State Lands

For Wild Spaces, Not Wilderness

Many people often ask why I am opposed to creating and expanding wilderness areas. Wilderness areas are those areas that all motor vehicles are banned along with bicycles, and all productive uses of land for man, such as mining, agriculture, and timber production.

Farm Tower Trail

Wilderness is supposed to be a pure place, basically untrammeled by the hand of man. Not that many true wilderness lands exist in the Eastern United States — they’re is few old growth forests left or other areas that look essentially like they were before mankind came and changed the landed for his purposes.

Indeed, such few limited areas deserve wilderness levels of protection. However, there are many other lands that have been legislatively designated as wilderness, but don’t really have a wilderness character to them — or a need for such an extreme level of protection. They’re is some land that also should get wilderness protection retroactively, but that should be reserved for the mostΒ sensitiveΒ of parcels.

Lower Blue Ridge

In contrast is the case for public lands, wild spaces, and rural lands that are lightly regulated by the hand of man. Even a rural farm field that is actively being farmed for crops or pasture is relatively wild place compared to an urban city block or suburban subdivision.

Indeed, what makes the “wild spaces” such a delightful places is the general lack of people using it, and their light use. They are not aggressively patrolled by law enforcement, and give man a chance to be alone and explore without a guided tour. They also provide a place for nature to be in it’s wild nature.

Along Pheasant Truck Trail

Our country needs more public lands. We need habitat for the wild things. We need to protect our working forest and farms from development. Special ecosystems need special protections — including wilderness protection in some cases. But the important thing is to keep our wild spaces wild, and without too much government regulation.

analysis suggests different districts wouldn’t have helped Dems much – City & State New York

Don’t blame the maps: analysis suggests different districts wouldn’t have helped Dems much – City & State New York

There’s more than enough blame to go around, after New York Democrats’ uniquely weak performance in the Congressional midterm elections. Among those taking heat: state Sen. Michael Gianaris, who oversaw the process that got Congressional maps favorable to Democrats thrown out, and replaced with less friendly?ones drawn by a special master.?

But a preliminary analysis of the results shows that the special master’s district maps probably did not play as much of a role in Democrats’ losses as some have assumed. The party may have held just one more seat if state legislators and the governor had settled for a less partisan map. And results were so poor for Democrats this year that even the Legislature’s aggressive lines wouldn’t have been a cure-all. Dems would have likely won just four out of the nine competitive seats – still losing all of Long Island.?

“The data makes clear that the problem on Election Day was a performance issue, not a district issue,” Gianaris, the deputy majority leader, told City & State after reviewing the analysis. “Under any alternative scenario of district lines, you’d have substantially the same results.”