Forest Preserve (New York)

Forest Preserve (New York)

New York's Forest Preserve is all the land owned by the state within the Adirondack and Catskill parks, managed by its Department of Environmental Conservation. These properties are required to be kept "forever wild" by Article 14 of the state constitution, and thus enjoy the highest degree of protection of wild lands in any state. It is thus necessary to amend the New York State Constitution in order to transfer any of these lands to another owner or lessee. Currently there are more than 2,600,000 acres (1,050,000 ha) of Forest Preserve in the Adirondacks and 287,514 acres (116,353 ha) in the Catskills.

While today the Forest Preserve is valued largely as a conservation measure, its establishment in the 19th century was motivated primarily by economic considerations. Gradually its inherent worth as a nature preserve came to be seen, as it became a draw for recreation and tourism. A later amendment to Article 14 also made the lands important parts of water supply networks in the state, particularly New York City's, by allowing 3% of the total lands to be flooded for the construction of reservoirs.

Read more about Forest Preserve (New York):  Article 14, Land Classifications Within The Forest Preserve, Forest Preserve Lands Outside The Parks, Controversies

Famous quotes containing the words forest and/or preserve:

    I have come to the conclusion that the closer people are to what may be called the front lines of government ... the easier it is to see the immediate underbrush, the individual tree trunks of the moment, and to forget the nobility the usefulness and the wide extent of the forest itself.... They forget that politics after all is only an instrument through which to achieve Government.
    Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882–1945)

    The worst of charity is, that the lives you are asked to preserve are not worth preserving.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)