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USFS Highlands Regional Study Draft Report

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USFS Highlands Regional Study Draft Report - March 2002

Highlands Coalition

US FOREST SERVICE RELEASES DRAFT OF HIGHLANDS STUDY & CALL TO ACTION: REPORT URGES PROTECTION OF 100,000 ACRES OF PRIORITY LANDS TO PROTECT WATER SUPPLIES 

Highlands Coalition, April 4, 2002 (updated with correction)

The USDA Forest Service has released a draft today of the New York- New Jersey Highlands Regional Study, an update to their previous study of the region in 1992. The study update focuses on the 1.5 million acre NY-NJ Highlands, which is part of the nearly 2 million acre greater Highlands region that stretches from Reading Pennsylvania to the Litchfield Hills of Connecticut. Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-NJ) and Senator Robert Torricelli (D-NJ) were instrumental in securing the necessary funding from Congress to update the study. 

The draft report reinforces their earlier finding that the Highlands region is of national significance, due to the diversity and quality of its natural resources and landscape, all located within two hours travel of over 20 million Americans. "This study confirms what the Highlands Coalition has been saying for the last decade," said Michele Byers of the NJ Conservation Foundation. "The Highlands are a priceless source of clean water and open space for millions of Americans, and these lands are being developed at a startling rate. We must act now to protect the Highlands before we lose our water supply and our quality of life." 

Among the key findings regarding the critical resources of the Highlands include: 

- Highlands' surface water reservoirs are the major water-supply source for numerous communities outside the Highlands, including parts of New York City and 94 New Jersey Municipalities, 

- These reservoirs are especially important because of their ability to store water for use during critical times, such as prolonged drought, 

- 14 million people visit the Highlands each year for recreational opportunities, - 247 threatened and endangered species occur in the Highlands, 

- The Highlands serve as a major migratory flyway for neo-tropical bird species, of which many populations are in decline, especially those that require large undisturbed patches of forest. 

- Nearly 25% of the Highlands is comprised of large contiguous tracts of forests more than 500 acres in size, which are critical to the survival of species such as black bear, bobcat and river otter. 

According to the report, approximately 20% of the Highlands region is public or privately protected open space. Just over half of the region is forested, but the vast majority of that forestland is privately owned and threatened by increasing development pressure. The study found that over 5,000 acres of land were developed a year in the NY-NJ Highlands between 1995 and 2000. The rate of forest and wetland loss quadrupled from a rate of 830 acres a year between 1984 and 1995, to 3,400 acres a year between 1995 and 2000. An additional 1,600 acres of farmland a year was lost between 1995 and 2000.

The report predicts that a 48% projected increase in population under current zoning and land use laws will likely cause further conversion of productive agriculture and forestlands, threatening critical forested watersheds and water supplies. Twenty Highlands' municipalities experienced greater than 20% population growth between 1990 and 2000. If current trends continue, ground water withdrawals are expected to exceed local supply in a number of the Highlands' watersheds, including the Ramapo, Whippanny, Pequest, Upper Delaware, and Lopatcong. The Rockaways and Upper Musconetcong basins could also experience similar shortages. The number of watersheds in the Highlands likely to have exceptional water quality (less than 10% impervious cover) would be reduced more than 75%.

"The Highlands region is the backyard and water source for the metropolitan area," said Ella Filippone of the Passaic River Coalition, "but it is changing fast. If current trends continue, the quantity and quality of the water supply for millions of people will be in serious risk. Especially in light of the recent drought, we must act quickly to protect the critical forested watersheds in the Highlands that safeguard our water, as well as the wildlife and recreational opportunities that we so cherish." 

According to the study, while all of the NY-NJ Highlands serves as critical watershed lands, nearly 50% of the NY-NJ Highlands area was ranked as having medium to high water resource values deserving special attention. The report notes that 77% (294,000 acres) of these high-value water resource lands deserve further protection. 

The study ranks 38% (540,000 acres) of the Highlands as having exceptional conservation value overall. Over half of these high-value lands are unprotected from future land conversion or development and deserve special consideration through either purchase as protected open space, conservation easements or other policy arrangements. Approximately 15% (98,000 acres) of the Highlands was mapped as having a high likelihood of change and high conservation value and deemed a priority for future open space purchase and land use planning. 

Several major areas of high resource value were singled out as "gaps" in conservation protection, including Depot Hill/Pawling/West Mountain in Dutchess County NY, East Hudson Highlands in Dutchess and Putnam Counties NY, Ft. Defiance Hill and Canopus Valley in Putnam and Westchester Counties, west end of the New Croton Resevoir in Westchester County NY, Tuxedo and Arden Farms area in Orange County NY, Ramapo Mountains and Torne Valley in Bergen County NJ & Rockland County NY, Wyanokie and Ramapo Highlands in Passaic and Bergen Counties NJ, Pequannock watershed NJ, Lubber's Run area in Sussex County NJ, Upper Pohatcong/Pequest area in Warren County NJ, and the Scotts Mountain Area in Warren and Hunterdon Counties NJ. 

"The Highlands Coalition has previously identified 180,000 acres of priority lands in need of conservation throughout the NY-NJ Highlands, at an estimated value of $750 million," said Jim Tripp of Environmental Defense. "The Forest Service report has reinforced the need to protect significant amounts of land in the Highlands and identified important areas that should be high priorities for federal, state, local and private land conservation funding." 

The report identifies an array of opportunities and strategies that can be adopted by all levels of government to protect the critical resources of the Highlands, including implementation of the NJ State Plan recommendations following recognition of the Highlands as a "Special Resource Area", and the development of a "Highlands Greenway" as part of the NYS Open Space Plan. The need for a state and federal partnership is also recognized, modeled after the successful preservation of Sterling Forest. 

"Decision-makers at all levels of government must heed the dire warning in this report regarding the risks to the water and other critical resources of the Highlands if the status quo continues," said Tom Gilbert of the Appalachian Mountain Club, Chair of the Highlands Coalition. "Existing programs and authorities are insufficient to prevent the steady loss of open space and erosion of water supplies in the Highlands. State and local governments can't do it alone. The federal government must be a full partner and make a significant investment to help safeguard the future of this nationally significant region." 

The Forest Service has scheduled public listening sessions to hear comments on the draft report on April 22nd, at 6:30 pm, at the Frelinghuysen Arboretum in NJ, and April 23rd, at 6:30 pm, at the Ramapo Town Hall in NY. The report is available on the web at http://www.fs.fed.us/na/highlands/draft_report/. Comments may also be submitted by e-mail to NA_HighlandsStudy@fs.fed.us

* * * The Highlands Coalition includes over 90 national, regional, state and local organizations working together to protect and enhance the sustainability of natural and human communities in the greater Highlands region of PA, NJ, NY and CT. For more information about the Highlands Coalition, see http://www.highlandscoalition.org, or call 609-818-0400. 

Contacts: 

Tom Gilbert, Appalachian Mountain Club, Highlands Coalition Chair, 609-818-1776
Jim Tripp, Environmental Defense, Highlands Coalition Vice-Chair, 212-616-1247
Michele Byers, NJ Conservation Foundation, Coalition NJ State Chair, 908-234-1225 

Highlands Coalition POB 118 Titusville, NJ 08560 609-818-1776, fax: 609-737-7264 http://www.highlandscoalition.org

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