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Results From Forest Managemet Survey

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From November 10–19, 2022, the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center conducted a statewide survey of Oregonians’ values and beliefs about Oregon’s forests. A description of the methodology used for the research is provided below.

The question numbers in this document correspond with the accompanying documents (Q1-62A). Due to rounding, the percentages reported below may not add to 100% or compare exactly to the percentages for the same question in the annotated questionnaire or tabs.

Included below for selected questions are noteworthy subgroup variations for BIPOC/white, age, urban/rural, education, gender, and households with and without children.

OVBC surveys currently use aggregated data to analyze the opinions of BIPOC residents in comparison to the opinions of residents who identify as white and not another race. BIPOC residents are not a monolith; the grouping represents a wide diversity of races and ethnicities. The findings included in this memo should not be construed such that all people of color are believed to share the same opinions. Disaggregated race data will be provided when sample sizes permit reliability.

For survey full question wording, all statistically significant subgroup findings, and respondent quotes, readers are encouraged to refer to the accompanying three documents: (1) annotated questionnaire, (2) crosstabulations document, and (3) verbatim written responses spreadsheet.

Oregon Values and Beliefs Center (OVBC)This research was completed as a community service by the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center. OVBC is an independent and non-partisan organization and an Oregon charitable nonprofit corporation. Representative OVBC projects include opinion research about race-based crimes for the Asian Health and Service Center, as well as research about early childhood education and the cost of childcare for the Children’s Institute.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

State Forest Management

Involvement and Communications

 

STATE FOREST MANAGEMENT

General Forest Values and Beliefs

“Logging is hugely important for maintaining our forests and lessening the pollution-causing forest fires. It also is of vital importance for sustaining our housing and manufacturing markets, as well as creating vital jobs and economies for small-town and rural communities.”

Man, age 30–44, Linn County, White

 

“Environmental concerns, at this point, have to outweigh economic development. Without the environment, we have no economy.”

Woman, age 45–54, Multnomah County, White

 

“Logging trees can be balanced with planting more. Trees get old and sick, use them productively.” 

Man, age 55–64, Clackamas, Asian

 

“Jobs from tourism need to supplant jobs from cutting timber, and timber harvests should be halted on all public land.”

Nonbinary or gender nonconforming person, age 65–74, Washington County, Other race or ethnicity

 

Forestry Management Priorities

“While I placed recreation last, it is only because the other needs are urgent.” 

Woman, age 65–74, Clackamas County, White

 

“Clearcutting, using herbicides, and then replanting single species is considered management—as is selectively harvesting and allowing natural mixed species growth. These are two completely different ways to manage our forests, and people need to understand the difference and why the differences matter.”

Woman, age 55–64, Lincoln County, White

 

“Replant, replant, replant.”

Nonbinary or gender nonconforming person, age 30–44, Lane County, race not specified

 

“It is sad people are doing this to trees and it’s wrong.” 

Man, age 18-29, Washington County, Black or African American

 

“These are the priorities I would like to see but if the land is privately owned, I’m not sure that my priorities matter.”

Man, age 55–64, Multnomah County, White

 

“While it’s important and acceptable to insist that private forest land be managed for environmental benefits, that means that urban areas need to accept similar restraints, e.g., no more “natural” gas hookups and carbon taxes on fossil fuels.”

Man, age 75+, Washington County, White

 

“Clear cutting should be outlawed. A tree farm does not a forest make.”

Man, age 45–54, Multnomah County, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander

 

“Difficult to balance the rights of the landowner with what’s good for the community/world.”

Woman, age 18–29, Deschutes County, White

 

Job Performance

Timber Harvest

Oregon Tribal Fairness Act

 

INVOLVEMENT AND COMMUNICATIONS

PAST RESEARCH

In 2019, research showed that the vast majority of Oregonians preferred managing state forests in a way that prioritizes both environmental protections and economic considerations[1]. Those sentiments are still true today.

In the intervening years, devastating wildfires across the state may be responsible for a marked shift in resident opinions about forest management. Three years ago, more than half of residents rated the management of federal, state, and private forests as good/very good.  Today, about four in ten residents agree that forests are managed well.  Political debates about forest management, including media coverage and social media influence, may also have played a role in the declining figures.

Although forestry has historically played a significant role in Oregon’s economy, residents continue to find themselves in need of additional information about the industry to form full opinions about forest management. In 2019, about one-quarter of Oregonians described themselves as not very or not at all familiar with the forestry industry. Today, roughly the same proportion of residents need more information to know if forests are managed right.

Opinions of wood products have shifted over the past three years, and Oregonians are now 10 percentage points more likely to prefer wood products as a building material to other products like steel and concrete (61%, up from 50%). This may reflect growing awareness of carbon-intensive materials as well as growing acceptance of products like cross-laminated timber.

Perceptions of the benefits of forest thinning may have declined somewhat over the same stretch of time, or else people today may simply have less awareness of the practice. In 2019, three-quarters of residents said that forest thinning would reduce the risk of wildfire in forests in eastern and southwest Oregon. Today, just 62% say it is acceptable to thin trees (but not the oldest ones) to reduce wildfire fuels. However, an additional 18% say it is neither acceptable nor unacceptable and 12% say they don’t have an opinion. In this data set, an area of the state was not defined.

METHODOLOGY

The online survey consisted of 1,554 Oregon residents ages 18+ and took approximately 15 minutes to complete. Respondents were contacted by using professionally maintained online panels. In gathering responses, a variety of quality control measures were employed, including questionnaire pre-testing, validation, and real-time monitoring of responses. To ensure a representative sample, demographic quotas were set, and data weighted by area of the state, gender, age, and education.

Statement of Limitations: Based on a 95% confidence interval, this survey’s margin of error for the full sample ±2.48%. Due to rounding or multiple answer questions, response percentages may not add up to 100%.