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California losing most land to development


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By Paul Rogers, Mercury News

The natural landscape of the American West is gradually disappearing under a relentless march of new subdivisions, roads, oil and gas production, agricultural operations and other human development, according to a detailed mapping study released Tuesday.

From 2001 to 2011, an area totaling 4,321 square miles — or 15 times the size of San Jose, Oakland and San Francisco combined — was modified by development in the 11 Western states, the report found, with California losing the most natural land, and Wyoming and Utah changing at the fastest rate.

“We are nibbling away at our wild places at a fairly rapid clip,” said Mike Dombeck, former chief of the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in the 1990s.

The report was produced by scientists at Conservation Science Partners, a nonprofit research organization based in Truckee, who spent a year analyzing more than 30 large databases and a decade of satellite images over Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming.

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Comments (2)
  1. Carl Ribaudo says - Posted: May 21, 2016

    The population is 40 million and the state is 100,000 housing units short of what is needed. Small wonder why we are losing land to development.

  2. cautious and skepical says - Posted: May 22, 2016

    Developers are getting more creative by requesting zoning swaps and trying to obliterate commonsense. Case in point Martis Valley West Parcel Specific Plan wanting to build a luxury home development and oversized campground (glamping) on a shared Tahoe Basin ridge-line in a high wildland fire zone. They should just build where the plan designated development.