The Dawn of a New Constructive Era 23 



We need in this problem, as in many other matters, not so 

 much regulation by the state as correlated action and joint effort 

 by the public and private agencies, working toward a common Co-operation 

 purpose. This plan is in successful operation in the West in Preferable to 

 forest fire protection and in the handling of grazing matters. State Regu- 

 While conditions are different in the South, the principle is, T tation 

 believe, feasible if the land owners are prepared to enter upon a 

 far-reaching plan of land administration. 



There would be involved first of all a classification of the 

 land and a survey of the resources, both timber and grazing; 

 then a plan of development, administration, finance and control. 



Personally I should like to see a plan worked out for a 

 specified group of holdings, under the direction of a board or 

 committee composed of representatives of the owners and of the 

 public agencies that might be interested, as the 'county, state Offers Assist- 

 and federal government. If such joint enterprises could be un- ance of For- 

 dertaken it would turn the course of the use of the pine lands ^*' oervice 

 from a progressive destruction of resources to an upbuilding 

 process. If such constructive enterprise should be initiated you 

 may confidently count on the support of the Forest Service. 



