Record Details

Farm Zoning and Fairness in Oregon 1964 - 2014

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Title Farm Zoning and Fairness in Oregon 1964 - 2014
Names Richmond, Henry R. (creator)
Houchen, Timothy G. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-04-08 (iso8601)
Note See Related Document: Oregon's public investment in conservation, prosperity and fairness. 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1957/5503
Abstract Senate Bill 100 (1973) and the Oregon Land Conservation and Development
Commission’s (LCDC) goals (1975) required:
- Cities to adopt urban growth boundaries (UGBs) to contain sprawl, and
- Counties to use zoning to limit 15.6 million acres of farmland to farm use, and 8.0
million acres of forest land to forest use.

After eight statewide votes, many “fairness” adjustments by the legislature, and
thousands of local debates, Senate Bill 100 has survived. More important, 36 counties and
241 cities have implemented LCDC’s Goals -- a nationally unprecedented state land use
policy success story.

Opponents said the law was unfair. They claimed limitations on farm and forest land
would result in sweeping loss of market value. Opponents pushed to repeal or gut the law
in nearly every legislative session, beginning in 1975. Failing there, opponents placed seven
initiative measures on the ballot to repeal the law -- 1970, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1996, 2000, 2004.

Three factors show Oregon’s land use laws have been fair for the vast majority of farm
land owners:
- Compensation: $5.75 billion compensation in the form of reduced property taxes,
1974 - 2014 (Table 19, p. 44);
- Strong growth in farmland market value: 5.52% faster than the S & P 500 statewide,
1964 - 2012 (Table 6, p. 31);
- ‘Fairness’ Adjustments and the Law: Oregonians believe in fairness. They also want
Oregon’s land use laws implemented. Forty years of votes in the legislature and at
the ballot box show Oregonians want the laws adjusted, not repealed, so fairness and
Oregon’s land use goals both can be achieved. Section IV (pp. 4 - 13) describes how
the legislature and the LCDC added numerous elements of flexibility to Oregon’s
land use law to avoid or remedy unfairness.

Opponents claimed Oregon’s land use laws were out of date, and had “ossified.” To
the contrary, from 1975 - 2005, the legislature altered state, city, and county planning laws
1,071 times,2 likely more changes than to any other single body of state law.
Genre Technical Report
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/55583

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