Jane Minor point, we have less than 0.1% prairie remaining. So since Iowa was approximately 80% prairie we have less than 28,000 acres. Daryl Smith jrclark wrote: > > Another sample Caucus Resolution. I think we should support a resolution > that protects natural areas, and Debbie agreed. > > Jane Clark > [log in to unmask] > > Prepared by 1000 Friends of Iowa > > RESOLUTION #4: Natural Areas > > WHEREAS, Iowa has less natural areas than nearly any other state in the > nation, and Iowans depend on these areas for hunting, fishing, hiking and > other types of recreation, and > > WHEREAS, building on wetlands and in flood plains increases the risk of > flooding by destroying natural systems that absorb flood waters, thus > increasing the threat to human life and property, and > > WHEREAS, natural areas are important for wildlife habitat, and add > significantly to the beauty and quality of life of our state; > > THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT we support policies and practices that seek > to minimize the effect of development pressure on sensitive and unique > natural areas. > > TALKING POINTS > > When you consider the fact that agriculture is a form of development, > Iowa is one of the most developed states in the nation. We have very > little wild land left. According to the Iowa Department of Natural > Resources, the original prairie acreage in Iowa was 28 million. We now > have 30,000 acres of native prairie remaining. Iowa originally had 2 > million acres of wetlands. Natural wetlands now number around 27,000 > acres. (For the sake of comparison, the state has 978,500 acres of roads > and highways, according to the Iowa Department of Transportation.) > > Iowa's remaining wilderness is very beautiful, and much of it is > threatened with some type of development pressure. The Loess Hills is > one of Iowa's most unique natural treasures. This type of landscape > occurs in only one other place in the world, in China. Yet we are seeing > extensive erosion and loss of the hills due to different types of > development pressure. Trophy homes dotting the hills are an increasingly > common sight. Commercial pressure intrudes as well. And business and > government alike tear down the hills for fill dirt in various development > projects. > > Over the past 15 years, rainfall in Iowa has increased 10% (perhaps due > to global warming?). All that water has to go somewhere. If it can't > percolate through a flood plain or a wetland, it keeps rolling downstream > until it finds your town and your basement. This may explain why > so-called 500 year floods have become such a common occurrence in Iowa. > > > Please contact Kathy Beauchamp of 1000 Friends at 515- 243-8828 if you > intend to deliver a > resolution---she will send you an information packet on the resolutions > and background information. > > > > > > > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT > to [log in to unmask] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: [log in to unmask]