Farm Bureau moves to new building
SALEM — The Oregon Farm Bureau Board of Directors three years ago told the staff to find a new location for its offices. The board wanted a building that was closer to the Capitol, had more meeting space and a less cluttered financial balance sheet.
The Farm Bureau’s new headquarters at 1320 Capitol St. NE meets all three criteria and has another obvious benefit.
“The building is nicer,” Oregon Farm Bureau Executive Vice President Dave Dillon said.
“The thought was to have not just an office but an event space,” said Katie Fast, vice president of public policy for the Farm Bureau.
The building, and specifically its large meeting room that comes complete with a big-screen television and multiple electronic hook-ups for laptop computers and other devices, already has served as the site for an election-night party for two county Farm Bureaus.
“The idea was to have a really nice space for people to meet,” Fast said.
The building also has three other meeting rooms, enabling the Bureau to accommodate multiple meetings at the same time and for different sized groups.
As for its proximity to the Capitol, the building definitely meets that criteria. The Farm Bureau offices had been in a building across Salem on South Commercial Street for 19 years.
“I can walk to the Oregon Department of Agriculture and Oregon Water Resources Department buildings from here,” Fast said, “and it’s five minutes to the Capitol.”
For the record, the Farm Bureau’s new offices are less than a mile from the Capitol. Its old offices were more than three miles from the Capitol. But that’s only half the story. Add in traffic issues on Commercial Street at peak business hours and the time it takes to go to and from the Capitol for Farm Bureau staff has lessened considerably.
Also, Dillon pointed out, getting public officials and legislators to meet with Farm Bureau staff at the offices is now more palatable.
“If you’ve got somebody from an agency or a legislator and they are coming out to meet with your board or another group of members and a half-an-hour of their day is spent driving to the office and back, that is not the best situation for a group that relies on those kinds of meetings,” Dillon said.
Also, Dillon said, Farm Bureau members from around the state will find it much easier to get to the new offices.
Dillon said the new building also unclutters the Farm Bureau’s financial balance sheet. Instead of renting to several tenants, including many not associated with the natural resource industries, the new building will have less than a handful and all will be associated with natural resource industries.
The Oregon Cattlemen’s Association and the Oregon Dairy Farmers Association moved in with the Farm Bureau in early October. At most, the Farm Bureau expects to rent to two or three more tenants, Dillon said.
Also, the Farm Bureau is divesting its holdings in residential housing that it purchased along with its old building.
“We were spending too much time and had too much of the balance sheet in real-estate management, which is not really core to our mission,” Dillon said.
The new building is called the Natural Resource Center at Capitol and Gaines.