When Marc Thomas worked for the Georgia Forestry Commission (GFC), he met dozens of landowners who, for financial reasons, were selling their timber in a hurry. Many of these landowners had inherited their timberland from their parents, and they were either absentee landowners—trying to manage the land from a distance—or they had just moved home after years of city life. Others knew how they would like to manage their forests but didn’t have the financial resources to put this knowledge to work. While state and federal cost sharing and incentive plans were in place to help them, Marc discovered that very few of the people he met were taking advantage of these programs.
The LIFE Program
Today, Marc works at Fort Valley State University in Georgia, and one of his
responsibilities is to continue the implementation of the Landowner Initiative for Forestry
Education (LIFE) program. LIFE’s mission is to help minority and limited resource forest
landowners.
The goals of the program are to educate and raise awareness,” said Thomas. “We want to
encourage landowners to develop goals and objectives for their land, to create and implement land
management plans. We want to provide landowners with the information and technical assistance they
need to implement those plans. We want make sure forest landowners have the necessary skills and
information to negotiate market prices when it comes time to harvest their trees. Finally, we want
to reinforce that the forest is part of our legacy and encourage landowners to retain this valuable
natural resource for future generations, who will also make a living off the land and pass it on to
their children. That is how wealth is created."
The
Timber Owner Market Guide
To accomplish these goals, Marc knew he’d need the right tools and the right partners. From
his days at the GFC, he remembered Forest2Market’s Georgia Timber Report. Forest2Market creates a
quarterly report about timber prices in Georgia specifically for the GFC. But Marc needed to
educate forestland owners about more than market prices; he needed to provide best practices for
managing forestland as well. So he called Forest2Market.
Suzanne Hearn, Manager of Sales and Marketing at Forest2Market, recommended the Timber Owner
Market Guide to help Marc—and the eight cooperative extension agents and program assistants who
work with him—increase awareness of land management practices among limited resource and minority
forestland owners. “Marc is very dedicated to the landowners in the program,” said Hearn. “He
lobbied hard on their behalf—describing how Forest2Market’s data could play a significant role in
helping individual timberland owners keep and manage their lands for the future. He made such a
strong case that I gave him the discount subscriptions he asked for."
The Timber Owner Market Guide turned out to be the ideal tool for Marc and those the LIFE
program serves. It provides local market price-per-ton information for various types and classes of
timber—pine sawtimber, chip-n-saw, and pulpwood, and hardwood sawtimber and pulpwood. This
information is crucial for the program. According to Thomas, once the new forest landowners
understood that there were differences in prices based on the type and size of trees in a stand,
they immediately understood that they could build harvesting plans to increase their income. And,
of course, knowing the going rate for timber gave them the information needed to evaluate bids from
wood-buyers and dealers effectively.
In addition to pricing, the Timber Owner Market Guide provides detailed information about
best practices for managing timberland. From proper thinning techniques to tax and estate planning
tips, the helpful hints provide practical advice and links to additional information. The FSVU -
Cooperative Extension Program’s county extension agents, who generally have agricultural instead of
forestry backgrounds, use these articles to improve their knowledge of forest management; they then
share the information with forestland owners. “Our agents and program assistants are able to pass
along valuable timber marketing information through the knowledge they’ve acquired from the Timber
Owner Market Guide,” said Thomas.
The Results
While Marc and the LIFE program use a variety of methods to raise awareness and provide
information to minority and limited resource forestland owners—including workshops and marketing—
they are beginning to see the results of having the Forest2Market Timber Owner Market Guide in
their tool boxes. Landowners working in the program, who generally own 30-250 acres of timberland,
are writing land management plans that include recommendations for harvesting, maintenance, and
replanting. They are enrolling in the Georgia Stewardship Program and taking advantage of state and
federal cost sharing programs. And when it comes time to harvest, many are getting three or even
five bids from wood-buyers and dealers. As a result, these limited resource and minority forestland
owners are making better once-in-a-lifetime decisions when selling their timber.
More importantly, these forest landowners are re-establishing their ties to the land of
their parents and grandparents and creating legacies for their children and grandchildren. They are
finding in the forest not only a source of enjoyment and income, but also a source of wealth to
pass on to future generations.
About Forest2Market
Forest2Market was founded in 2000 to bring solutions to participants in the forest and wood
products supply chain. Forest2Market provides raw material pricing data for the forest products
industry that is current, local and accurate, thus allowing landowners and forest product
professionals to make more informed decisions. Forest2Market’s suite of customized market-based
analytics allows both buyers and sellers to make better decisions based on better data. For more
information visit, www.forest2market.com , e-mail Forest2Market or call (704) 357-0110.