Darby Bradley On Fossil Fuel, Housing, Entrepreneurship
Darby Bradley, past president of the Vermont Land Trust, stands at the edge of a field that is part of the 300-acre Sparrow Farm in East Montpelier, conserved in 1995 with a public trail easement. The mountains in the background are the northern end of the Worcester Range, where the Vermont Land Trust conserved over 7,000 acres in 1997 and 2014.
Listen below as Bradley speaks to the relationship between landowners and the land trust over time—and read his response to the question: What will bring us to the next level in meeting the energy and environmental challenges we are facing today?
What will bring us to the next level in meeting the energy and environmental challenges we are facing today?
The above comes from the recent Vermont Folklife Center exhibit, Portraits in Action: Pioneers in Renewable Energy, Environmental Conservation, and Land Use Planning. The exhibit brings together the perspectives of a diverse cross section of twenty-five pioneers, activists, and leaders in renewable energy, environmental conservation, and land use planning, and invites them to speak to the issues at hand. It is both an oral history and a call to action.
See more from the exhibition - Portraits in Action.