Login Sunday Mar 14, 2010
See new posts automatically when you subscribe to an RSS feed of your favorite columnist(s).
I write this to the people who for generations have lived in the
Adirondack Park and to the people who work hard and try to make a
living in the little communities that string along the beautiful lakes
and rivers. We all truly love this place and want to stay here, but the
future looks grim.
The Adirondack Forest Preserve was originally created by the New York
State Legislature in 1885. When it was decided to set aside land for
protection in the Adirondacks, it was never envisioned that this place
would be a park. It was to be an experiment to show that it is possible
to have sustainable communities while still preserving a great
wilderness area. A recent survey by the LA Group shows the
demographics of the "Park" and how the population is aging, families
are diminishing and businesses are few. It becomes more and more
evident that the experiment has failed.
It takes a Constitutional Amendment to change Article XIV of the New
York State Constitution. Article XIV protects state land in the
Adirondacks while there is no provision within the Constitution that
protects the people and their way of life.
I have been working for several years with NYCO Minerals, a mining
operation in Willsboro. NYCO employs 75-100 people. These are
family-sustaining jobs that support our communities, stores, churches,
businesses and keep children in our schools. NYCO is currently trying
to reach an agreement to amend the NYS Constitution so the Company can
continue to mine deposits of the mineral that are adjacent to their
current operations. The mineral rests beneath state land. If you
remove land from the forest preserve it must be replaced, and NYCO is
willing to do that. NYCO, DEC, NYSED, Senator Little and I have been
working with environmental groups to see if they could support such an
amendment. Without this amendment, future operations at NYCO could be
shortened by many years.
NYCO was recently notified by the environmental group "Protect the
Adirondacks!" that when the concept of a land swap between NYCO and NYS
was presented to their board, the response was, and I quote, "The
employment issues and community of Willsboro economic issues were
voiced as positive benefits of the proposal; however, they fail to sway
the majority regarding the high threshold needed to amend Article XIV",
end quote. The other environmental groups in the Adirondacks remain at
the table trying to work through this issue.
People chose to come here because this is a beautiful and special
place. Those of us who live here know that and don't want anything to
change; yet as time goes by, our presence is becoming meaningless. Our
opinions don't matter! When people first began discovering the
Adirondacks, we carried their packs, cut their trees, built their
homes, dug their ditches, labored in their mills, taught their
children, healed their sick and welcomed them like family. Most have
become our friends and our neighbors, but those who came with their own
agenda have stood Judge and Jury on what is acceptable for growth in
our communities, which roads will be closed, what areas of our beloved
mountains will remain accessible to the handicapped and aged, what kind
of vehicles are allowed on trails, and even if we can keep our
traditional hunting camps on state-owned land. Are we not part of the
state? What about the great experiment?
I am very angry, but even more, I am very sad. The great experiment is
a failure and there is no balance. My family, friends and neighbors are
being forced out of existence and few seem to care.
***
Teresa Sayward (R-I, Willsboro) represents the 113th Assembly District.
Leave a Reply