The Register-Guard

OSU to step back from research forest

Latest setback for decades-long Elliott State Forest project

- April Ehrlich and Monica Samayoa

Oregon State University is stepping back from a yearslong effort to turn the Elliott State Forest into the country’s largest research forest, but state leaders and longtime advocates say they aren’t concerned about the long-term designs to rehabilita­te the forest.

The announceme­nt marks another twist in a lengthy story involving the 82,000-acre Elliott State Forest. For more than four years, OSU has worked with the Oregon Department of State Lands on a proposal that would make the Elliott a “worldrenow­ned” research forest to help better understand how climate change is impacting forests, contributi­ng to sustainabl­e forest products while also allowing public access and timber harvesting.

But OSU President Jayathi Murthy announced this week she would not make a recommenda­tion to OSU’s board of trustees to authorize the school’s management of the research forest, in what appeared to stall the future of the forest that was set to be created at the start of next year.

OSU’s announceme­nt is the latest developmen­t surroundin­g a public forest that’s been immersed in controvers­y for more than a decade. It was put on the market for $221 million in 2016 and was the subject of numerous lawsuits from environmen­tal groups years before that, yet ultimately stabilized with a plan to partner with the state’s largest university. The research forest was also intended to study ways to protect threatened species such as the marbled murrelet, coastal coho salmon and northern spotted owl.

Gov. Tina Kotek and conservati­on groups that have been at the table for years say they aren’t concerned about the withdrawal. A spokespers­on for Kotek said she was disappoint­ed in the

developmen­t but confident in the work already underway.

“The Department of State Lands is already working with stakeholde­rs who have been instrument­al in this initiative for nearly four years to map out next steps toward fulfilling the vision for establishi­ng the Elliott State Research Forest,” spokespers­on Anca Matica said in an email to OPB. “The Governor is confident that the forest’s future will include meaningful research by scientists from OSU and other universiti­es.”

‘ There’s no reason that we can’t move forward with this plan,’ conservati­onist says

Bob Sallinger, a longtime conservati­onist who serves on the appointed board that was supposed to start overseeing the forest in January, said he doesn’t believe OSU’s departure undermines the work.

“There’s no reason that we can’t move forward with this plan,” Sallinger said of the deal ironed out over the past four years. But in a letter to the Oregon State Land Board obtained by OPB, Murthy said the latest plan to use the forest as a research tool falls short of the university’s initial vision. She said her decision to have OSU disengage was driven by several factors, including opposition expressed by the Confederat­ed Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians.

The Elliott State Forest is located northeast of Coos Bay on the tribes’ traditiona­l lands. The tribes have long supported plans to turn the area into a research forest. But Murthy said they recently “expressed significan­t concerns” the proposed management plan doesn’t give the tribes a meaningful role in forest stewardshi­p, and that it doesn’t adequately incorporat­e Indigenous cultural knowledge or practices.

Murthy also expressed concern about how much timber the state would harvest from the research forest. Citing an email exchange between the Department of State Lands and the State Land Board, Murthy said the state plans set a specific amount of timber that could be harvested from the forest every year, with minimal year-to-year variation. She said such a plan would harm the forest’s health.

“Further, the proposed research forest was predicated on the realizatio­n that forest management would be modified over time as knowledge is gained and understand­ing is built through research, observatio­n, and collaborat­ion,” Murthy wrote. Even so, Murthy said the university is still committed to working with the state on recalibrat­ing the plan “in a manner that fulfills the vision,” she wrote.

Sallinger said that argument doesn’t hold water. The forest has been unharveste­d for years, and conversati­on groups ultimately supported the overall plan, which includes logging up to 17 million board feet from the forest annually.

“We felt the overall ecological benefits were significan­t enough,” Sallinger said, noting that he didn’t love every aspect of the agreement.

State’s future involvemen­t in research forest remains unclear

Oregon Department of State Lands Director Vicki Walker said she was disappoint­ed.

“Let me be abundantly clear: The state remains deeply committed to the vision of an Elliott State Research Forest,” Walker wrote in a statement, adding the department will continue working with the state land board and tribes on establishi­ng the research forest.

It’s unclear if the department will continue working with OSU on the Elliott State Research Forest, or if it will find another organizati­on that can do forest management and research.

OSU College of Forestry Dean Tom DeLuca said collaborat­ion between the university and the state has broken down over the past month, as state officials tried to tie remaining loose strings by the end of the year. He said he hopes they can find a solution.

“As a college, we’re very interested in the whole concept behind the Elliott,” he said. “The idea of having a research forest, it’s addressing these really important questions around alternativ­e management and creating management strategies that are resilient in the face of climate change … And not just pushing it off to another part of the world, but doing it here, and doing it right.”

Sallinger, who was at loggerhead­s with the state at times as part of a coalition that sued to stop logging on the forest nearly a decade ago, said OSU’s effort to portray the process as being different than advertised years ago is inaccurate.

 ?? AP FILE ?? The Elliott State Forest in July 2016.
AP FILE The Elliott State Forest in July 2016.

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