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<blockquote data-quote="gst" data-source="post: 201724" data-attributes="member: 373"><p>So the end result of a willing seller not being able to close the deal to a willing buyer becasue of a law that blocks that willing buyer from doing with the property what he wants is somehow that much different? </p><p></p><p>Okie dokie pokie. </p><p></p><p>The only law that truly prevents the sale here in ND that I am aware of is the sale of lands to foreign nationals. Outside of that DU and other nonprofits CAN buy lands if they use them as the law allows.........not really any different than zoning laws.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: silver"><span style="font-size: 9px">- - - Updated - - -</span></span></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>and this is the point why local residents as well as others are taking exception to this plan. It is not like there are no wild lands here, the plan is to purchase a few hundred thousand acres to connect MILLIONS of acres of already protected lands. </p><p></p><p>Yes the population has declined here just as it has in my county and township as well as most across this rural country side. According to those like plainsman that decline suddenly means we can not expect the same ideals of community and schools and business as more populated areas they live in becaue they want somewhere to come visit or pursue their recreation choice of hunting. </p><p></p><p>http://gprc.org/research/buffalo-commons/</p><p></p><p>[h=1]Buffalo Commons[/h]<span style="color: #666666">[FONT=&quot]The Buffalo Commons is a cultural and social movement for positive, restorative social and ecological change on the Great Plains.</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">As both model and metaphor, the Buffalo Commons includes various, sometimes seemingly disconnected components that all add up to a new healthier life for our region centered around sustainability and regained community. This restoration economy can include everything from GPRC’s Million Acre Projects and Plains Youth InterACTION program, to a small West Texas or Kansas farmer’s re-banking of the soil on his land, to a group of Lakota or Oklahoma or Colorado mothers working together to stage gang intervention or ward off a meth invasion, to a string of communities along two hundred miles of a creek or river working to establish clean, healthy water flows again, to environmental groups making ecologically-focused land purchases. It’s problem solving through local, hands-on action.</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666"><a href="http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Buffaloc.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Buffaloc.jpg" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></a></span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">The Buffalo Commons engages Prairie/Plains people to get invested in the healthful restoration of their communities and local environment wherever they live. Small businesses, housewives, big landholders, small landholders, inner-city children, Indian elders, cities, suburbs, towns and villages can all take pride in the unique identity of being and belonging to our Great Plains region, and working together in a shared sense of community, rather than the old way of every man (or woman) for him/herself.</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">History of the Buffalo Commons Movement</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666"></span></p><p><span style="color: #666666"></span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">In 1987, Drs. Frank and Deborah Popper developed their bold new idea for a Buffalo Commons, (Popper and Popper, “The Great Plains: From Dust to Dust, PLANNING, 1987). Their continuing research showed that hundreds of counties in the American West still have less than a sparse 6 persons per square mile — the density standard Frederick Jackson Turner used to declare the American Frontier closed in 1893. Many have less than 2 persons per square mile.</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">The frontier never came close to disappearing, and in fact has expanded in the Plains in recent years. The 1980 Census showed 388 frontier counties west of the Mississippi. The 1990 Census shows 397 counties in frontier status, and the 2000 Census showed 402. Most of this frontier expansion is in the Great Plains. Kansas actually has more land in frontier status than it did in 1890.</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">Great Plains Restoration Council mounted a Plains-wide mapping project at the county level, using a series of economic and social indicators, to show exactly where the frontier is and how much further it has expanded. GPRC than did more sophisticated mapping that scrutinized these and other factors down to the Census Block level, allowing for a much more rigorous and exact understanding of ecological, biological, geographical, topographical, demographic and political conditions. Since then, we have specifically honed our focus onto a few, key target ecological areas while developing a new model of youth education.</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666"><a href="http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/buffaloc2.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/buffaloc2.jpg" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></a></span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">[/FONT]</span></p><p><span style="color: #666666">[FONT=&quot]There once were over 400 million acres of wild prairie grasslands in the central part of North America. The backbone of the Buffalo Commons movement is the work — over a period of decades — to re-establish and re-connect prairie wildland reserves and ecological corridors large enough for bison and all other native prairie wildlife to survive and roam freely, over great, connected distances, while simultaneously restoring the health and sustainability of our communities wherever possible so that both land and people may prosper for a very long time. Future generations may choose to expand these reserves and corridors, as the new culture of caring and belonging we have started today becomes an integral, ingrained part of life in the world of tomorrow, especially as extensive grasslands become needed to help absorb carbon from the atmosphere. (Highly biodiverse native prairies are excellent carbon sequesters.)[/FONT]</span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gst, post: 201724, member: 373"] So the end result of a willing seller not being able to close the deal to a willing buyer becasue of a law that blocks that willing buyer from doing with the property what he wants is somehow that much different? Okie dokie pokie. The only law that truly prevents the sale here in ND that I am aware of is the sale of lands to foreign nationals. Outside of that DU and other nonprofits CAN buy lands if they use them as the law allows.........not really any different than zoning laws. [COLOR="silver"][SIZE=1]- - - Updated - - -[/SIZE][/COLOR] and this is the point why local residents as well as others are taking exception to this plan. It is not like there are no wild lands here, the plan is to purchase a few hundred thousand acres to connect MILLIONS of acres of already protected lands. Yes the population has declined here just as it has in my county and township as well as most across this rural country side. According to those like plainsman that decline suddenly means we can not expect the same ideals of community and schools and business as more populated areas they live in becaue they want somewhere to come visit or pursue their recreation choice of hunting. http://gprc.org/research/buffalo-commons/ [h=1]Buffalo Commons[/h][COLOR=#666666][FONT="]The Buffalo Commons is a cultural and social movement for positive, restorative social and ecological change on the Great Plains. As both model and metaphor, the Buffalo Commons includes various, sometimes seemingly disconnected components that all add up to a new healthier life for our region centered around sustainability and regained community. This restoration economy can include everything from GPRC’s Million Acre Projects and Plains Youth InterACTION program, to a small West Texas or Kansas farmer’s re-banking of the soil on his land, to a group of Lakota or Oklahoma or Colorado mothers working together to stage gang intervention or ward off a meth invasion, to a string of communities along two hundred miles of a creek or river working to establish clean, healthy water flows again, to environmental groups making ecologically-focused land purchases. It’s problem solving through local, hands-on action. [URL="http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Buffaloc.jpg"][IMG]http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Buffaloc.jpg[/IMG][/URL] The Buffalo Commons engages Prairie/Plains people to get invested in the healthful restoration of their communities and local environment wherever they live. Small businesses, housewives, big landholders, small landholders, inner-city children, Indian elders, cities, suburbs, towns and villages can all take pride in the unique identity of being and belonging to our Great Plains region, and working together in a shared sense of community, rather than the old way of every man (or woman) for him/herself. History of the Buffalo Commons Movement In 1987, Drs. Frank and Deborah Popper developed their bold new idea for a Buffalo Commons, (Popper and Popper, “The Great Plains: From Dust to Dust, PLANNING, 1987). Their continuing research showed that hundreds of counties in the American West still have less than a sparse 6 persons per square mile — the density standard Frederick Jackson Turner used to declare the American Frontier closed in 1893. Many have less than 2 persons per square mile. The frontier never came close to disappearing, and in fact has expanded in the Plains in recent years. The 1980 Census showed 388 frontier counties west of the Mississippi. The 1990 Census shows 397 counties in frontier status, and the 2000 Census showed 402. Most of this frontier expansion is in the Great Plains. Kansas actually has more land in frontier status than it did in 1890. Great Plains Restoration Council mounted a Plains-wide mapping project at the county level, using a series of economic and social indicators, to show exactly where the frontier is and how much further it has expanded. GPRC than did more sophisticated mapping that scrutinized these and other factors down to the Census Block level, allowing for a much more rigorous and exact understanding of ecological, biological, geographical, topographical, demographic and political conditions. Since then, we have specifically honed our focus onto a few, key target ecological areas while developing a new model of youth education. [URL="http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/buffaloc2.jpg"][IMG]http://www.gprc.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/buffaloc2.jpg[/IMG][/URL] [/FONT][/COLOR] [COLOR=#666666][FONT="]There once were over 400 million acres of wild prairie grasslands in the central part of North America. The backbone of the Buffalo Commons movement is the work — over a period of decades — to re-establish and re-connect prairie wildland reserves and ecological corridors large enough for bison and all other native prairie wildlife to survive and roam freely, over great, connected distances, while simultaneously restoring the health and sustainability of our communities wherever possible so that both land and people may prosper for a very long time. Future generations may choose to expand these reserves and corridors, as the new culture of caring and belonging we have started today becomes an integral, ingrained part of life in the world of tomorrow, especially as extensive grasslands become needed to help absorb carbon from the atmosphere. (Highly biodiverse native prairies are excellent carbon sequesters.)[/FONT][/COLOR] [/QUOTE]
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