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Positively relentless in saving the NJ Highlands
The Record of Hackensack ^ | 06.13.04

Posted on 06/16/2004 8:03:13 PM PDT by Coleus

Positively relentless in saving Highlands

Sunday, June 13, 2004

 

"They are so unassuming, so courteous, and yet they are so tenacious and passionate about protecting the environment." David Epstein, Highlands Task Force

When it comes to saving North Jersey's environment, a group of women has proven that some crusading techniques are timeless.

As legislators strode into the State House last week for a session that included a vote on the Highlands preservation bill, the halls were lined by environmental lobbyists - familiar faces from the Sierra Club and the activist Highlands Coalition. But among the most persistent at spurring passage of the Highlands legislation, by all accounts, were members of the New Jersey State Federation of Women's Clubs.

As it happens, just the night before, the organization was honored for its role more than a century ago in helping save the Hudson River Palisades from quarry blasters.

"If it were not for the New Jersey Federation of Women's Clubs, we would not be here," Carol Ash, executive director of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, said at a tribute dinner Wednesday at the Ross Dock park house at the base of the Palisades in Fort Lee.

Ash also lauded the group for waging a similar effort to save the core watershed lands of the Highlands from development.

That effort, two of its leaders said, involved mobilizing the group's 305 clubs and 14,000 members in New Jersey to politely but persistently contact state officials by letter, e-mail, telephone, fax, and in face-to-face talks.

"One hundred years ago, [women's club leaders] Cecilia Gaines and Elizabeth Vermilye kind of invented the wheel when it came to demonstrating women's organized strength. We just replicated that," said Ann Quinn, the immediate past state president of the federation.

"It appeared to work all over again," she said after witnessing Thursday's vote for the Highlands bill by a sweeping majority of legislators.

The Highlands bill, which Governor McGreevey will sign shortly, will sharply restrict development on critical lands near reservoirs and feeder streams that provide water to millions of state residents. The mountainous area, which has been under severe development pressures, stretches from northern Bergen County down to Hunterdon County's farmlands.

"We all stood up and cheered," Quinn said of the crowd in the galleries of the Senate and Assembly, as the Highlands bill passed by wide margins. "So many groups worked on this for so long, it was like 'Wow, it really happened!'Ÿ"

David Epstein, a member of McGreevey's Highlands Task Force, called the women's clubs the "bedrock" of the Highlands effort.

"They are so unassuming, so courteous, and yet they are so tenacious and passionate about protecting the environment," said Epstein, executive director of the Morris Land Conservancy.

"They did so much of the legwork to get this done. They were at every single hearing; they were lobbying in the halls," he said. "Their approach is always so friendly and courteous, you can't help but be taken by the positive attitude they bring to this."

Curtis Fisher, a policy adviser to Governor McGreevey, described the group's lobbying approach.

"I was at an event with my boss. The federation grabbed him and said 'the Highlands, the Highlands, the Highlands!' They kept calling me, attending hearings all across New Jersey - the federation was there, raising the flag for protecting the Highlands."

Quinn, who spent Thursday buttonholing legislators after testifying month after month at hearings, credited the federation's legislative chairman, Patty Whitehouse, with organizing the lobbying effort.

"She was the one who coordinated everything. She did a vast amount of work," Quinn said.

Whitehouse, a Peapack-Gladstone resident of the Highlands who recently became a vice president of the state federation, said she copied the 1897-1900 letter-writing campaign used to spur New Jersey and New York officials to save the Palisades.

"And we used some new techniques," Whitehouse confided. "E-mail and telephones!"

E-mail: barry@northjersey.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Politics/Elections; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: environment; highlands; njhighlands; propertyrights
Can Conservative Activists learn anything from this? I know by having a democrat Governor and Legislature made this a bit easier.
1 posted on 06/16/2004 8:03:15 PM PDT by Coleus
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To: Leto; Huck; thenderson; d-back; Freemeorkillme; Calpernia; firebrand; Sub-Driver; ...


2 posted on 06/16/2004 8:06:01 PM PDT by Coleus (Roe v. Wade and Endangered Species Act both passed in 1973, Murder Babies/save trees, birds, algae)
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To: Coleus

If they want to "save" a particular piece of property then let buy it.


That way they can let it go to seed to their heart's content.


3 posted on 06/16/2004 8:39:17 PM PDT by BenLurkin
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To: Coleus

Actually they enviros were outnumbered by people involved in the construction industry (working people ;-) ) at the public hearings. This was set up to be a slam dunk by McGreedy, but it didn't turn out that way. Most of the admendments "weakened" the bill from the leftist point of view.

When thee bills come up people need to get out and show their faces at the public hearings and email their reps.


4 posted on 06/16/2004 9:27:21 PM PDT by Leto
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To: Coleus

It won't be long until the developers attack the small town and villages to increase housing density. All Boroughs with a sewer be aware, very aware!


5 posted on 06/17/2004 5:41:23 AM PDT by primatreat (Go mac and you will never go back!)
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