March 24, 2003
Thank you. I want to start by thanking you all for lending us your time, your
minds, and your passion on this issue, with special thanks, of course, to our
co-chairs – the great defenders of Michigan’s natural resources
– Governor Milliken and Attorney General Kelley.
Let me also thank Senators Emerson and Sikkema, Speaker Johnson and Representative
Byrum for their participation and support of this process. And also to Michigan’s
foundation community which has rallied around this project – specifically
Rob Collier of the Council of Michigan Foundations, and the Americana, Dow,
Fry, Kellogg and Mott Foundations – your support is really incalculable.
Thank you.
I’m pleased to be able to introduce to you all this morning – for
the first time – the state’s first ever full-time Foundation Liaison
– Ms. Karen Aldridge-Eason. Karen comes to us from the Mott Foundation,
and the position she will hold beginning April 1 is made possible completely
by our foundation partners.
The position is so exciting to me, not just because of what Karen will be doing
– building the bridge between the foundation community and the Governor’s
office for land use planning projects and early childhood development initiatives,
in particular – but really because of the creative direction we’re
signaling that work in this administration will be done.
We don’t have the public dollars we’ve had in the past to do all
the things we want to do. But we won’t let our budget hold us back. We’re
finding new and creative ways to get our most important work done. We’re
using our tax dollars to do the necessary, the critical…we’re fixing
the roads and putting police officers on them; we’re educating our children
and making sure that our families have the food and medicine they need to nourish
their bodies. But with our formal partnership with the foundation community,
we are finding ways to nourish our souls…to add depth and color and richness
to our lives.
I am so pleased to introduce Kim to you all this morning.
So let me turn, for a moment, to you and what you’re all here to do.
No one in this room would disagree that this council has a difficult assignment.
This issue of our land and how we best use it has been sitting on the shelf
for far too long. And every hour that it sits, ten more acres of our land disappears.
Every year that it sits, sprawl and land consumption win. With the creation
of this commission – with you – the shelf life on wise land use
has finally expired. We are getting to real work.
It’s not the non-use of our land. It’s the wise use of it.
It will require cooperation and results – which is why we are calling
on the expertise of so many from so many diverse sectors of our community. Let
me thank you – on behalf of the families whose summer playgrounds you
will preserve, and the communities whose character you will maintain, and the
farmers whose heritage you will preserve, and the cities whose economies you
will help fuel – thank you for leaving the labels and borders of your
day jobs at the door for this; thank you. Thank you for lending us your expertise.
Please be willing to step back from your particular interest to exercise leadership
for the whole.
Someone once wisely said, “we all live downstream.” Especially
on this issue, all of our neighborhoods, all of our communities, all of our
families are affected. So, I’m truly inspired by the partnership here.
We are all downstream; we are all in the same boat. It’s so great to sense
the spirit of cooperation that your very presence signals.
This process deserves support from all vantage points because, frankly, in
Michigan, our land resources are why we are here and they are who we are. Our
forests, fauna, and farmland have defined our way of life for hundreds of years,
and in doing so, they have defined our identity as a state.
Fewer things really get my blood boiling than when people – people who
have never seen Michigan outside a conference room in one of our hotels –
ask me: “Why in the world do you live in Michigan?”
They don’t know, because they’ve never seen this amazing state!
They have never seen the soul of Michigan. They have not dug their feet into
the warm sand of our silver dunes, or gotten their shoes muddy in an apple orchard
on a crisp fall day. You need to stand on the rocks up north, on the shore of
Lake Superior and let that huge expanse of blue make you feel infinitesimally
small. You need to gape at the beauty of our Michigan homeland, not the sprawl
of our cities, to really understand. California, eat your heart out!
And it’s part of our history. Michiganians have for centuries bent their
backs and brought out of our land the resources that helped to, literally, build
this great state from the ground up. Michigan’s land is a bloodline that
feeds our heart and our muscle and our future.
So, what we are doing here is fighting for the preservation of that bloodline
– the 3,228 miles of beaches and sand dunes and waterfront, the 300,000
acres of farmland that have been sacrificed to sprawl in the last ten years.
The question on the table for me, and for all of you, is really: “What
kind of Michigan do I want my grandchildren to know?” Do we want them
to know clear lakes and green forest light of your childhood?
The cricket songs and lapping waves and squeaky sandy porches of our summers?
The tulips and soft petals of trilliums of our spring? The lake breezes and
pine-scented air of our North?
Or will they only know something else? Something concrete and dressed in grey
pavement, adorned with strip malls?
The answer, of course, is that we must protect and preserve this amazing land
entrusted to us which calls our hearts to find a home in Michigan.
This critical issue isn’t the product of just another “ism”
– conservationism, liberalism, or Republicanism. It’s the product
of this fundamental question of whether or not we want to save the splendor
of our state for our grandchildren’s generation and beyond, while still
permitting wise economic growth.
And this is about saving our cities and communities. We’ve spent years
and billions of dollars to build up the infrastructure of our older urban areas,
but the more we grow, the less we put back into our cities. The population loss
of our major urban areas is staggering. And the infrastructures built to service
these depleted populations now sit, yet still must be maintained with tax dollars.
The resulting impact on our land base is significant. Millions of square feet
of commercial space have been closed down, with replacements being constructed
in new communities. We are gobbling up land at a rate that our population won’t
support, the land base won’t maintain and that we can no longer tolerate.
The issues surrounding land use in Michigan do not lend themselves to delay
or pause. You are here to work quickly – before the problem is outside
our scope of influence. Whether it’s a local public official trying to
attract and keep new jobs downtown or a farmer faced with selling the family
land to a developer – please remember as you work that everyone, every
family and community, is affected.
“Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice.” If our children are
to find a pleasant peninsula when they look about them…they need you to
seek the answers to this challenge today.
We’re putting in your hands every tool we can muster to chart a new map
for our state – extensive background, the collective mind power around
this table and experts from six state departments that directly affect land
use. Every tool in our tool box is at your disposal.
As you work to blaze a new path, I leave you with these words from our own
Gwen Frostic, who still reminds us of why we must divert from our old one:
“…the beauty
the music
and life itself
Will go on beyond time
only if man comes to
understanding the urgency
Of preserving
the land
the water
and the very air
Only if he finds a way
of correlating his needs
with those of the universe
Will there be
any time
beyond now.”
In this council, as we partner and work together, I know you’ll remember
that we are truly, in Gwen Frostic’s words, preserving the Michigan we
know for a “time beyond now.”
Thank you, fellow stewards, for your commitment to serve.