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FoxHershockMappingCommunities

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planning processes, especially with public agencies with an<br />

eye towards sustainable development. SIT therefore<br />

influenced changes in perception and practice with regard<br />

to, for example, land use planning and practices (increased<br />

likelihood of participation); site-specific fire dangers and<br />

prevention (increased awareness and sensitivity to<br />

conditions and dangers); and recreation and tourism<br />

opportunities (greater focus on the outdoors).<br />

Research using SIT has also led to changes in approaches<br />

to non-timber forest products (NTFP) including increased<br />

interest and utilization as well as developing agency<br />

management strategies (Everett 2001; Lonner 2002; Clifford<br />

2004). There is increased interest in watershed analysis<br />

based attempts at integrated resource management and<br />

rehabilitation that rely on SIT and that involve the<br />

community or that are contracted out to the community<br />

(USDA, Forest Service 1994a, 1998). One local Native<br />

American tribe is using TC GIS support to develop maps<br />

illustrating their historical uses of territory to obtain federal<br />

tribal status. The county is using SIT to establish an<br />

Emergency 911 system with caller ID and spatial locations<br />

and has already provided hard copy maps to benefit other<br />

operations such as volunteer fire departments, emergency<br />

search and rescue, and medical evacuation teams.<br />

There has been some resistance to mapping, common in<br />

remote areas. People with libertarian values or concerns<br />

about “government interference” are generally opposed to<br />

mapping and identifying residences and land parcels.<br />

Some people are concerned that mapping will lead to<br />

rezoning, enforcement of building codes, and increased<br />

property taxes. Others opposed are people involved in<br />

illicit activities such as drug cultivation or manufacturing;<br />

fish and wildlife poaching; and theft of resources such as<br />

timber, firewood, minerals, or water.<br />

5. Social Capacity built through SIT<br />

Social capacity includes relationships built in the<br />

community, and the ability of its members to organize and<br />

work together to address community concerns that might<br />

range from civic engagement in general to capturing access<br />

to otherwise unavailable resources.<br />

In 1993, SIT had little impact on the community other than<br />

maps being used for recreation and for natural resource<br />

project management. By 2004, many people in the<br />

community had developed more of a sense of place. There<br />

is also an increased emphasis on understanding the<br />

concept of “place,” including such factors as proximity,<br />

connectedness, and duration, which has helped people<br />

concerned about the same issue find each other and work<br />

together. This has led to greater sophistication in public<br />

discussions and debates among communities and with<br />

public and private resource managers. For example, the<br />

Trinity County Fire-Safe Council (TCFSC) used community<br />

mapping to produce extensive collaboration between the<br />

public, fire managers, and resource managers (TCFSC<br />

1999), which is leading in turn to better public policy (a<br />

county fire management plan) and funding for fire<br />

preparation and suppression projects (Everett 2004). Better<br />

understanding of land-use planning and its potential<br />

impacts led to extensive public involvement in a highway<br />

relocation project and a community airport expansion.<br />

Better understanding of resource problems and<br />

opportunities has led to the development of NTFP<br />

utilization and a nascent small diameter timber utilization<br />

industry, which in turn helps with fire fuel reduction.<br />

Most public and many private land or natural resource<br />

planning processes now include at a minimum SIT<br />

generated maps of proposed project areas and sometimes<br />

use SIT analyses to assess possible impacts. Locally<br />

generated SIT is being used by groups working on, for<br />

example, a public/private land exchange community forest<br />

project on land managed by the Bureau of Land<br />

Management (BLM) near Weaverville (the county seat); a<br />

water quality monitoring plan, that will include identifying<br />

recently sprayed watersheds; the proposed airport and<br />

highway projects; Trinity River water allocation; public<br />

resource management and access to the resources; and<br />

recreation opportunities. The Yurok, Karuk, and Hoopa<br />

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