The long wait for forest preserve plans: Records show 782,000 acres are without any management plans
A half century later, hundreds of thousands of acres are without management plans
By Gwendolyn Craig
New York regulators have fallen behind in creating and implementing dozens of plans intended to protect forest preserve lands and to provide the public opportunities to enjoy them.
Called unit management plans, or UMPs, these documents are legally required for Adirondack and Catskill Park forest preserve. They include inventories of fish, wildlife, natural and cultural resources, identify current and proposed public uses and list schedules for implementing new projects.
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RELATED: A unit management plan, explained
An Adirondack Explorer investigation found vast tracts of the 2.69 million acres of the Adirondack Park Forest Preserve are either guided by decades-old plans or have none.
Here are some of the findings by the numbers.
The Adirondack Park is about 6 million acres. About 2.69 million acres are public lands designated as the forest preserve. These lands are protected under the state constitution and require UMPs under the Adirondack Park Agency Act passed 50 years ago.
Between 1999 and 2004, four Adirondack Park UMPs were adopted, not including amendments to existing ones.
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Fourteen units have draft UMPs or draft amendments.
Four units covering about 450,000 acres have draft UMPs previously released for public comment. These include: Lake George Wild Forest, Debar Mountain Wild Forest, Ferris Lake Wild Forest and Wilcox Lake Wild Forest.
Five units totaling about 332,000 acres have no UMPs and are not on the DEC’s list to get one anytime soon. These units include: Round Lake Wilderness, Sargent Ponds Wild Forest, Little Moose Wilderness, William C. Whitney Wilderness and West Canada Lake Wilderness.
Approximately 1,881,000 acres have UMPs. Click on the map below to see the park’s unit boundaries and the status of each’s UMP.
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Boreas says
Great article – thanks Gwen!!
Sally says
Another “gotcha” style article with no real suggested solutions. Why not push for more funding for the state agencies you continually bash to bring on staff to actually do this work? Easier to just interview disgruntled former employees from a very closed and non transparent era with axes to grind with all these articles.
Tracy Ormsbee says
Solutions sidebar is at the bottom of the main story here: https://www.adirondackexplorer.org/stories/the-long-wait-for-unit-management-plans
Robert Gibson says
What’s to manage. Severely restrict the usage of Adirondack Park Lands (except for the high peaks) and let the trees fall down.
Lorraine Duvall says
One of my first remembrances of Barbara McMartin was at a conference around 1999 were she complained about the lack of Unit Management Plans . Her 2002 book has a great history on UMPs – “Perspectives on the Adirondacks: A Thirty-Year Struggle by People Protecting Their Treasure.”