Conservation Funding Wins Big at the Ballot
- Details
- Created on November 06, 2008
On November 4, voters backed 62 of the 87 (71 percent)
conservation finance measures on ballots across America. These
successful measures will generate a single-day record of $7.3 billion
in new funding for parks and open space. Overall in 2008, voters
approved 88 measures totaling $8.4 billion in new public funding for
land conservation, also a single-year record. The approval rate for
2008 was 71 percent, topping the 66 percent approval rate for 2007 and
just below the 74 percent rate for 2006.
The
record-setting amount of funding for 2008 can largely be attributed to
passage of Minnesota's $5.5 billion Clean Water, Land and Legacy
constitutional amendment (a single-measure record). The Minnesota
measure nearly doubles the previous largest conservation ballot
measure, New Jersey's Constitutional Amendment in 1998, which dedicated
$2.94 billion in sales tax to the Garden State Preservation Trust.
A complete list of
results from local and state balloting on conservation and parks is
available online today from LandVote 2008 -- www.landvote.org.
Among the other significant measures yesterday were:
-- East Bay Regional Park District, California: a $500 million bond measure received 71 percent support
-- Hillsborough County, Florida: a $200 million bond measure received 78 percent support
-- Hunterdon County, New Jersey: An extension of the county's 3-cent property tax for 20 years will generate $152 million
-- Community Preservation Act, Massachusetts: 7 of 8 measures approved, bringing the total of communities statewide that have adopted CPA to 140
-- Blaine County, Idaho: a two-year property tax for open space will establish the first county conservation program in the state
-- Johnson County, Iowa: a $20 million bond will establish Iowa's first county conservation program
"Tuesday's results demonstrate sustained
support among voters for new investments in land conservation, even in
a very tough economic climate," said Ernest Cook, director of
conservation finance with The Trust for Public Land. "Voters understand
the need to invest to preserve our land and water resources for future
generations and that's just what these ballot measures will provide
funding to do."
The Trust for Public Land
and its lobbying affiliate, The Conservation Campaign, played key roles
in the success of many of these ballot measures. Together, TPL and TCC
assisted in 37 measures on ballots across the country on November 4,
and 30 passed: an 81 percent passage rate. These measures generated
$6.47 billion in new conservation funds. Remarkably, TPL's Conservation
Finance program had a hand in 89 percent of the conservation funds
approved in 2008.
"Whether Democrat or
Republican, voters seem to be of similar minds on one issue:
conservation," said Will Rogers, president of The Trust for Public
Land. "The results from 2008 continue a strong trend we have seen
across the United States for the past decade: people want to preserve
land in their communities, and they are willing to pay for it."
Since 1996, TPL's
Conservation Finance Program has helped communities pass 418 local and
state ballot measures which have generated over $82 billion in total
funding, including over $32 billion for land acquisition and
restoration. The Trust for Public Land provides technical assistance
directly to individual communities interested in dedicating new funding
for land conservation. A complete list of results from local and state
balloting on conservation and parks is available on-line today from
LandVote -- www.landvote.org.
The Trust for Public Land is a national nonprofit land conservation
organization which conserves land for people to enjoy as parks,
gardens, and other natural places, ensuring livable communities for
generations to come. Since its founding in 1972, TPL has helped protect
more than 2.5 million acres in 46 states. The Trust for Public Land
depends on the support of individuals, foundations, and corporations.
Visit the Trust for Public Land on the Web at www.tpl.org.
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