Columbia River Gorge Commission Tells Farmer He Can't Farm His Land PDF Print E-mail
When can a farmer not farm his land?  When the Columbia River Gorge Commission says so.
 
OIA is working for a property owner who owns land in east Multnomah County.  The property is within the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area.  Because of its location with the Scenic Area, the Columbia River Gorge Commission, along with Multnomah County, have zoning authority over the property.
 
Multnomah County and the Gorge Commission have zoned the property as farmland.  Obviously, the primary use for land zoned farmland is farming.  
 
The property owner has used the property for horse boarding for years.  Under Oregon law, boarding horses is considered a farm use.  In fact, the Oregon legislature (not LCDC) first defined farm use in the early 1960's, as a way to ensure that a uniform definition of farming applied across the state.
 
That means that in every part of the state, boarding horses is considered a farm use, just like growing wheat, harvesting apples, or ranching cattle or sheep.
 
But not in the Gorge Scenic Area.
 
The Gorge Commission has determined that it is not subject to state law, and is not bound by the definition of farm use that has existed in Oregon law for half a century.
 
According to the Gorge Commission, when the legislatures of Oregon and Washington signed the Gorge Compact (a bi-state agreement between the two states that created the Gorge Commission) in 1987, each state lost the ability to control land uses in the Scenic Area, on any land - federal, state, local, or private.
 
This isn't federal government planning - the Gorge Commission is not a federal agency.  But it's not state planning, or local planning either. 
 
In fact, despite the fact that the Gorge Commission receives its funding from the Oregon and Washington legislatures (in other words from your tax dollars), the Gorge Commission believes that it answers to no one, not even the state legislature.
 
Unfortunately for our property owner, the Gorge Commission does not believe that boarding horses is a farm use.  As a result, our property owner cannot board horses unless he applies for a conditional use permit, which costs thousands of dollars and which he may or may not receive.
 
This makes no sense.  Farmers across the state have relied on the legislature to provide them with a uniform definition of farm use.  Farmers in the Gorge Scenic Area should be able to farm their land in the same way as farmers in every other part of the state.
 
But the scary part is that the Gorge Commission believes it can ignore the Oregon legislature and the Washington legislature, while at the same time sticking its hand out and demanding that the two states fund its activities.
 
Fortunately, there is a solution, but it will require courage from our state leaders. 
 
The Oregon and Washington legislatures can and should make changes to the Gorge Compact - changes that will make the Gorge Commission accountable to legislators in both states.
 
The legislatures of each state can accomplish these changes by agreeing on the changes, and then passing identical legislation in each state. 
 
Starting in January, Oregonians In Action will be working with members of the Oregon legislature (from both parties) to make these changes.  In addition, we are making contact with Washington legislators to do the same.  
 
With effort, persistence, and dedication, we're hoping to convince the legislatures of each state of the importance to restore some control to each state over zoning and planning in the Gorge Scenic Area. 
 
It makes no sense for our state officials to turn over complete control of planning and zoning to an unelected commission who thumbs their nose at them, all the while demanding state tax dollars.  It's time to fix this problem.
 
Dave Hunnicutt
President
Oregonians In Action
 

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