---
kind: section
source_pdf: oregon-prosperity-council-report-june-2026.pdf
fingerprint: 8ac9aef8ca1b
page_range: [265, 266]
breadcrumb: ["Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback", "26. Central Oregon LandWatch (Ben Gordon, Executive Director)"]
source_links:
  pdf: "https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=265"
  raw_pages:
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0265.txt"
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0266.txt"
---

# 26. Central Oregon LandWatch (Ben Gordon, Executive Director)

<!-- enrich:begin -->

## TL;DR  *(generated · confidence: high)*

Central Oregon LandWatch (Ben Gordon, Executive Director) urges the Prosperity Council to preserve Oregon's 50+ year land use program as foundational to economic vitality and quality of life. The program controls sprawl, preserves working farms and forests, and addresses affordable housing and wildfire through reforms like the Oregon Housing Needs Analysis (finalized December 2025). Agriculture contributes 13% of state GDP ($6.8B annually); Oregon leads in softwood lumber production. Outdoor recreation/tourism generates $16B annually and supports 190,000 jobs. Submission advocates maintaining the land use program's core pillars in forthcoming recommendations.

**Key points** *(each cites a PDF page)*:

- Central Oregon LandWatch urges the Prosperity Council to maintain Oregon's land use program as essential to economic development, quality of life, and livability of communities ([p. 265](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=265))
- Oregon Housing Needs Analysis, finalized in December 2025, provides landmark housing reforms to increase production, affordability, and choice across Oregon's communities ([p. 265](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=265))
- Agriculture contributes 13% of Oregon's gross state product and generates more than $6.8 billion annually in commodity production ([p. 266](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=266))
- Oregon is the largest softwood lumber producer in the United States ([p. 266](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=266))
- Outdoor recreation and related tourism spending generates $16 billion annually and supports over 190,000 jobs in Oregon ([p. 266](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=266))
- Land use program limits development in wildland-urban interface to protect communities and property from catastrophic wildfire risk ([p. 266](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=266))

Amounts: $6.8 billion in agricultural commodities annually · 13% · $16 billion · 190,000 jobs · Dates/FTE: April 7, 2026 · December 2025 · October 2025 · Programs: Oregon Housing Needs Analysis (OHNA) · Oregon's land use program · Executive Order No. 25-26 · Parties: Central Oregon LandWatch · Ben Gordon · Governor Tina Kotek · Tim Knopp

<!-- enrich:end -->

> **Source:** PDF [pp. 265-266](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=265) · raw: [265](../../.extracted/pages/page-0265.txt) · [266](../../.extracted/pages/page-0266.txt)

Breadcrumb: Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback > 26. Central Oregon LandWatch (Ben Gordon, Executive Director)

---
April 7, 2026
sent via email: Prosperity.Roadmap@oregon.gov, tim.knopp@oregon.gov
Governor’s Prosperity Council
Tim Knopp, Chief Prosperity Officer
Office of Governor Tina Kotek, State of Oregon
900 Court Street, Suite 254
Salem, Oregon 97301
Dear Co-Chair James, Co-Chair Robinhold, Prosperity Council members, and Mr. Knopp,
As this Council creates recommendations for Governor Kotek’s consideration to accelerate
Oregon’s economy, create good-paying jobs, and recruit and grow Oregon’s businesses, we
look forward to engaging and working together to help ensure all Oregonians have the
opportunity to thrive.
It will be essential in the work ahead to recognize that Oregon’s land use program is part of
the bedrock foundation upon which our economic vitality is built.
Oregon Land Use: At the heart of Oregon’s ‘second paycheck.’
For more than 50 years, Oregon’s land use program has been at the heart of creating the
1
world-renowned quality of life that sets our state apart. It has focused development in
cities and towns, corralled rural sprawl, and preserved working farms, forests, wild places,
and open space.
As noted in Governor Kotek’s Prosperity Roadmap, “Our exceptional quality of
life…makes [Oregon] not only a smart place to do business but also a desirable place to
live, work, and raise a family.”
For over 50 years, Oregon’s land use program has proven its durability and
flexibility, evolving to safeguard the state’s exceptional quality of life. Today, that
adaptability is being put to work to address some of the state’s most pressing
economic headwinds: the affordable housing shortage and wildfire risk.
The program is already delivering results on these issues through significant reforms,
2
such as the Oregon Housing Needs Analysis (OHNA). Finalized in December 2025,
these landmark changes to Oregon’s housing goal will provide more abundant and
affordable housing across Oregon’s communities as they are implemented this year and
1
Oregon Values and Beliefs Center. Environment and Land Use – 2023 Typology Study Summary. OregonVBC.org.
https://oregonvbc.org/environment-and-land-use/
2
Oregon Adopts Landmark Housing Rules to Increase Production, Affordability, and Choice, DLCD, December 2025
https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/ORDLCD/bulletins/3fe7815

beyond. Simultaneously, the land use program serves as a critical shield against
climate-driven threats. By strategically limiting development in the wildland-urban
interface, Oregon is effectively protecting both people and property from the increasing
3
risk of catastrophic wildfire.
Working farms and forests, intact landscapes, healthy waterways: Oregon’s
economic all-stars
To borrow an example from the sporting world, you don’t bench your star players. And
when it comes to Oregon’s economy, working farms and forests, intact landscapes and
healthy waterways have been and will continue to be essential VIPs that need to be
prioritized.
Oregon’s farmlands support an agricultural economy that contributes 13% of the state’s gross
4
product and produces more than $6.8 billion in agricultural commodities annually. Our
5
forestlands make Oregon the largest softwood lumber producer in the U.S.
Further, the benefits and value of intact, functioning landscapes and waterways are
significant, as recently highlighted in Governor Kotek’s Executive Order No. 25-26
(October 2025), directing state agencies to take urgent action to promote the resilience of
our communities and natural and working lands and waters. Outdoor recreation and
6
related tourism spending top $16 billion in Oregon and support over 190,000 jobs.
We urge this Council to keep these facts and this track record ‘front and center’ in
the work ahead and, in doing so, ensure any forthcoming recommendations uphold
the key pillars of Oregon’s land use program. Our economy and the livability of our
communities depend on its continued success.
Thank you for your service and consideration of these comments. We would welcome the
opportunity to share more detailed insights and examples on the information included here with
the Prosperity Council as you undertake this important work on behalf of Oregonians.
Sincerely,
Ben Gordon, Executive Director
3
Oregon’s Land Use Law Creates Wildfire-Adapted Communities, Sightline Institue, 2023:
https://www.sightline.org/2023/07/25/oregons-land-use-law-creates-wildfire-adapted-communities/
4
Oregon Department of Agriculture. State of Oregon Agriculture: 2025 Report from the State Board of Agriculture. Oregon.gov.
https://www.oregon.gov/ODA/Documents/Publications/Administration/BoardReport.pdf
5
Business Oregon. Forestry & Wood Products – Target Industries. Oregon.gov.
https://www.oregon.gov/biz/programs/homeareas/byboregon/targetindustries/pages/forestry.aspx
6
Economic Analysis of Outdoor Recreation in Oregon: 2022 Update, Earth Economics.
https://www.oregon.gov/oprd/PRP/Documents/2024.07.17%20Economic%20analysis%20of%20outdoor%20recreation%20in%20O
R%20-%202022%20update.pdf

---

Parent: [Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback](./INDEX.md) · PDF: [pp. 265-266](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=265)
