A letter from Bruce Babbitt
I was so sorry to hear about Maeveen's passing. Perhaps
you can pass the following words on to her husband, friends
and admirers:
I will always remember the first time I met Maeveen. At the
Interior Department we had listed the pygmy owl as an endangered
species. Preliminary reports indicated that owl habitat included
a whole lot of Pima County, including most of the lands ripe
for urban development. It was looking like yet another big
train wreck was on the way.
After I met with Chuck and the Supervisors, it was clear that
none of us had much idea of what to do. I was promoting the
idea of Habitat Conservation Plans, but we really didn't have
many examples or precedents. Chuck suggested that I should
talk directly with Maeveen, and I finally located her office
in a corner of the County Complex.
To my astonishment, she had a plan in mind. The idea, she explained
in her quiet, self assured way, was to go beyond the habitat
needs of the pygmy owl, and beyond the requirements of the
Endangered Species Act, to build a comprehensive open space
plan for all of eastern Pima County.
I questioned her at length about whether it would be politically
possible to actually implement such an expansive vision. I
explained that elsewhere in the country we had run into intense
opposition with little to show for our efforts. Her response
was calm and unequivocal-- this is Pima County and we can do
it.
After that initial encounter I set up a back channel directly
from my office to Maeveen. Whenever issues came up to my attention,
I just picked up the phone and called her directly. And her
responses to my questions were always complete and reassuring---
she had all the facts, understood the science and the law ,
and was conversant with the developers,environmentalists and
elected officials. And she was the one person who could provide
the vision- an emerging concept of what a County Landscape
System could be.
The Pima County model, Maeveen's model, played a large role
in showing other parts of the country how the Endangered Species
Act can be managed and used to further good conservation planning.
It was and is a model that did much to save the Endangered
Species Act from it critics. It was Maaven's model, and I am
pleased that Pima County has chosen to name the system in her
honor. It is truly a fitting memorial to her incredible life
and leadership.
Bruce Edward Babbitt served as United States Secretary of the
Interior and as Governor of Arizona. He currently serves as
Chairman of the Board of the World Wildlife Fund in the U.S.

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