SMART GROWTH IN MARYLAND

'Smart Growth' in Maryland is the title of a major initiative of Governor Glendening's administration in response to the problems being created for older communities, the environment, and resource lands by sprawling residential and commercial development. The initiative approaches the problem from two perspectives - existing community support and revitalization and increased conservation of resource lands.
For an overview of the multi-faceted program, begin with:
http://www.mdp.state.md.us/smartgrowth/smartwhat.htm

For basic demographic information and maps of the 'priority funding areas' and protected lands in individual counties go to:
http://www.mdp.state.md.us/info/localplan/counties.html

For a slide show of maps that track growth in the region since 1900 go to:
http://www.mdp.state.md.us/smartgrowth/slides/OPweb_nav.htm

For national online resources about sprawl and smart growth go to:
http://www.mdp.state.md.us/smartgrowth/smartlinks.htm

For a high school curriculum about Smart Growth go to:
http://dnrweb.dnr.state.md.us/smartgrowth/TOC.HTM

To learn more about sprawl and smart growth in Maryland go to 1000 Friends of Maryland, a private non-profit whose mission is "to preserve what is best about Maryland and to encourage sensible growth."
http://www.friendsofmd.org/friends2.html

Several publications, Smart Growth: How is Your County Doing? and Planning for Sprawl are available online from 1000 Friends of Maryland at:
http://www.friendsofmd.org/01report.htm

TOPICS IN THIS SECTION
Essential Facts about Growth in Maryland
Key Growth Management Tools
Smart Growth in Maryland
Chesapeake Bay 2000 Agreement
IN THEIR OWN WORDS
What motivates landowners to protect their land? Hear what landowners say about why they donated or sold a permanent conservation easement on their land.

"Destruction, in the name of development, is going on so fast everywhere it is hard to know what will happen in the years ahead," wrote Alverta Dillon, a retired schoolteacher in 1990, six years after she and her sister, Louise, placed their 150-acre Garrett County farm in easement. The Dillon sisters, now deceased, permanently preserved their slice of heaven, in the scenic valley known as "the Cove" located in a watershed of the Cove Run, a tributary of the Youghiogheny River. There, they lived in a farmhouse built in 1928, also listed in the Maryland Historical Trust's Historic Sites Survey, where they tended to gardens of flowers, herbs and vegetables. As stewards of the land at the Cove, the Dillon sisters' move preserved the farmstead that had been in their family since 1870. A self described "biologist, ecologist...with a bit of horticulturist thrown in," Alverta was keenly aware of the complex mechanisms of ecological systems. Their easement guarantees perpetual preservation of this simple, honest way of life so important to us all.

MET Easement recorded in 1984. The Dillon sisters generously bequeathed their entire estate to MET upon Alverta's death in 1998.

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