A partnership of community groups and agencies are interested in bringing the Wisconsin Humanities Council’s Wisconsin: Making it Home film festival to the Chequamegon Bay area in 2010. The purpose of the festival is to promote dialog in communities about humans and nature. The Making it Home touring festivals include films from the 2009 Tales from Planet Earth Environmental Film Festival. The films tell stories from around the world that reveal connections between people and place, that explore questions of justice and responsibility, and that challenge assumptions about how we live on the planet.
We hope that we are successful in bringing this film festival to our area. If you are interested in volunteering, or would like to help plan the festival, please contact me.
For more information see our website.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Working Lands Workshop March 10
About four years ago I traveled to Madison with Bill Ferraro and Rick Dale, two fruit growers from Bayfield, to make a presentation about our farmland preservation program. Rick and Bill met with Rod Nilsestuen, the Wisconsin Secretary of Agriculture to explain the benefits of purchasing development rights (PDR)on Bayfield orchards to preserve farmland.
We also presented a slide show about our program (the second in Wisconsin after the Town of Dunn) and information about twenty-four other states that have a state fund to support local PDR purchases. We had a full house in front of the Working Lands Initiative Committee and a great discussion about what works.
Secy Nilsestuen and his committee have done an excellent job incorporating this concept into the new Working Lands Program. To learn more about it, come to our workshop on Tuesday, March 10 at the Northern Great Lakes Visitor Center (Ashland, WI). We look forward to hearing more about the status of the program, and other efforts to protect farmland and working forests.
We also presented a slide show about our program (the second in Wisconsin after the Town of Dunn) and information about twenty-four other states that have a state fund to support local PDR purchases. We had a full house in front of the Working Lands Initiative Committee and a great discussion about what works.
Secy Nilsestuen and his committee have done an excellent job incorporating this concept into the new Working Lands Program. To learn more about it, come to our workshop on Tuesday, March 10 at the Northern Great Lakes Visitor Center (Ashland, WI). We look forward to hearing more about the status of the program, and other efforts to protect farmland and working forests.
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