Major change and renewed commitment.

AuthorPollack, Stephanie
PositionFrom The Acting President

THIS IS THE FIRST ISSUE IN the nine-year publishing history of Conservation Matters in which the names Douglas I. Foy and Stephen H. Burrington don't appear on the CLF staff list. Doug, our president for 25 years, accepted an invitation from Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney to be the state's first-ever Chief of Commonwealth Development (see page 9). Steve, our general counsel and a colleague for 13 years, is Deputy Chief. Doug is responsible for the state agencies of housing, transportation, environmental affairs, and energy, ensuring that they coordinate efforts to forge a sustainable future for Massachusetts. It's a tribute to both CLF and the causes we hold dear that our president would be chosen for such an important position. And where does his departure leave CLF? As strong as ever! The Board of Trustees is conducting a national search for a new president, and I've accepted the honor of serving as acting president. It's a big responsibility, and the talented staff here at CLF will miss Doug and Steve, but none of us has any doubt that CLF will continue to be the voice of environmental advocacy in New England.

This issue of CM exemplifies that continuing, pivotal role. It's devoted to our new Clean Air and Climate Change Project (CACCP), formerly called the Energy Project. CLF senior attorney Seth Kaplan is project director. For his letter on the subject, turn the page. For a look at "Energy," look back to the year 1978, when CLF opposed federal government plans to auction oil drilling sites on Georges Bank. We kept the pressure on for seven years, and no such drilling has ever taken place.

The Energy Project was officially launched in 1980, and it battled from the start to stop construction of a second nuclear plant at Seabrook, NH. Four years passed, but the plant was never built.

In 1985, with a wild and scenic stretch of Maine's Penobscot River about to be inundated by construction of a hydroelectric dam, expert CLF testimony defeated the project. We said that realizing untapped potential for energy conservation would make the dam unnecessary.

Our 1987 report, Power to Spare, cited the benefits and potential--for all New England--of improving energy efficiency. Intervening in many utility proceedings, CLF convinced regulators to require more efficient practices. They subsequently ordered 12 utilities to create efficiency programs, under the guidance of CLF energy collaboratives.

In 1993 and 1994, the Energy Project halted...

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