Who We Are & What We Do

Message From the Executive Director

Why Support UF?

10 Point Plan

Board of Directors

Advisory Council

UF Staff

Interns

Volunteers

Members & Supporters

Annual Reports

 

 

 

Message From the Executive Director

Iwas born and raised in the Upstate and except for attending school and working one year in Washington, D.C., I have lived here my whole life.

This truly is the most special place on the planet—a region with spectacular natural resources and a thriving and diverse economic base.

During the last several years, I have watched the changes in the Upstate with a mixture of pride and dread.

I have been proud to see our region wean itself from almost total dependence on the textile industry, now in serious decline, and attract such corporate luminaries as BMW, Michelin and Fuji.

I have been proud to see our region’s population become more diverse and to see more and better economic opportunities for minorities.

I have been proud to see our major cities, mostly shuttered and abandoned in the 1960s, rebounding with vigor in the last 10 years, becoming magnets for businesses and downtown residents.

But outside the cities, which comprise only about fifteen per cent of the Upstate’s total land area, the news is not good.  Low-density residential subdivisions, grotesque commercial strip development, and massive seas of asphalt are consuming our region, fueled by an ever-expanding infrastructure of roads and water and sewer lines. 

Indeed, every day in the Upstate, 65 acres of open space—forests, natural areas, wildlife habitat, pastures, farmland, and green fields—are devoured by the voracious growth machine.  It is a staggering rate—about five times the rate of our region’s population growth, the equivalent of a brand new version of Greenville’s Haywood Mall every 30 hours.

There is not much we can or should do about population growth in the Upstate, but there is a lot we can do about the inordinate consumption of land and the loss of important natural areas and historic sites.  And there is a lot we can do about the quality of development itself.

This is what Upstate Forever is all about: the where and how issues—where our region should be growing and how land should be developed.  I founded the organization in 1998 because of the urgent need for a voice in our region for a better and different way to grow—a way that conserves both land and tax dollars.

Yogi Berra said, “When you come to a fork in the road, take it.”  The Upstate is now at the fork in the road to its destiny.  We do have a choice.  We can become another Atlanta or we can become something different—a region that prospers both economically and environmentally.

Please join us.  As a nonprofit organization, Upstate Forever cannot do its work without the support of our members. 

Help us make a difference. Help us keep the Upstate the best place in the world. Forever.

Thank you for your support!

Best regards,

Brad Wyche
Executive Director

 

 

 

 

Upstate Forever promotes sensible growth and the protection of
special places in the Upstate region of South Carolina.

864.250.0500 | Contact Us!