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Trust for Public Land
Environmental organization in San Francisco, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Trust for Public Land is a U.S. nonprofit organization with a mission to "create parks and protect land for people, ensuring healthy, livable communities for generations to come".[1] Since its founding in 1972, the Trust for Public Land has completed 5,000 park-creation and land conservation projects across the United States, protected over 3 million acres,[2] and helped pass more than 500 ballot measures—creating $70 billion in voter-approved public funding for parks and open spaces.[3] The Trust for Public Land also researches and publishes authoritative data about parks, open space, conservation finance, and urban climate change adaptation.[4][5][6] Headquartered in San Francisco, the organization is among the largest U.S. conservation nonprofits,[7] with approximately 30 field offices across the U.S., including a federal affairs function in Washington, D.C.[8][9][10]
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Consistent with its "Land for People" mission, the Trust for Public Land is widely known for urban conservation work, including New York City playgrounds and community gardens,[11][12] Chicago's 606 linear park,[13] Los Angeles green alleys,[14][15] Climate-Smart Cities programs in 20 American cities,[16] and "The 10-Minute Walk" initiative, which aims to put a high-quality park or open space within a 10-minute walk of every resident of every U.S. urban census tract.[17][18]
The Trust for Public Land simultaneously focuses on public access-oriented land protection, such as additions to Yosemite National Park,[19] the Appalachian Trail,[20] Cape Cod National Seashore,[21] and other national, state, and municipal parks across America.[22][23][24] The organization also prioritizes projects that celebrate and advance social equity.[25]
Although the Trust for Public Land is an accredited land trust,[26] the organization differs from conventional land trusts in that it does not generally hold or steward conservation property interests. Instead, the Trust for Public Land works with community members, public agencies, and other conservation non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to identify park-creation and land protection projects, and then helps plan, fund, protect, and/or create those spaces, with ownership of any resulting property interests typically transferring to local, state, or federal public agencies, or to other conservation NGOs.[27]
In addition to creating parks and protecting open spaces, the Trust for Public Land is a leading advocate for public conservation funding at the local, state, and federal levels.[28][29][30] Through campaigns, ballot measures, and legislative advocacy, the organization works—often in concert with its affiliated 501(c)(4) nonprofit, the Trust for Public Land Action Fund—to ensure adequate funding for many of the federal and state public funding programs relied on by public park and conservation agencies, and by conservation NGOs.[4][5]
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Strategies, programs and initiatives
- Parks for People, a strategy for providing close-to-home access to nature through parks, playgrounds, trails, community gardens, and other outdoor public spaces in U.S. cities, towns, and suburbs .[31]
- 10-Minute Walk campaign—a collaboration with the National Recreation and Park Association and Urban Land Institute—which seeks to ensure that everyone in urban America lives within a 10-minute walk of a high-quality park or open space.[32] Since this initiative's 2017 launch, 200 U.S. mayors have taken the 10-Minute Walk Pledge for their cities.[33]
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History
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The Trust for Public Land was founded in San Francisco in 1972 by Huey Johnson, the former western regional director of The Nature Conservancy, and other San Francisco Bay Area and national lawyers and conservationists. Johnson's goal was to create an organization that would use emerging real estate, legal, and financial techniques to conserve land for human use and public benefit. An additional founding goal was to extend the conservation and environmental movements to cities, where an increasingly large segment of the population lived.[34] Early Trust for Public Land programs of the 1970s and '80s included:
- The Urban Land Program, which led to the creation of parks and gardens in Oakland, California, San Francisco, New York City, Newark, New Jersey, and other cities.[35]
- The Public Land Program, which included transactions that helped create the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, Cuyahoga Valley National Park, and the Sawtooth National Recreation Area in Idaho, among other parks and preserves.[35]
- The Land Trust Program, which helped found or train about one-third of the nation's then-existing local land trusts. In the 1980s, the Trust for Public Land joined other groups to found the Land Trust Alliance, in order to train and support local land trusts.[36]
Noteworthy projects
- The 606/Bloomingdale Trail, Chicago[37]
- Appalachian Trail additions in multiple states[38][39]
- Atlanta Beltline[40]
- Civic Center Playgrounds, San Francisco[41][42]
- Green Alleys, Los Angeles[43][44]
- Hollywood Sign/Cahuenga Peak, Los Angeles[45]
- Kashia Coastal Reserve, Sonoma County, California[46]
- Montana Legacy Project, the largest private conservation transaction in U.S. history[47]
- Newark Riverfront Park[48]
- The Preserve, Old Saybrook, Connecticut[49]
- Queensway, New York City[50]
- Runyon Canyon Park expansion, Los Angeles[51]
- San Gabriel Mountains, Los Angeles County[52]
- Sterling Forest State Park, Orange County, New York[53]
- Yosemite National Park expansion, California
- Virgin Islands National Park expansion[54]
- Weir Farm National Historic Site, Wilton and Ridgefield, Connecticut[55]
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References
External links
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