
Commissioners expressed concern that a salvage sale of timber blown down on county trust lands in the winter of 2006-07 won't sell, or if they sold, it will be at a low price because so much other blowdown timber will be on the market from the December, 2007, storm.
Cothren said private timber companies were able to log their blowdown within months, so why did it take the DNR so long to prepare the sales.
"I'll take full responsibility," Schropf said.
The major portion of the Wahkiakum blowdown was in three pieces, he explained. One was on hillsides; the other two were in riparian zones along streams. He ordered staff to prepare the project as one sale, but permitting issues with the wetland areas have held up the sale.
"I didn't realize at the time that it would take so long," he said. "In hindsight, I would have done them in two sales. I won't make that mistake again."
The upside is that the agency now has the process in place to quickly prepare permits for salvaging timber in riparian zones, he said.
He added that he and his staff agree that the agency's process for putting up a sale takes too long, and they're going to work to make changes in the process.
In related business, Forester Collin Robertson and Regional Manager Marcus Johns reported that the agency is preparing a large sale for bid this spring. Called Nagasawa Pass, it should generate about $1.8 million for the county in 2009, they said.