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.

Opinion: Approve Plum Creek's Development Plan in Pieces

August 06, 2008 - What do Moosehead Lake and North Aberdeen, Scotland, have in common? Local communities and conservation groups in both places are working hard to get tourism development right for the economy and the environment. That means resisting overblown and poorly conceived tourism projects by large corporations intent, it seems, on playing on economic fears in a down economy to get zoning approval to carve up wilderness and sell it to the highest bidder.

Plum Creek has drawn a line in the sand saying it will make no other changes to its plan for more than 2,000 resort and housing "units" (as of yet these units remain undefined — are they condos, villas, trophy homes or hotel rooms?) spread out across more than 18,000 acres of Maine’s north woods around Moosehead Lake. Plum Creek has come across at times as if it were a community organization focused on helping the locals. But let’s make no mistake: Plum Creek reports to its shareholders who are looking to increase profits at a time when the company’s timber holdings are no longer yielding the income they once enjoyed. This is why Plum Creek transformed itself from a timber company into one of the largest real estate corporations in North America.

Across the Atlantic on the coast of Scotland, another real estate giant is trying to get zoning approval for tourism development cloaked in language about helping the local economy. None other than Donald Trump is seeking zoning approval for a 450-room resort (by the way, smaller than Plum Creek’s proposed 800 units at Moose Mountain), a golf course, 35 golf villas, 950 holiday homes, and accommodation for 450 staff. Trump recently made the case during public testimony in Scotland that he should be granted permission to build on fragile sand dunes that are a national designated Site of Special Scientific Interest and are home to thousands of migrating birds and have been a community recreational resource for generations.

Trump’s approach seems bent on scaring local communities in Scotland to support his plan by saying that if he does not get his way, he will take his economic investment elsewhere (where it will be appreciated, no doubt) and locals in Scotland will suffer the economic consequences. Hard tactics for troubled economic times. Project opponents in both Maine and Scotland have sought compromises in these two very different yet similar cases, but bottom-line issues, such as not building on the wild dunes of Scotland or not putting a 400-room resort in Lily Bay on Moosehead Lake’s "wild side," have been met with firm resistance by both of these powerful real estate corporations.

In Plum Creek’s case, it insists that building a large resort on Lily Bay is essential to its plan. But in my 20 years of working in the nature tourism industry as an adviser to governments, businesses, tourism development corporations and conservation organizations in the U.S. and around the world, Plum Creek’s assertion that two large resorts on opposite sides of Moosehead Lake are "essential" defies logic. Even in Lake George, N.Y., where I recently visited, they realized that building resorts on one side of Lake George and keeping the other side more wild and protected was a smart move for both the tourism economy and for the environment.

Since Plum Creek’s proposal already includes an 800-room resort on Moose Mountain, it would be better for the company to show its track record for economic success there first before being given approval for a second oversized resort on Lily Bay. There is no reason Plum Creek needs to have its plan approved all at once — unless it fears that if the results of this proposed development fall short of its economic promises to locals, it will never get zoning approval later to also convert Lily Bay into more real estate development.

Let’s all welcome Plum Creek’s desire to invest in Maine’s rural communities around Moosehead, but only with a more sensible tourism development plan. At a time when other forward-thinking tourism destinations in the U.S. are aligning with the World Travel and Tourism Council’s Blueprint for New Tourism that calls for a sustainable tourism approach that supports the protection of cultural and natural heritage and provides direct benefits to local people, granting approval to Plum Creek to build on Lily Bay is a mistake that Maine cannot afford.

We need best practice models for tourism in our state, not case studies of tourism development gone wrong. A second large resort on Lily Bay in Plum Creek’s plan represents the latter.

Costas Christ of Brooksville is global travel editor for National Geographic Adventure Magazine and chairman of the World Travel and Tourism Council — Tourism for Tomorrow Awards.

Saturday August 2nd, 2008

by Costas Christ writing in the Bangor Daily News


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.