Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: fireweed on June 06, 2013, 03:26:22 PM"Current use isn't supposed to have anything to do with what the land would sell for. It is supposed to be based off average income made off that type of land. " I have looked up articles on the 1968 amendment to the state constitution. The people voted on changing from highest use value taxation to "current use" value taxation. There was no talk of income, yield, stumpage values, timber excise etc. The intent was current use value based on sales of that type of land. Rather quickly after the current use language was adopted, the legislature started modifying the current use meaning. They separated out timber from land, and because then it was hard to find the price of bare land, they use a productivity formula for the land. But the original language that was voted on says nothing about basing values on income production.If you support continued valuation based only on income potential, you must admit these Leases/fees are increasing the average income per acre above and beyond the income from timber. If today's values top out at $243 per acre, and now with leases/fees each acre is making say $20 more per year, the taxable values should go up accordingly. That is a fair arguement. Maybe they should go up a bit. My issue is with the idea they should be taxed more because they don't allow public access. One shouldn't have a thing to do with the other IMO.
"Current use isn't supposed to have anything to do with what the land would sell for. It is supposed to be based off average income made off that type of land. " I have looked up articles on the 1968 amendment to the state constitution. The people voted on changing from highest use value taxation to "current use" value taxation. There was no talk of income, yield, stumpage values, timber excise etc. The intent was current use value based on sales of that type of land. Rather quickly after the current use language was adopted, the legislature started modifying the current use meaning. They separated out timber from land, and because then it was hard to find the price of bare land, they use a productivity formula for the land. But the original language that was voted on says nothing about basing values on income production.If you support continued valuation based only on income potential, you must admit these Leases/fees are increasing the average income per acre above and beyond the income from timber. If today's values top out at $243 per acre, and now with leases/fees each acre is making say $20 more per year, the taxable values should go up accordingly.
For small landowners, that may be a real possibility--either free access or no access. But large landowners (like Hancock, Weyco. Rayonier, SPI etc) are all SFI certified and the SFI standard has a " provide public recreation" requirement, therefore to stay certified all the big companies must provide some sort of recreation. They simply cannot close down their land to all recreation and maintain certification. (SFI, as you probably know, is already being criticized and challenged as a industry rubber stamp by enviro groups and must show some backbone at some time)
5. Aesthetics and RecreationTo manage the visual impacts of forest operations, and toprovide recreational opportunities for the public.