In a small corner of the Southeast, a sustainable economic development organization launches a bold vision to preserve the region’s Appalachian beauty and way of life.
Thrive Regional Partnership has launched the Cradle of Southern Appalachia initiative, a tri-state, collaborative landscape conservation blueprint to protect the region’s highest-quality natural areas. The initiative has been endorsed by Thrive’s Natural Treasure’s Alliance, a collective of conservation, outdoor recreation, and land management groups dedicated to long-term, voluntary conservation across the region.
The Cradle of Southern Appalachia initiative identifies areas that, if protected, would increase wildlife habitat and would better prepare the region in the face of increasing natural emergencies such as wildfire, flood, and drought. These areas would also improve physical and mental health by providing communities with healthy, public open spaces for people to connect with each other and the outdoors.
The data model used in the initiative, built by the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga’s Interdisciplinary Geospatial Technology Lab (IGTLab), is available for planning and outreach purposes beyond the conservation community. It is intended to be used as a resource by national, state, and local leaders in traditional sectors such as economic development and transportation planning to incorporate smart growth into their infrastructure decisions.
In addition to endorsing the blueprint, Thrive’s Natural Treasures Alliance has agreed to collaboratively strive toward the following outcomes by 2055, in order to preserve the region’s quality of life and protect its natural areas from encroaching development.
Double the amount of protected woodlands
Improve water quality of at least 50% of polluted streams in the region
Keep common species common by protecting 90% of at-risk fish, plants, and wildlife
Foster conservation awareness and education
Though not the only conservation plan of its kind, most of these plans are organized by land protection agencies alone. What makes the Cradle of Southern Appalachia initiative unique from a national perspective, is that it is a culmination of years of public input facilitated by Thrive, an organization with mutual purposes of protecting the region’s landscape while ensuring a sustainable economic future for its communities.
Thrive Regional Partnership invites partners outside the conservation community to join this effort to safeguard the region’s quality of life for future generations. The nonprofit is available to connect the general public, planning groups, private industry, and the media with the network of specialists and resources they need to ensure the natural heritage of their properties and communities is preserved.
Questions? Please contact Rhett Bentley, Director of Communications at rbentley@thriveregionalpartnership.org.