History of Oregon BLM
The low elevation forests of western Oregon have checkered history involving railroads, corruption and even the Supreme Court since settlers moved west.
The history of these lands date back to how the west was settled. One of the biggest obstacles to westward expansion was
transportation. Moving goods from one place to the next and encouraging
people to move thousands of miles across a rugged, wild landscape was
certainly a challenge – without the advantage of cars and airplanes as we
have today.
Just after the Civil War, in order to assist settlement, Congress began
offering land grants from federally owned land to assist rail and wagon
road construction. In 1866 the State of Oregon was fortunate to receive a huge grant including every other square mile in a 40-mile swath
of land stretching from Portland south to the California border.
Oregon then awarded a private railroad company the land, to sell to
settlers, in order to cover the costs of railroad construction and
encourage settlement. The company would take over management of the
railroad they built. In order to prevent the giveaway of the land to
big corporations, the following stipulations were placed on the grant:
• Bona fide settlers must buy and settle the land.
• Only 160 acres could be sold at a time, and only to one settler.
• $2.50 per acre was the maximum price.
The Great Oregon Forest Giveaway
The Oregon and California Railroad Company immediately started building
the important railway and promptly violated all three conditions placed
on the disposal of the forestland. Instead, the company sold off the
gigantic timber to the highest bidder. In 1903, the Southern Pacific
Railroad --– which bought the O&C Railroad Co. and finished the
railway – ceased selling the land to settlers altogether because of the
mounting value of the old-growth timber.
When this was found out the State of Oregon was furious, as they were
interested in seeing the land settled, not sold off to
timber interests. The U.S. Congress eventually passed a resolution that
reclaimed the land in federal ownership. The railroad sued. Legal
battles drug on for years and the case eventually made its way to the
Supreme Court. The high court ruled that Southern Pacific had to give
the land back and enjoined any further land sale.
The court left it to Congress to figure out what to do with the land.
They passed the Chamberlain-Ferris Act in 1916 and the O&C Act in 1937, putting
the management of these forests in the hands of the General Lands
Office. The Office merged with the Grazing Service in 1946 to become
the BLM. While the BLM wound up with almost 2.4 million acres, several
hundred thousand acres were located on lands administered by the Forest
Service.
It might have made more sense to have the U.S. Forest Service manage
these federal lands, as they managed almost all of the forest reserves
in the U.S. at the time. Nevertheless, six BLM Districts in western Oregon, in an
agency more accustomed to managing cows in arid deserts than forested watersheds, now administer some of the nation's most unique public forests.
Legacy of Abuse
The federal timber sale program began in earnest with the post-World War II
housing boom. The logging of the Pacific Northwest’s ancient
forests is legendary. In 50 years over 80% of the old growth was
leveled. The western Oregon BLM Districts facilitated logging by administering timber sale contracts. Logging reached a
feverish pitch in the 1980s, leaving many damaged watersheds, boomed
then busted rural economies, and a monoculture of tree plantations
dominating a once lush landscape of cathedral forests.
Since the Northern spotted owl was listed as threatened under the
Endangered Species Act – because the rate of old forest removal would
not sustain the old-growth dependant species – logging has been
curtailed on the BLM’s forests. There are still numerous
old-growth timber sales, but several hundred thousand acres were protected in old-growth reserves.
Because the land that was granted was every other square mile
(section), it formed what has been called a “checker board” ownership
pattern. Several areas have been consolidated over the years as a
result of land exchanges and large blocks of roadless ancient forest do
still persist on the Oregon BLM.
The Threat is Growing
Despite the importance of the Oregon BLM, numerous old-growth logging
projects threaten the overall integrity of these low-elevation forests.
Particularly on the Coos Bay, Roseburg and Medford BLM, timber planners
have targeted remaining ancient forests in spotted owl critical habitat
and in key watersheds for salmon recovery.
In a move that threatens up to 800,000 acres of remaining old-growth forest, the
Bush administration has proposed to remove protections on the Oregon BLM. Arguing that the 1937 O&C act
makes timber production more important than wildlife, clean
water or other uses, the Bush administration is poised to open up currently protected old-growth forest.
The corrupt history of the some of the most majestic forests on earth is
continuing. In the summer of 2005,
the BLM began revising management plans for western Oregon BLM forests.
We can only hope that the citizens of Oregon and all Americans will
step in again, like they did almost 100 years ago, and save these
forests for future generations to come.
Click here for more information and PDF documents on the legal history of O&C lands.