WEEKLY UPDATES
Keep tabs on news, events and market changes from the Lake Regions in Maine.
click here to subscribe


RECREATIONAL GUIDELINES BOOKLET
Enjoy your favorite activities the safe way.
Click here to request your free copy.


Buffer Handbook
A guide to creating a vegetative buffer for lakefront properties.
Click here to receive this free handbook.

Maine Lakefront Real Estate

Lake Living magazine has been described as "the Downeast Magazine of the Sebago Region" Click here for a free copy of this award-winning magazine!



Our Maine lakefront experts are standing by to help you. Views and news about Maine lakes and lakefront homes See why the Mr. Lakefront team provides superior information and unsurpassed service Read the latest news about lakes and ponds across the state Educate yourself about buying lakefront property Find information about hundreds of Maine lakes and ponds Browse available Maine lakefront properties

Maine Shoreland
Zoning -
A Handbook For Shoreland Owners
A "Must Have" for every Maine lakefront homeowner.
Send us your info and receive this free 42 page handbook:
Name:

*Email:

Phone:

Comment:

*required


Maine lakefront property, Lakefront property in Maine, Lakefront property Maine, Maine lakefront real estate

The latest news about Maine lakes and ponds.

Student Activists Aim to Save Moosehead

September 19, 2007 - Brunswick - Grassroots efforts by a handful of current and former Bowdoin students may prevent the development of idyllic wilderness in northern Maine by an outside real estate trust.

Plum Creek Real Estate Investment Trust, a Seattle-based developer and the largest private landowner in the nation, is currently seeking approval for development around Moosehead Lake, the largest lake in Maine. Plum Creek plans to build housing and resorts on property around the lake.

But Bowdoin alum Colin Beckman '07, an organizer trying to stop the development of Moosehead Lake, believes that development can be prevented through community-oriented activism.

"People will be able to see the results of their efforts in a way that differs from most grassroots opportunities," said Beckman, adding that the campaign "really allows students to take [fighting the development] on as their project."

Currently, Beckman and 41 other Bowdoin students are involved in efforts to prevent the development.

The Moosehead Lake Campaign aims to write 1000 letters petitioning the LURC (Land Use Regulation Commission) against the development of Moosehead Lake, as well as having 1000 people attend and speak out at the four hearings LURC will hold to discuss the plans. Of that 1000, Beckman hopes that 250 of them will be from Bowdoin or the Brunswick area.

On campus, the Moosehead Lake Campaign will continue to enlist students and rally support for the cause. To raise awareness, the campaign will engage in letterwriting parties, dorm storms (where campaign members visit dorms to raise awareness), a contra dance for the cause, and trips to the hearings, among other events.

In 1998, Plum Creek purchased the land surrounding Moosehead Lake from Sappi, a leading paper producer in South Africa. Upon purchase of the land, Plum Creek announced that they would keep the land zoned for timber. Because the land purchased by Plum Creek was to be used primarily for forestry and wilderness conservation, the company was able to buy land for only $200 an acre.

But in April 2005, Plum Creek made a proposal to develop the land for real estate. Twice the public rebutted proposals and asked the company to rethink their planning.

A hearing slated for this November marks the third time the company will petition for construction authorization, though this time Plum Creek will go before the seven-member Land Use Regulation Committee for approval. Although this is not Plum Creek's first proposal, it is the first time the decision will be determined by the committee.

The development proposal will now span over 20,500 acres of undeveloped land. Plum Creek plans to build 2315 "residential and resort accommodations," according to the Plum Creek concept map map.

Public sentiment is divided on the issue. Though Greenville and Rockwood, neighboring towns to Moosehead Lake, might be well served by the influx of new people into their struggling economies, some feel that the development would bring a host of problems into the community.

Beckman and others working on the campaign believe that this srawl would also lead to corporate contracting, transforming a haven of pines into a jungle of asphalt, McDonalds and spas. Beckman, along with a Natural Resources Council of Maine would like to see a more sustainable development.

According to Diano Circo, NRCM's North Woods Policy Advocate and Outreach Coordinator, it would be better to "structure the community to be locally developed and not developed by some outside source."

The issue Beckman and his peers find more pressing, however, is the destruction of the wilderness that would inevitably take place. Circo described Moosehead Lake as a "beautiful place, a gem of Maine."

Students involved with the project have different reasons for their commitment. Some are interested in wilderness conservation, while others have personal ties.

Bennett Haynes '08 recalls the time he spent in the area as a child.

"I grew up going on trips up there and really gained an appreciation for that region," he said. Circo is optimistic about the future of the lake region.

"Maine is a very different place," he said. "In Maine, people make a difference."

This article first appeared in the Bowdoin Orient, September 14, 2007


Lakes: Moosehead Lake
Regions: Moosehead


Print this story

Email this story

return to Lake News



37 Roosevelt Trail . PO Box 970 . South Casco . ME 04077
Phone: 207-655-8787 . E-mail: info@mrlakefront.net




HOME | MAINE LAKEFRONT LOCATOR | LAKESMART | LAKEFRONT 101
MAINE LAKE NEWS | ABOUT US | CONTACT US | OUR LISTINGS | SITE MAP
Privacy Policy: Your information will be held in the strictest confidence and will never be shared or sold.
© 2010 Mr. Lakefront, Inc.