A sponsor from the House presented a measure to exempt standing timber harvests from the state's severance-style timber tax when the land is held in a conservation classification such as CUVA or FLPA. The sponsor said the change would help family timber farms facing mill closures and depressed markets and proposed a 10-year sunset to limit long-term fiscal exposure.
“As I submit to you this is a very fair even handed approach,” the sponsor said, and noted the exemption would apply only while land remained in conservation use; if the land were removed from conservation the bill would require a clawback of taxes owed. Committee members agreed the measure targeted a narrow set of landowners, but several expressed concern about setting precedent for future tax relief requests.
Senator Albers and others asked for comparative data and cautioned that once relief is provided it may be hard to refuse similar requests after other disasters. The majority leader and other senators questioned how the timber measure would intersect with federal relief already provided after storms; the chair asked staff to compile information on FEMA/GEMA and other relief flows to ensure the state does not duplicate federal aid.
The committee heard that the timber tax is unique in Georgia because severance is assessed at harvest, not year to year like other commodities, and that relief would be targeted to working conserved parcels. The session closed with continued discussion and a request for more fiscal data; no committee vote occurred on the timber measure that day.