Farmland preservation programs have changed, but same focus

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SALEM, Ohio — The state and federal farmland preservation programs continue to preserve land in Ohio — albeit in slightly different way.

The state program, which is administered through the Ohio Department of Agriculture’s Office of Farmland Preservation, now operates in cooperation with certified, local sponsors who help coordinate and complete applications.

This is the second year for the new program, which requires local sponsors to submit their applications for review by ODA’s Farmland Advisory Board. The board then makes recommendations to the director — based on points-based criteria — about which easements should be purchased.

The advisory board is made up of about a dozen members, including farmer members from across the state, and representatives for county commissioners, township trustees and planners, and Ohio legal professionals.

Local role

The goal with the new system was to give local entities more responsibility, while offsetting some of the state’s administrative workload.

Howard Wise, assistant state agriculture director, said there was some criticism over the change at first, partly because people “felt they would have to do more work.”

As it turns out, “there’s some truth to that,” he said, but the localized program has also helped to do a better job of connecting with landowners in the different parts of the state.

There were 18 state-certified sponsors in 2014, covering about 50 counties. Wise said the local sponsors have a better idea of the needs and concerns within their own communities, and can “give the farmers a personal touch,” in a way that the previous, centralized program struggled to do.

The options

Ohio offers two main programs for farmland preservation — the Local Agricultural Easement Purchase Program, which is funded through the voter-approved Clean Ohio Fund, and the Agricultural Easement Donation Program, which allows landowners to donate easement rights, so that their land will be preserved.

With the purchase program, money is paid for up to 75 percent of the land’s appraised development value, with a payment cap of $2,000 per acre and a per-farm cap of $500,000.

For 2014, Ohio made $6 million available for easement purchases, and tentatively $6.25 million for 2015, which the state estimates will also leverage additional funds from the federal Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program.

All combined, preservation programs in Ohio have preserved 315 family farms in 54 counties, which amounts to 54,212 acres of agricultural production.

Wise said participation in the state program has gone up since it changed, with 28 easements last year, and about 38 that are pending this year. He said selected farms are also being paid faster, with an average turnaround time of 15 months.

Advisory board

Lucille Hastings, the advisory board farmer representative for northeast Ohio, said the program is always being evaluated for ways to make it better.

“We keep trying to tweak it all the time,” she said.  “We’re interested in doing the best job for farmland preservation in the state of Ohio and we also want to make it fair to everybody in agriculture.”

Hastings, who owns a farm in Holmes County, said it helps to have a program that is localized because farmland pressures differ across the state. In some counties, the pressure is business development, while in her county, the pressure is often residential development.

Hastings said the local sponsor model also helps ensure more money is spent on actual farmland preservation, rather than administrative costs. Currently, the Ohio Office of Farmland Preservation employs three people and usually an intern.

Federal options

Landowners also have some federal options for preserving their farm, which have also changed slightly.

The 2014 farm bill created the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program, which consolidates three former NRCS easement programs — the Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program, the Grasslands Reserve Program, and the Wetlands Reserve Program — into two components.

One component protects farmlands and grasslands, and the other protects and restores critical wetlands.

In the last round of funding, the USDA made $328 million available across all the states. Ohio landowners submitted 93 applications and received $8.3 million for purchasing 17 conservation easements through the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program.

This will protect and restore about 4,500 acres of Ohio’s prime farmland and wetlands.

More applications

Matt Harbage, the Agricultural Land Easements manager for Ohio, said about 50 ag-specific easements applications were received this year, an increase over 40 last year.

He said the federal program has used the local sponsor model for years, and that it makes sense, for working with landowners on a local scale.

Like the state program, USDA ranks and scores applicants according to rigorous selection criteria, and awards the top performers.

Under current rules for the federal ag easement program, NRCS may contribute up to 50 percent of the fair market value of the agricultural land. In cases where NRCS determines that grasslands of special environmental significance will be protected, NRCS may contribute up to 75 percent of the fair market value.

Learn more.

To learn more about farmland preservation in Ohio contact your local sponsor or visit the ODA Office of Farmland Preservation online at www.agri.ohio.gov/farmland/. You can also reach them at 614-728-6210.

To learn more about federal programs and ACEP, visit www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/national/programs/easements/acep/.

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