A tiny school district in Northwest Oregon surrounded by state forestland will get its day in court against the Oregon Department of Forestry over a conservation plan that would reduce logging to protect threatened and endangered species, and potentially lead to less school funding.

The Jewell School District, a single school serving 115 students in Clatsop County, first sued the forestry department more than two years ago after the Board of Forestry approved the Western Oregon State Forest Habitat Conservation Plan. The plan scales back logging an average of 20% on 630,000 thousand acres of western state forests for the next 70 years to protect watersheds and 17 threatened or endangered species. In the Clatsop State Forest, logging must be reduced roughly 35% over 70 years.

Originally published on oregoncapitalchronicle.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.