New York: Long Island's Last Stand

 

Long Island's Last Stand

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From the Central Pine Barrens to the waters of the Great South Bay, with your help we can keep Long Island protected for nature and for people.

Go Deeper

2008 Annual Report: More than 1640 acres of open space, working farms and natural areas on Long Island were protected in 2008.  Download our 2008 report (.pdf 2MB).

Last Stand Overview:  Download an overview and find out more about our 10-year action plan (.pdf)

Public Support:
 In a recent poll, eight in ten voters said that local governments on Long Island should maintain or increase spending levels on open space preservation for protection of drinking water and to maintain quality of life.

Long Island
: On Long Island, The Nature Conservancy has helped to preserve more than 150,000 acres. Visit us on the web at nature.org/longisland.

Archive

2007 Annual Report: In 2007, more than 2,250 acres were protected across Long Island.  Download the report here.

2006 Annual Report: In 2006, we launched Long Island's Last Stand and protected 1,938 acres of farmland and open space.  Download the report here.

Contact Us

For more information about Long Island's Last Stand, please contact:
Kevin McDonald
(631) 329-7689
kmcdonald@tnc.org

Long Island's Last Stand

Long Island's Last Stand is a coalition of over 100 concerned environmental, civic and business associations that supports a ten-year action plan to save the most significant remaining open spaces and farmland and to restore and protect our harbors, bays and public parklands.

Without significant increases in the rates of land and water preservation, in ten years currently unprotected open spaces, and watersheds will be completely developed or too fragmented to significantly contribute to environmental goals. The continued loss of farmland may end our sustainable agricultural economy.

A Vision for the 21st Century

Long Island's Last Stand is a comprehensive land and water preservation, management and restoration program that:

  • Protects the most important remaining 25,000 acres of open space;
  • Protects 10,000 agricultural acres to preserve farming viability;
  • Manages and restores tens of thousands of acres of parks, open space, harbors and bays, and farms for our sustainable future.

We support and encourage management and restoration projects led by the Counties and Towns to reverse the accumulated impacts of environmental damage to our lands and waters. Now is the time to manage and restore these lands and waters to sustain the environmental and public health values that led us to preserve them in the first place.

New York state, counties and towns should develop coordinated, complementary funding and policy strategies. We must:

  • Increase Long Island’s share of State funding by $85 million a year, for land and water preservation, management and restoration across Long Island;
  • Extend the Suffolk County Drinking Water Protection Program with a reconfigured allocation scheme that favors land preservation programs, increasing funding to $40 million annually;
  • Increase County funding by $10 million a year to restore and manage the County’s lands and waters
  • Create a new and permanent Nassau County Land and Waters Trust fund to provide enhanced parks, and sustainable land and marine natural areas at a level similar to Suffolk County

A long-term and diversified financial commitment at the State, County and Town levels, at acceptable cost to the taxpayer, sets the stage now for public health, environmental and economic sustainability through the 21st Century and beyond. With strategic land purchases and targeted management and restoration activities we can assure that our lands, our waters and our way of life will remain for the benefit of our children and all future generations.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © TNC (LILS logo); Photo © Kara Jackson/TNC (hikers).