
Nature
group backs Measure 49
Land
use - The Nature Conservancy, which usually avoids politics, has given
$360,000 to limit Measure 37
August 22, 2007
ERIC
MORTENSON
The
Oregonian
The Nature Conservancy
usually works quietly in the background, buying property to preserve as
wildlife habitat, acquiring development rights or working with
landowners on restoration projects.
But the group's
Oregon
chapter has jumped into the
middle of the property rights debate, emerging as the biggest donor so
far in support of Measure 49, which would limit development rights made
possible when voters approved Measure 37 four years ago.
Through Tuesday, The
Nature Conservancy in
Oregon
had contributed nearly
$360,000 to the Yes on 49 campaign, all but $9,200 of it in cash, state
campaign finance records show. Measure 49 will be on the November
ballot.
State Director Russell
Hoeflich acknowledged that The Nature Conservancy does not typically get
involved in political campaigns, but he called Measure 37 a
"fundamental attack" on
Oregon
's land-use system.
"In this case, after
evaluating the impact of Measure 37 on clean water supplies and on
working farms and forests, we decided to join the broad coalition of
business leaders, farm organizations, conservation groups and others in
supporting Measure 49," Hoeflich said.
The state group's board
of trustees unanimously supported taking a leadership role in the
campaign, he said, and the national and international organizations
approved the action.
The
Oregon
chapter reallocated money
in its budget to contribute to the campaign, Hoeflich said.
Approval of Measure 37
resulted in about 7,500 claims by property owners who maintained that
land-use regulations imposed after they bought the property hindered its
development and reduced its value. The law required local governments to
compensate property owners or waive the regulation in question.
Cities and counties, with
no money to pay millions in compensation claims, routinely approved
Measure 37 claims.
But the scope of
development plans filed with Measure 37 claims alarmed conservation
groups, farm and vineyard owners, and others. Measure 49 would allow
many property owners to build up to three houses -- as many as 10 in
limited cases -- while prohibiting large subdivisions, shopping malls
and industrial development.
The Yes on 49 campaign
has received more than $1 million in contributions and reported spending
$313,000 through Tuesday.
Winery owner Eric
Lemelson of
Carlton
is the campaign's
second-largest contributor. He has given $225,000, plus another $100,000
from a trust in the name of his mother, Dorothy Lemelson.
Lemelson said his home
and vineyards are surrounded by Measure 37 claims. "Personally, I
don't have a problem with small claims or giving a house or two to your
kids -- no worries in my books." But large subdivision claims are a
threat to
Oregon
agriculture, he said.
Other key contributors to
the Yes on 49 campaign include 1000 Friends of Oregon, which has given
$30,000, and farm bureaus in
Polk
,
Washington
and Marion counties, which
have contributed a total of $27,000.
Measure 37 was sponsored
by Oregonians In Action, a property rights group based in Tigard. The
group strongly opposes Measure 49. Through Tuesday, Oregonians in Action
reported $112,251 in contributions and spending of $89,732.
Oregonians in Action and
others, including individual property owners, maintain that large
Measure 37 claims often were filed as legal "placeholders" to
preserve development rights. Many claimants say they don't plan to
develop their property as intensely as they indicated in their claims.
Eric Mortenson;
503-294-7636; ericmortenson@news.oregonian.com
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