
|
FOR
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE April 23,
2009 |
CONTACT:
Nick
Smith 503-986-1351 |
STATE FAILS TO ACT ON
‘WOPR’ Plan Puts Rural Oregonians Back to
Work
The bill is
considered dead for the 2009 session after the House Agriculture, Natural
Resources and Rural Communities Committee failed to advance the measure before a
key deadline last week.
“It’s unfortunate
to see the Governor and Legislature put politics and special interests ahead of
creating jobs for rural Oregonians,” Rep. Sprenger said. “The state doesn’t need
to increase government debt to create jobs, it simply needs to revaluate natural
resource policies that have devastated our rural
economy.”
The Bureau of Land Management’s WOPR plan would
potentially increase sustained yield harvests in
Under an agreement with the federal government, the state has served as a formal cooperator in the WOPR planning process. Ten state natural resource agencies, led by the Oregon Department of Forestry, have been involved in WOPR’s development. Though Governor Ted Kulongoski signed the agreement with BLM in 2005, he has aggressively opposed WOPR’s implementation.
“To help
The Legislature also failed to act on a
similar Senate bill, Senate Joint Resolution 24, which directs state agencies to
immediately facilitate implementation of the WOPR plan.
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