We need to immediately to generate
overwhelming opposition to this approach , so that Congress realizes that
they can't adopt it without harming the people who vote for them.
Why Your Actions Are
Critical LTA has been working hard to discredit the Joint Committee's
recommendations. But we urgently need your help -- because local
land trusts and their local allies have the best opportunity to demonstrate to
Congressmen and Senators that the people they represent would be hurt by
them. Every email/letter/phone call to your own Senators and
Congressional Representatives will help in that. We have posted on
our website www.lta.org/publicpolicy/ppc.htm draft messages and our recommendations for ways you can use your
board, your volunteers, and your donors in this effort. I want to
thank those people who have already written, and who are taking the initiative
to get others to write.
Here's how you can help:
1. Write
Letters We need you to
generate local input to all Members of Congress, particularly the key members,
about the local consequences of the JCT proposals. Start by asking your board
members, landowners, donors and members to send a letter opposing the proposal
and promoting private land conservation. We have posted the tools you need
on our web site ( www.lta.org) .
2. Arrange Visits with Key
Leaders We need to have
in-person lobbying of key Congressional leaders by local
conservation leaders, local government officials, the DC representatives of the
national conservation organizations that are members of LTA, and by LTA's
staff, faculty and associates. LTA and your State Service Center (if
you have one) will help you arrange these meetings. Contact Christen
Linke Young at cyoung@lta.org for
assistance. Key leader meetings are paramount. (see list on
www.lta.org/publicpolicy/ppc_contact.htm)
Some Members of Congress are more influential than
others. A list of the Senators and Congresspersons we most need to
influence is posted here (www.lta.org/publicpolicy/ppc_contact.htm). If you or your supporters have a close
relationship with any of them, please email Christen Young at
cyoung@lta.org with that information. We
will help land trusts organize visits with these key members over the next
month in DC or in their home districts either, on weekends or
during the February 21-25 Congressional recess.
3. Identify
Partners We are recruiting
people and organizations who aren't land trusts, but share an interest in our
work, to make statements opposing what the Joint Committee has proposed
. That includes outreach to Governors, sportsmen's and wildlife
conservation organizations, agricultural organizations, state governments, and
federal conservation agencies. We are doing that in Washington,
DC -- and its something that you can do, with the people and organizations you
work with locally . Email these names or contacts to us at
protectprivateconservation@lta.org .
4. Educate Members of
Congress Continually Building on this work to ensure that
every Senator and Congressperson knows and values the work of land trusts
. This is not an overnight task. It will require us
providing training, materials and motivation to every land trust in the country
to develop strong relationships with their elected
representatives.
5. Media We are also working to build a long-term plan to increase
public recognition of the value of the work of land trusts
. It is important to place positive conservation stories in your
local newspaper and try to get your editorial board to write an endorsement of
conservation easement and land trusts. Here is the link (www.lta.org/publicpolicy/ppc_newsletter.htm) to a newsletter template that you can use for your newsletter on
current challenges to private conservation. Currently we are working
with the media people at The Nature Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited, The Trust for
Public Land, The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Institute, and The
Conservation Fund on a short term media plan. By next week, we will
have additional guidance and tools for you to use...stay
tuned.
What LTA Has Done To
Date
We have spoken with the staff of the Senate Finance Committee about the
report. We have built strong relationships there over the past year,
and that is paying off now. We have met with key people in the White
House and the Department of Interior to alert them and ask their help in
opposing this.
1. Building Consensus and
Organization I had a
conference call with the CEOs of The Nature Conservancy, The Conservation Fund,
American Farmland Trust, The Trust for Public Land, Ducks Unlimited, The
National Trust for Historic Preservation, The Theodore Roosevelt Conservation
Partnership, and a handful of our larger regional land trusts. They
all agreed on the seriousness of this issue. The top policy people
from those organizations met here at LTA on Tuesday and agreed on first steps
for work here in DC over the next month, including coordinated visits to key
Congressional leaders. We held two (2) conference calls in the last
week with the leaders of 33 state land trust service centers to begin the
outreach effort to all land trusts. In states where there is no
State Service Center, LTA will ask at least one Executive Director of a larger
land trust to volunteer to be a state coordinator of all land trusts response
to congress from that state.
2.
Staffing We have a team of
experienced tax lobbyists already in place, and they are already touching base
with the House and Senate leadership to assess where we are, and who will be
willing to help us. We need to raise the funds to hire additional
lobbyist who have access to Congressional leaders. LTA has shifted
its staff to work on this, and virtually every LTA staff person will have a
role in this effort.
3.
Fundraising This crisis is
going to require us to raise significant levels of new funding. We
hope that all land trusts and board members to consider a gift to LTA's
"Conservation Defense Fund" for this effort. Forward all funds to
Land Trust Alliance 1331 H Street NW, Ste 400, Washington, DC
20005. We are also reaching out to foundations and donors who can
help as it is evident that this will be a very expensive year in regards to our
policy work. If you have donors whom you believe will want to help
fund this work, please email me at: protectprivateconservation@lta.org.
We must all stay focused on immediate steps
over the next few weeks. But success will also require that we
continue to work through this year, and over the next several
years. We now face a great likelihood that Congress, even if they
reject the Joint Committee's approach, will propose other ways to prevent
abuses of deductions for conservation donations. That means we will
be working closely with the Congress over the next year on the issue of what
they should do.
It also means changing
our work and your work to ensure that the public -- and their elected
Representatives -- understand the importance of the conservation work you are
doing. If we don't, the problems we face now could come back at any
time in the future.
We continue to try to increase communication and
coordination with you and all of our partners on this
issue. This is important now -- and will be even more important in
the future, as Congress begins to discuss other alternatives to the current
rules about conservation donations. We pledge to listen carefully to
you, and to safeguard the interests of all legitimate land
trusts. If you have comments, ideas or questions, send them to
protectprivateconservation@lta.org
I can't talk to each one of you about this issue, but I do want
to hear from you. If you have ideas or resources you could
bring to bear on this problem, please let us know. If you think we
are headed in the wrong direction, let us know. It has never been
more important. We can work with you to put these ideas and
information to work -- but only if you tell us about them.
Thank you for
working together to ensure private land conservation is viable and thriving in
the future.
Rand Wentworth President Land Trust
Alliance ProtectPrivateConservation@lta.org :
************************************************ Some emails
are sent out solely for informational purposes and are not always issues I
support or reflect my
beliefs. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ NOTE: In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material
herein is distributed without profit or payment to those who
have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For more
information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
| |