HomeMy WebLinkAboutA Winston - Planning Dept recommendation to approve OswitFrom:Abby Winston
To:Planning
Subject:Planning Dept recommendation to approve the Oswit Land Trust"s (OLT) Application for Prescott Preserve
Date:Wednesday, July 24, 2024 12:28:15 PM
Attachments:The Demise of The Environmental Trust.docx
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This email is in regards to Item 4c on the Planning Commission agenda for July 24, 2024
Dear Planning Commissioners:
First, I would like to commend the Planning Department staff for a thorough and thoughful
report/recommendation. They have addressed many of my and my neighbors concerns about having a
nature preserve in an urban area. If you recommend the approval with all the recommended conditions
and with one additional requirement I believe the current and future residents of Palm Springs will have
been well served by this process. The condition that should be added would require OLT to build a
dedicated fund for on-going operations.
In the 2 years since the land was donated to OLT they have continued to buy other land but they have not
made an effort to build an endowment that would allow them to safely operate an urban preserve now or
in the future. In addition, they have made no effort to comply with city fire and safety code ordinances
unless forces by code compliance to do so. These requirement will also help ensure that the promises
that have been made to the community are kept. In order to maintain the land and manage the wildlife is
a way that will keep visitors as well as the homes and surrounding residents safe they must have
sufficient operating funds.
I have attached an article that shows the necessity of this requirement for the continued protection of the
city as a whole and the neighborhoods surrounding the proposed preserve. It is a case study of a failed
land trust by an expert on Land Trusts.
In addition, below I have used the "Center for Natural Lands Managements Cost Analysis, 28 Case
Study" from 2004 to calculate an estimated annual cost of the Prescott Preserve. I have used the annual
inflation rate to increase the cost for the 2004 dollar to $1.66 in 2024.
CNLM did this Analysis in 2004. They looked at 28 preserves with the express purpose of analyzing a
wide range of preserve types. They were looking to see if they could come up with a cost per acre.
What they discovered was a relationship between overall size and cost per arce. Very large preserves
costed out to $100 per acre but smaller preserves cost $1,000 an acre. They also found that costs
were also depended on the type of preserve. For example: public use, presence of invasive exotics,
uses of the surrounding areas, edge effect and the quality and appropriateness of any restortation.
Since Prescott is small and will have high use as an urban preserve it also will have the highest costs.
Applying the highest costs of $2,100 per acre in 2004 dollars to the 120 acres of the Prescott Preserve
the annual costs would have been $252k. Applying an inflation calculator to that makes 1 2004 dollar
equal to $1.66 in 2024. So, $2,100 is now $3,486. At 120 acres that's $418,320 annually. Taking a
more conservative approach, we can look at the average cost per acre for a small preserve of $1k an
acre. That calculation would make the annual cost estimate for Prescott in 2024 dollars ~$199,920.
I think it is safe say the costs to operate Prescott Preserve is between $199k and $418k per year.
These numbers include annualized capital mainenance. So they would include things like pond
equipment, road repairs etc.
These cost would require an endowment of berween $5M and $10M. There is a high likelihood that
OLT will not be able to maintain this land based on this analysis if they can't even fund a fulltime
ranger and repair sidewalks that are heir responsibilty. A requirement for OLT to create and fund an
endowmnet of at least $5M in the two years time recommended for OLT to meet the other
requirements for approval would improve the odds of them running a successful preserve.
Another fact that indicate the necessity of this requirement is the recent request from Jane Garrison,
OLT's founder and CEO, to the City Council to give the preserve $200k in operating funds annually
with no end date identified or committment to find funding from donors. The Council has turned this
request down because OLT didn't request this funding through any mechanism that the city has for
funding projects like this it was just a letter to the City Council.
I strongly urge you to approve the staff recommendation with the additional requirement for OLT to
fund the project. This will protect the city and the neighborhood surrounding the Prescott Preserve from
the same outcome as the Palm Springs Country Club, over a decade ago.This urban preserve was the
vision of OLT. The city and the surrounding neighborhoods should not be responsible to pay for it with
no committment from the organization that owns it to fund it's operations.
Thank you,
Abby Winston
505 S Farrell Dr N83
Palm Springs, CA 92264
The Demise of The Environmental Trust SHERRY TERESA
After 15 years in business, with 4,621 acres under management and over four million
dollars in endowment funds, The Environmental Trust in California filed for bankruptcy
on July 29, 2005. The organization listed “unperformed obligations” exceeding $13
million. Sherry Teresa, Executive Director of the Center for Natural Lands Management,
delves into what happened and pulls out some lessons for conservation organizations
everywhere.
Winston Churchill once said: “Man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of
the time he will pick himself up and continue on.” We have many opportunities on a
daily basis to learn from our mistakes. The greatest mistake, however, is to ignore the
lesson and just continue on unenlightened. This story—the demise of The
Environmental Trust—presents an interesting lesson. It is the story of an environmental
mitigation land management organization in the US that set out to achieve great things
and in the end, set the example of how not to run a nonprofit organization.Don “Doc”
Hunsaker, a former San Diego State University biology professor, organized The
Environmental Trust (TET) as a California 501(c) (3) (non-profit) private foundation in
1990 to acquire environmentally threatened and sensitive properties and then assume
perpetual responsibility for their maintenance, monitoring, and management. TET
operated primarily in San Diego County where its properties included mitigation lands,
conservation easements, conservation and mitigation banks, and lands within the
Multiple Species Conservation Plan (MSCP) created for endangered species listed under
the state and federal Endangered Species Act (ESA).After 15 years in business, with
4,621 acres under management and over four million dollars in endowment funds, TET
filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the United States code on July 29, 2005 for
“unperformed obligations” exceeding $13 million. A liquidating plan for reorganization
was filed on December 30, 2005 and called for the sale or distribution of all TET assets
to qualified parties. TET’s president at the time observed “TET’s liquidation marks a
very sad event from both the commercial as well as from an environmental perspective.
Environmentally, TET’s winding up and closure represents a failure to maintain
sensitive habitat entrusted by many interested parties with TET for perpetual
maintenance, monitoring and preservation.”
What Went Wrong?
I remember the first time I met Doc. He is an affable guy, the favorite uncle type. He
came up to Sacramento to talk about our organizations joining forces. While I
immediately liked him, the more we spoke the more I realized how vastly different were
our philosophies of conservation land management and stewardship. These
philosophical differences embodied the core issues, described below, that I believe
eventually led to TET’s decline and demise.
I believe that five factors contributed to TET’s fate:
(1) TET failed to develop and execute a realistic business plan;
(2) TET, and arguably the wildlife agencies, had a vague definition of what constituted
best management practices for habitat stewardship;
(3) State and federal regulators did not adequately monitor TET’s business practices, its
compliance with accepted nonprofit fiduciary duty standards, or monitor its habitat
management practices;
(4) TET’s staff and board had poor or non-existent internal financial management
controls; and
(5) The organization made clear departures from sound corporate governance
principles.
Lack of a Business Plan: TET failed to appreciate that it was in the business of
conservation. It did not have a well-considered and well-crafted business plan that
addressed both current conditions and changes that might occur in the future. TET had
no strategic plan, no clear set of overarching guiding principles, and a limited
understanding of its habitat protection mission. These failings had practical, serious
consequences. For example, with some frequency, TET’s Executive Director would enter
into negotiations for the perpetual maintenance of habitat lands without performing any
serious due diligence regarding the conservation property or the business transaction.
Little consideration was given to the full range of stewardship tasks TET would have to
assume or their actual costs. TET’s key managers frequently disregarded their own
staff’s recommendations concerning the management and funding of property.
Stewardship endowments were frequently based on a fixed “dollar per acre” estimate,
not upon any disciplined task-based analysis tied to an actual property. As a result,
“deals” were too frequently negotiated far below actual cost, but justified by the
overriding desire to add to the number of properties and total acreage under
management. Sadly, TET often chose to underbid the competition to add property and
money to its portfolio, the general approach was ‘We’ll make it up on the next deal.’
Lack of a Model for Conservation Land Stewardship: There remains a lack of clarity
about what constitutes adequate habitat stewardship. In my mind, TET’s bankruptcy
was caused largely by the failure of resource agencies to define “the work” of the
steward—the long-term mitigation requirements of a proponent’s permit, as well as
monitoring obligations and responsibilities. The goals or intent of “the work” are usually
straightforward and well defined in the law and various project-specific documents,
such as biological opinions. Actually setting forth tasks that achieve the goals is a
different matter. Few entities know how to do that. Thus definitions became a ground
for contentious negotiations. If you are a project proponent, you probably believe that
stewardship ceases at the end of mandatory 5-year monitoring periods. A large number
of people, including some in resource agencies, believe nature preserves are, or should
be, self- sustaining after some minimal re-vegetation or restoration. Hunsaker’s
definition of TET’s stewardship was simple: it will maintain fences (when funding was
available), pick up trash, and conduct drive-by “monitoring” visits. Indeed, most
mitigation permits set forth broad perpetual habitat management goals—leaving the
interpretation of what actually must be done to achieve them to a land manager.
Adaptive management is an emerging issue that is not clearly addressed in permit
conditions or property management plans. We have struggled to educate project
proponents (who are dedicating land and contributing endowment funding as a
condition of receiving permits to develop land) and define stewardship and to explain
why certain activities are necessary—not just to maintain habitat, but to fend off
invasive and exotic plants and animals, to control visitor use and trespass issues, to
adequately monitor a property’s biology, to maintain gates, fences and roads, to educate
the public, to anticipate the need for and maintain fuel breaks and to conduct controlled
burns, and a myriad other stewardship tasks that are rarely if ever specifically identified
in any permit.
Habitat managers will tell you how challenging it is to maintain and enhance
endangered species habitat that are next to urbanized areas. How do you allow people to
use and enjoy these sites while trying to protect species? At the Center’s preserves, we
have dealt with many totally unanticipated issues. They have ranged from dealing with
marijuana plantations, to eliminating motocross and BMX tracks established by local
teenagers, to stopping gangs target shooting concrete-encased telephone poles with
machine-guns, to removing illegal migrant camps, to dealing with arson, to stopping the
dumping of unwanted pets, to overcoming the results of ruptured oil pipelines—and the
list goes on. We are constantly presented with new challenges. A funding strategy that
anticipates the unanticipated—what we often call contingencies and adaptive
management is the only way to manage preserves that are adjacent to or surrounded by
urban areas.
Global issues such as climate change and local issues such as nitrogen deposition from
smog have profound implications for habitat preservation and may totally change
ecotypes. It is impossible to predict what unique things will occur over time and what
impact those changes may have on the land. Stewardship is not easy, and it is not for the
fainthearted! TET, in my opinion, was neither prepared nor willing to meet the
challenges of modern day habitat management.
The California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (USFWS) jointly composed a letter to TET in 2003 that clearly identified TET’s
most serious stewardship deficiencies. For the first time, state and federal natural
resource agencies jointly gave specific directions on habitat stewardship and outlined
what they expected from a manager While CDFG/USFWS made numerous requests of
TET for habitat management and financial information, their entreaties were frequently
unanswered.
Failure of Regulatory Agencies to Act: It was evident early on that TET was not
conducting sound business or habitat management practices. Many resource agency
personnel knew this and requested information from TET that would clarify what they
were doing, and the results of those actions. Requests were frequently ignored and the
agencies failed to take action. Was there blatant procrastination by the agencies in
dealing with TET? Even today, months after TET’s demise, there still exists a serious
lack of oversight of habitat managers by the regulatory agencies. This external oversight
problem is compounded by a lack of internal oversight by stewardship organizations.
Reports are not submitted, or are poorly researched and written. Violations are not
enforced. In fairness to the regulatory agencies, they have few trained personnel to
address these issues. Yet they have failed to create a process to whereby they might
know if a land manager is or is not doing their job.
Financial: TET failed to take its fiduciary responsibility seriously. An organization that
relies on the income from endowments to fund its work must have a sound investment
management strategy. Newly formed organizations and those with small endowments
face different risks and have different investment obligations than larger, more stable
entities. TET lacked a reliable investment policy—one that would assure adequate
inflation-adjusted perpetual income from endowments to fund current and future
preserve management.
TET endowments were pooled for investment purposes. That is lawful, typical and an
efficient and appropriate practice. However, TET failed to account for each preserve’s
income and expense–something that is generally required by permits. Every preserve
needs an original cost estimate and annual budgets. Because TET may have deliberately
underbid projects, its endowments were “short”. Money for annual management had to
come from somewhere. That meant TET had a choice: it could either do less work than
was required, or it could use funding from another preserve to make up the difference.
TET often used the PAR� program, software created by the Center for Natural Lands
Management, to estimate its future stewardship costs, but TET’s bids to proponents
included endowment requests based not on long-term inflation-adjusted earning rates
of balanced debt and equity portfolios, (“capitalization rates”), but on guesses about
investment earnings from its endowment. Incorrect cost and income assumptions
allowed proponents to put up endowments that almost immediately began to waste.
Investing endowments is complex, and generally requires the assistance of highly
skilled, professional financial management experts. The Ford Foundation provides
excellent advice for endowment holders on its website www.fordfound.org and
see Investment Management for Endowed Institutions.
Under California’s Nonprofit Integrity Act of 2004, charitable corporations with assets
of $2 million or more must prepare annual financial statements audited by an
independent certified public accountant (CPA). The statements must use generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP). The independent CPA must follow generally
accepted auditing standards. The audited financial statements must be made available
to the Attorney General and the public no later than nine months after the close of the
fiscal year. It appears TET never obtained a formal annual opinion letter from any
auditor.
TET’s Board Abdicated Fiduciary Responsibility. Several of TET’s board members have
stated that they were not given complete financial reports and were not aware of the
gravity of the situation until told so by a new executive director who realized that the
organization could no longer sustain itself. However, board minutes show that prior to
2002 and following a special report in 2002, TET’s dire financial situation and lack of
sound management practices was brought before the board. Even if there was not
complete financial information presented to the board, its members are not absolved—it
is their responsibility to have asked questions. Nonprofit board members are
accountable for any wrong doing in the organization and can be held personally liable.
The California Attorney General could sue TET’s board members personally. If this
sends a chill down the spine of nonprofit board members everywhere, it should.
So What Now?
According to proceedings to “wind up” the The Environmental Trust, it appears that fee
title to some properties will be offered back to the original owners, along with a portion
of the endowment they provided. However, all habitat management and monitoring
obligations and encumbrances (typically conservation easements) would remain with
the land. According to information disclosed in bankruptcy proceedings (case# 05-
0232l-LAl-l), TET failed to record many of these conservation easements and frequently
deposited only 80% of endowment funds into investment accounts, keeping the other
20% as some kind of overhead reimbursement. Hunsaker, who had stated earlier,
“basically, we are protectionists who wanted to grab land and save it,” now believes TET
“did not receive enough moneys to fund the obligations that it assumed and the services
it agreed to provide.”
This, according to Hunsaker, was due in large part to “under funding its services, poor
planning, inefficiency in executing of its tasks, poor investment decision making and the
general decline of the U.S. equity markets.” The corporation’s books were in disarray
and its endowments without adequate funds. When push came to shove, most of TET’s
real estate could not be sold, and the wildlife agencies refused to renegotiate
stewardship obligations. No entity will willing assume TET’s habitat management
obligations without adequate funding.
Under the bankruptcy proposal, if the original owners do not agree to take the property
back, TET’s nature preserves will be offered to a local agency. But that agency must
comply with regulatory permits. How will they, absent funding? If local agencies are not
interested, TET property will be offered to the wildlife agencies, and if they pass, to
qualified nonprofits.
TET properties were scheduled to be disposed of in this manner starting on February 9,
2006. It is unclear what will happen to the properties. Without adequate endowments,
other organizations are unlikely to accept them. The owner of last resource may end up
being the State of California. This may mean that the public may ultimately assume
responsibility for the properties. And yet again, the public will end up subsidizing
private development by paying for the perpetual maintenance of the habitat lands.
Without recorded conservation easements, many of these mitigation properties could be
in jeopardy of being developed or used for purposes other than nature preserves.
Ensuring the Future
A New York Times article estimates that by 2025 the population of the US will increase
by 70 million people. This increase equals the current population of New York, Florida
and California combined. All the population growth in the US in the last decade didn’t
equal the growth of just two Southern California counties, Riverside and San
Bernardino. We are in the throes of a $25 trillion building boom. The needs and
requirements to set aside lands to compensate for development impacts to endangered
species and wetlands will only increase. The need for experienced, credible and
professional land management entities will also increase. It is imperative that stringent
guidelines and standards be established for these stewards, as well as for public agencies
that hold mitigation lands. Regulatory agencies must find a way to correctly define
stewardship goals and provide consistent and thorough oversight of the steward’s work.
Private land trusts and conservation organizations are great innovators. They undertake
groundbreaking work typically not found in any government controlled land
conservation program. Therefore we cannot afford to lose the energy, effectiveness and
efficiency of private stewards. Government is not the solution to the TET problem. But
government is a key partner. The government needs the private sector to ensure the
long-term sustainability of these lands and cost-effective protection of resources for
future generations. Government must create a flexible and responsible regulatory
framework for mitigation. It can provide oversight itself, or by outsourcing to qualified
organizations. Indeed, oversight can probably be delegated to qualified private entities.
Organizations and individuals in California representing private and public
conservation entities have developed a model: Standards and Guidelines for Managing
Endowment Funds and Mitigation Lands. Legislation has been introduced to formally
allow nonprofits and other public conservation entities to hold and manage mitigation
endowment funds under these strict standards and guidelines. However, all this will be
for naught and we could have many more failures like TET if the regulatory agencies fail
to set goals and do not provide the necessary oversight to monitor an organization’s
activities.
Mitigation banks receive oversight from a committee made up of USFWS, U.S. Army
Corps Of Engineers, CDFG & U.S. Environmental Protection Agency called the
Mitigation Banking Review Team (MBRT). Perhaps a Mitigation Stewardship Review
Team (MSRT) should be formed to review mitigation manager’s biological and financial
reports and audits, and to conduct site visits to ensure stewardship is being carried out
under clearly defined best management practices. This would allow nonprofits
concerned with conservation to conduct the day-to-day conservation land management,
while allowing the regulatory agencies the oversight to ensure that these lands are
properly managed. As new nonprofit organizations spring up to offer stewardship
services and land trusts enter the mitigation land management arena, it is imperative
they will have learned lessons from the demise of TET.
Private stewardship is an experiment. Perhaps the private sector cannot assume all
funding obligations in perpetuity. But it is equally clear that government has few
mechanisms in place to assure perpetual funding. Most budgets are subject to annual
appropriation. Government can rarely invest in a balanced portfolio of assets that has an
adequate inflation and risk-adjusted return. If government does not earn enough to
manage land, the land is not managed. We are back to TET. Only time will tell. But I
think the answer must be a responsible partnership among all the players.
The Business of Conservation
I believe the lesson learned from TET is this: we are in the business of conservation. In
order to be successful and accomplish our mission, however, we must conduct our
activities using strong ethical, financial and professional standards. No nonprofit can
abandon its fiduciary and moral responsibilities. As we have seen from Congressional
hearings and legislation surrounding The Nature Conservancy’s recent troubles, non-
profits involved in conservation assume significant societal obligations under a sacred
trust that cannot be abused. This means we must be absolutely open and operate
transparently, meeting the highest of ethical and professional standards. To do anything
less is to abdicate our fiduciary trust; worse yet, it is a breach of public trust.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily
represent the views of the Ecosystem Marketplace or its staff.