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KUSP provides
a brief Land Use Report on KUSP Radio. Tune in every weekday at 6:33 or 8:49 am.
KUSP is at 88.9 FM in General Coverage, 105.9 FM in Big Sur Valley, 91.3 FM in
Palo Colorado Canyon, and 91.7 FM in San Ardo. Archives of past transcripts are
available here.
Week
of October 13, 2003 to October 17, 2003
- Monday,
October 13, 2003 Marks Ranch
- Tuesday,
October 14, 2003 Big Sur Land Trust
- Wednesday,
October 15, 2003 Land Trust Rally in Sacramento
- Thursday,
October 16, 2003 Trust For Public Land
-
Friday, October 17, 2003 More on Land Trusts
The following Land Use Reports have been presented on KUSP Radio by Gary Patton, Executive Director of LandWatch Monterey County. The opinions expressed by Mr. Patton are not necessarily those of KUSP Radio, nor of any of its sponsors.
Monday,
October 13, 2003 Marks Ranch
The Marks Ranch is a spectacular 797-acre property located immediately
adjacent to Toro Park, off Highway 68, in Monterey County. The Marks
family members were incredible conservationists, and helped preserve
a number of unique and special parts of the Central California coast.
Herman, Agnes and Andrew Marks honored their mother, Nisene, by
creating the 10,000-acre Forest of Nisene Marks State Park in Aptos.
The family made key donations at Point Lobos, and helped create
Toro Park, now one of the most heavily used recreational facilities
in all of Monterey County.
The
family homestead, the Marks Ranch, has recently been steeped in
controversy. Ironically, in view of the familys commitment
to conservation, and through a rather convoluted set of circumstances,
a long term option on the property was given to a Monterey County
developer, who wanted to turn the Ranch into a major residential
subdivision.
Citizen
protests were immediate, once the plan became known, and its
a pleasure to report that the option has now been terminated, and
that the owner of the property is seeking a conservation buyer.
The Big Sur Land Trust and the Trust For Public Land are working
to find a way to preserve and protect the Marks Ranch property.
This week, Ill talk a little bit about how land trusts work,
and what a key role they play in achieving sound land use and planning
policies.
For
KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More
Information:
Big
Sur Land Trust Website
http://www.bigsurlandtrust.org/
Trust
For Public Land, California Website
http://www.tpl.org/tier2_rl.cfm?folder_id
=266&submit.x=14&submit.y=10
St.
Johns College Website
http://www.sjca.edu/
LandWatch
Communications on Marks Ranch
http://www.mclw.org/pages/issuesactions/marksranch.html
Sierra
Club Report on Marks Ranch
http://ventana.sierraclub.org/conservation/
marks_ranch/article0107.shtml
Tuesday,
October 14, 2003 Big Sur Land Trust
The Big Sur Land Trust is a familiar name, not only around the Monterey
Bay Area, but even nationally. Of course, that has a lot to do with
the spectacular scenery that the Big Sur Land Trust is charged with
protecting. The Big Sur Coast is a genuine national treasure.
I
often urge listeners to go to the KUSP website. If you click on
the Land Use Report link at www.kusp.org, and then retrieve the
transcript for todays report, youll find a link that
can show you in vivid color just how beautiful the Big Sur Coast
really is. And heres probably the best part, the photographs
on the website show lands that the Big Sur Land Trust has already
succeeded in protecting!
While
the focus of the work done by the Big Sur Land Trust will always
remain on the Big Sur Coast, local residents can be happy that the
land trust has acted, on some occasions, to help protect other critically
important natural areas. The Big Sur Land Trust is currently working
to protect and preserve the Marks Ranch, which is located along
Highway 68, near Salinas, and is not located on the Big Sur Coast.
The website also shows some striking photos of lands on the Monterey
Bay Seashore that are a lot closer to Marina than to Big Sur.
Bill
Leahy, the new Executive Director of the Big Sur Land Trust, joins
an effort that began in 1977, and that has been incredibly effective
in helping to preserve the incomparable natural resources of the
Central Coast.
For
KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More
Information:
Big
Sur Land Trust
http://www.bigsurlandtrust.org/index1.html
Wednesday,
October 15, 2003 Land Trust Rally in Sacramento
Groups like LandWatch Monterey County, for which I work, emphasize
the importance of the non-environmental aspects to land
use planning, as a kind of corrective to the easy assumption that
land use issues are simply a brand of environmental
issue. In fact, how we use the land profoundly affects our economy,
and issues of social equity, as well as the natural environment.
Groups like LandWatch also stress the regulatory and
policy making processes that play such an important
role in land use planning. Land use policy is really the product
of a rules setting process, which establishes specific requirements
for how land can be used.
To
achieve good results where land use is concerned, however, its
very helpful for a community to be able to go beyond the regulatory
process, and we do need to focus very specifically on protecting
our most important natural resources. This week, in Sacramento,
land trust organizations from around the nation are meeting to discuss
how to provide permanent protection to the natural environment through
acquisition and easement techniques. These are the techniques used
by groups such as the Big Sur Land Trust, or the Land Trust of Santa
Cruz County, or Cambria Greenspace, in San Luis Obispo County, to
provide permanent protection to the most important parts of our
natural environment.
If
youd like to get more information on this Land Trust
Rally, as its called, check the KUSP website.
For
KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More
Information:
Land
Trust Alliance Rally
http://www.lta.org/training/rally.htm
Thursday,
October 16, 2003 Trust For Public Land
One of the groups working to protect the Marks Ranch in Monterey
County is the Trust For Public Land, or TPL. TPL has
also played a key role in Santa Cruz County, working to provide
permanent protection for the Santa Cruz County North Coast.
TPL
is something like a land trust, which typically holds
lands, over time, in trust for the public good. But TPL can also
be seen as a sophisticated real estate business, operated in the
interest of acquiring and then permanently protecting land for the
public. TPL will often acquire important natural lands, and hold
them for awhile, and will usually prepare a management plan for
the lands during the time theyre the owner. Then, TPL will
sell or transfer the land to others, often to public agencies, with
restrictions that will guarantee the long term protection of natural
resources.
This
is definitely a non-regulatory approach. Such non-regulatory
efforts cant replace, but absolutely complement, the kind
of regulatory processes that establish the basic land use rules
which govern our use of the land. My recommendation is this: support
and contribute to organizations like TPL and the Big Sur Land Trust
that use acquisition, easement and non-regulatory techniques to
protect natural resources, but dont forget City Hall, the
Board of Supervisors, and the local General Plan. We cant
be successful in achieving good land use, unless were active
in both areas!
For
KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More
Information:
Trust
For Public Land Website
http://www.tpl.org/
TPL
California Website
http://www.tpl.org/tier2_rl.cfm?folder_id=266&
submit.x=13&submit.y=8
Draft
Coast Dairies Management Plan
http://www.tpl.org/tier3_cd.cfm?content_item_id
=12007&folder_id=266
Friday,
October 17, 2003 More on Land Trusts
A number of land trusts operate actively within the Central Coast
area. These include the Land Trust of Santa Cruz County, the Peninsula
Open Space Trust, the Elkhorn Slough Foundation, the Big Sur Land
Trust, the Monterey County Agricultural and Historical Land Conservancy,
and Cambria Greenspace, in San Luis Obispo County. This is definitely
not a complete list.
If
youd like to get a complete list, or at least something like
a complete list, you should visit the website of the Land Trust
Alliance, the national organization that is sponsoring the Land
Trust Rally taking place in Sacramento this week. The Land
Trust Alliance website has a Find A Land Trust feature
that allows you to find detailed information on a land trust in
your geographic area.
The
work done by land trusts is critically important. I hope, however,
that youll not only support land trusts, but will also get
involved in what might be called the political process
(in the very best sense of the word). That political process
leads to land use policies that will govern not only
the way our communities, and individuals, use natural resources,
but also how land use affects our local economy and social equity.
The unfortunate bottom line is this: we dont have
enough money to purchase every piece of land that plays a vital
role in our future, so we need to set good rules for how that land
is used, if we want to enhance and maintain the quality of our community
life.
For
KUSP, this is Gary Patton.
More
Information:
Land
Trust Alliance Find a Land Trust
http://www.lta.org/findlandtrust/index.html
Land
Trust Alliance Rally
http://www.lta.org/training/rally.htm
Archives
of past transcripts are available here
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