SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Non-Tech : Stumpage Fees -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: long-gone who wrote (2)8/25/2001 7:50:53 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12
 
"The United States contends that British Columbia violated the softwood lumber agreement last June when it announced a 16 percent cut in stumpage rates to spur the economy. An arbitration panel has been formed to hear arguments, and a decision is expected by early next year. "
billingsgazette.com



To: long-gone who wrote (2)8/25/2001 8:21:16 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 12
 
Timber Mart-South
Warnell School of Forest Resources, The University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-2152

3rd Quarter 1998
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Market Conditions
Depressed stumpage markets were widespread throughout the South, with reports of overstocked mill inventories, loggers on quotas, and too much salvage wood on the market. Many reported holding off sales until prices picked up. The quarter was characterized by mill downtime and closures, with little to no new capacity announced.



The upward trend seen in pine sawtimber stumpage prices which began in the second quarter of 1996 has taken a downward fall. Third quarter pine sawtimber prices averaged $36.66/ton, off $5 a ton from last quarter, a level not seen since 1996.

Hardwood sawtimber stumpage prices were down $1.60 a ton southwide, falling back to prices seen this time last year. Dry weather allowed access into most tracts early in the quarter and an oversupplied hardwood market was reported in most states. Texas, however, reported grade hardwood bringing in excellent prices this quarter.


Pulpwood stumpage prices showed similar movement this quarter, with both pine and hardwood markets reported as being very slow. In Florida, very little green wood was on the market with such low prices being paid for fire salvage wood. Some areas of south Georgia felt the impact of the Florida fires, as salvage wood impacted regional prices.

Southwide pine pulpwood stumpage averaged $9.82/ton third quarter, a price not seen since third quarter last year. Hardwood pulpwood prices dropped considerably third quarter, averaging $4.93/ton southwide. Multiple states reported an oversupply of both hardwood and pine pulpwood with heavy inventories at mills and woodyards depressing prices.


News During the Quarter



Chesapeake Building Products Co. has converted its West Point, VA hardwood sawmill to pine. This is the second Chesapeake mill to switch from hardwood to pine, with the first occurring in 1994 at Princess Anne, Maryland.

Crown Vantage Inc.'s previously announced plan to sell the St. Francisville, LA pulp and paper mill has been abandoned after bids did not meet company expectations. The company plans to continue exploring restructuring ideas (See TMS Newsletter, 2nd qtr., 1998).

Rayonier plans to invest $14 million in its Swainsboro, GA sawmill to increase lumber recovery and enhance cost competitiveness. Drying and finishing facilities as well as enhanced process control technology will be added. Completion is expected sometime in the year 2000.

Temple-Inland Forest Products announced plans for a new sawmill at Pineland, TX along with the expansion of its finger-jointing capabilities in Diboll. The Pineland mill will replace the company's plywood mill at the site and the expansion at Diboll will utilize some of the site's existing facilities.



Boise Cascade Corp. announced the closure of their pine sawmill at Fisher, LA. The company cited a limited timber supply, increasing timber prices, and mill inefficiencies as reasons for the shutdown. Boise plans to close this and three other mills in the Western U.S. by year-end.

Champion International Corp. announced it will curtail production of southern bleached kraft pulp at its Courtland, AL pulp and paper mill for 60 days beginning October 1. This curtailment reflects weak pulp markets and higher-than-normal pulp inventories. The Courtland mill produces approximately 30,000 tons of market pulp per year. The Company also scaled back production at its Canton, NC uncoated freesheet paper facility by shutting down three paper machines for about a week during August.

Florida Coast Paper LLC at Port St. Joe planned downtime for six weeks in August and September. Last year, the kraft linerboard mill took 5 months of downtime during the second and third quarter due to weak containerboard markets.

Georgia-Pacific Corp. announced the closing of its market pulp operations at Port Hudson, LA and Ashdown, AR for at least two years. The closures will result in about 1.5 million tons of reduced annual hardwood pulpwood consumption between the two mills. The Company also plans to reduce production at four other market pulp mills. "With the economic downturn in Asia and its weaker currencies, southern hardwood market pulp is not a viable product" said A.D. Pete Correll, chairman and CEO. The closures, combined with slowdowns at other mills and diversions of market pulp to internal uses will decrease G-P's total market pulp capacity and current production by more than 455,000 mtpy, or 23% of last year's production. G-P will continue to produce 1.5 million metric tons of softwood market pulp and northern hardwood kraft, selling about one million metric tons on the market and using the rest internally. G-P's Leaf River mill in New Augusta, MS will supply 502,000 mtpy of southern softwood kraft and southern hardwood kraft. The market pulp curtailments, along with containerboard mill outages elsewhere, may reduce G-P's wood use by almost 10 percent.

International Paper plans to take downtime at its hardwood pulp mill at Natchez, MS from September 12 to October 7 for maintenance and market reasons.

J.M. Huber at Crystal Hill, VA was down for a day in August after a press fire occurred causing minor damage at their OSB mill.

Louisiana Pacific announced plans to sell five lumber and two treating mills as the Company refocuses on its lumber business, selling mills which are more focused on localized speciality markets. The mills to be closed are located in Chilco-Sandpoint, ID, Eatonton and Statesboro, GA, Hattiesburg and Philadelphia, MS and New Waverly and Silsbee, TX. Combined, the sites annually produce about 150 million board feet of lumber equal to 12% of the Company's output. As part of the refocusing strategy, L.P plans to expand and upgrade certain other facilities throughout North America which offer longer-term strategic capabilities. No specific details were released.

Plum Creek permanently closed their plywood plant in Joyce, LA on August 1, leaving the site's sawmill running. The plywood plant was purchased along with the sawmill from Riverwood International Corp. in 1996 (See TMS, Newsletter, 3rd qtr., 1996).

St. Laurent Paperboard Inc. plans to cease hardwood market pulp production at its West Point, VA mill in November. This will reduce the pulpwood consumption at the facility by about 500,000 tpy, or 20%. Last year, the mill consumed about 2.56 million tons of roundwood and chips. The company also plans future closure or sale of its Elizabeth City, NC barge chip mill sometime in the fourth quarter of this year (See related story in Company Restructuring section page 3).

Stone Container Corp. announced plans to idle its Panama City, FL kraft linerboard mill for two months beginning July 31. This downtime follows the mill's month-long shut down first quarter of the year (See TMS Newsletter, 1st qtr., 1998).

Temple-Inland Inc.'s linerboard mill at Orange, TX sustained damage as a result of a power surge from a lightning strike. The mill is expected to be fully operational again by the end of the quarter.

Union Camp Corp. took about 70,000 tons of downtime in its linerboard mills and 16,000 tons of downtime in its uncoated freesheet mills during the quarter.



Boise Cascade Corp. announced restructuring plans which will reduce its plywood capacity by 11% and lumber capacity by 28%. The plan is to adjust production to available timber supply and focus on the Corporation's value-added engineered wood products. Included in the plan is the closure of sawmills in Elgin, OR, Horseshoe Bend, ID, and Fisher, LA, and a plywood plant in Yakima, WA. (See related story in Mill Closures/Downtime and , Outages, page 2).

Bowater Inc. is selling its pulp and paper mill in Dryden, Ontario to Weyerhaeuser Co. for $520 million. Bowater's Crown forest licenses will be transferred to Weyerhaeuser.

Jefferson Smurfit Corporation and Stone Container Corporation anticipate the previously announced merger of the two companies to be completed shortly after stockholders approval meetings set for November 17 (See TMS Newsletter, 2nd qtr., 1998).

Mead Corp. announced reorganization plans including the sale of a hardwood sawmill in South Range, MI and approximately 50,000 acres of surrounding timberland as part of an effort to divest non-strategic assets.

St. Laurent Paperboard Inc. announced plans to implement a major product restructuring effort in the next three years. The Company is moving toward a long-term business strategy of producing higher-margin, value-added graphic linerboard for the packaging industry. Following the November curtailment of market pulp production, the Company plans to upgrade the West Point mill's product mix by converting some of the existing kraft linerboard capacity to premium white-top liner. Additionally, a new off-site processing facility will replace the current mill-site chipping operation. The new facility will be constructed and operated by a third-party contractor to be selected later this year. As a result of this initiative, the Company will close down its NC chip mill. To accomplish these strategic goals, the Company plans to undertake a phased $56 million capital expenditure program over the next three years, starting in the fourth quarter of 1998 (See related story in Mill Closures/Downtime and Outages section page 3).

Tenneco Inc., is considering a restructuring strategy which includes combining its containerboard mills and corrugated box operations into a separate company. The separation would include the company's mills at Counce, TN, Valdosta, GA, Tomahawk, WI, and Filer City, MI. Tenneco produces 2.11 million tons of linerboard and corrugating medium at the four plants. A final decision is expected in October or November.

Union Camp Corp. announced a series of reorganization and restructuring actions to further improve its profitability. Cutbacks in research and development were mentioned with the planned closure of the Company's corporate laboratory at Princton, N.J.



Shareholders have approved the $2.47 billion merger of Bowater Inc. and Avenor Inc., creating the largest newsprint producer in North America. Bowater, based in Greenville, SC, generated $1.48 billion in sales last year. Together with Canadian pulp and paper company Avenor, it would have had a 1997 sales volume of $2.87 billion. Additionally, Bowater recently purchased a 250,000 tpy newsprint mill in Korea. With the Korean and Canadian mills, Bowater's capacity will rise to about 2.3 billion tons, the world's second largest newsprint producer.

Deltic Timber Corp. is soon to be owners of almost 400,000 acres after the completion of a 16,300 acre timberland purchase in Arkansas. The mature pine timberland was owned by RII Timberland Partners and is located in Bradley, Columbia, Dallas, and Union counties.

International Paper announced plans to purchase a 90% interest in OAO Svetogorsk, an integrated pulp and paper mill located 85 miles northwest of St. Petersburg, Russia. The mill produces 250,000 metric tons per year of pulp and paper This is the first U.S.-based forest products company to make a major investment in Russia. The deal does not include any timberland, yet I.P. cited the government-guaranteed wood source as a cost advantage. I.P is expected to finalize the transaction by the fourth quarter.

Kimball International, Inc. announced the acquisition of the largest privately-owned land parcel in the State of Kentucky, an 11,700 acre site in Crittenden and Union Counties bordering the Ohio River. The property, owned by Alcoa, the world's leading producer of aluminum, has high quality native hardwood timber and provides for a potential expansion of Kimball's furniture manufacturing facilities.

Sappi Ltd. announced plans to sell all of its timberland acreage in western Maine to Plum Creek for $180 million. As part of the sale, Plum Creek has agreed to a 40-year timber supply contract to sell fiber to Sappi's mill in Skowhegan, ME. Sappi plans to rely on purchased wood to supply its mills in Hinckley and Westbrook, ME. The acquisition of the 905,000 acre tract will bring the total ownership of Plum Creek, the sixth largest private timberland owner in the nation, to over 3.3 million acres.

Strategic Timber Trust Inc., a timberland investment fund headquartered in New London, NH, announced acquisition of about 90,000 acres of mostly mature pine timberland in Louisiana. The value was reported between $2,500 and $2,775 per acre!

The Timber Company (G-P's timberland management company) announced plans to sell about 61 thousand acres of hardwood timberland in West Virginia to the Forestland Group LLC, a timberland investment fund based at Chapel Hill, NC. These properties, which were identified as nonstrategic to the company's core business, are located in Logan and Mingo counties. After the sale, The Timber Company will continue to own and manage approximately 235,000 acres of forestland in West Virginia. G-P owns a nearby OSB mill at Mount Hope.

forestry.uga.edu



To: long-gone who wrote (2)8/25/2001 8:23:31 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 12
 
Georgia's wet weather last winter has brought on new logging restrictions and trucking ordinances. In Randolph County, an ordinance requiring notification of the location the logger is cutting, along with the use of gravel at each road entrance is now required. Brooks County passed a bridge, ditch, and road ordinance requiring a permit for each site along with a $1,000 cash deposit for each permit. Pulpwood or timber travel during inclement weather is also restricted in the county. Washington County increased its bond requirement from $500 to $5,000 and added a permit requirement with notification of the day equipment moves on the property.
forestry.uga.edu



To: long-gone who wrote (2)8/25/2001 8:33:30 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 12
 
FO-5632-GO
Revised 2000
To Order

Property Tax Guide
for Forest Landowners

Melvin J. Baughman

This publication will help Minnesota’s rural landowners, especially forest landowners, understand our state’s property tax system. Rural lands can be classified in different categories, each with a different tax rate. This publication briefly describes the ad valorem tax system, including its Native Prairie Tax Exemption Program, Wetland Tax Exemption Program, Minnesota Agricultural Land Preservation Program, Metropolitan Agricultural Preserves Program, and Minnesota Agricultural Property Tax Law (Green Acres Law), and the Tree Growth Tax Law. Use this publication to evaluate whether your land is appropriately classified, based on your land use and objectives. Not all programs are available statewide. If you have further questions about any of these tax systems or programs, including whether they are offered in your county, contact your county assessor.

1. Ad Valorem Tax System
2. Minnesota Tree Growth Tax Law
3. Comparison of 2b Timberland Classification and Tree Growth Tax Law

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ad Valorem Tax System

The ad valorem property tax system covers most land in Minnesota (Minnesota Statutes Section 273.13). Ad valorem means according to value. The tax payable is based on the property’s estimated market value, its property class rate, and the local tax rate:

Estimated Market Value x Class Rate x Local Tax Rate = Tax Payable

(The above formula is a simplified version of calculations that may involve credits and additions between state and county governments.)

Estimated Market Value

Estimated market value for each parcel of land (including land, buildings, and trees) is determined by the county assessor as of January 2 each year. It is based on recent sales of similar property. That market value is used to calculate taxes payable in the following calendar year (e.g., estimated market value in 1999 is used to calculate taxes payable in 2000). Your property’s estimated market value is shown on your property tax statement. If you believe this estimate is not correct, you may appeal to the assessor by providing evidence of sales of similar, nearby property.

Classification and Rate

The class rate is a percentage of the market value. This rate is established by state law for each property type. Table 1 shows rates for property types into which forest and agricultural land typically may be classified by the assessor. For example, 2b Timberland has a class rate of 1.20 percent for taxes payable in 2000.

Table 1. Selected class rates by property type.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Class Property Type Class Rate (%) Payable 2000

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2a Agricultural Homestead
House, garage, one acre:
1st $76,000 1.00
over $76,000 1.65
Remainder of farm:
1st $115,000 0.35
$115,000 - $600,000 0.80
over $600,000 1.20

2b Timberland and Non-Homestead
Agricultural Land: 1.20

4c(1) Seasonal Recreational Residential Non-Commercial
1st $76,000 1.20
over $76,000 1.65

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


As a general rule, properties managed for more than one distinct use (such as a commercial business located on a farm) are divided into parts for tax purposes. Each part is classified according to its primary use. This is known as a split classification.

Forest land that is not part of a farm may be classified 2b Timberland. Timberland is defined as: (a) real estate, rural in character and used exclusively for growing trees for timber, lumber, and wood and wood products, or (b) real estate that is not improved with a structure and is used exclusively for growing trees for timber, lumber, and wood and wood products if the owner has participated or is participating in a cost-sharing program for tree planting or timber stand improvement on that particular property, administered or coordinated by the Minnesota commissioner of natural resources. Forest land that is part of a farm commonly is classified 2a Agricultural Homestead or 2b Non-Homestead Agricultural Land. State law explicitly includes timberlands within the definition of agricultural land, provided that the property as a whole is used primarily for agricultural purposes [Minnesota Statutes Section 273.13, Subdivision 23(b)].

Class 4c(1) Seasonal Recreational Residential Non-Commercial property includes land and buildings devoted to temporary and seasonal residential occupancy for non-commercial recreation purposes. If forest land has a cabin or water frontage, or appears to be used for recreational purposes, or is in an area of the county where recreational use of forest land is quite common, the assessor may assign it to Class 4c(1). Land in this class that is valued at less than $76,000 has a class rate of 1.20 percent, the same as 2b Timberland and Non-Homestead Agricultural Land; land in this class valued over $76,000 carries a 1.65 percent class rate.

Other classifications into which forest land might be placed include Residential Homestead and Seasonal Recreational Residential Commercial. There are other classifications in the ad valorem system, but forest land is less likely to be placed in them.

While county assessors use Minnesota Department of Revenue guidelines when classifying land, similar appearing properties may be classified differently by different assessors, depending on their judgments as to the primary use of each property and their interpretations of class definitions. For example, to qualify your forest land under 2b Timberland, an assessor may require evidence that you are managing timberland exclusively for wood and wood products; otherwise the land may be classified as 4c(1) Seasonal Recreational Residential Non-Commercial. A woodland management plan and evidence of past management (tree planting, harvesting, thinning, etc.) will serve as evidence of timber management. If you do not agree with the classification assigned to your land, discuss it with your county assessor.

Local Tax Rate

The local tax rate is determined by the county auditor, who divides the dollar amount of the property tax levy for each taxing jurisdiction by the total taxable valuation (market value x class rate) of the jurisdiction. The local tax rate that applies to a particular parcel is the sum of tax rates of all taxing districts in which the parcel is located. This local tax rate may be modified by credits or additions provided in state law.

Sample Tax Calculation

For an example of calculating the tax payable, assume that a parcel of forest land had a market value of $300 per acre in 1999 and a 2b Timberland class rate of 1.20 percent, and the local tax rate was 90.41 percent:

$300 x 0.0120 x 0.9041 = $3.25 per acre tax payable in 2000.

Native Prairie Tax Exemption Program

Native prairie land may be exempted from property taxes [Minnesota Statutes Section 272.02, Subdivision 1(11)] if it is dominated throughout by native prairie vegetation; not severely altered by plowing, heavy grazing, seeding to non-native grasses and legumes, or spraying with large amounts of herbicides; not in use as pasture (haying is allowed); at least five acres (smaller tracts may qualify if they provide important rare species habitat or other significant prairie features); and located in an eligible county (all counties except Lake of the Woods, Koochiching, Itasca, St. Louis, Lake, Carlton, and Pine).

To apply, (1) fill out the Native Prairie Tax Exemption application, available from your county tax assessor, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR), or other conservation agency; (2) obtain two USDA Farm Service Agency aerial photos of the entire tract being applied for exemption and outline in red the prairie acreage; and (3) mail the application and photos to your county tax assessor.

The county assessor will forward your application to the local DNR area wildlife manager, who will evaluate the prairie and determine whether it qualifies. Once the prairie is enrolled, your exemption will automatically be renewed each year. You must notify the county assessor in writing if you change the use or condition of the property such that it no longer meets the above criteria. If you sell the property, the exemption carries over to the new owner so long as the prairie is preserved.

Wetland Tax Exemption Program

The following wetland types are exempted from property taxes [Minnesota Statutes Section 272.02, Subdivision 1(10)]: (a) public waters wetlands (all Type 3, 4, and 5 wetlands as defined in U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Circular No. 39 that are not public waters, but are 10 or more acres in unincorporated areas or 21/2 acres in incorporated areas); (b) lands mostly under water that produce little if any income and have no use except for wildlife or water conservation purposes; and (c) land in a wetland preservation area (carries a restrictive covenant to protect soil and water and prevent development). Not eligible for this tax exemption are woody swamps containing shrubs or trees, wet meadows, meandered water, streams, rivers, and floodplains or river bottoms. No landowner application is required for this tax exemption. Contact your county tax assessor to see if your wetland qualifies.

Minnesota Agricultural Land Preservation Program

Landowners can receive $1.50 per acre per year property tax credit and other benefits for agreeing to preserve their farm and forest land for long-term agricultural use. Before this can happen, the county must adopt (and have approved by the Minnesota Department of Agriculture): (a) an agricultural land preservation plan that designates portions of a county for long-term agricultural use and other portions for growth around urbanized areas, and (b) land use regulations (e.g., zoning and subdivision regulations) that restrict uses to agriculture and forestry, and require low nonfarm residential densities in areas designated for long-term agricultural use. Once a county’s plan and regulations have been adopted and approved, a landowner in an agricultural zone may voluntarily place an agricultural preserve covenant on the land, restricting land use to agriculture and forestry. The county may charge an application fee of no more than $50 and the landowner must agree to follow sound soil conservation practices. A covenant runs with the land, even if it is sold. The landowner or local government may terminate the covenant, but that process takes eight years.

Under an agricultural preserve covenant (Minnesota Statutes Sections 40A.12-13 and 273.119):

The landowner receives $1.50 per acre per year property tax credit.
Local governments cannot enact ordinances or regulations that restrict or regulate normal agricultural practices.
Enrolled farmland within a township cannot be annexed to a municipality unless the landowner or county has initiated termination of the covenant, or the township would not be able to provide normal governmental function and services, or the farmland is completely surrounded by the city.
Eminent domain proceedings are limited and subject to public and administrative review.
Public sanitary sewer systems, water systems, and drainage systems are prohibited and land may not be assessed for public projects built in the vicinity unless the project is necessary to serve land primarily in agricultural use or the landowner chooses to use and benefit from the project.
This program currently is available in Waseca, Winona, and Wright counties. For more information, contact your county tax assessor or the Minnesota Department of Agriculture.

Metropolitan Agricultural Preserves Program

This program is similar to the Minnesota Agricultural Land Preservation Program described above, except that it applies only to counties in the Twin Cities Metropolitan Area (Minnesota Statutes Chapter 473H). A participating township, city, or county government must designate portions of its jurisdiction for long-term agricultural use and approve zoning regulations that allow no more than one residential unit per 40 acres. Landowners within a designated agricultural zone may obtain application forms for agricultural preserve status from their local government or the Metropolitan Council. A minimum of 40 acres is required, with these exceptions (if the exceptions have been approved by the local authority):

Noncontiguous parcels of at least 10 acres and totaling 40 or more acres may qualify if they are farmed as a unit.
A 35-acre parcel may qualify if the land is a single quarter/quarter section and the reduction in acreage is due to a public road right-of-way or a variation in the section survey.
A 20-acre parcel may qualify if the land is adjacent to eligible land on not less than two sides; if the land is predominantly Class I, II, III, or irrigated IV according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service; if the local government considers the land to be an essential part of the agricultural region; and if the parcel was a parcel of record prior to January 1, 1980, and was an agricultural preserve prior to becoming a separate parcel.
Once approved, a landowner’s restrictive covenant to preserve agricultural land will run with the land even if it is sold. A covenant may be terminated, but the process takes eight years.

A landowner receives these benefits:

Farmland enrolled in the program is classified and assessed for tax purposes according to its agricultural value, rather than its market value.
The farmland’s tax rate is equal to 105 percent of the previous year’s statewide average tax rate for townships outside the Twin Cities Metropolitan Area. If the local tax rate is higher, the difference is paid in the form of a tax credit by the county or state conservation fund. Participants are guaranteed a minimum tax credit of $1.50 per acre per year.
Enrolled farmland cannot be assessed for public improvement projects such as sanitary sewers, storm water sewers, water systems, roads, and other public improvements built on or in the vicinity of agricultural preserves.
Local governments cannot enact or enforce ordinances or regulations that restrict normal farm practices.
Enrolled farmland within a township cannot be annexed to a municipality unless the landowner has requested to withdraw from the program, or the farmland is completely surrounded by the city.
Enrolled farmland has some protection from eminent domain proceedings.
Minnesota Agricultural Property Tax Law (Green Acres Law)

This law provides for agricultural land to be assessed (and subsequently taxed) for its agricultural value and not for any added value attributable to its urban development potential (Minnesota Statutes Section 273.111). Special assessments for public sewer, water, streets, etc., are deferred for as long as the property qualifies under the program.

To qualify there must be at least 10 acres of land and it must meet these ownership criteria: be the owner’s homestead or the homestead of the owner’s surviving spouse, child, or sibling; or have been in the possession of the applicant or the applicant’s parent, spouse, or sibling for seven years; or be the homestead of a shareholder in a family farm corporation; or be in the possession of a nursery or greenhouse. The property must be used for agricultural purposes and at least one-third of the owner’s total family income must be derived from agriculture, or the total production income, including rental from the property, must be $300 plus $10 per tillable acre. The owner’s slough, wasteland, and woodland contiguous to the agricultural land also qualifies for this agricultural assessment.

When the land no longer meets this law’s criteria, a rollback tax is levied equal to the amount by which the preferential assessment reduced the tax due on the property over the previous three years. The landowner also must pay any deferred assessments for public works projects, plus interest, for the entire period enrolled. If the land is sold, the new owner may apply within 30 days to continue application of this law to the property. If the application is approved, no back taxes will be due.

Minnesota Tree Growth Tax Law

When land is placed under Minnesota’s Tree Growth Tax Law (Minnesota Statutes Section 270.31-270.39), property taxes are based on the value of annual timber growth on the property. Individual counties may choose whether to adopt this law. Ten counties have forest land enrolled under the Tree Growth Tax Law: Becker, Carlton, Cass, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Itasca, Koochiching, Morrison, St. Louis, and Wadena.

Qualification and Application Procedures

Any owner of at least five acres of forest land in a county that has adopted this law may submit an application to the county board. The application, in triplicate, must include:

a legal description(s) of the property;
a map showing the location and boundaries of each forest type on the property and a list of the dominant tree species and number of acres in each forest type (see Forest Classifications and Tax Rates below);
a statement concerning the owner’s intention to reforest any temporarily nonproductive land; and
a signed and sworn statement by the applicant that "while the land is under the tree growth tax law it will be used exclusively for the growing of continuous forest crops in accordance with sustained yield practices and will be open to use by the public for hunting and fishing except within one-fourth mile of a permanent dwelling or during periods of high fire hazard as determined by the Commissioner of Natural Resources."
Most counties have additional qualifications. Contact your county auditor for an application form and further details.

Forest Classifications and Tax Rates

All lands placed under the Tree Growth Tax Law are categorized under one of three forest classifications, each with its own tax rate.

Commercial Forest Types

A forest type is a stand of trees composed of species that commonly occur together. It is identified and named for those tree species that make up 50 percent or more of the sawlog volume in sawlog stands, of cordwood in pole-timber stands, or of the number of trees in seedling and sapling stands. Commercial forest lands contain at least three cords of standard pulpwood or sawlogs per acre or 500 stems of commercial tree species per acre. Forest types recognized under the Tree Growth Tax Law include:

Aspen-Birch - a stand in which a mixture of trembling aspen, bigtooth aspen, and paper birch predominates.

Upland Hardwood - a stand in which northern hardwood species (sugar maple, red maple, yellow birch, basswood, and oak) predominate.

Lowland Hardwood - a stand on poorly drained land in which bottomland hardwood species (ash, elm, and balm of Gilead [balsam poplar]) predominate.

Spruce-Fir - a mixed hardwood and coniferous stand with white spruce and balsam fir the most common species.

Swamp Spruce - a stand in which swamp conifers predominate with black spruce the most common.

Other Swamp Conifers - a stand in which conifers predominate, with tamarack (eastern larch) or white-cedar the most common.

Stagnant Spruce Swamp - a stand in which spruce predominates, but that will not produce standard pulpwood in 100 years, although it will produce Christmas trees of commercial value.

Jack Pine - a stand in which pine species predominate, with jack pine the most common.

Norway and White Pine - a stand in which pine species predominate, with Norway (red pine) or white pine the most common.

The tax on commercial forest types is 30 percent of the value of estimated average annual tree growth for a forest type. Growth rates for each forest type are set every 10 years by the county board of commissioners based on forest surveys by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and U.S. Forest Service North Central Research Station. The stumpage value of each forest type, expressed in dollars per cord, is recalculated in even-numbered years. Stumpage value of a forest type is based on the proportion of each species that commonly occurs in a type and the average timber sale receipts for each species on state land in the county over the previous two years. If fewer than 500 cords of a species have been sold during the previous two years, the commissioner of the DNR sets the stumpage value for that species according to the DNR base stumpage price for that species on its land.

For example, assume that in a particular county, the average annual growth rate for the jack pine forest type is 0.436 cords per acre, the stumpage value for this forest type is $28.80 per cord, and the tax rate for all forest types under Tree Growth is 30 percent:

0.436 cords per acre x $28.80 per cord x 0.30 = $3.77 Tree Growth tax per acre on jack pine.

Temporarily Nonproductive Forest Type

These lands are capable of producing a commercial forest type, but presently do not contain a sufficient timber volume to be classified as a commercial forest type.

Temporarily nonproductive forest types are taxed at a flat rate of $0.05 per acre per year, providing the owner agrees to reforest within 10 years. If the landowner does not reforest within 10 years, the land is taxed thereafter at $0.15 per acre per year.

A $0.50 tax credit is authorized for each acre of land planted and maintained with a minimum of 500 trees of commercial species. The owner may apply this credit against taxes on other lands within the same governmental subdivision on which the planting is made. The credit can be used annually until the plantation is 10 years old and the land is reclassified as a commercial forest type. For example, by planting 20 acres the owner will have a $10.00 credit per year (20 acres x $0.50/acre) for up to 10 years. Before enrolling land under the Tree Growth Tax Law, several counties require landowners to sign an agreement relinquishing their right to this tax credit.

Permanently Nonproductive Land

This type includes land that is unsuitable for growing commercial forest types, such as muskeg, marsh, and rock outcrops. Such land is taxed at a flat rate of $0.05 per acre per year.

Land Used for Administration, Public Recreation, or Buildings

Land enrolled under the Tree Growth Tax Law that is used for administrative or management purposes (e.g., roads and work sites) or for free public recreation is classified the same as adjoining lands under the Tree Growth Tax Law. Cabins and temporary buildings are taxed as personal property.

Withdrawal

When land is enrolled under the Tree Growth Tax Law, the agreement between the landowner and the county board of commissioners is a covenant that runs with the land and is recorded by the county recorder at the landowner’s expense. The owner may withdraw land from the Tree Growth Tax Law at any time. However, the land then will be subject to back taxes and penalties based on the difference between taxes paid under Tree Growth and what would have been paid under the ad valorem tax system for the period the land had been enrolled under Tree Growth, but not exceeding 10 years.

If at any time the county board deems lands enrolled under the Tree Growth Tax Law to be more valuable for purposes other than timber production, such lands may be removed from the Tree Growth Tax Law by joint agreement of the county board and the landowner. In the event of a disagreement, such lands may be removed by the county board upon the recommendation of a three-member committee - one member each appointed by the county board, the landowner, and the Minnesota commissioner of revenue.

Comparison of 2b Timberland Classification and Tree Growth Tax Law

Whether the 2b Timberland class or Tree Growth Tax Law is more appropriate for a given landowner’s forest land depends on the tax payable under each system, management requirements, attitudes toward public access, and conditions for withdrawing land from a particular classification.

Table 2 shows the average tax per acre on forest land under the 2b Timberland class and the Tree Growth Tax Law. The statewide average tax on 2b Timberland is $3.53 per acre (payable 1998). This tax is higher than the average Tree Growth Tax (payable 2000) for all forest types except Norway and white pine, which is $8.62 per acre. Landowners should compare the ad valorem tax on their land with the Tree Growth Tax rates for their forest types to determine which system offers the lower tax.

Table 2. 2b Timberland and Tree Growth Tax per acre by county
Tree Growth Tax ($/Acre) By Forest Type, Payable 2000 *
County Average 2b Timberland Tax ($/Acre), Payable 1998 Average Tree Growth Tax ($/Acre), Payable 1999 Aspen- Birch Upland Hardwood Lowland Hardwood Spruce- Fir Swamp Spruce Other Swamp Conifers Stagnant Spruce Swamp Jack Pine Norway and White Pine
Becker 3.73 5.43 2.06 2.12 0.47 0.88 0.55 0.34 0.30 3.77 14.55
Carlton 3.63 2.08 1.83 0.86 0.30 1.33 0.72 0.27 0.30 2.38 9.08
Cass 3.53 3.08 2.07 1.85 0.32 1.44 0.71 0.48 0.30 2.71 7.68
Crow Wing 5.03 3.32 2.64 2.67 0.46 1.13 0.71 0.30 0.30 4.00 7.06
Hubbard 4.81 5.03 3.04 1.16 0.34 1.02 0.49 0.44 0.30 5.09 7.93
Itasca 4.20 2.07 2.91 1.62 2.06 1.26 0.94 0.29 0.30 5.04 10.47
Koochiching 2.06 2.01 2.59 2.08 0.51 1.12 0.98 0.49 0.30 2.60 6.11
Morrison 4.52 3.05 1.95 2.56 0.36 1.52 0.78 0.38 0.30 2.47 5.67
St. Louis 2.57 1.64 1.62 0.46 1.27 0.91 0.87 0.50 0.30 1.88 9.70
Wadena 5.75 2.64 2.60 2.93 0.33 1.40 0.71 0.25 0.30 3.40 7.94
State Average * 3.53 2.18 2.33 1.83 0.64 1.20 0.75 0.37 0.30 3.33 8.62
*Tree Growth Tax on Temporarily Nonproductive forest land is $0.05 per acre for up to 10 years and $0.15 per acre after 10 years if not reforested. Tree Growth Tax on Permanently Nonproductive forest land is $0.05 per acre.
*State averages for 2b Timberland Tax and Tree Growth Tax are based on the number of acres enrolled in all counties. State average Tree Growth Tax by forest type is an average of figures in the column and is not weighted according to the acres in each forest type.

Acknowledgments

Funding for this publication was provided by:

University of Minnesota Extension Service (the Renewable Resources Extension [RREA] program of the University of Minnesota Extension Service and the U.S. Department of Agriculture—Cooperative States Research, Education and Extension Service)
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Forest Stewardship Program in cooperation with the USDA Forest Service, State and Private Forestry.
Author - Melvin J. Baughman is an Extension Specialist—Forest Resources and Professor in the University of Minnesota’s Department of Forest Resources, College of Natural Resources

Product Manager - Gail M. Tischler
Graphics - John A. Molstad
Editor - Mary K. Hoff










Produced by Communication and Educational Technology Services, University of Minnesota Extension Service.

The information given in this publication is for educational purposes only. Reference to commercial products or trade names is made with the understanding that no discrimination is intended and no endorsement by the University of Minnesota Extension Service is implied.

In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, this material is available in alternative formats upon request. Please contact your University of Minnesota county extension office or, outside of Minnesota, contact the Distribution Center at (612) 625-8173.

The University of Minnesota Extension Service is committed to the policy that all persons shall have equal access to its programs, facilities, and employment without regard to race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sex, age, marital status, disability, public assistance status, veteran status, or sexual orientation.

University of Minnesota Extension Service Home Page
extension.umn.edu



To: long-gone who wrote (2)8/25/2001 8:41:39 PM
From: long-gone  Respond to of 12
 
sierralegal.org