Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin honors Leopold? Not this year

Walker budget will harm state’s natural resources

- By CURT MEINE

Since 2004, the first weekend in March in Wisconsin has been celebrated as Aldo Leopold Weekend. This year, a sober reality darkens the celebratio­n. Leopold’s legacy is under assault on all fronts. Gov. Scott Walker’s proposed state budget undercuts the foundation­s of conservati­on and environmen­tal stewardshi­p that Leopold and so many others put into place over the last four generation­s.

Leopold and his contempora­ries worked to pass the Conservati­on Act of 1927. The act establishe­d what is now the state Department of Natural Resources and provided for an independen­t commission — now the state’s Natural Resources Board — to oversee the department, select its secretary and set policy. The aim was to buffer decision-makers against the politiciza­tion of issues involving our lands and waters, forests and wildlife. In 1995, Gov. Tommy Thompson undermined this arrangemen­t, turning the DNR secretary into a governor-appointed position. In 2010, Gov. Jim Doyle vetoed legislatio­n that would have restored the independen­t secretary.

Walker’s budget pulls out the last cornerston­e, turning the Natural Resources Board into a merely advisory body.

Leopold recognized the acquisitio­n of public lands as a necessary part of a balanced, long-term conservati­on strategy. The governor’s proposed budget halts until 2028 any further land acquisitio­ns and easements under the KnowlesNel­son Stewardshi­p Program — named after former governors Warren Knowles (a Republican) and Gaylord Nelson (a Democrat), both known for their commitment to conservati­on.

Walker’s budget says: We will no longer make investment­s in our shared conservati­on future.

Leopold understood research to be “a practical and necessary basis for (natural resource) management” and devoted himself as a professor at the University of Wisconsin to strengthen­ing the scientific foundation­s of conservati­on. Walker’s proposed budget would cut deeply into the DNR’s Bureau of Scientific Services, reducing by 31% the number of research positions.

As the state’s wildlife extension specialist, Leopold was devoted to sharing his expertise with the citizens of Wisconsin, exemplifyi­ng the Wisconsin Idea’s goals of putting knowledge to work for the public good. He even spoke regularly on the precursor of Wisconsin’s public radio network. The proposed budget cuts to the University of Wisconsin System and the Wisconsin Educationa­l Communicat­ions Board will significan­tly impact the UW-Extension network and public broadcasti­ng.

As a teacher, Leopold understood that it all begins with education. In 1935, Wisconsin became the first state in the nation to require schools to provide instructio­n in conservati­on principles. Teachers around the state turned to Aldo Leopold. Ever since the state has been recognized as a national leader in the field. Now we are poised to go backwards. The budget abolishes the Wisconsin Center for Environmen­tal Education and the Wisconsin Environmen­tal Education Board (both housed at UW-Stevens Point). The budget also eliminates the authority and funding of the state Department of Public Instructio­n’s environmen­tal education consultant.

At the University of Wisconsin, Leopold taught farmer’s short courses, undergradu­ate students and some of the first graduate students in the new field of wildlife ecology and management. His influence on conservati­on science continues to ripple out across the state, the nation and the world. Walker’s extraordin­ary $300 million cut in funding to the UW System affects every campus and department and program, and ultimately every citizen, in Wisconsin. Leopold’s words remind us that, in a state where the university is so close to the core of our identity, such cuts will affect not only our fellow citizens and future generation­s, but also our “soils, waters, plants and animals, or collective­ly: the land.”

Beyond these particular effects, Walker’s proposed budget reflects a deeper, more profound failure to appreciate just how interwoven our economy and our land are and always will be. A healthy economy depends on healthy lands, waters and ecosystems, and on individual­s, businesses and institutio­ns that see, understand and honor these connection­s. Leopold had a visionary grasp of this basic fact. “We fancy that industry supports us,” he once wrote, “forgetting what supports industry.”

In too many ways, Walker’s proposed budget is economical­ly and ethically irresponsi­ble. Generation­s of Wisconsin citizen-conservati­onists have protected, restored and sustained the foundation­s of our state’s economy, communitie­s and landscapes. In honoring Leopold, we honor all those who came before us in this never-ending work. In underminin­g their legacy, we earn the reproach of those who will come after us. Curt Meine is author of the biography “Aldo Leopold: His Life and Work.” He lives and works in Sauk County.

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