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March 21, 2016

Impact of AMC's Maine Woods Initiative: $22M

Photo / Courtesy of Moosehead lake regional economic development Corp. Moosehead Lake is within a three-hour drive of Portland and "a prime nature-based tourism destination," according to AMC Senior Vice President Walter Graff.

GREENVILLE — The Appalachian Mountain Club’s spending on activities such as land conservation, sustainable forestry, construction, trails, programs and salaries in the Moosehead Lake and 100-Mile Wilderness region has contributed nearly $16 million to the Piscataquis County economy and $22 million to the Maine economy since its Maine Woods Initiative was launched in 2003, according to a new economic impact report.

In all, AMC has spent more than $44 million on Maine Wilderness Initiative capital investments and operational spending since its initial conservation purchase of the Katahdin Iron Works tract in 2003.

The study, “AMC’s contributions to the Maine economy,” was prepared by David Vail, Adams-Catlin professor of economics emeritus at Bowdoin College. It analyzed AMC’s activities and spending in the region and the spending of its overnight guests and program participants.

Some highlights:

  • The Maine Woods Initiative directly and indirectly created 56 full-time equivalent jobs in Piscataquis County and 71 jobs statewide in 2014. It generated some employment for at least 150 people, or 3% of Piscataquis County’s private sector workforce. AMC directly employs 26 full- time equivalent staff in the region.
  • Aside from lodging and program revenues collected by AMC, guests at its Maine Wilderness lodges spent nearly $157,000 with local businesses in 2014 on lodging, restaurant meals, guide services, and other purchases. AMC guests have spent more than $1.1 million in local communities since AMC reopened Little Lyford Lodge and Cabins in 2004.
  • By hiring local contractors and purchasing local building supplies wherever possible, 60% of AMC’s capital investment in lodge improvements has stayed within Piscataquis Country.
  • AMC has permanently protected 70,000 acres of land in the region, open to the public for recreation and managed as ecological reserves, or for sustainable forestry. It has created a 120-mile trail network and operates Little Lyford Lodge and Cabins and Gorman Chairback Lodge and Cabins as destinations for hiking, paddling, fly fishing and skiing.

According to the report, operational spending has been on a steady upward path since 2005, exceeding $1 million in 2010 and $1.5 million in 2014. Expenditures are likely to grow even more with the reopening of Medawisla Lodge and Cabins and expanded trails and programming in the Roach Ponds area.

AMC’s Maine Woods Initiative is an innovative approach to land conservation that combines outdoor recreation, resource protection, sustainable forestry, and community partnerships. It seeks to address the ecological and economic needs of the Maine Woods by supporting forest products jobs and traditional recreation, creating new multi-day recreational opportunities for visitors and attracting new nature-based tourism to the region.

“We are proud of what we have accomplished but also recognize that our vision is long-term,” said AMC Senior Vice President Walter Graff, who leads the Maine Woods Initiative. “True success will be measured over the long term by the generations of visitors and citizens of the region benefitting from a closer connection to the outdoors resulting in a healthier and more economically diverse community.”

Graff characterized the Moosehead Lake and 100-Mile Wilderness region as “a prime nature-based tourism destination.” He said AMC will use the report’s findings “to better leverage local community and economic impacts” — adding that it might also be useful “to others who seek to evaluate whether the MWI is or could be a model for conservation and community development in other rural areas.”

The study was funded by the Elmina B. Sewall Foundation, which also provided funding for the expansion of the local recreational trail network.

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