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Blaine
County 2025: Our Vision for the Future
What is your vision for how our community will
look twenty years from now? If you’re like many Blaine County residents,
your answer will include open space, wildlife habitat, working farms and
ranches and outdoor recreation opportunities. Unfortunately, all of
these are threatened by the vision for our county espoused by Marty
Flannes in his recent opinion titled “Blaine County 2025 Ordinances –
Effective and Fair?”
Mr. Flannes suggests that the best way to protect
wetlands and sensitive habitats, especially those near Silver Creek, is
through cluster and planned unit developments. He argues that such
development is preferable to the agricultural practices that now occur
on these lands.
But conservationists know that much of the best
wildlife habitat we have in the West is found in farmlands and
ranchlands. Development of these areas does not improve them, but merely
results in an awkward mix of residential and agricultural uses. This
proposal would damage wetlands, cut off wildlife pathways used by mule
deer and other big game and ruin the aesthetics that have made the
Silver Creek Valley recognized as a world-class fishing destination.
Development as proposed in the op-ed is the root
cause of many conservation problems and is a serious threat to our
wildlife, our fish, our water quality and our open spaces.
Our vision for the valley is one where
agriculture, abundant wildlife and a world-renowned spring creek
flourish together. This vision respects our rural heritage and economy.
It preserves the wildlife, fishing opportunities and open space that
make our valley such a wonderful place to live. It is a vision born of
decades of collaborative conservation with landowners and other
community members.
This shared vision has permanently protected
through voluntary conservation easements more than 9,500 acres in the
Silver Creek watershed donated to both The Nature Conservancy and The
Wood River Land Trust. Through partnerships and voluntary efforts we
have worked with farmers and ranchers to restore wildlife habitat, plant
thousands of willows and fence off sensitive riparian areas. It has
been the landowners who have worked to protect the rural atmosphere, the
wildlife habitat and the working farms and ranches that define the
Silver Creek watershed and the southern end of Blaine County.
Jack Hemingway, who fished Silver Creek as a
child in the 1930’s, remarked in 2000 that the creek was better now than
when he first saw it. There are not many places about which such a claim
could be made. That’s why Silver Creek has been recognized as a model
for community-based conservation. It proves that wise, collaborative
stewardship can provide our community with economic, recreational and
quality of life benefits.
We strongly support the goals of the Blaine County
2025 proposed wetlands conservation ordinance, designed to protect our
productive agricultural lands through a program that encourages
landowners to voluntarily agree not to develop to their currently
permitted A-20 density. Instead, under this new ordinance landowners
would have the option to transfer this density closer to the cities, and
leave the working farms and ranches undeveloped.
The magic of Silver Creek is why the community has
invested so heavily in preserving its beauty and wildlife. It’s why
thousands of visitors come here each year—from across the country and
around the world. It is a vision and a reality of a landscape where
people working together can protect a special place for wildlife, for
farmers and ranchers, for future generations.
Trish Klahr, Silver Creek Watershed Manager, The
Nature Conservancy
Laura
Hubbard, State Director, The Nature Conservancy |