S-4301 _______________________________________________
SENATE BILL NO. 6830
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 51st Legislature 1990 Regular Session
By Senator Amondson
Read first time 1/30/90 and referred to Committee on Environment & Natural Resources.
AN ACT Relating to preparing a timber supply assessment; and creating new sections.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. As Washington's economy develops into one oriented towards manufacturing more value-added product for the world markets, it must compete with the very best organizations in the world. To compete the state requires a highly sophisticated inventory of available timber, both now and into the future.
The last timber supply report for Washington is more than a decade old. During that time the forest products industry underwent major changes; mills closed, mills modernized, the market for wood products became more and more international, and the land base for timber production shrank.
Management decisions by the federal government, state government, and local government all benefit by having access to data describing the abundance of timber in Washington. The United States forest service needs to understand the impact its proposed forest management plans may have on the economy of Washington. As national and international firms seek to invest in Washington they require the best available inventory information.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2. The department of natural resources shall prepare a report on the timber supply in Washington state, identifying the quantity of timber present now and quantity of timber that may be available from forest lands in the future using various assumptions of landowner management, including changes in the forest land base, amount of capital invested in timber management, and expected harvest age. This report shall categorize the results according to region of the state, land ownership, land productivity, and according to major timber species. The inventory shall be prepared in such a way that it may be updated on a regular basis. The inventory must include all forest lands within the state including but not limited to federal forests, other federal timber lands, areas withdrawn from harvest such as parks, recreation areas, and wilderness areas, state and local government owned or managed lands including parks, watersheds, and similar lands reserved for nontimber producing activities, and all private timber lands in the state.