Green vs. green

by The Associated Press

Monday, March 19, 2007 12:15 PM EDT

ROMULUS - In a ghostlike performance, the small cluster of white deer slip in and out of sight, peacefully weaving among the hummock-shaped bunkers that once held America's war weapons.
The Associated Press
A white white-tailed deer grazes with another deer at the former Seneca Army Depot where there is a herd of rare white white-tailed deer, in Romulus. Seneca White Deer Inc. is fighting to save the habitat of the world's largest herd of rare white white-tailed deer living within the fenced-in former Seneca Army Depot in upstate New York, where developers want to build an ethanol facility, a biomass power plant and farm up to 4,500 acres of willows.
The striking image is one Dennis Money wants others to see.

“It's a classic moment to see one of these deer on top of an ammunition bunker. You go back to that old saying about beating your swords into plowshares. You put a military base to bed and turn it into a conservation park,” Money said on a recent winter morning.

Money is a member of Seneca White Deer, a group fighting to save the habitat of the world's largest herd of rare white white-tailed deer, which live within the fenced-in former Seneca Army Depot in upstate New York.

Developers are also interested in planting up to 4,500 acres of willow trees on the decommissioned military site and building an ethanol facility and biomass power plant.

It is an unlikely showdown that pits green idea against green idea.

But Glenn Cooke, the executive director of the Seneca County Industrial Development Agency, which now holds title to the land, said he thinks the two plans are compatible, and that protection and preservation of the white deer has always been a priority.

“The issue is whether one group should be given rights to the entire 7,500 acres. We believe several uses can coexist,” Cooke said.

Empire Green Biofuels, a farmer-based initiative, hopes to begin construction this spring on the $85 million ethanol project and $30 million biomass plant, said Edward Primrose, a local farmer and president of the company's board of directors.

The two plants will create about 50 jobs initially, and up to as many as 150.

Snuggled between Cayuga and Seneca lakes in upstate New York's Finger Lakes region, the 10,587-acre army depot opened in 1941 on what had been productive farmland. For more than 50 years, the depot was used to store and dispose of military explosives, including nuclear bomb materials. It ceased most operations in 1993 and officially closed in 2000.

When the depot was built, the Army erected 24 miles of 7-feet high fence. It kept intruders out - and deer in. Initially, there were just a few white-tail deer, with typical brown coloration. But as the herd grew, the “ghost” deer began to appear. The white deer are not albinos - animals with pink eyes and born without pigmentation. They simply carry a recessive gene for white hair. They have brown or gray eyes.

The Army noticed, and gave the white deer protection while managing the brown deer herd.

The white deer have prospered and today number between 250 and 300 - about a third of the depot herd.

White deer will occasionally show up in herds of brown deer but never in such numbers in the wild. There are two privately owned herds of white deer in Europe, each with about 50 animals.

Since the Army departed, the depot has become home to a state prison, a soon-to-open county jail, a state police training center and a residential camp for children with emotional problems and history of delinquency. But those facilities are on the periphery, away from the deer's habitat.

Primrose doesn't believe the deer would be adversely affected by Empire's plans. He said only about 1,500 acres would likely be planted, leaving much of the herd's habitat untouched. Primrose said the board is working with Cornell University and the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry to develop a management plan.

Before the Army pulled out, it recommended turning the core of the property into a conservation park featuring the white deer and using it for outdoor recreation. It's the largest remaining piece of open space in the Finger Lakes.

For nearly eight years, Money's organization has been seeking to protect the herd and develop the land as a conservation park. They recently launched a letter-writing campaign and Internet petition drive to build support for relocating the plants.

More than 23 million people visit the region yearly for its wineries and outdoor recreation, according to the Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance. After agriculture, tourism is New York's next largest industry, and ecotourism is a booming segment of that business.

Four days of mini-safaris last fall were proof that such a park would be a success, Money said. The hastily arranged tours drew 1,800 visitors - and organizers turned away another 500 people - and grossed $28,000.

“If you marketed it properly, you could have busloads and busloads of ecotourists,” said Money, who has previously helped with river otter and peregrine falcon restoration projects in upstate New York.

“Plus, it would have a fantastic PR image for Seneca County. We could be home to the world's largest herd of white deer. Instead of the home of prisons and a landfill. It's a more positive public image. It's a natural fit,” Money said.

The park would feature hunting, hiking and horse trails, camping areas and eventually an educational center and Cold War museum. A limited number of white deer could be hunted to manage the herd. The depot has a 60-acre pond and counts as an important birding area, sitting just 15 miles south of the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge, a major rest stop for migratory waterfowl.

Colleges and universities also could use the park as a unique field laboratory to do research, Money said.

Seneca White Deer is ready to go to court to stop the ethanol plant, Money said.

The group contends the IDA pushed the project through without following proper permitting procedures, including rezoning 4,700 acres of land without performing an environmental impact statement.

The organization has proposed moving the plants to the east side of the depot, where the prisons are located. Local farmers could grow willow on their field outside the depot, many of which are now fallow or underused, Money said.

“The farmers will be happy growing crops and getting money for it, you have the animals happy because they don't have to move or die, and you have the combined economic stimulus from tourism and the production of ethanol,” Money said.

---

On the Net:

Seneca White Deer: http://www.senecawhitedeer.org/

The Citizens' Say

There are 7 comment(s)

TraceyfromMaine wrote on Apr 24, 2007 5:55 PM:

" My father has lived in Auburn my whole life, and was the well-known meat manager at the Auburn Wegman's for over 25 years. I have grown up in this area, however now live in Maine. I have a HUGE passion for deer of any kind, and would be sorely devastated if the herd of white deer were annihilated or otherwise. Deer are majestic and beautiful and to kill them would be a disaster. I agree that it could wind up benefiting the area in more ways than residents want to imagine. My mother lived in a condo complex right down the street from the prison, and she was the one who originally told me of the plight of these beautiful creatures. Can you imagine? Romulus would be on the MAP as the home of the only know white deer herd in the entire world!! When you read of endangered species and it says it's the only one in the world at its location, what do you say? "WOW! I want to know more!" And then people will travel to Romulus and realize how absolutely beautiful the rolling fields are and the deep beauty it holds in the countryside- just as I did. Leave the deer alone, and protect them! "

Don Parker wrote on Mar 20, 2007 11:51 AM:

" I'd pay to go on a hunt in a second, now that the herd is getting to be a decent size. A lottery system might work best, and some of the funds raised could be used to maintain the land, while the rest could be used for promotion and other sporting activities. "

just watching wrote on Mar 20, 2007 9:32 AM:

" gee wouldn't that be a great place for a highend deer hunt -just think of all the money that could be made ! Not really they need to be protected and with the proper managed levels some could be moved to other protected areas ,some things just need to be lefted alone!!!!!! "

taxpayer1 wrote on Mar 19, 2007 4:54 PM:

" Mayor Lattimore needs to talk to these people NOW and FAST. Bringing that ethanol plant to Auburn would be HUGE. THAT is a project with jobs that THIS city needs. Give them a viable alternative to putting it at the depot land! Push long and hard to bring that plant HERE. We need the jobs and it will be a long term beneficial project that could put Auburn on the map. So much better than a casino! THIS will be a tax producing employer taht we NEED. And if not in Auburn city limits, then get here in the outskirts, but bring it HERE!!!! "

This photo wrote on Mar 19, 2007 3:18 PM:

" is absolutely beautiful "

White deer sightings wrote on Mar 19, 2007 1:14 PM:

" We used to see white deer in the King Ferry area some years ago -- then suddenly they were all gone. Haven't seen one this side of the lake in at least 15 years. I suppose enough were killed that they lost the recessive gene, while the deer enclosed in the Army Depot can only inbreed. Hopefully whatever plans go forward allow the deer to have a bit more free range so they can out-breed and be more healthy. "

MD wrote on Mar 19, 2007 12:49 PM:

" I remember the first time I saw a white deer at the Seneca Depot...it was breathtaking! I hope everyone does everything possible to ensure they around for future generations to enjoy. "

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