Numbers to Call
Regulated Use
Raising Awareness
Prevention Tips
Defensible Space
Fire Resistant Plants
KOG Ranger
Hunters
Partnerships
Billboards
2007 Fire Stats
Resource Links

 Please be careful in our forests!

Currently

Today, Oregon’s 33.8 million acres of forest lands are all under organized protection.  Three operating forest protective associations (Coos, Douglas, and Walker Range) and nine others managed by the Oregon Department of Forestry provide protection for approximately 16.2 million private-timber and grazing acres throughout the state.  KOG is given a contribution of one cent per acre of that protected land to promote statewide wildfire prevention campaigns.  The landowners are the backbone of the organization.  In addition, cooperative agreements with the Department of Forestry, Coos, Douglas, and Walker Range forest protective associations, and federal wildfire agencies, as well as grants, partnerships, and private contributions provide the basic revenue for Keep Oregon Green..

The 37 members of the Board of Trustees govern the Association and its day-to-day-operations are directed by its president/CEO. These members are affiliated with

American Forest Resources Council

Oregon Small Woodland Owners

City of Bend Fire Department

Oregon State Federation of Garden Clubs

The forest industry

Oregon State University

Forestry consultants

State and federal wildfire agencies

Office of the State Fire Marshal

World Forestry Center

Oregon Forest Industries Council

The task of promoting wildfire messages is becoming increasingly difficult.  In past years it was a challenge to have the wildfire prevention messages reach traditional visitors to the forest.  Now, we are faced with getting them to an increasing number of people who live in and around these 3.5 million acres.  This “wildland-urban interface” poses a double threat - from people living in or near the forest who may start fires that spread to the wildlands or from wildfires  that spread to the nearby residences.  In either case, the result is potentially disastrous but could have been avoided by responsible prevention actions taken by the homeowner. 

Perhaps no money is better spent in Oregon than that contributed to the KOG campaigns.  Concrete evidence of the program’s success is given by the annual wildfire  statistics.  They show that, in spite of greater use of our forest for recreation and housing, the numbers of human-caused wildfires are not increasing in proportion to the population.

In the future the need to prevent wildfires will be greater than ever before. More and more people are moving into the wildland interface; there is a greater demand for recreation in the forests; the health of federal forests is declining; wildfires are bigger than ever before; and suppression costs have become astronomical.  According to wildfire experts, wildfires are now burning so intensely that it will take years for the forests to recover; and due to the effects of these super hot wildfires where the soil has burned leaving nothing but rock, some of the forests may never grow back.  As a result, the ecosystem is drastically changed.

The number of human-caused wildfires currently stands at 71 percent of the total in Oregon. As these numbers are reduced, there will be less smoke in the air, less carbon introduced into the atmosphere; more carbon sequestered by the healthy trees; and the atmosphere cleaner. The journey ahead may be a steep one, but Keep Oregon Green will always be up to the challenge.

 Please be careful in our forests!

 

 (continued)

Our Mission

In The Beginning

Grass Roots Organization

Thank you for visiting our website.  Help Keep Oregon Green*  by becoming a member of our Association.

*"Keep Oregon Green" is a registered trademark of the Keep Oregon Green Association

 

Counters

Keep Oregon Green Association

PO Box 12365 - Salem, OR 97309-0365
Telephone 503.945.7498

Cabin