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The Pinelands Preservation Alliance advocates for Pinelands preservation before government agencies like the New Jersey Pinelands Commission and seeks to educate the public about the Pinelands and the threats facing its natural resources.
Here is a summary of our current efforts. PPA's bi-monthly newsletter, Inside the Pinelands, and our Pinelands Watch action alerts discuss major issues in detail. If you would like more information on any of these topics, please contact us.
PPA's advocacy work is focused on four basic themes:
Here is more detail on our current advocacy work in these areas:
Monitoring public agencies: PPA monitors the Pinelands Commission, the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and other agencies whose actions affect the Pinelands. We review major development applications submitted to the Pinelands Commission and other proposals that affect the Pinelands environment.
We press the government to apply environmental regulations consistently in favor of preserving the region's land and water. In most cases, we are able to work cooperatively to ensure the Pinelands Commission and other agencies reject or modify development proposals that violate environmental protections. In some cases, we enter lawsuits on the side of the government when developers sue, while in some cases we bring legal challenges against government agencies when they fail to implement the law consistently.
PPA works to involve citizens in this monitoring effort by notifying residents when they could get involved in issues affecting their area and through our broader Pinelands Watch network..
Appointments to the Pinelands Commission: The Pinelands Commission is the government agency primarily responsible for implementing the Pinelands Protection Act and the state's Pinelands protection programs. The Commission is composed of 15 volunteer Commissioners, plus a professional staff who serve the Commission. One of PPA's most important jobs is to advocate for strong, conservation-minded appointments to the Pinelands Commission. Of the 15 Commissioners, seven are nominated by the Governor and confirmed by the state Senate; seven are appointed from the seven counties that have land in the Pinelands; and one is a nominee of the United States Secretary of Interior. PPA tries to ensure the Governor and the Counties, as well as the Secretary of Interior, appoint the right people to fill these critical positions.
Regional Growth Area issues: For the last few years, the Pinelands Commission has struggled to respond to problems arising in certain Regional Growth Areas, especially in
During the past year, PPA pressed the Pinelands Commission, DEP and local governments to convene a broadly-based, long range water supply planning effort for the
Water quality: Over the past several years, the Pinelands Commission science program has documented the loss of Pine Barrens aquatic habitats as contamination with fertilizers, septic effluent and liming compounds associated with suburban development and upland farming have altered native Pine Barrens water chemistry in the most developed Pinelands watersheds. Water quality changes bring non-Pine Barrens plant and animal species, frequently displacing native species. PPA views this transformation as a fundamental threat to the long-term survival of the
PPA is pressing the Pinelands Commission to create a task force and adopt a strategy to address this issue. The challenge is admittedly great, since the Pinelands Plan calls for a good deal of development, large areas in and around the Pinelands are already developed, it is not clear how development and farming can be designed to avoid these impacts, and, at this point, it is not clear how this process of habitat alteration is spreading over time. While individual Commissioners are beginning to express their concern with this problem, the Commission has not taken action on it.
Water supply: PPA is working hard to prevent ecologically harmful allocations of water, particularly from the Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system, and to ensure a truly sustainable level of exploitation of all aquifers. PPA is advocating both for implementation of existing regulatory standards that have been neglected in the past and for changes to the water allocation rules.
PPA tracks, analyzes and submits comments on specific water allocation requests that affect the Pinelands.
PPA, in partnership with the New Jersey Conservation Foundation and American Littoral Society, submitted a proposal calling on the Governor to convene a working group of public and private agencies to plan for sustainable development, including particularly a sustainable use of ground water, in the
Landscape and habitat protection: Improving protection of rare, threatened and endangered species habitat has been a major focus of PPA’s work over the grant period. This work includes several related efforts:
Advocating for improved policies to better protect threatened and endangered species habitats in potential development areas: PPA is proposing area-wide reexamination of Pinelands CMP designations in known species “hot spots” and more reliable environmental survey procedures (including specific, species-based survey protocols). This idea is motivated by experience showing that trying to protect such habitat on a parcel-by-parcel basis as development applications arise is difficult and rife with conflict.
Advocacy for protection of known threatened and endangered species habitats in connection with specific development applications or proposals: This work includes continued work on the Sanctuary development in
Permanent land protection: PPA, the New Jersey Conservation Foundation and The Nature Conservancy have undertaken a major effort to get more federal money appropriated under the acquisition element of the National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978. Right now, $9 million of federal funds have been authorized but not appropriated by Congress. We have made several trips to
PPA supports the New Jersey Conservation Foundation’s purchase of the 9,400 acre DeMarco farm, which will become the Franklin Parker Preserve a very fitting tribute to the career of our friend and PPA Trustee Frank Parker.
Advocating for stronger Off-Road Vehicle (ORV) regulation: PPA sees illegal Off-Road Vehicle use as a major threat to
PPA’s principal new communication and outreach initiative is the completion and distribution of the nature film, The
PPA publishes its newsletter, Inside the Pinelands, six times a year and its action alerts, Pinelands Watch, also six times a year. PPA’s efforts foster regular press coverage of Pinelands issues, natural history and education programs.
PPA holds its annual Summer Institute for Teachers each year in July. The week-long program provides a broad examination of the Pinelands designed for high school and middle school teachers, using both field experiences and classroom presentations and workshops. For more about the Summer Institute, click here.
PPA is expanding its formal education programs with development of a new program, titled Barrens To Beaches, for high school teachers and their students. Barrens To Beaches is being designed as an integrated curriculum and field experience that studies the