[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR2812.0-6]

[Page 260-262]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
    CHAPTER II--BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 2810_TRAMROADS AND LOGGING ROADS--Table of Contents
 
         Subpart 2812_Over O. and C. and Coos Bay Revested Lands
 
Sec. 2812.0-6  Statement of policy.

    (a) The intermingled character of the O. and C. lands presents 
peculiar problems of management which require for their solution the 
cooperation between the Federal Government and the owners of the 
intermingled lands, particularly with respect to timber roads.
    (b) It is well established that the value of standing timber is 
determined in significant part by the cost of transporting the logs to 
the mill. Where there is an existing road which is adequate or can 
readily be made adequate for the removal of timber in the area, the 
failure to make such road available for access to all the mature and 
overmature timber it could tap leads to economic waste. Blocks of timber 
which are insufficient in volume or value to support the construction of 
a duplicating road may be left in the woods for lack of access over the 
existing road. Moreover, the duplication of an existing road reduces the 
value of the federal and other timber which is tapped by the existing 
road.
    (c) It is also clear that the Department of the Interior, which is 
responsible for the conservation of the resources of the O. and C. lands 
and is charged specifically with operating the timber lands on a 
sustained-yield basis, must have access to these lands for the purpose 
of managing them and their resources. In addition, where the public 
interest requires the disposition of

[[Page 261]]

Federal timber by competitive bidding, prospective bidders must have an 
opportunity to reach the timber to be sold. Likewise, where other timber 
is committed by cooperative agreement to coordinated administration with 
timber of the United States, there must be access to both.
    (d) Accordingly, to the extent that in the judgment of the 
authorized officer it appears necessary to accomplish these purposes, 
when the United States, acting through the Bureau of Land Management, 
grants a right-of-way across O. and C. lands to a private operator, the 
private operator will be required to grant to the United States for use 
by it and its licensees:
    (1) Rights-of-way across lands controlled directly or indirectly by 
him;
    (2) The right to use, to the extent indicated in Sec. Sec. 2812.3-5 
and 2812.3-6, any portions of the road system or rights-of-way 
controlled directly or indirectly by the private operator which is 
adequate or can economically be made adequate to accommodate the 
probable normal requirements of both the operator and of the United 
States and its licensees, and which form an integral part of or may be 
added to the road system with which the requested right-of-way will 
connect;
    (3) The right to extend such road system across the operator's lands 
to reach federal roads or timber; and
    (4) In addition, in the limited circumstances set forth in Sec. 
2812.3-2 of this subpart the right to use certain other roads and 
rights-of-way. The permit will describe by legal subdivisions the lands 
of the operator as to which the United States receives rights. In 
addition, the extent and duration of the rights received by the United 
States will be specifically stated in the permit and ordinarily will 
embrace only those portions of such road system, rights-of-way and lands 
as may be actually needed for the management and removal of federal 
timber, or other timber committed by a cooperative agreement to 
coordinated administration with timber of the United States.
    (e) When the United States or a licensee of the United States uses 
any portion of a permittee's road system for the removal of forest 
products, the permittee will be entitled to receive just compensation, 
including a fair share of the maintenance and amortization charges 
attributable to such road, and to prescribe reasonable road operating 
rules, in accordance with Sec. Sec. 2812.3-7 to 2812.4-4.
    (f) As some examples of how this policy would be applied in 
particular instances, the United States may issue a permit under subpart 
2812 without requesting any rights with respect to roads, rights-of-way 
or lands which the authorized officer finds will not be required for 
management of or access to Federal timber, or timber included in a 
cooperative agreement. Where, however, the authorized officer finds that 
there is a road controlled directly or indirectly by the applicant, 
which will be needed for such purposes and which he finds either has 
capacity to accommodate the probable normal requirements both of the 
applicant and of the Government and its licensees, or such additional 
capacity can be most economically provided by an investment in such road 
system by the Government rather than by the construction of a duplicate 
road, he may require, for the period of time during which the United 
States and its licensees will have need for the road, the rights to use 
the road for the marketing and management of its timber and of timber 
included in a cooperative agreement in return for the granting of 
rights-of-way across O. and C. lands, and an agreement that the road 
builder will be paid a fair share of the cost of the road and its 
maintenance. Where it appears to the authorized officer that such a road 
will not be adequate or cannot economically be enlarged to handle the 
probable normal requirements both of the private operator and of the 
United States and its licensees, or even where the authorized officer 
has reasonable doubt as to such capacity, he will not request rights 
over such a road. Instead, the Bureau will make provision for its own 
road system either by providing in its timber sale contracts that in 
return for the road cost allowance made in fixing the appraised value of 
the timber, timber purchasers will construct or extend a different road 
system, or by expending for such construction or by extension monies 
appropriated for such purposes

[[Page 262]]

by the Congress, or, where feasible, by using an existing duplicating 
road over which the Government has obtained road rights. In such 
circumstances, however, road cost and maintenance allowances made in the 
stumpage price of O. and C. timber will be required to be applied to the 
road which the Bureau has the right to use, and thereafter will not in 
any circumstances be available for amortization or maintenance costs of 
the applicant's road.
    (g) When a right-of-way permit is issued for a road or road system 
over which the United States obtains rights of use for itself and its 
licensees, the authorized officer will seek to agree with the applicant 
respecting such matters as the time, route, and specifications for the 
future development of the road system involved; the portion of the 
capital and maintenance costs of the road system to be borne by the 
timber to be transported over the road system by the United States and 
its licensees; a formula for determining the proportion of the capacity 
of the road system which is to be available to the United States and its 
licensees for the transportation of forest products; and other similar 
matters respecting the use of the road by the United States and its 
licensees and the compensation payable therefor. To the extent that any 
such matter is not embraced in such an agreement, it will be settled by 
negotiation between the permittee and the individual licensees of the 
United States who use the road, and, in the event of their disagreement, 
by private arbitration between them in accordance with the laws of the 
State of Oregon.
    (h) The authorized officer may in his discretion, issue short term 
right-of-way permits for periods not exceeding three years, subject to 
one-year extensions in his discretion. Such permits shall specify the 
volume of timber which may be carried over the right-of-way and the area 
from which such timber may be logged. The permits shall be revocable by 
the authorized officer, the State Director, or the Secretary for 
violation of their terms and conditions or of these regulations or if 
hazardous conditions result from the construction, maintenance or use of 
the rights-of-way by the permittees or those acting under their 
authority. As a condition for the granting of such permits, the 
applicant must comply with Sec. Sec. 2812.3-1 and 2812.3-3 of this 
subpart to the extent that rights-of-way and road use rights are needed 
to remove government timber offered for sale in the same general area 
during the period for which the short term right-of-way is granted.
    (i) The authorized officer may, in his discretion, issue to private 
operators rights-of-way across O. and C. lands, needed for the conduct 
of salvage operations, for a period not to exceed five years. A salvage 
operation as used in this paragraph means the removal of trees injured 
or killed by windstorms, insect infestation, disease, or fire, together 
with any adjacent green timber needed to make an economic logging show. 
As a condition of the granting of such rights-of-way, the operator will 
be required, when the authorized officer deems it necessary, to grant to 
the United States and its licensees for the conduct of salvage 
operations on O. and C. lands for a period not to exceed five years, 
rights-of-way across lands controlled directly or indirectly by him and 
to grant the right to use to the extent indicated in Sec. Sec. 2812.3-5 
and 2812.3-6 any portions of the road system controlled directly or 
indirectly by the private operator which is adequate or can economically 
be made adequate to accommodate the requirements of both the operator 
and of the United States and its licensees.

[35 FR 9637, June 13, 1970, as amended at 41 FR 21642, May 27, 1976]