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Oregon group looks to cut red tape around agritourism industry

Volunteer Teena Larson works in a church pumpkin patch, Friday, Oct. 27, 2023, in San Antonio.
Eric Gay
/
AP
Volunteer Teena Larson works in a church pumpkin patch, Friday, Oct. 27, 2023, in San Antonio.

A group of about a dozen farmers is lobbying state legislators to loosen Oregon's iconic land use laws to expand business opportunities on agricultural land.

Agritourism brings in nearly $1 billion each year to the Willamette Valley. The extra income can bolster a farm鈥檚 financial resilience when crop sales are down. But some farmers say strict state land-use laws limit how they can use their land, and they鈥檙e looking to change that.

Land conservation groups, however, say those laws exist to protect farmland.

As the fall season settles in, some farmers are preparing to open up their fields of pumpkin patches, farm-to-table dinners, corn mazes and hayrides for visitors to come in and spend a day on a farm.

But navigating the complex systems that are Oregon鈥檚 planning and zoning laws presents a challenge for farmers wanting to participate in some forms of agritourism activity, said Samantha Bayer, the general counsel at the Oregon Property Owners Association 鈥 a lobbying group representing private property owners.

鈥淲hat we are seeing is that our land use laws are not designed and not being implemented to support a robust economy in general,鈥 Bayer said. 鈥淭he quest for farmland preservation is so over-leveraged that now you鈥檙e actually preventing farmers from using their land and doing the things that they need to do to stay in business.鈥

The campaign, which is affiliated with the property owners association and run by about a dozen farmers, is looking to lobby legislators and the governor to address some of those challenges.

Bayer said Oregon is losing farms, but it鈥檚 not because of urban sprawl. The latestdoes indeed show Oregon lost 2,069 farms from 2017 to 2022 鈥 the majority of those farms range from one to nine acres. Consolidation, the increasing cost of business and climate change are part of the reason for that loss.

Bayer said another reason for the loss of farms is that the laws designed to protect farmland are hurting farmers.

Oregon鈥檚 land protection laws are enshrined in . The foundation of the law is a set of 19 statewide land use planning goals. One of them, goal three, requires counties to identify farmland and zone it as exclusive farm use, or EFU.

If a farmer on exclusive farm-use land wants to host some form of agritourism activity, they usually have to seek a permit. One way is to apply for a farm stand permit. That allows farmers to sell the produce they grow on their farms, as well as other goods like hats, shirts or mugs. Annual sales of those non-agricultural goods and other fees they charge for activities like hay rides or farm-to-table dinners are limited to 25% of total annual farm-stand retail sales. If they go over that cap, they risk losing their permit.

Hilary Foote, a farm and forest specialist at the Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development, told OPB the cap is in place to prevent farm stands from selling goods and services that are not related to agriculture.

鈥淭hat is a requirement established by the [Oregon] Legislature with the intent of ensuring that the sale of farm products remains the primary focus of something that has been permitted as a 鈥榝arm stand鈥 and that it does not become a retail store,鈥 she said.

Bayer, with the property owners group, said she believes the cap was established with good intentions, but would prefer the state did away with it.

鈥淚t should be farm first. And I think that that鈥檚 fair and that鈥檚 reasonable, especially when we鈥檙e talking about the exclusive farm use zone,鈥 she said. 鈥淗owever, I think there is a way to do that so that it鈥檚 not an income restriction. I am not aware of any other business in the state of Oregon that is restricted on the income they can earn for promoting their business because of the underlying zoning of their property.鈥

Nellie McAdams, the executive director of the Oregon Agricultural Trust, said those limitations exist for a reason 鈥 to keep farmland dedicated to agriculture.

鈥淲ithout reasonable limitations, we run the risk of having any kind of products that have no relation to agriculture or that particular farm being sold on farmland,鈥 she said.

McAdams and people from other land conservation groups argue the agritourism industry can create challenging conflicts in agricultural communities such as noise, traffic, parking or trespassing. She said doing away with state rules that limit what can and cannot be done on farmland could make problems worse for working farms.

鈥淲hat we鈥檝e been providing in Oregon is a model around the country that states wish that they had as a tool, because otherwise they are seeing the unnecessary loss of farmland left and right for personal gain rather than for the long-term benefit of those communities,鈥 she said.

Bayer said the Keep Oregon Farming campaign has already collected over 700 signatures, which will be sent to Gov. Tina Kotek by the end of October.

She said the group also intends to prepare a bill for the upcoming 2025 state legislative session which will be focused on providing clarity around agritourism and eliminating the 25% farm stand income cap.

This story comes from the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.

Copyright 2024 Oregon Public Broadcasting

Alejandro Figueroa is a reporter for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. His reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.