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Columbia Land Trust Working Forest Initiative, July 2008

Introduction

All aspects of Columbia Land Trust’s work are intended to serve it mission and vision. A detailed strategic plan guides this work. To understand our Working Forest Initiative, it’s critical to understand this broader strategic context of the mission, vision, and strategic plan.

Mission

Columbia Land Trust conserves signature landscapes and vital habitat together with the landowners and communities of the Columbia River region.

Vision

Columbia Land Trust leads and inspires private actions to conserve the great natural resources of the Columbia River region. We see a future that includes:

Strategic Plan

Columbia Land Trust is currently completing the third year of our latest five-year strategic plan (2006-2010). The plan details four key goals:

To accomplish these goals, Columbia Land Trust has defined, and is executing, several distinct strategic conservation initiatives:

Each of these initiatives are (or are planned to be) documented in their own initiative plan. Key elements of the Working Forest Initiative are described in the following section.

Working Forest Initiative

Based on our mission to conserve signature landscapes and work with landowners and communities, we have a Working Forest Initiative dedicated to protecting large-scale working forestland that is under threat of conversion by development. Working forest conservation can both preserve critical habitat by providing a conservation buffer around those areas. In addition, the Land Trust believes that conserving the livelihoods of those who depend on the forest is an important objective that can be achieved through sustainable forestry practices. In the last decade, over 75% of the nation’s industrial timberland has been sold. Increasingly, the buyers are financial investors who are looking to maximize their return not just by selling timber, but by selling small tracts or smaller blocks. Such fragmentation and conversion is expected to continue as these investors look to exit their investments over a five to 15-year period. The challenge is that there is expected to be more turnover of smaller blocks in the future at higher per/acre costs. The opportunity is that these sellers are willing to sell to conservation groups if the groups can raise the cash to buy. The Land Trust’s initiative is focusing on ways to blend traditional conservation capital with private equity and debt so that we can conserver the Columbia basin’s most precious working forestlands.

This initiative was approved by the Columbia Land Trust Board of Directors in December 2005 as part of the organization’s strategic plan. Cherie Kearney, Forestry Initiative & Special Projects Manager, is leading the initiative. A Forestry Advisory Council, consisting of board, staff, volunteers, and consultants, is also actively involved in setting direction for the initiative.

Initiative goals

Strategies

Selection Criteria and Phase One Priority Areas

To help identify priority areas for forestry conservation, the Land Trust applied the following criteria:


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Columbia Land Trust, a private, non-profit organization, was founded in 1990. We're dedicated to conserving signature landscapes and vital habitat together with the communities of the Columbia River region.  Questions, comments, or concerns may be directed to info@columbialandtrust.org
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This page was last updated on July 23, 2006
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