Monday, March 16, 2015

Tips from Cornell to the CCA Party on how to sell their budget proposals

Voters may need better reasons from the CCA Party than just “trust us!”
By Will Collette
Based on Cornell's report, this is the perfect solution

When the Charlestown Town Budget, along with its traditional property tax rate hike, goes to the voters for their approval this June, there will also be two other ballot questions for voters to decide.

One will ask voters for their approval to lock up the land bought by Charlestown for $2.1 million on the Charlestown Moraine to prevent that land from becoming the site for two commercial-sized wind turbines. That land, is one of the remnants of the proposed nuclear power plant project that was killed by citizen activism in the 1970s.

Rather than allow even the most remote chance that the town might have a better use for the land at some distant point in the future, the current Town Council, totally controlled by the Charlestown Citizens Alliance, wants that land permanently locked up as open space by giving the state DEM a conservation easement for free.

The second ballot question the CCA Party-controlled Council wants voters to approve is OKing $2 million to renew the now depleted bond authorization to buy more open space. Unlike previous bond issues, this one is restricted to open space only and purposely drops any mention of “recreation,” an option that made it a lot easier to pass earlier bond issues.


Since the CCA Party took control of Charlestown in 2008, we have had one battle after another over the use of undeveloped or under-utilized land in town, with the CCA Party generally favoring expanding the amount of open space land in town – currently well over 50% of the total land area of the town – while also seeking to restrict public use of that land.

There has been some dissent to these efforts that have risen from the fiscal conservative argument that locking up more land as non-taxable open space reduces the tax base which loads home and business property owners with higher taxes. But often dissent has taken the form of wanting any open space land acquisition to be available for use by all, and not just hardy hikers.

This is not an uncommon debate around the country, especially in those areas that are rich enough in land and money – like Charlestown – where more mundane issues like hunger, bad housing, unemployment, failing infrastructure demand and get more attention.

I haven't made up my mind about these two bond issues. Contrary to the CCA's belief, I really like and appreciate all our open space. I like it a lot. But I am not sure that we want to rule out some future public use for what was once known as the Whalerock land, such as using it for a school if Charlestown hot-heads get their way and we secede from the Chariho School District.

Nor do I trust the idea of putting $2 million back onto Planning Commissar Ruth Platner's Open Space ATM card. I think she betrayed our trust with her backroom dealings on the YMCA Camp scandal (Y-Gate), the Battle for Ninigret Park and Whalerock. I think she puts the interests of her friends and her own biases about wanting to remove people from the environment ahead of the public interest.

As we get closer to the special election, presumably after we get more information - or knowing the CCA Party, a bunch of murky b.s., I'm sure I will have made up my mind.

I saw the following piece in one of the many on-line news journals I devour and it seemed like one that the CCA Party ought to examine as they gear up for the special election in June.


From: Cornell University via EurekAlert! 

What inspires people to support conservation? As concerns grow about the sustainability of our modern society, this question becomes more important. A new study by researchers at Cornell University provides one simple answer: bird watching and hunting.

This survey of conservation activity among rural landowners in Upstate New York considered a range of possible predictors such as gender, age, education, political ideology, and beliefs about the environment. All other factors being equal, bird watchers are about five times as likely, and hunters about four times as likely, as non-recreationists to engage in wildlife and habitat conservation. 

Both bird watchers and hunters were more likely than non-recreationists to enhance land for wildlife, donate to conservation organizations, and advocate for wildlife-all actions that significantly impact conservation success.

The contributions of individuals who identified as both bird watchers and hunters were even more pronounced. On average, this group was about eight times more likely than non-recreationists to engage in conservation.

"We set out to study two groups--bird watchers and hunters--and didn't anticipate the importance of those who do both, and wildlife managers probably didn't either," said Dr. Caren Cooper, the study's lead author, now at North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. "We don't even have a proper name for these conservation superstars, other than hunter/bird watchers."

"Managers often discuss direct and indirect links between wildlife recreation and conservation," said study co-author Dr. Lincoln Larson, now at Clemson University. "Our findings not only validate this connection, but reveal the unexpected strength of the conservation-recreation relationship."

The study, published in the Journal of Wildlife Management, speaks to wildlife agency managers. Findings could assuage concerns about diminishing support for conservation in the United States and its historic ties (both socially and economically) to hunting, an activity that has been declining for decades.

"Our results provide hope for wildlife agencies, organizations, and citizens concerned about conservation," offers study co-author Dr. Ashley Dayer of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "Bird watchers, a group not traditionally thought of as a constituency by many wildlife management agencies, have real potential to be conservation supporters, if appropriate mechanisms for them to contribute are available."

As agencies and conservation organizations ponder how to better work with bird watchers, hunters, and hunter/bird watchers on conservation, one take-home message is clear: The more time we spend in nature, the more likely we are to protect it.


Continue reading at EurekAlert!