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Balancing Forest Conservation with Economic Development with Laurie Wayburn, Ep.76

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Manage episode 416936636 series 2802963
Content provided by Crystal DiMiceli. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Crystal DiMiceli or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Send Crystal a text letting her know what you thought about the show!

Conserving land doesn't have to be all or nothing. We don't have to choose between setting aside whole tracks of forests to protect them or cutting them all down for economic development. Laurie Wayburn, the co-founder and president of Pacific Forest Trust, has found a middle ground. Since 1993, Pacific Forest Trust has transformed over 350,000 acres of privately owned forests in California and Oregon into carbon-sequestering and climate-fighting assets. Through the use of conservation easements, she works with landowners to find the best ways for them to keep the ecosystem intact, yet, still gain economic benefit from what they own. With nearly 60% of U.S. forests under private ownership, this "middle ground" could be key in protecting our natural treasures.

Highlights

  • How hass her international experience with conservation influenced her work today?
  • How can conservation and economic development go hand in hand?
  • How can we avoid the terrible wildlife seasons we have been seeing?

What YOU Can Do

  • Plant native trees, bushes, and plants within your community as part of your parks and natural areas or as borders around play fields, etc. This can be very powerful in supporting the ecosystem.
  • Urge whether it's your city council, your county, the commissioners and supervisors, your state legislature, your federal, representatives, etc to support forest conservation as a critical climate change policy, and that means putting some real money behind it and really guiding how that forest conservation is done for the future.
  • Provide financial support to Pacific Forest Trust so they can do the work that you want to have done.

Resources

Want a free guide to help you become a force for nature? Get it HERE!
If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate, and review it! This helps to boost its visibility.

Hit me up on Instagram and Facebook and let me know what actions you have been taking. Adopting just one habit can be a game-changer because imagine if a billion people also adopted that!

What difference for the world are you going to make today?

  continue reading

79 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 416936636 series 2802963
Content provided by Crystal DiMiceli. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Crystal DiMiceli or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Send Crystal a text letting her know what you thought about the show!

Conserving land doesn't have to be all or nothing. We don't have to choose between setting aside whole tracks of forests to protect them or cutting them all down for economic development. Laurie Wayburn, the co-founder and president of Pacific Forest Trust, has found a middle ground. Since 1993, Pacific Forest Trust has transformed over 350,000 acres of privately owned forests in California and Oregon into carbon-sequestering and climate-fighting assets. Through the use of conservation easements, she works with landowners to find the best ways for them to keep the ecosystem intact, yet, still gain economic benefit from what they own. With nearly 60% of U.S. forests under private ownership, this "middle ground" could be key in protecting our natural treasures.

Highlights

  • How hass her international experience with conservation influenced her work today?
  • How can conservation and economic development go hand in hand?
  • How can we avoid the terrible wildlife seasons we have been seeing?

What YOU Can Do

  • Plant native trees, bushes, and plants within your community as part of your parks and natural areas or as borders around play fields, etc. This can be very powerful in supporting the ecosystem.
  • Urge whether it's your city council, your county, the commissioners and supervisors, your state legislature, your federal, representatives, etc to support forest conservation as a critical climate change policy, and that means putting some real money behind it and really guiding how that forest conservation is done for the future.
  • Provide financial support to Pacific Forest Trust so they can do the work that you want to have done.

Resources

Want a free guide to help you become a force for nature? Get it HERE!
If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate, and review it! This helps to boost its visibility.

Hit me up on Instagram and Facebook and let me know what actions you have been taking. Adopting just one habit can be a game-changer because imagine if a billion people also adopted that!

What difference for the world are you going to make today?

  continue reading

79 episodes

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