a boatyard clus- ter around Pier 3. Isom envi- sions the 2007 plan inform- ing the new iteration. Port C ommissioner James Campbell, who also served on the commission in the 1960s, said the commu- nity has survived on the pil- lars of logging, fi shing and tourism, but needs to adapt. “We’ve got to take what’s left over,” he said. “But I think what we’re looking at in this area is making sure we take care of the tourist industry on the waterfront and make it attractive for people to come here.” Port commissioners and city councilors were opti- mistic about a future with a closer partnership. “I think we’re very grate- ful for the opportunity to work with the city in this productive manner,” said Dirk Rohne, the president of the Port Commission. “I’m excited about the future, and I know that only working together will we be able to move forward.”