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#1 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2023
Posts: 6
Thanks: 0
Thanked 6 Times in 2 Posts
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Just received this email from the Squam Lakes Association:
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The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to AJames For This Useful Post: | ||
BroadHopper (05-03-2025), FlyingScot (05-02-2025), Grant (05-02-2025), Newbiesaukee (05-02-2025), Senter Cove Guy (05-02-2025) |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Merrimack and Welch Island
Posts: 4,347
Thanks: 1,341
Thanked 1,622 Times in 1,054 Posts
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What does this mean in terms of "lost" revenue to LRCC? How much of that was re-distributed to other groups? Name some, please. I know and have supported LRCT. Never had any awareness of LRCC.
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2017
Posts: 606
Thanks: 136
Thanked 274 Times in 168 Posts
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LRCT is a host site for LRCC. My understanding is they are paid through LRCC and do work for LRCT.
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2016
Location: Tuftonboro and Sudbury, MA
Posts: 2,375
Thanks: 1,277
Thanked 1,017 Times in 627 Posts
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It's not lost revenue, it's lost labor. The government pays the salaries of the Americorps workers, providing nonprofits such as Squam Lakes Association and Lakes Region Conservation Trust with low cost labor to do the kinds of things noted by the OP. So with the cancellation of the program, that's 32,000 people out of work, and a lot manual labor for nonprofits that will not be done.
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#5 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Merrimack and Welch Island
Posts: 4,347
Thanks: 1,341
Thanked 1,622 Times in 1,054 Posts
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2016
Posts: 2,050
Thanks: 210
Thanked 652 Times in 435 Posts
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Excellent. The labor pool does need more able bodies
Sent from my iPhone using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app |
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#7 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2016
Location: Tuftonboro and Sudbury, MA
Posts: 2,375
Thanks: 1,277
Thanked 1,017 Times in 627 Posts
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The Following User Says Thank You to FlyingScot For This Useful Post: | ||
capewx (05-02-2025) |
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#8 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2021
Posts: 3,359
Thanks: 3
Thanked 593 Times in 489 Posts
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#9 |
Senior Member
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Some photos and info ....... http://www.lrct.org/our-work/lakes-r...ervation-corps ....... from the Lakes Region Conservation Trust.
The lakes region here in central New Hampshire is blessed with miles of mountain walking trails and many shoreline shallow waters good for paddling a kayak. In this year 2025, the Town of Meredith is building ....... http://www.meredithnh.gov/293/Adapti...t-Leavitt-Park .... close to the Meredith-Center Harbor border on the northern end of Lake Winnipesaukee at Leavitt Beach.
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... down and out, liv'n that Walmart side of the lake! |
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#10 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2016
Location: Tuftonboro and Sudbury, MA
Posts: 2,375
Thanks: 1,277
Thanked 1,017 Times in 627 Posts
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They were already doing everything they could to get more donations and volunteers. So when they lose a bunch of cheap labor, they do 8 or 9 things instead of 10. For great local groups, like the Squam guys and LRCT, that's really a bummer |
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#11 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2021
Posts: 3,359
Thanks: 3
Thanked 593 Times in 489 Posts
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Other land owners are using everything from timber operations, to carbon tax mitigation sales, to leasing their motorized trails.
Many LRCT lands already have some of this, but looking deeper means more revenue without really that much more volunteer efforts. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to John Mercier For This Useful Post: | ||
Descant (05-03-2025) |
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#12 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2017
Location: Jackson Pond, New Hampton
Posts: 233
Thanks: 46
Thanked 141 Times in 78 Posts
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Unfortunately the cancellation of funding isn't the only issue facing New Hampshire's natural resource's. The House budget as just sent forward includes a doubling of the fee carried by dam owners from $1,500 annually to $3,000. I am one of those dam owners and this is causing me to re-think the value of the pristine 53 acre pond my dam retains. Owning a dam is already a huge investment in both financial cost and the burdenship of responsibility.
The easy solution for me and many other dam owners would be to remove the spillway elevations and drain the retained waters. Jackson Pond would likely shrink from its current 53 acres of pristine fresh water to something around 15 acres surrounded by a muddy marsh. Many affected small lakes and ponds like this will disappear from the NH landscape forever, so this is no small issue. Jackson Pond was dammed up in the 1890s and served for one hundred years as the Ashland Town water supply. My neighbor across the pond and myself bought the dam in 2018 to preserve it just as it is both for ourselves and the public to enjoy. The DES has inspected the dam twice since and so far there are no issues, But now, do to a legislative money grab the future of this dam must be reconsidered. As mentioned before we already singularly carry the burden to maintain this pristine waterway, but now find ourselves a target for budgetary reasons. Do you think this is fair? If not be sure to let your State Senator and the Govenor's office know ...before it is too late. For some photos of Jackson Pond please check out the Lakes and Ponds gallery in this fantastic website. |
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#13 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Waltham Ma./Meredith NH
Posts: 4,096
Thanks: 2,211
Thanked 1,188 Times in 755 Posts
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The Proponents for less Government don't realize that many of the things they enjoy on a daily basis are funded by Government and are threatened by these blanket cutbacks. I'm all for Government cutbacks, but not with a chainsaw approach!
Wait until they start cutting our national forests, who is going to be left on the payroll to monitor this cutting? |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Biggd For This Useful Post: | ||
FlyingScot (Today) |
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#14 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2016
Posts: 2,050
Thanks: 210
Thanked 652 Times in 435 Posts
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Prefer not to pay taxes so others can enjoy a picnic on private property
Off topic though related, the silence from every NH environmental group regarding the development and destruction of the Laconia State School Property is saddening. Paving 100 acres and adding 2000 housing units a short distance uphill from a state park and Winnisquam Lake. The runoff alone into the lake will be so harmful to the environment and wildlife. Sent from my iPhone using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app |
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#15 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2016
Location: Tuftonboro and Sudbury, MA
Posts: 2,375
Thanks: 1,277
Thanked 1,017 Times in 627 Posts
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Your and your neighbor have waterfront houses on the pond, and the dams are on your property? Aside from the one neighbor you mention, are there other homes on the pond? Have you tried to transfer ownership of the dams to a larger nonprofit that would not mind spending $3,000/year, or maybe that's not even possible? Thanks |
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