[Congressional Record Volume 151, Number 151 (Tuesday, November 15, 2005)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E2360]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING HARRIET BURGESS, PRESIDENT AND FOUNDATION OF AMERICAN LAND
CONSERVANCY
______
HON. FORTNEY PETE STARK
of california
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, November 15, 2005
Mr. STARK. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay tribute to a remarkable
woman, Harriet Burgess, President and founder of American Land
Conservancy. For the past 20 years, Harriet, who presently resides in
Inverness, California, has applied her consummate skill in building
consensus among legislators, government agencies, landowners and
environmental groups for the conservation of public lands.
Her list of acquisition accomplishments while Vice President of the
Trust for Public Land reveals a national landscape of treasured sites.
She saw a need for a non-profit land acquisition agency that would
tackle the most challenging and difficult projects. She founded the
American Land Conservancy to rescue irreplaceable environmental acreage
from imminent development.
Through her talent and perseverance she has kept intact precious
tracts of land from California's Topanga Canyon to the Sierra Nevada
and has been a matchmaker in arranging swaps and purchases of private
lands for public uses from the Malibu coast to the Columbia River
Gorge.
One transaction in Nevada involved 44 different property swaps. She
has also masterminded the acquisition of lands along the upper
Sacramento River and the North Fork American. She played a role in the
addition of a one thousand plus acre parcel to the San Francisco Bay
Area's renowned Gate National Recreation Area.
Harriet Burgess grew up in Xenia, Ohio where her fondest memory is
wandering through the forest looking for wildflowers. But she didn't
get into protecting public space until after her children were grown,
when she volunteered to rewrite the zoning ordinance for Fairfax
County, Virginia. During her time in Virginia, she was an exemplary
member of my legislative staff in Washington, DC.
After a divorce in 1978, she moved to California and headed the
western regional office for the Trust for Public land before founding
the American Land Conservancy in 1990. The Conservancy, under Harriet's
direction, has become a potent force in safeguarding California's most
precious open spaces. Through sheer persistence and tenacity Harriet
has time and again brought seemingly out-of-reach projects within
grasp, helping local communities realize their dreams of protected land
for open space.
Harriett Burgess has been a tireless and highly effective advocate of
wilderness and recreational open space protection. Her list of
accomplishments will be felt by generations.
As friends gather on November 16, 2005 to pay tribute to Harriet's
extraordinary contributions, I join them in thanking her for the fruits
of her efforts. We are grateful for her tenacity and perseverance to
protect our precious lands.
____________________