Demonstrated again Tuesday when the Clean Water, Land and Legacy amendment was approved by more than 56 percent of voters was that --notwithstanding how much the demographics of Minnesota have changed in the past half-century, and particularly in the past 20 years -- most people who live here still have a closely held affinity for our natural resources.
And, if given a chance, they're willing to pay more to keep the state's lakes and rivers clean, its forests intact and the hope alive that at least some of its wetlands can be restored, its prairies replanted and its fish and wildlife kept healthy and plentiful.
That said, the 10-year-long struggle to place the amendment before voters ultimately never was about conservation. Power, control and money were the issues. Those who've held them, or controlled them, for more than a century in Minnesota -- lobbyists, legislators and governors, mostly -- were loathe to give them up, no matter the cost to the state's environment.
Put another way, Minnesota's resources are messed up because conservation in this state has been designed to fail from the outset.
How could it be otherwise when the commissioner of the Department of Natural Resources is appointed by, and must do the bidding of, the governor? Similarly, for funding, the DNR is at the mercy of the Legislature.
Which is in large part why, beginning in 1880, this state has been dredged, cut, polluted and, more recently, paved --with impunity. Money -- and the quest by all of us for it -- is the reason.
Historically, Minnesota officeholders have been more than willing to aid and abet mining, agriculture, development, forestry and other natural-resource-utilizing interests by keeping conservation professionals underfunded, and under thumb.
Missouri voters broke this fast ride to nowhere when they approved dedication of a fraction of their sales tax for conservation. But they went a step further than Minnesota voters did Tuesday: Missouri also placed power and control of its Department of Conservation in the sole hands of a citizens board. And it imbedded in its constitution a dictum that the agency must at all times act in the best interest of conservation.