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NEWS
RELEASE
Embargoed for use on or after May 10, 2001
Video
footage of Virginia landscapes and wildlife available
upon request.
Contacts:
Susan Clark, Trust for Public Land, 212-677-7171, 347-675-5824
(cell), Susan.Clark@tpl.org
Daniel White, The Nature Conservancy, 804-295-6106,
dwhite@tnc.org
Chuck Epes, Chesapeake Bay Foundation, 804-780-1392,
cepes@cbf.org
See also the list of contacts
available for interviews
VIRGINIANS
RATE LAND CONSERVATION AS A TOP PRIORITY FOR STATE FUNDING
80%
of Voters Favor Dedicating $40 Million to Protect Open
Space, Forests, Farms and Clean Water, According to
a New Statewide Poll
Richmond,
Va. - Virginia voters say providing funds for land conservation
should be as high a state legislative priority as funding
transportation needs and public schools, and they are
willing to pay for conservation efforts, according to
a new statewide poll released today. Moreover, preserving
open space and protecting the quality of Virginia's
air and water rank among the top issues voters expect
the next governor and General Assembly to address.
Two
well-known research firms-one Republican and one Democrat-conducted
the poll for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, the Nature
Conservancy Action Fund and the Trust for Public Land.
The poll reveals that voter support for land conservation
has risen dramatically compared to the results of a
similar survey completed in 1992. Key findings of the
new poll include:
- 97%
of Virginia voters rank "protecting air and
water quality" as important, placing this issue-along
with public education, also with 97% support-atop
the list of legislative priorities
- 89%,
or nearly nine out of 10 voters, rate "preserving
and protecting open space" as important
- 82%
of those polled believe that Virginia's natural
areas soon will be lost forever unless we act now
to save them
- 96%
of voters believe that Virginians owe it to future
generations "to protect the land, water and
wildlife for their use and enjoyment"
"It
is especially encouraging that the vast majority of
Virginians surveyed feel that protecting our air, water
and land resources ranks among the Commonwealth's highest
priorities," said Joseph H. Maroon, Virginia
Executive Director of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.
"Clearly, the public understands that protecting
important lands will help to improve local streams,
rivers and the Chesapeake Bay."
To ensure the protection of Virginia's forests, farms,
open space and natural areas, say 65 percent of the
state's voters, the legislature and governor should
establish permanent state funding for land conservation.
Virginia
currently lags far behind other states in funding conservation
programs. North Carolina, for example, devotes $60 million
annually to conservation efforts. A strong majority
of Virginians said they would support dedicated state
funding for conservation, and eight in ten said they
would back a plan to dedicate $40 million per year from
the state's current land-recording tax as a permanent
source of funding for land conservation. This funding
would be directed to the Virginia Land Conservation
Foundation to match other public and private dollars
and would be used across the Commonwealth to acquire
conservation easements and open-space lands from willing
sellers.
"The
people of Virginia have grown increasingly concerned
about maintaining quality of life, countering threats
to our natural and cultural heritage, and sustaining
the economic benefits of agriculture, forestry and tourism,"
said Michael L. Lipford, Virginia Executive Director
of The Nature Conservancy. "The survey shows clear
and strong support for addressing land conservation-purchasing
conservation easements and land from willing sellers-through
existing recordation-tax revenues."
Voters
also expressed solid support for Virginia honoring its
commitment to join with Maryland and Pennsylvania to
protect 20 percent of the land within the Chesapeake
Bay watershed by the year 2010. Maryland and Pennsylvania
already contribute more than $100 million annually to
protect land within the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and
78 percent of Virginia voters favor our state providing
at least $40 million per year for this effort.
"Additional
funding is key to carrying out the tri-state agreement
to protect 20 percent of the Chesapeake Bay watershed
and protecting Virginia's natural, historical and recreational
resources, said Debi Osborne, Chesapeake Field Office
Director for the Trust for Public Land. "This poll
shows the strong support of Virginians to create a substantial
dedicated funding source of at least $40 million per
year and also indicates that the majority of voters
are willing to pay for conservation."
The
Tarrance Group, a Republican research firm based in
Alexandria, Virginia, and The Kitchens Group, a Democratic
research firm located in Orlando, Florida, conducted
the survey April 23-26, 2001. The poll consisted of
telephone interviews with 750 likely voters from across
the Commonwealth of Virginia.
In
a similar survey conducted in 1992, voter concern about
crime and public education was five times higher than
concern for the conservation of natural resources. In
the current survey, the level of concern for protecting
Virginia's natural resources nearly equals concern about
crime and public education. Similarly, in 1992, 57 percent
of voters said the state should not spend money to buy
land when priorities such as public education needed
funding. In the present survey, 67 percent state that
conservation funding should not be sacrificed to support
other needs.
Chesapeake Bay Foundation - With more than 92,000
members, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation (www.cbf.org)
is the largest conservation organization working exclusively
to Save the Bay. With headquarters in Annapolis, Md.,
and state offices in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania,
CBF works throughout the Chesapeake's 64,000-square-mile
watershed to protect and restore the Bay with programs
in environmental education, resource protection and
restoration.
The
Nature Conservancy -- The mission of The Nature
Conservancy (http://nature.org/)
is to preserve
the plants, animals and natural communities that represent
the diversity of life on Earth by protecting the lands
and waters they need to survive. Since 1951, the Conservancy
and its one million members have been responsible for
the protection of more than 12 million acres in the
United States alone, including 225,000 in Virginia,
and it owns 1,400 preserves across the country-the largest
private system of nature sanctuaries in the world. The
Nature Conservancy Action Fund, a separate 501(c)4 organization,
helps preserve and protect plants, animals and natural
communities through the mobilization of members of the
conservation community in the legislative and public
policy arena.
The
Trust for Public Land - A national non-profit land
conservation organization, the Trust for Public Land
(www.tpl.org)
specializes in conservation real estate, applying its
expertise in negotiation, conservation finance and law
to protect land for people. Founded in 1972, TPL has
protected more than one million acres of land nationwide,
including more than 10,000 acres in Virginia. TPL recently
published "Keeping our Commitment: Land Conservation
in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed."
List
of Interview Contacts
- Michael
L. Lipford, Virginia Executive Director
The Nature Conservancy
Wednesday, May 9: Available for telephone or in-person
interviews in Charlottesville. Call: 804-295-6106
Thursday, May 10: Available for telephone or in-person
interviews in Richmond. Call: 804-339-0604
- Joseph
H. Maroon, Virginia Executive Director
Chesapeake Bay Foundation
Wed., May 9 & Thur., May 10: Available for telephone
or in-person interviews in Richmond.
Call: 804-780-1392
- Debi
Osborne, Chesapeake Field Office Director
The Trust for Public Land
Wed., May 9: Available for telephone or in-person
interviews in the Washington, DC area. Call: 202-543-7552
Thur., May 10: Available by phone until 11:00 a.m.
Call: 202-262-8993 (cell)
- Andy
McLeod, Director of the Conservation Finance Program
The Trust for Public Land (Boston)
Wed., May 9 and Thur., May 10: Available by phone:
617-367-6200
- Mary
Kathryn van Eerden, Green Sea Program Director
The Nature Conservancy
Wed., May 9 & Thur., May 10: Available for telephone
or in-person interviews in Chesapeake.
Call: 757-549-4690
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