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Rural Oregon counties face financial uncertainties as federal funding sources shrink
Rural Oregon counties face financial uncertainties as federal funding sources shrink
Rural Oregon counties face financial uncertainties as federal funding sources shrink

Published on: 09/16/2025

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

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FILE - In this undated file photo, a large fir tree falls to the forest floor after it was cut by an unidentified logger in the Umpqua National Forest near Oakridge, Ore.

For decades, rural Oregon counties that contain large swaths of federally owned forest land have depended on a share of timber revenues from federal logging to fund schools, law enforcement and other essential public services. These payments were originally meant to offset the loss of property tax revenue that counties could not collect on federal lands. But when logging on these lands slowed drastically in the 1990s due to new environmental protections — like the Endangered Species Act — those payments plummeted.

In response, Congress stepped in with a temporary fix: the Secure Rural Schools Program. First passed in 2000, Congress reauthorized it multiple times over the years until it allowed it to expire in 2023. The lapse in reauthorization has triggered the default distribution of the significantly reduced timber revenue to counties.

The federal budget process has introduced new complications as well. President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which was signed into law in July, requires federal agencies to ramp up logging. But it also includes a provision redirecting all proceeds from timber sales on lands in counties to the federal government — threatening one of the last fiscal lifelines for rural governments to fund its core services.

With counties facing budgeting shortfalls that carry big consequences, questions about how to create a long-term sustainable path forward have taken on new urgency. Lane County Commissioner Heather Buch and Klamath County Commissioner Derrick DeGroot — whose counties receive the second- and third-highest federal payments in Oregon after Douglas County — join us, along with Mark Haggerty, a senior fellow at the liberal-leaning thinktank Center for American Progress to talk about the challenges Oregon’s rural counties face and what a stable funding model for these counties might look like.

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News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2025/09/16/think-out-loud-rural-oregon-fiscal-future-uncertain/

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