I spent a lot of time this weekend thinking about the best way to use nonprofit funds to fight what’s happening to nearly every county across the US today.
It’s not forming a land trust (at this time).
It’s not buying the land. The nonprofit could never stop the scale of what’s happening.
It’s not going ‘acre for acre’ with these corporations.
It’s going straight to the top.
And the top is ORES. If a legal precedent can be set here in New York State, it could be applied nationwide. And the legal precedent here is that the state has been allowed to supersede town boards in the name of ‘green energy’ while destroying its own DEC-designated and protected habitats and endangered species.
Only a few cases have been brought against this law/ORES since 2020.
It’s time for a new case to be opened. It’s the most direct way I can try and help all of the towns in New York State writing to me right now, desperate for help as big solar swallows up farmland, working farms, grasslands, wetlands, protected habitats, and the very land that makes our country what it is.
It’s happening on a much larger and more destructive scale than anyone realizes.
And with the American Land Rescue Fund, I am beholden to no one. There’s no stakeholders I have to appease. No land the nonprofit owns. There’s no PACs dictating how I vote. I’m not afraid to seek out the most aggressive attorneys available in this state to make a case here. I’m not afraid to go straight to the top when so many nonprofits in the environmental space are too scared to do just that.
The American Land Rescue Fund will step up where others have bent the knee.
The website will go live this week. Follow me here for updates. It will include a breakdown of how all donations will be utilized. I am currently vetting legal teams as we speak.
If you believe you know of an attorney or legal team that will take on the state in the most aggressive manner possible, feel free to tag them below. You can also send us an email at: contact@americanlandrescuefund.com.
The time for nice games is over. This is going to take one hell of a team, and that’s what my nonprofit was founded to do.