These municipalities and institutions have passed official resolutions supporting the LULA and its principles.
Amenia, Austerlitz, Bedford, Beekman, Bethel, Bethlehem, Clarkstown, Clinton, Cortlandt, Dover, East Fishkill, Fishkill, Greenburgh, Greenville, Goshen, Harrison, Hyde Park, Knox, LaGrange, Liberty, Mamaroneck, Marbletown, Marlborough, Montgomery, New Baltimore, New Castle, New Paltz, North Salem, Ossining, Pawling, Philipstown, Pleasant Valley, Poughkeepsie, Putnam Valley, Red Hook, Rhinebeck, Rochester, Rosendale, Schodack, Somers, Stanford, Union Vale, Wantage, Wappinger, Washington, Wawarsing, and Yorktown.
Beacon, Middletown, New Rochelle, Newburgh, Rye, Rensselaer, and White Plains.
Dobbs Ferry, Ellenville, Fishkill, Greenwood Lake, Goshen, Hastings-on-Hudson, Irvington, Larchmont, Mamaroneck, Millbrook, New Paltz, Nyack, Pawling, Philmont, Piermont, Red Hook, Scarsdale, South Nyack, Tarrytown, Tivoli, Upper Nyack, Wappingers Falls, and Warwick.
Dutchess, Putnam, Rensselaer, Rockland, and Westchester.
Appropos Housing Opportunities and Management Enterprises, Inc., Columbia County Industrial Development Authority; Columbia Economic Development Corporation, Columbia Land Conservancy, Croton Housing Network, Dutchess County Environmental Management Council, Harlem Valley Partnership, Greater Centennial Community Development Corporation Interfaith Council for Action, Housing Action Council, Hudson River Valley Greenway Communities Council & Greenway Conservancy for the Hudson River Valley, Long Island Sound Watershed Intermunicipal Council, Mid-Hudson Pattern for Progress, New York Planning Federation, Rockland Municipal Planning Federation, Rockland Riverfront Communities Council, Rural Ulster Preservation Co., Save the Woods and Wetlands, Saw Mill River Coalition/Groundwork Yonkers, Washingtonville Housing Alliance, Westchester Community Opportunity Program, Inc., Westchester Land Trust, Westchester Municipal Officials Associations, Westchester Municipal Planning Federation, and the Yorktown Community Housing Board.
The skills and tools learned at LULA remain the touchstones of the conservation work I conduct in the tri-state region
Dr. Michael Klemens Wildlife Conservation Society’s Metropolitan Conservation Alliance
Over 84% of the participants ranked the program as excellent or very good.
73% of survey graduates said they used the skills learned in the program to adopt land use innovations.
For more information on LULA in Connecticut, visit the sister site.
