Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

From a past disaster, a future park?

December 10, 2009

Photo: Tore Ofteness

I love this story on Crosscut.com, a web news source covering the Pacific Northwest.  The writer, Bob Simmons, seems to have  internalized a crucial lessons in shaping narrative nonfiction: if a source tells you about a near-death experience, put it at the front of the piece.

Barbara Snow was alone in her home by the lake on that January morning. She awoke at 5 o’clock to a terrifying scraping and hammering at the sides of her house. She opened the door to her carport to see what was going on. Tons of muddy, ice-cold water rushed into the house. In moments the water was chest high and she was struggling in the darkness to get out.

“I thought I was dying,” Snow recalled last month. “I started to feel warm and at peace with everything. I began to see happy scenes from when I was a little girl.

“I thought to myself, I’ve always been late for everything, am I going to be on time for my death? For some reason this struck me as very funny, and I came to my senses.”

The year was 1983, and Snow was almost swept away after “bad logging on private and state-owned land, poorly built logging roads and a record rainstorm” on mountainous land sent ”80 acres of mud, logs and timber slash” into Whatcom Lake near Bellingham, Washington.

The havoc energized the community to protect Lake Whatcom and the surrounding hillsides. The citizen-based groups Conservation Northwest and Whatcom Land Trust organized public pressure to have the land set aside in a timber and wildlife preserve.

Twenty-six years after the Smith Creek disaster, it’s happening. Under a land transfer agreement between [Whatcom County] and the state Department of Natural Resources, the land becomes what may be the state’s largest county park: 8,400 acres of timbered hills, within easy bicycle distance of Bellingham.

There is a  lot of great detail in the piece about the land’s history and the current deal that could make it a park.  Of course, voices are raised in opposition: we can’t afford to maintain a park, we should still be able to log the land. But Simmons gives the last word to Whatcom County Administrator Dewey Desler, who takes the long view and argues for the project. 

Great stuff, and I won’t spoil the writer’s fine ending by quoting it here.

Read the story at Crosscut.com

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America’s Best City Parks

November 19, 2009

 

Post Office Square Park, Boston - Photo: Halvorson Design Partnership

Forbes is carrying a pretty feature on some of the nation’s premier city parks.  A linked slide show displays images of thirteen parks in twelve cities (Boston gets two), with short descriptive information and links to longer discussions of  each resource on other websites.

Frequent travelers will know many of these parks, because they are hard to miss.  Any tour of Boston, for example, would include the centrally located Boston Common, which is featured in the piece.  But other parks are less well-known and worth the look if you are in the vicinity.  For example, Boston’s Post Office Square Park, which is tucked among towering buildings in the financial district and  fills with workers at lunchtime on any sunny day.

It is of no surprise to us that Peter Harnik, of TPL’s Center for City Park Excellence, is quoted as a source in the piece.  Founded in 2001, the center works to advance understanding of how city park systems benefit cities and their residents.  Peter and his crew maintain the nation’s most comprehensive database of city park facts and co-publish the City Parks Blog, a must-visit for anyone interested city parks.

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Please Vote!

November 3, 2009
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Barnegat Bay, NJ - Photo: Seth Sherman

There are conservation funding measures on the ballot in twenty-five states and communities today–including a $400 million measure that would keep New Jersey’s highly regarded Green Acres state funding program in business.   It is interesting to note that seven of remaining 24 measures are also from New Jersey boroughs and townships.  In part, this reflects New Jersey’s status as our most developed state.  But the high percentage of local conservation funding measures also reflects the success of the Green Acres program itself, since its matching funds are available only to communities that have created their own funding stream. 

We have our fingers crossed that all the New Jersey measures will pass, continuing that state’s stirling record of support for conservation. Many of the New Jersey conservation projects TPL has helped to complete over the years have been funded in part by a combination of Green Acres and local conservation funds. TPL president Will Rogers recently blogged in support of on this measure over at the Huffington Post.

In addition to the New Jersey measure, we are also watching in particular a $20 million municipal measure in Tigard, Oregon.  (More information from The Oregonian.)  Land protected and parks created in the Portland suburb would also advance the creation of  The Intertwine, a commendable regional open space system. 

Twenty-five is a relatively small number of conservation measures by recent standards, but off-year elections are always lighter for all kinds of measures.  But no matter the number, TPL’s conservation finance folks will be tracking the results in the online LandVote database of conservation measure results going back to 1988.

Thanks for voting today.

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Wareham, MA, celebrates latest CPA state funding accomplishment

November 2, 2009
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Photo: Heidi Blythe

Congratulations to the residents of Wareham, Massachusetts, and the millions of people who love Buzzards Bay.  (Of which I am one–my grandfather owned a cottage there in the 1950s.)

SouthCoastToday.com is highlighting the protection of 300 acres along that bay, which is off the state’s southeast coast.   While TPL did not complete the transaction work on this project, the piece caught my attention in part because it used funds from the Community Preservation Act, which TPL helped to pass and which has become a model state matching program for community conservation.  Wareham used two rounds of CPA appropriations to complete the project.

Enacted in September of 2000, the CPA permits local community’s to pass by referendum a property tax surcharge of up to 3 percent  dedicated to open space protection, historic preservation, and affordable housing. Communities that adopt the CPA are eligible for state matching funds for CPA projects.  To date,  142 communities–40 percent of all Massachusetts communities– have adopted the funding tool, and the state has distributed nearly $335 million in matching funds. 

More information can be found on the website of the Community Preservation Coalition,  an alliance of open space, affordable housing, and historic preservation organizations (including TPL) that works with municipalities to help them understand, adopt, and implement the CPA.

Information on how TPL can help Massachusetts communities implement the CPA can be found here.

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The “green lining” nationwide

October 20, 2009

A spate of recent stories again highlight the “green lining” in the recession. This is the term conservationists are using to highlight their ability to compete for conservation-worthy properties that were priced out of reach as recently as last year.

A front page story in the San Francisco Chronicle describes how almost 600 acres of oak woodlands along California’s Yuba River–once slated for new homes–is now queued for prtection for the bargain price of $4m million after the development went bust.

In Tampa, the 160-acre former Georgetown Development — bought for $125 million in 2005 — has been sold for $34 million with the understanding that TPL will be able to pick up about hald the property for a new public waterfront park. According to the Tampa Tribune, at one time there were to be 1,200 homes here.

And the Hartford Current has a story on what it calls “The Green Recession in Connecticut,” discussing five ongoing projects.

On the other hand, the Sarasota Florida Herald-Tribune raises the alarm that Sarasota County’s much admired conservation program–which has protected more than 27,000 acres — is sputtering, because its coffers are filled by a a tax tied to home values.

This, alas, is the not-so-green side of the recession for conservationists. While land bargains are blooming, money can be harder to find.

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LandMark: Tabernacle Dome

September 28, 2009

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Congratulations to the American people for acquiring this parcel near the base of Tabernacle Dome along the Kolob Terrace Road in Zion National Park.  The National Park Service estimates that there are more than 4.2 million acres of private inholdings within the park system, a number now reduced by 10.  The Park Service has wanted to acquire this inholding for a long time, assuming that the park’s 2.5 million annual visitors would rather look at rolling terraces than houses.  Funds came from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund.  Photo by TPL staffer Paul Maynard. 

Send us YOUR LandMark – instructions here.

Dump oil – conserve land

September 25, 2009

We wouldn’t encourage anyone to dump oil in the ocean.  But if you do it, and get caught, we are glad some of the penalty money is going to conservation.  According to the Portland Press Herald, the Overseas Shipholding Group pleaded guilty to dumping off of three states, including Maine, where a portion of a $37 million fine is going to studying alewife, restoring fish runs, and removing derelict lobster traps.  Another $200,000 will go toward adding 110-acre Timber Point to the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge.


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