Posts Tagged ‘conservation funding’

Conservation finance links, 6/1

June 1, 2011

Residents promote Oregon's successful Proposition 76 last November

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation. As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

California
In support of the Laguna Beach open space initiative

Funding Sacramento parks

More on Sacramento

Orange County reveals Measure M open space

Connecticut
Acquisition ruled invalid, referendum needed

Minnesota
Legislature adjourns without Legacy bill

Putting Legacy funds in perspective

Missouri
Anti-tax sentiment keeps Greene County measure off the ballot

New Jersey
2009 bond funds are authorized

More

More

Green Acres program turns 50

Use of open space tax questioned

Maintaining Cumberland County’s preservation program

Pennsylvania
Protecting Growing Greener

Upper Saucon open space group sends recommendations to supervisors

Texas
Funding available for Collin County open space projects

Wisconsin
Legislature trims stewardship and conservation budget

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Conservation finance links, 5/15

May 16, 2011

LandVote(TM) Logo

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation. As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

Alabama
Senate approves Forever Wild reauthorization bill

California
Sacramento County to consider park district funded by sales tax

Colorado
El Paso County voters hope for sales tax for parks o and m

Delaware
State enjoys unexpected new revenue, looks to spend on open space

More

Florida
Hernando County officials continue to raid open space funds

Georgia
Dunwoody Councilcontinues to discuss November parks bond

Maryland
Land prices down, but so are open space funds

Massachusetts
Pelham becomes first CPA passage in 2011

New Jersey
Little Falls Township considers open space tax

Group looks to protect Moorsetown open space tax

Wyckoff Township places open space tax extension on November ballot

Cumberland County planners get final open space plan

Pennsylvania
Lehigh County candidates talk open space funding

Conservation finance links, 3/31

March 31, 2011

Residents promote Oregon's successful Proposition 76 last November

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation.  As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

California
Truckee resumes park bond discussions

Marin County still considering open space tax

Illinois
Kane County prepares for next weeks open space bond

Massachusetts
Somerset, yet another community looking at the costs and benefits of adopting CPA

Mississippi
House approves 1-cent tax for parks in Southaven

Pennsylvania
State severance tax discussed for local infrastructure and open space

Meeting is held in SE Pennsylvania to understand the economic benefits of open space

Rhode Island
$4M in state open space bondfunding approved

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Conservation finance links, 1/31

January 31, 2011

Photo: Tom Arthur/Wikipedia Commons

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation. As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

Arizona
Town, assisted by TPL, likely to purchase park after new tax ordinance

California
Progress delayed on Truckee park bond

Illinois
Assessment of McHenry County’s open space efforts

Recession has helped Illinois county open space efforts

Montana
A look at Montana’s open space funding efforts

North Carolina
Mecklenburg County looking to divert property tax to pay for debt and open space

Pennsylvania
Land preservation efforts sweep through northern Chester County

Tennessee
Concern over tighter regulation to state open space tax breaks

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Conservation finance links, 12/15

December 15, 2010

LandVote(TM) Logo

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation. As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

California
Truckee seeking input on $20M bond
East Bay parks and conservation groups look to take advantage of land prices
Editorial endorses Sacramento parks assessment

Colorado
Greeley quality of life sales tax dwindling

Connecticut
Outgoing Gov. dispenses millions for open space and farms

Massachusetts
Provincetown discusses land bank repeal

Montana
Montana Legacy Project completes final phase
Wyss provides $35M to conservation efforts

New Jersey
Township becomes part of growing list to expand use of open space tax to cover o and m

New York
New York releases new report on state parks funding
Report found here
Scarsdale tables potential open space funding referendum

North Carolina
Mecklenburg County parks add millions in value according to TPL study

Oregon
Tigard wants ideas on bond spending

Pennsylvania
Monroe County Commissioners considering ending Parks and Rec Commission

Washington
Interesting article on Tax Increment Financing, Sprawl, and Urbanism
TIF Primer
Audit shows State Parks Commission wasted millions

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GOCO plays Santa

December 10, 2010

Chaffee Couty, Colorado ranchland - Photo: Darcy Kiefel

Santa arrived early this year for dozens of communities that received grants from Great Outdoors Colorado (GOCO), that state’s enviable conservation funding program.

As we have mentioned before, dedicated state funding programs are a powerful force in creating conservation. GOCO, which began in 1992, sets aside a portion of state lottery funds for support of conservation and park projects. Counties, communities, agencies, and nonprofits apply for the funds for specific projects.

According to the GOCO website, to date the program has awarded grants to more than 3,100 projects in all of the state’s more than 64 counties.

Among the cities celebrating grants this week are Thornton and Alamosa, which will use the money to help build skateparks. Dillon is going to build picnic shelters. Pitkin County received 2.5 million for the Wapiti Ridge Mountain Park. And the Colorado Riverfront Trail System will grow in Mesa County.

The funds will help TPL and its partners conserve a key open space in the mountain community of Crested Butte, protect a working ranch in Chaffee County, add open space to the Denver suburb of Westminster, protect a creek corridor in the town of Saguache, and conduct a GIS park and conservation analysis in metropolitan Denver.

In all, more than $24 million was distributed in this round of funding. The complete awards list can be found here.

In choosing its lottery as a conservation funding mechanism, Colorado has hit on a solution that seems to actually do better in hard times. According to lottery director Abel Tapia as relayed by the The Pueblo Chieftain, “the Colorado Lottery realized a record profit of $112 million during the past year and anticipates it will hit its target this year to continue funding GOCO at the expected level.”

Congratulations to all the Colorado communities that have received this much-deserved support in crafting a conservation future. More information about TPL work in Colorado can be found on TPL’s website.

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Conservation finance links, November 15

November 15, 2010

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation.  This first posting after the election, includes stories on some of the measures voters faced on November 2.  Of the 35 measures on last-week’s ballots, 28 were approved, generating more than $2 billion in new conservation funding.  As always, TPL’s online LandVote database provides the best source of data on conservation finance measures since 1988.

Colorado
Boulder County continues to hold slim lead
Lawmakers approve conservation easement review

Iowa
Despite statewide trust fund success, GOP leaders do not plan on increasing sales tax

Massachusetts
Middleboro CPA to be delayed until next summer
More on Middleboro CPA
State is buying land at a rate of 54 acres a day
Sunderland one of 4 communities to approve CPA on election day

Michigan
Meridian Township renews open space tax

Minnesota
Public access to open space a key question in Washington County

Missouri
Columbia voters approve parks sales tax

New Jersey
Southern NJ gaining farms while losing farmland
Old Bridge Township voters end open space tax after 10 years

South Carolina
Despite overwhelming support Dorchester County open space bond may be delayed

Texas
Dallas preparing new parks bond package

Utah
Snyderville Basin voters overwhelmingly approve open space bond
West Valley voters reject open space bond

Washington
Sustaining Seattle parks during tight budgets

Wisconsin
Iowa success leads the way for Wisconsin conservation funding

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A victory for the orange (and green)

November 3, 2010

San Francisco Chronicle

It has been a notable day at TPL central, where we have been studying the results of yesterday’s election to the tune of cheers and marching bands nine floors below. Orange confetti—a team color of the San Francisco Giants—swirled in the concrete canyons outside the windows.  There were probably a few San Franciscans who did not attend the Giants’ World Series victory celebration, but from above it looked as though all 800,000 of us might be in the streets.

And the elections? Coincidently, the record for conservation at the ballot box yesterday was 80 percent, exactly the same as the Giant’s four-games-to-one World Series victory—an impressive showing for the team in green. In all, 28 of the 35 conservation funding measures on ballots nationwide were approved, generating just over $2 billion dollars in conservation funding. 

Otherwise, voters seemed to be in an angry and frugal mood. But even as they focused on their disappointment over the state of the economy, they voted to spend money for conservation. To me this suggests that conservation is a truly bipartisan issue. But what’s more important, conservation is a local, quality-of-life issue. Even voters inclined to say “no” reflexively may find themselves saying “yes” to a park next door or saving the last farm in town. 

Its hard to deny that we live in a polarized and politically divided country. Dare we hope that conservation is one issue that holds us together? Congratulations to all the states and communities celebrating home town conservation victories today.

For details of all of yesterday’s conservation funding measures—as well as all such measures going back to 1988—go to www.landvote.org.  There is a press release on yesterday’s measures here.  And for information of TPL’s work helping states and communities pass conservation funding measures, go to www.tpl.org/services.

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Conservation finance links, November 1

November 1, 2010

Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation.

According to TPL’s LandVote database, since 1988 states and communities nationwide have approved 2263 conservation finance measures that have generated nearly $54.2 billion in funding for local parks, greenways, and natural areas.

This year, there are statewide measures on the ballot in California, Iowa, Maine, Rhode Island, and Oregon.  And communities in more than a dozen states will vote on conservation funding measures.

Now, here are today’s conservation finance links. We’ll be back on the other side of the election.

California
Redlands look at ways to preserve open space

Colorado
Opinion piece on Boulder County open space measure

Florida
Amendment 4 would require voter approval for land use decisions

Iowa
Iowa set to vote on conservation trust fund
More on Iowa measure

Massachusetts
After defeat in the Spring, Sunderland set to vote again on CPA
Middleboro voters set to decide on CPA
Marborough voters to decide on CPA as well
Vineyard towns track falling CPA match

Missouri
What the Columbia sales tax would buy

New Jersey
Public to get say on Cumberland County open space plan
More on Cumberland County plan
Park Ridge voters to see open space tax tomorrow
Old Bridge voters prepare for open space tax

Oregon
Tigard bond editorial

Rhode Island
More on Rhode Island statewide open space bond
Opinion piece on Narragansett open space bond
More on Narragansett open space bond

Utah
West Valley open space bond touted as economic development tool

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Conservation Finance Links, 9/15

September 15, 2010


Twice each month TPL’s Conservation Finance service publishes links to state and local conservation finance stories from around the nation. In addition to helping states and communities organize and pass conservation finance measures, the service operates TPL’s LandVoteTM database of all such measures since 1988.

Arizona
Prop 301 seeks to balance state budget by diverting voter approved open space funds

Colorado
Colorado Springs again seeks to divert open space money towards maintenance

Massachusetts
Marlborough voters will see CPA on Fall ballot

Michigan
Kent County still deciding on funding its farmland preservation program

New Jersey
Hudson County to suspend open space tax this year
Another Township seeks to reduce open space tax
Cumberland County to survey residents on open space
Burlington County begins new Municipal Park Development Program
Lebanon Township residents fear population burst if they take state conservation money for new park

Pennsylvania
Gas tax still faces significant hurdles; State legislators also up against Oct. 1 deadline
Onorato says natural gas tax needed to protect environment
Rendell pays visit, pitches for drilling tax
Environmentalists seek funding from Marcellus Shale taxes
After months of debate Upper Providence finally decides how to use open space funds

Virginia
Stafford County eyes options to save open space

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