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Oregon Scientific Standards for Forest Regulation Initiative (2020)

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Oregon Scientific Standards for Forest Regulation Initiative
Flag of Oregon.png
Election date
November 3, 2020
Topic
Forests and parks
Status
Not on the ballot
Type
State statute
Origin
Citizens


The Oregon Scientific Standards for Forest Regulation Initiative did not appear on the ballot in Oregon as an initiated state statute on November 3, 2020.

The measure would have added a review process for the State Board of Forestry to determine if forest regulation complies with current science. On January 13, 2020, the Oregon Secretary of State rejected the petition.[1][2]

On February 10, 2020, petitioners announced that they had signed an agreement with petitioners of opposing ballot initiatives to work together to achieve forest regulation reform via the legislature rather than the initiative process. Twenty-six groups signed the cooperative memorandum. One side of the debate included groups like Oregon Wild, the Audubon Society of Portland, and the Oregon League of Conservation Voters. The other side included timber companies, like Stimson Lumber, Roseburg Forest Products, and Weyerhaeuser. The agreement focuses on reforming the Oregon Forest Practices Act of 1971 with the aim to enact new legislation by the February 2022 legislative session. The agreement sets up an 18-month process to establish a federally approved “habitat conservation plan,” which would take into account the Endangered Species and Clean Water Acts and the interests of the timber industry. Additionally, the two sides agreed to support a bill that would limit aerial pesticide treatments and allow regulations that would restrict logging near streams in southern Oregon’s Siskiyou region. On April 7, 2020, both sides of the agreement formally withdrew their petitions from the Oregon Secretary of State.[3][4]

Text of measure

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Oregon

The state process

In Oregon, the number of signatures required to qualify an initiated state statute for the ballot is equal to 6 percent of the votes cast for governor in the most recent gubernatorial election. Signatures for Oregon initiatives must be submitted four months prior to the next regular general election. State law also requires paid signature gatherers to submit any signatures they gather every month.

Moreover, Oregon is one of several states that require a certain number of signatures to accompany an initiative petition application. The signatures of at least 1,000 electors are required to trigger a review by state officials, a period of public commentary, and the drafting of a ballot title. Prior to gathering these initial 1,000 signatures, petitioners must submit the text of the measure, a form disclosing their planned use of paid circulators, and a form designating up to three chief petitioners. The 1,000 preliminary signatures count toward the final total required.

The requirements to get an initiated state statute certified for the 2020 ballot:

In Oregon, signatures are verified using a random sample method. If a first round of signatures is submitted at least 165 days before an election and contains raw, unverified signatures at least equal to the minimum requirement, but verification shows that not enough of the submitted signatures are valid, additional signatures can be submitted prior to the final deadline.

Details about this initiative

  • Jim James, Scott Russell, and Neil Westfall filed the petition on November 5, 2019.[2]
  • On January 13, 2020, the Oregon Secretary of State rejected the petition.[2]

See also

External links

Footnotes