Tag Archives: development

roposed development a big test for Adirondack Park Agency

I can easily imagine many of the towns/cities in which I lived or visited during my 26-year career in the U.S. Air Force as simply caving in should a mammoth nature-destroying development ever come to their backyards. Not so in the Adirondack Park, which is across Lake Champlain from where I am typing this. Americans tend to easily forget, or just overlook, the fact that Nature is not making any new land these days. Once natural land has been built on or paved over, that’s the end, and Wild Nature is once again diminished. Read about the proposal to build a nw housing empire at Tupper Lake in the Adirondacks.

Invasive species, development threaten forests in Va.

Of course, the threats are hardly limited to Virginia, despite what the headline writer at the Virginian-Pilot paper would have us believe. Read the article (actually a brief that was probably good enough to simply fill a hole on an inside page somewhere).

Va. submits its Chesapeake Bay cleanup plan

Nice start, Virginia, but nothing will work throughout the six-state watershed (that includes much of Pennsylvania) without drastic changes in how every property owner lives. The guy across the street from where I sit routinely spills his lawn fertilizer into the gutter. Repeat that sordid pollution tale a hundred thousand times and what’s the result?

Read about Virginia’s plan here.

Tall trees help fight crime, study says

This Portland Oregonian article spells it out nicely. I wonder just what in the hell developers are thinking when they build a McMansion and then cut down all the surrounding native trees in order to make room for a big lawn. Hugh?

Outer Banks to get another big box retailer

The chain is Lowe’s, which, apparently, just doesn’t have enough outlets already (there are four within a 30-minute drive of where I sit), and the board that controls such development in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina’s Outer Banks, has said OK as this newspaper story describes. So, there goes yet another piece of green, natural landscape on a barrier island that likely will someday be under water anyway, thanks to climate change.

Cleaner Lake Champlain is goal of new law

The lake faces a dim future, as it has from before the years I lived near its shore at the former Plattsburgh  Air Force Base. Why? Because of human greed and thoughtlessness, among other things.

Read about a law governing phosphorous in detergents.

The land and our growing disconnect with same

Here’s my newspaper column (in tomorrow’s edition)

Here’s something to think about the next time you’re stuck in traffic on Interstate 81 or another of our wildlife habitat-fragmenting highways to nowhere.

Incredibly, there are those walking among us who think such traffic snares constitute wonderful news as they’re signs of “progress.” Among them are likely developers mapping new townhouse clusters and dreaming up better and bigger subdivisions to be bulldozed into existence from natural lands where songbirds once ruled.

Meanwhile, there are growing numbers of thinking folks – dispirited over the loss of green, open space to the pavers and builders – who wonder where it will all end, and worry about the already-frayed quality of life.

In 1907, President Teddy Roosevelt boldly said, “The conservation of our natural resources and their proper use constitute the fundamental problem which underlies almost every other problem of our national life.”

When he proceeded to create the national park and national wildlife refuge systems, the U. S. seemed set on a new path toward real conservation. Well, as we all know, progress on that path since then has been uneven at best.

Have you heard of the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative? Despite being well tapped into conservation-oriented news outlets, I hadn’t heard much. For one thing, the record-setting heat wave we just finished enduring was more than enough to keep one focused on global warming.

As someone who cares deeply about such things as air and water pollution, environmental justice, habitat destruction and fragmentation, I worry a lot about the status quo.

My reading list included media coverage of listening sessions hosted by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, and other high-ranking federal officials. The sessions are part of the Outdoors Initiative, by which the president aims to create new policy with substantial on-the-ground impacts as profound as Teddy Roosevelt’s were 100 years ago.

On rolling out this ambitious initiative on April 16, Obama said, “Even in times of crisis, we’re called to take the long view to preserve our national heritage – because in doing so we fulfill one of the responsibilities that falls to all of us as Americans, and as inhabitants of this same small planet.”

President Obama took this bold move at a time when it would have been easier politically to sideline grand conservation plans. One listening session participant reported that the officials present seemed quite serious about something coming of it all. The bad news is that the public segments holding sway on the electronic-forum segment of the show – which, the plan goes, will inform policy – are anything but “long view” environment-friendly.

This “Ideas” forum is an Internet site where people can post ideas and others can vote to “Promote” or “Demote” them, yielding a positive or negative score that reflects net feedback.

After a few early encouraging votes, my idea quickly fell into the red, with “Demotes” outnumbering “Promotes.” No comments, just negative votes. I was prepared to take the plunge into the minus side personally until I checked out the “What’s Hot” list along the right side of the Ideas page. That’s when I realized that every “hot” idea running positive had to do with increasing off-road access in public lands, eliminating regulations, limiting wilderness designations, “wise use” – you get the idea. Every idea running heavily in negative territory actually would serve to protect and/or foster appreciation for the environment. If federal officials really do use the voting on this public forum to make policy, the environment is in for a rough ride.

It doesn’t have to be this way. There’s still time to turn the tide. The truly bad ideas are only a few hundred votes ahead. From urban green spaces to peace parks to helping grass-roots groups be more effective, plenty of ideas worthy of Sierra Club members’ support have been posted, and you can make a difference. Please visit the site, post an idea, and vote today.

Get started  at http://www.doi.gov/americasgreatoutdoors

Remember the words of the great conservationist/writer Aldo Leopold:

“Conservation is getting nowhere because it is incompatible with our Abrahamic concept of land. We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.”

An endangered specis success story, in Calif.

And note how the butterfly species became endangered in the first place: human development. Same old story

Read about the success story right here.

Everglades needs sugar deal done right

The author of “Tourist Season” is on target – again – with this Miami Herald op-ed on the Everglades ecocystem, Big Sugar, wetlands and more.

Growth (as in ‘development’) in Newport News, Va.

And this newspaper video captures the glory of a wrecking crew ripping apart an outdated Taco Bell fast-food factory to make room for a NEW Taco Bell fast-food factory. I motored past this spot dozens of times while in Hampton Roads on Air Force Reserve duty. Yes, we will miss the old girl. Too damn bad.