Last updated: Sat Feb 04 07:45:18 +0000 2012

Sleeping With the Enemy?

 Written by Joseph Kiesecker Published on February 25th, 2011  Originally published in CoolGreenScience. The Nature Conservancy works routinely with extractive industries – like oil and gas and min...
Catalyst for Conservation: New Book Chronicles Brandywine Conservancy’s Successful Work to Conserve King Ranch Property

Thousands of acres permanently protected from development help keep the Brandywine watershed healthy Catalyst for Conservation traces the history of the Brandywine Conservancy’s work to save ...
Environmental Advisory Committees and Historic Preservation

Environmental Advisory Committees and Historic Preservation At first glance a historic district appears to be separate from the purpose of an Environmental Advisory Committee at the township or cou...
Ailanthus altissima, a Problem Land Managers Can Eliminate

Ailanthus altissima, a Problem Land Managers Can Eliminate   Ailanthus altissima is one of many non-native invasive plants that plague land managers in Pennsylvania.  In our area, it is the mo...
Environmental Activism – Why and How: An Ecologists Speaks

Environmental Activism – Why and How An Ecologist Speaks Activism is intimately attached to the profession of an ecologist.  To become a part of a discipline that is as important to human survival ...

Quote of the Day

“The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment. Pennsylvania's public natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people.”
— Pennsylvania Constitution (Article I, Section 27)
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Legislative Budget and Finance Committee Reports on Growing Greener 2

As required by Pennsylvania House Resolution 2009-17, the nonpartisan Legislative Budget and Finance Committee reviewed Growing Greener 2. Download the committee's report by clicking on the following link: Review of the Commonwealth’s Growing Greener II Initiative.

Growing Greener 2 has had positive economic and environmental impacts across the state, saving hundreds of farms, bringing streams back to life, improving state parks, creating thousands of jobs, plugging hundreds of abandoned and leaking gas wells, remediating abandoned strip mines, preserving tens of thousands of acres of green space important to communities, and more. 

More than 60 percent of Pennsylvania voters approved the $625 Growing Greener bond in a statewide initiative in May 2005. However, the bond money from Growing Greener 2 is essentially gone. Unless Growing Greener is renewed, the number of land conservation, recreation and water protection projects initiated in Pennsylvania's local communities in the coming decade will be a small fraction of those completed in the previous decade.


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Betty Reefer on 06-14-2010 10:54 AM I encourage ALL farmland preservation counties to join in on the effort to Renew Growing Greener. The agricultural conservation easements that we have placed on our farmland (over 4,000 farms) are forever, we cannot allow this program to go backwards, we must move forward, preserving our farms. And there are not too many easements that come for free. So Please, join this effort, because as a united force, we can make a difference. For every farm that has been preserved, there are three more waiting.
Betty Reefer on 06-14-2010 10:54 AM

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Betty Reefer on 06-14-2010 10:54 AM

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The people of the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association envision a prosperous Pennsylvania, where communities know that their treasured green places will endure. We envision a Commonwealth where the lands that guarantee our water quality are safeguarded; where every child can safely play at a nearby park; where our productive farmland and forests are protected, securing our food and timber supply; and where wild places are preserved for wildlife and people.

Thank you to the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources for supporting the Association’s conservation efforts.

© 2012 Pennsylvania Land Trust Association