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Opportunities & Exposures: Environment
Green Elephants
Carolin H. Atchison
10/01/2005

The principle of local control informs bipartisan conservation efforts on the East Coast as well. When the real estate boom of the 1990s began to impact Cape Cod, Democrats and Republicans, real estate agents and environmentalists deemed it critical to find the right fiscal formula to preserve their charmed way of life. Yet, in January 1998, Cape real estate agents and Republican state representative Thomas George opposed a ballot initiative crafted by Democratic state representative Eric Turkington and environmentalists, calling it unfair. When voters agreed and the measure failed, Turkington promptly offered to work with his conservative opponents on a new solution, an offer they accepted.

As a coalition dubbed People United for a Cape Cod Land Bank, Turkington and George offered voters a new proposal that offered a small surcharge on property taxes combined with state funding. Furthermore, each town was given the power to decide how to run its own land bank, appoint its open-space committee and, at town meetings, let residents vote on what lands to preserve. No new bureaucracy, no hidden costs. The second version was a resounding success adopted by all 15 towns on the Cape. Since then, the land bank has raised about $150 million for the purchase and protection of 5,000 acres of land for various purposes. The Cape Cod Land Bank was the model for Massachusetts’ Community Preservation Act, which to date has been adopted by 100 out of 142 towns in the commonwealth.

Do we dare dream that someday the GOP will reclaim its rich conservation heritage at the national level? Or that we will hear Bush declare, as Teddy Roosevelt did in 1910, “Conservation is a great moral issue, for it involves the patriotic duty of insuring the safety and continuance of the nation”? As some Republicans like to say, “Conservation is conservative.” 

Carolin H. Atchison is a writer
and conservationist living in Encinitas, Calif.

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