File #: 2023-0314    Version:
Type: Motion Status: Passed
File created: 9/12/2023 In control: Transportation, Economy, and Environment Committee
On agenda: Final action: 10/3/2023
Enactment date: Enactment #: 16436
Title: A MOTION requesting the executive to develop and transmit a study regarding state forest trust lands currently managed for King County by the Washington state Department of Natural Resources.
Sponsors: Rod Dembowski, Dave Upthegrove
Indexes: Executive, Forest, Natural Resources and Parks, Department of
Attachments: 1. Motion 16436, 2. 2023-0314 DNR Land Transfer Options 09122023, 3. 2023-0314_SR
Staff: Ngo, Jenny
Title
A MOTION requesting the executive to develop and transmit a study regarding state forest trust lands currently managed for King County by the Washington state Department of Natural Resources.
Body
WHEREAS, forests provide multiple benefits on both the local and global scale, and
WHEREAS, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has stated that forest management activities play a key role in the mitigation of climate change, and the Washington state Legislature has found that forests are one of the most effective resources that can absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and
WHEREAS, King County's 2020 Strategic Climate Action Plan states that there are substantial carbon and climate benefits to maintaining, protecting, restoring, and expanding the more than 811,000 acres of forest land in King County, and that recent studies combining carbon sequestration potential and risk of loss due to wildfire, insects, and disease rank the coastal and Cascade forests of Oregon and Washington among the highest priority for protection, and
WHEREAS, in 2021, the executive developed a 30-Year Forest Plan, which lays out priorities and goals associated with King County's forests, as well as strategies for achieving those over the next thirty years, and
WHEREAS, in addition to greenhouse gas mitigation benefits, the 30-Year Forest Plan states that King County's forests provide benefits to human health, salmon habitat, and water quality and quantity, in addition to the economic benefits of sustainable timber, and
WHEREAS, twenty-one counties deeded roughly 546,000 acres of forest lands to the state during the 1920s and 1930s, and, in exchange, the state committed to managing the properties as trust lands and giving most of the revenue from timber sales and other revenue-producing activities back to the county and junior taxing districts, and
WHEREAS, the state has managed the state forest trust lands within King County to balance economic, environmental, and r...

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