My family and I are down here in Jekyll Island, Georgia
this week. In so many ways, this island is a model of how we need to
live.
Jekyll Island was the playground of the rich in the late 1800s.
Pulitzer,
Gould, Rockefeller, Morgan ... a who's who of the richest and most
powerful
people in America. In fact, the idea for the Federal Reserve was
hatched
at their private club, the Jekyll Island Club. The families all
built
houses and wintered here for many years, until their power began to
wane.
In the early fifties, the heirs of the rich folk, who had not paid
property
taxes for many years, were surprised to find that the State of
Georgia took
their land in exchange for the taxes owed. The state took
ownership of the
island, and gave people 99 year leases. In an amazing
stroke of foresight,
the state required that only 35 percent of the island be
developed,
protecting the rest of the island.
It makes for a great
mix. Yes, there are hotels and restaurants, but
biking around this (very
flat!) island is so great: marshes, forests,
beach. There are electric cars
on the road, and I would have to say with a
great deal of surety that the
percentage of old fat men biking on Jekyll is
higher than in any other place
in America.
Now, of course, developers want to change this. Georgia
Governor Sonny
Perdue appointed three developers to the five-member Jekyll
Island
Authority, and they have decided that this island just can't do
without a
few McDonalds and maybe a Crate and Barrel.
There is a
milquetoast bill in the Georgia legislature that would provide
some
protection that the developers can't strip mine the whole thing, but
it's not
nearly as strongly worded as any of the residents and lovers of
this island
would like. Still, it's better than nothing.
I hope that people will
write to the Governor and encourage him to take
action FOR Jekyll, instead of
seeking to sell it out. Make a YouTube
video. Write a letter. But this is
too good to just give up on. This is
what we all need to be doing.