JSTOR

Balancing Environment and Development, Costs; Revenues; and Benefits of the Western Riverside County Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan

Author

Dixon; Lloyd ; Collins; Myles T. ; Wachs; Martin ; Hanson; Mark ; Melmed; Arthur ; Sorensen; Paul

Year

2008

Publisher

RAND Corporation

Type

BOOK

Category

Business & Economics

Language

English

Pages

271

ISBN

978-0-83304-609-3

Link

Last Update

01-Nov-2024

Keywords

Political Science ; Transportation Studies

Description

The Western Riverside County Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP) is an ambitious effort to balance development and environmental concerns in an area of rapid urban growth. In return for setting up a 500,000-acre conservation reserve, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the California Department of Fish and Game granted the county and cities in western Riverside County a 75-year "take" permit for endangered species. The take permit allows the cities and county to approve development projects outside the reserve that could negatively affect 146 sensitive plant and animal species. The plan is supposed to speed the frequently time-consuming and litigious process of permitting new highway and development projects while establishing an integrated conservation reserve rather than the patchwork of uncoordinated reserves that was so often the case in the past. The Western Riverside County Regional Conservation Authority (RCA) acquires land for and manages the reserve. This monograph examines the value of the land needed for the reserve, the financial consequences of acquiring the land over different periods of time, and the projected costs of operating the reserve. It compares projected costs and revenues and identifies potential funding sources to fill any resulting funding gap. It also examines the prospect for achieving the MSHCP's habitat-conservation goals and whether the MSHCP has, in fact, streamlined the permitting processes. Finally, it identifies issues that the RCA Board of Directors, RCA staff, and stakeholders should address to ensure the plan's success and the ongoing economic and ecological health of the county

Related

See More