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Oregon Department of Forestry
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Forest Resources Planning    Oregon Department of Forestry    

Program Mission   
Annual Timber Harvest Report   
Oregon Big Trees Registry   
First Approximation Report    
Land Use Planning   
Sustainable Forest Indicators Project   
PEFC Study of Oregon Forestlands   
The Forest Assessment   
Oregon Forest Cluster Strategy Project   

Program Mission

To lead strategic planning, to provide credible and objective analyses for the Board of Forestry and the Department of Forestry, and to actively promote policies that encourage sustainable forest management and further the objectives, policies, and programs of the Forestry Program for Oregon and all Oregon forestlands.

Vision:
This is what we do:

Annual Timber Harvest Report

The purpose of ODF Annual Reports is to compile timber harvest and forest management data into one consolidated report. These reports allow forestry professionals and the general public to access a wide variety of data sets connected with timber harvesting and other forest practices. The reports indicate who is involved in each activity, as well as the extent of activities performed by each group. This web site allows users to view Annual Reports from 1986 to the present and download selected data from as far back as 1962.

Oregon Big Trees Registry

/ODF/STATE_FORESTS/FRP/images/clatsopf.gif     Trees contained in the Oregon Register of Big Trees have met the criteria for the National Register of Big Trees, established by American Forests, who have administered the National Register of Big Trees since 1940.

In 2006, the National Center for Conservation Science & Policy assumed responsibilty for maintaining Oregon's Big Tree Registry.  In addition to the official registry, on the center's Oregon Big Tree Project website you can also find out more about the importance of big trees, instructions about nominating a big tree for inclusion in the registry, and how you can volunteer to help with the Oregon Big Tree Project.

If you have questions about the project, you may also contact:
Cindy Deacon Williams
Director of Aquatic Science and Education Programs
National Center for Conservation Science and Policy
84 Fourth Street
Ashland, OR  97520
PH:  541-482-4458
FAX: 541-482-7282
email: cindy@nccsp.org

First Approximation Report

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Oregon Forests
The First Approximation Report is Oregon´s Report on the Criteria and Indicators for the Conservation and Sustainable Management of Temperate and Boreal Forests developed through the Montreal Process. The Montreal Process is an internationally sponsored initiative that identified seven criteria as essential components of sustainable forest management. Sixty-seven indicators are used to describe these seven criteria. This report outlines the availability of data needed to describe the indicators.

Land Use Planning

Land Use Planning Handbook

ODF Land Use Planning Handbook, August 2003 [PDF; 269 KB]

Land Use Planning Notes

Sustainable Forest Indicators Project

In 2003, the Oregon Board of Forestry revised its strategic forest policy document, the Forestry Program for Oregon, and incorporated into state policy an internationally recognized framework for measuring and discussing sustainable forest management.

In March of 2005, the Board of Forestry's ad hoc Sustainable Forest Management Advisory Committee was appointed from a broad range of stakeholders and given the charge to:
1. Coordinate with technical experts to reach both strong policy and technical consensus on a set of recommended sustainable forest management indicators for use in measuring Forestry Program for Oregon implementation progress.
2. Solicit and summarize broad stakeholder input on both the usefulness of the recommended indicators and potential desired future outcomes for these indicators.
3. Provide advice to the Board of Forestry both on recommended indicators and desired future outcomes.
4. Provide advice to the State Forester on future Forest Assessment Project priorities.

The committee met for the first time in Salem on April 27 mostly to get oriented and organized. In addition to biological diversity, indicators will be developed for forest ecosystem health, social and economic benefits, forest productive capacity, soil and water resources, and legal and institutional frameworks (matching the seven strategies in the Forestry Program for Oregon).

Additional information about the committee and the project, including background, project planning, committee membership and meeting information, and core indicator development, can be accessed on the web page for the Sustainable Forest Indicators Project.

PEFC Study of Oregon Forestlands

On April 13, 2006, the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) released a report produced by the Pinchot Institute for Conservation entitled Oregon Forestlands and the Programme for Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC): An Assessment of the Process and Basic for Eligibility.

The Pinchot Institute Study evaluates the feasilibility of an "Oregon Certification Standard", meaning that wood products grown under the state's current standards for forest management could be endorsed by the international PEFC and be recognized in the global forest products marketplace.

An ODF news release describing the report is also available on the department's "Newsroom" web page.

The Pinchot Institute staff will provide a briefing to the Oregon Board of Forestry at its April 28 business meeting at ODF headquarters in Salem, Oregon

Contact David Morman at dmorman@odf.state.or.us or 503-945-7413 for more information.

Note:  Below is a link to the report's Appendix 7.3 Reference Matrix.  If you are considering printing this appendix, be advised that it is a PDF file, 112 pages, and pages 2 through 112 are formatted for legal-sized (11"x14") paper. 

Appendix 7.3 Reference Matrix [PDF, 112 pages, pages 2-112 formatted for 11"x14" paper]

The Forest Assessment

Oregon Timber Harvests

Oregon's Timber Harvests: 1849-2004 [PDF 1.66MB; 163 pages]

Draft Interagency Mapping and Assessment Project Study Plan [doc; 3.26 MB; 117 pages]

Forest Land Base Changes

Forests Farms & People: Land Use Change on Non-Federal Land in Western Oregon
[PDF 8.26MB; 52 pages]
Forests Farms & People: Land Use Change on Non-Federal Land in Eastern Oregon
[PDF 1.31 MB; 46 pages]

Oregon Forest Cluster Strategy Project

Oregon's forest cluster faces fierce global competition and Oregon is losing wood products manufacturing facilities for a variety of reasons.  The forest cluster may soon no longer be able to significantly contribute to rural economies; provide the people, equipment, and wood products market access necessary to maintain the economic viability of private forestland ownership; or provide the infrastructure needed to restore overstocked forests susceptible to uncharacteristic wildfire and forest health risks. In the midst of this crisis, the State of Oregon lacks a clear, broadly accepted strategy for revitalizing and maintaining its forest cluster firms and organizations.

In November, 2007, the chairs of the Oregon Economic and Community Development Commission, Oregon Board of Forestry, Oregon Forest Resources Institute Board, and Dean of the Oregon State University College of Forestry/Director of the Oregon Forest Research Laboratory signed a joint resolution to set Oregon on a path to craft a comprehensive new forest cluster economic development strategy. The resolution directs the Oregon Economic and Community Development Department (OECDD), Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF), Oregon Forest Resources Institute (OFRI), and the Oregon State University College of Forestry/Oregon Forest Research Laboratory (OSU) to work together to recommend a strategy and also recommend how best to build the organizational capacity within state government to play its role in successfully carrying out the strategy.  The goal and objectives for the proposed strategy are provided in the resolution.  An accompanying memorandum of agreement signed by the four agency directors provides more details on the actions to be accomplished.

More information on the strategy and actions, the Interagency Team and it's work, and additional resources, visit the departrment's
Oregon Forest Cluster Strategy web page.


Page updated: April 24, 2008

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