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2002 |
Bill
opens ag land to more housing Unusable farmland
can now be partitioned for residential purposes under House Bill 3326. The
law, which has been effective since January 1, 2002, has met the praise
of Realtors and county planners alike.
The law will allow some new
lots to be created in the Sisters country.
According to Sisters Realtor
Tim Bailey, HB 3326 will lower property costs.
"It allows more properties
with desired seclusion to exist," he said.
Bailey, who has recently been
involved in the partitioning of a 200-acre parcel in Sisters, says that
many of the EFU parcels that could be divided in the Sisters area exist
in the winter deer range, which is north and east of Sisters. In this
area, parcels may not be divided to less than 40 acres in size.
"HB 3326 was proposed to relieve
an inadvertent effect of 3661," said Kevin Harrison, head of the Community
Planning Department for Deschutes County.
In 1993, HB 3661 was passed
as a means to preserve prime farmland in the state of Oregon. The bill
was prompted by the partitioning and development of non-farm dwellings
on farmland in the Willamette Valley.
The bill, however, did not
discriminate between the Willamette Valley and Eastern Oregon. Further
court decisions limited the ability of landowners to partition their unusable
farmland in Eastern Oregon.
In the Dorvinen vs. Crook
County court decision of 1998, HB 3661 was interpreted to demand that
in any division of an EFU parcel, the parent parcel must meet the statutory
minimum parcel sizes of 80 acres farmland or 160 acres range land.
In 2000, the Friends of Douglas
County vs. Douglas County Court decision determined that both the parent
parcel and the new parcel must meet the statutory minimum parcel size.
HB 3326, sponsored by Reps.
Ben Westlund (R-Tumalo) and Tim Knopp (R-Bend), was signed into law by
Governor Kitzhaber July 2, 2001. It applies to EFU lands outside the Willamette
Valley. It allows landowners to make a one-time partitioning of parcels
lawfully created before July 1, 2001.
"HB 3326 produced a benefit
and relief for folks," said Damian Syrnyk of the Deschutes County Community
Development Department. "A lot of people were concerned that we were going
to partition off prime farm land."
Syrnyk states that the bill
actually provides a benefit to people who own prime farmlands. Partitioning
off unusable portions of land enable them to refinance or sell should
they need to recover from a heavy farm loss.
Farmland parcels over 80 acres
and range land parcels over 160 acres may be divided into as many as three
parcels. The parent parcel must remain over 80/160 acres. The minimum
lot size of a new parcel is five acres. Ninety percent of the new parcel
must have soil deemed unproductive for farm use.
For farmland property 40 to
80 acres in size and range land properties 40 to 160 acres, only one new
parcel may be created. The parent parcel must remain over 40 acres in
size and the new parcel must not have established water rights for irrigation.
While the changes could have
some effect in the Sisters country, Syrnyk said that of the six applications
the county is looking at, most are for properties southeast of Bend. |
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