Fall 2013 - Pennsylvania Land Trust Association
Transcription
Fall 2013 - Pennsylvania Land Trust Association
Fall 2013 Get Outdoors PA: Connect & Inspire Your Community ClearWater Conservancy does it. So does Countryside Conservancy. Wildlands Conservancy has been doing it for decades. Land trusts across Pennsylvania are not just providing conserved places to visit but are actively engaging people in outdoor activities such as hiking, kayaking, bird watching and more. Get Outdoors PA makes it easier for land trusts to develop and market their outdoor programming. Get Outdoors PA has been around for years, offering thousands of recreation programs in Pennsylvania’s state parks and forests. Now the program is expanding to include private, county and municipal programs. Get Outdoors PA flagship partners, Department (Continued on page 2) Ellen Ferretti Named Acting DCNR Secretary Ellen Ferretti will serve as the acting secretary for the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation & Natural Resources (DCNR) following the resignation of Rick Allan. Ferretti has served as Deputy Secretary for Parks and Forestry since June 2011. Prior to joing DCNR, Ferretti served as the vice president of the northeast regional office of the Pennsylvania Environmental Council; director of Environmental Resources at Borton-Lawson Engineering; project manager at Westinghouse Environmental and Geotechnical Services, Inc.; and was a former board member of North Branch Land Trust. She holds a B.S. in Environmental Science/Biology from Wilkes College in Wilkes-Barre. “I’ve spent many years working with the land trust community in Northeastern PA and look forward to now working with the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association (PALTA) and all the land trusts across the Commonwealth. Not only is the work of the land trust community so valuable, but the commitment of everyone involved, from staff to volunteers to landowners who want to conserve their land - it is inspiring! I applaud PALTA for the valuable work they do and look forward to meeting all of their members.” “The purpose of conservation: the greatest good to the greatest number of people for the longest time.” - Pennsylvania Governor, Gifford Pinchot (1923-1927, 1931-1935) Get Outdoors PA (cont’d) of Conservation & Natural Resources, Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission, Pennsylvania Recreation & Park Society and the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association encourage land trusts to participate and become community partners. Whether the land trust offers just one or many events a year, Get Outdoors PA can help. Benefit from technical resources in the Partner Portal! The GetOutdoorsPA.org website makes it easy for Get Outdoors PA partners to market outdoor events to the public. Individuals coming to the site simply choose the activity(s) and location(s) and they’re one click away from enjoying the great outdoors. The Partner Portal at GetOutdoorsPA.org provides resources to organizations wanting to enrich outdoor programming and expand outreach in the community. In addition, an online networking tool connects outdoor program administrators with one another so that they can share resources and ideas. “In partnership with Get Outdoors PA, we’ll expand our reach to create many more meaningful connections between the community and nature. Advertise your outdoor programs and events at GetOutdoorsPA.org! - Chris Kocher, President Wildlands Conservancy Get Outdoors PA partners can expect to receive special visibility when applying for DCNR grant programs. Wildlands Conservancy has long been serving the Lehigh Valley with outdoor programs such as nature walks, river sojourns and nature-based education. As a Get Outdoors PA community partner, Wildlands will, with little additional effort, expand its marketing reach and share its knowledge and best practices with other organizations. Chris Kocher, President of the Wildlands Conservancy, explains, “In partnership with Get Outdoors PA, we’ll expand our reach to create many more meaningful connections between the community and nature. Together, we’ll inspire generations to care for and appreciate our region’s irreplaceable natural resources.” Connecting children and adults to nature is a logical priority for land trusts. Connecting children, in particular, to nature is a great opportunity for land trusts to build relationships with future stewards. After all, it is the future landowners, farmers, donors, volunteers, conservationists that will continue this work. Becoming a partner is simple. Learn more and complete the online application at GetOutdoorsPA. org. So, advance your mission, improve your outreach, and become a Get Outdoors PA partner! Learn more by visiting GetOutdoorsPA.org or contact Nicole Faraguna (717.909.1298 or nfaraguna@ conserveland.org.) ConserveLand Page 2 PALTA Welcomes New Board Directors and Officers In April, PALTA membership elected three new directors to the PALTA Board: Sherri Evans-Stanton, Director of Brandywine Conservancy’s Enviromental Management Center, and Past PALTA President rejoins the board. Thomas Daniels, Professor at University of Pennsylvania, is a first-time board member. D. Andrew Pitz RLA, Executive Director of French & Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust, is a PALTA founding board member and past president. In June, PALTA’s board elected new officers: Paul Lumia, Executive Director of the North Branch Land Trust, was elected President. Jeffrey Marshall, President of Heritage Conservancy, was elected Vice-President. Tom Saunders, President of the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, was re-elected Secretary and John Conner of Manada Conservancy was re-elected Treasurer. Check out the Latest Guidance at A purchase option assures the option holder of the right to purchase property at a certain price within a certain time period but without an obligation to do so. The tool is widely used in business transactions and likewise is highly applicable to many conservation projects, including land, conservation easement and trail easement acquisitions. To call attention to the conservation strategies enabled by purchase options and to help organizations apply the tool to their work, PALTA has published two new resources at ConservationTools.org: 1. Purchase Options: Gaining the Right Without the Obligation to Acquire Property Interests Guide 2. Model Grant of Purchase Option Guide with Commentary (draft). Published for peer and public review, the draft is well developed and suited for use. PALTA urges interested people to review the draft and submit comments by October 15 to Andy Loza at aloza@conserveland.org to help PALTA deliver the most helpful first edition possible. Fall 2013 A Conversation with Conservation Attorney, Patricia Pregmon What led you to become a conservation attorney? A. Serendipity. The firm I joined in 1981 after graduating law school, Duane Morris, had a client, Natural Lands Trust, interested in pursuing donations of conservation easements qualifying for federal tax benefits under the then rather new tax code provisions. I, the novice, was the only real estate attorney who had at least a passing acquaintance with conservation easements. Several years earlier, my family and I were visiting friends on a farm in Chester County on a hot summer’s day. While we were wading in the creek, I learned that the farm was part of a larger tract protected by something called a conservation easement. I remember this vividly because I was fascinated by the concept (although not very clear about how it worked). When I was given the assignment for Natural Lands Trust, there was almost no guidance (other than the regulations) on what a grant of conservation easement was supposed to look like, what a “qualified conservation contribution” was supposed to contain, or exactly how it would work. But I was hooked -developing something new from the ground up appealed to me then and still does now. What does conservation mean to you? A. Let’s start with what it does not mean and that is the vain attempt of the human species (and its subspecies, lawyers) to keep every aspect of a real property exactly as it is at a certain moment. The natural environment is not static. I’ve always admired how conservation professionals can look at a woodland, for example, and see what it was and what it is becoming. Conservation, to me, is valuing natural areas for their past, present and future contribution to the health and well-being of all living things. The purpose of conservation is to maintain or achieve those values through a variety of strategies. The strategies may change but the conservation values remain fixed. The Pennsylvania Land Trust Association invites members to use the PALTA Member Logo on their websites and in print materials to show support for best conservation practices and increasing the pace at which Pennsylvanians conserve their special places and landscapes Shaped by six cycles of practitioner review and continuing user feedback, no easement document in the nation has undergone greater public scrutiny and testing than PALTA’s Model Grant of Conservation Easement. As the principal author, what have you learned in the development of this resource? A. First, that it was a brilliant idea (unfortunately, not mine) to have the document and commentary freely available online to any and all users. Second, collecting and responding to user comments and questions have improved and will continue to improve the document. No printed form will ever be as flexible and responsive to criticism as our online model. Third, I think we hit on the right concept of creating a model that was intended to be a platform to be adapted in a limitless variety of ways. Each easement holder has its own preferences. Each eased property is different. The commentary is the vehicle intended to guide changes to the model. When we started the project, I had . Find this and additional partner logos at ConserveLand.org/memberlogo How would you describe conservation easements to a non-lawyer who has no prior knowledge of them? A. A conservation easement is the grant of a power to block land uses harmful to the woodlands, fields, soils, streams, wetlands, fish, wildlife or scenic resources of the property. Future building on the land is managed to minimize adverse effects on these natural and scenic resources. ConserveLand Page 4 Continued from page 3 no idea that the commentary would grow to a book-length document. The first drafts had the commentary as little bubbles of text interspersed into the document. You have seen hundreds of conservation projects. What makes a project particularly interesting or challenging to you? A. I like puzzles. Projects with a number of stakeholders, all with their own objectives and concerns, are always interesting to me because, to come up with an acceptable solution, you need to analyze individual needs, mediate competing interests, and create a structure that brings them together into a whole. Many times I find that the solution to the puzzle is derived from strategies I’m familiar with from the non-conservation world: balancing competing interests of commercial lenders funding a development project or sorting out the priorities of private and public funding sources in tax credit transactions. my conservation writing (unless its freezing) on my back deck listening to the birds and observing the trees stirring from time to time. The woods have been the playground for our children and grandchildren. I love playing explorer, or archaeologist, or paleontologist back there with my grandchildren just as I did with my girls when they were little. There’s nothing better than to watch children explore nature by themselves. I’m an avid gardener and grow lots of herbs and vegetables, which the rabbits and squirrels enjoy. Until Sandy hit last year, we retreated on weekends to a wonderful spot in New Jersey that was almost surrounded by the Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge -- great birding (ospreys, eagles, herons and other shore birds) and kayaking. We had a little beach where horseshoe crabs and turtles came to lay their eggs. The whole family, grandchildren included, enjoy fishing. Almost every vacation I’ve ever taken was to a place with great fishing -- Kodiak island, Queen Charlotte sound, northwestern Quebec, Costa Rica, Florida keys. Do I enjoy the outdoors? You bet. What do you feel are the greatest challenges that Pennsylvania land trusts face, legal or otherwise? A. This is really difficult to answer because I truly believe that we are blessed here in Pennsylvania. Our land trusts take their easement management responsibilities very seriously. They have available to them the invaluable support and guidance of the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association. Nevertheless, no one can overlook that there is increasing competition for scarcer resources. Just like businesses during the economic downturn, we need to look at how we do our work and think of ways to do it more efficiently and effectively. I believe the model conservation easement and other model documents have brought down the cost of document preparation. I’m working now on a guide looking into the relationships of multiple easement holders and easement beneficiaries. It has caused me to think about the ways land trusts could partner with each other so as not to duplicate efforts but recognize each other’s strengths. I think this may be a viable path to allow smaller, often local, land trusts to survive on a limited budget. How do you enjoy the outdoors? A. Both my husband and I are outdoors people. We built our house in the woods along the steep slopes known as the Wissahickon gorge portion of Fairmount Park. The woods and its wildlife (fox, coyote, deer) and birds (song birds, screech owls, hawks and the occasional eagle) have been a key focus of our lives for many years. I do most of Fall 2013 Peter Hausmann Honored The Pennsylvania Land Trust Association honored Peter Hausmann of Chester County with the Lifetime Conservation Leadership Award at its awards dinner in State College on April 5th. Hausmann served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Natural Lands Trust for the past 13 years. During his tenure, the organization preserved more than 35,000 acres of open space, the most productive period in the organization’s sixty-year history. He is also a founding Trustee of the Willistown Conservation Trust. From left to right: PALTA Board Directors Sherri Evans-Stanton, Renee’ Carey, and Molly Morrison; Peter Hausmann; and PALTA Executive Director, Andy Loza. Peter was at the forefront of Chester County’s open space preservation efforts beginning in the late 1980s. In 1989, he helped to found and chaired Save Open Space, a citizens’ group that successfully shepherded the county’s pioneering open space bond issue. He is a former board member and real estate committee chair for The Nature Conservancy’s Pennsylvania Chapter and former board member of the Pennsylvania Environmental Council, the Green Space Alliance, and 10,000 Friends of Pennsylvania. Ever concerned about the long-term sustainability of the land trust movement, Peter lent his talents to the Land Trust Alliance from 2007 to 2009, where, as Chairman, he oversaw the launch of the Alliance’s ground-breaking accreditation process and was a leading advocate for the development of the Terrafirma Risk Retention Group - a charitable risk pool designed to insure member land trusts against the legal costs of defending easements. “Peter Hausmann isn’t a household name. But it should be for those in metropolitan Philadelphia,” asserted Andy Loza, executive director of PALTA. He cited Chester County in particular: “In the coming decades, when residents and visitors enjoy the county’s parks and protected open spaces, there’s a big chance that they owe their joy in part to the work of Peter Hausmann.” PALTA Honors Buckingham Township The Pennsylvania Land Trust Association honored Buckingham Township (Bucks County) with the 2013 Government Conservation Leadership Award for demonstrated leadership in conserving special landscapes and natural resources. The Township became a real development hotspot within Bucks County in the mid-1980s. Buckingham addressed this challenge by establishing a voter-approved open space program early on and renewing the program through two subsequent bond measures. This has enabled the Township to have significant funds available on a consistent basis in order to seize opportunities to preserve large and key parcels of lands when they become available. Andy Loza, Executive Director of the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association, stated, “I commend Buckingham Township’s proactive and steadfast approach to land use planning and land conservation; the township’s leadership has enabled this community to protect its treasured landscapes and preserve its quality of life.” From left to right: PALTA Executive Director, Andy Loza and Maggie Rash, Township Supervisor and Chairman. The award was presented Saturday, April 6th in conjunction with the 11th Annual Pennsylvania Land Conservation Conference in State College, Pennsylvania. Maggie Rash, Township Supervisor and Chairman, accepted the award on behalf of the township. ConserveLand Page 6 21 Land Trusts Now Accredited in Pennsylvania: PALTA Congratulates the 3 Most Recently Accredited Pennsylvania’s three newest accredited land trusts have made significant investments in their organizations that -- as organizationl leaders testify below -- have made them stronger, more efficient and more effective. E.L. Rose Conservancy of Susquehanna County “As a small conservancy, we have had to work very hard to achieve this goal but we know that it will benefit our constituents and that it will guide us in all of our work in furthering our mission.” - Patty Bloomer, President Land Conservancy of Adams County “The Land Conservancy’s accredited status demonstrates our commitment to permanent land conservation. Our organization is stronger today having gone through the rigorous accreditation program.” - Norma Calhoun, President. Westmoreland Conservancy “Westmoreland Conservancy’s accredited status demonstrates our commitment to permanent land protection and conservation. Our land trust is a stronger organization for the experience, better equipped to navigate the various challenges that present themselves in the face of environmental preservation.” - Shelly Tichy, President For the complete list of accredited Pennsylvania land trusts, visit ConserveLand. org. If your organization is considering applying for accreditation in the near future and is interested in completing a Guided Organizational Assessment, contact Nicole Faraguna at 717.909.1298 to find out if funding might be available. Thanks to 2013 Conference Sponsors AgChoice Farm Credit Brandywine Conservancy Chesapeake Conservancy & National The Conservation Fund, PA Office Conservation Impact Farmland Preservation Artists Green Hearts Institute for Nature in Childhood Hamer Foundation Land Trust Alliance Natural Lands Trust The Nature Conservancy, PA Chapter Park Service Chesapeake Bay Office PA Farmland Preservation Association Pennsylvania Game Commission Saul Ewing LLP The Trust for Public Land Western Pennsylvania Conservancy Wildlands Conservancy To learn about 2014 conference sponsorship opportunities, please contact Nicole Faraguna at 717.909.1298. Officers Paul Lumia, President Jeffrey Marshall, Vice-President John Conner, Treasurer Tom Saunders, Secretary Andrew Loza, Assistant Secretary Directors Thomas Daniels Sherri Evans-Stanton Ralph Goodno Kimberly Murphy D. Andrew Pitz RLA Jennifer Shuey Voting Members Allegheny Land Trust Allegheny Valley Conservancy Allegheny Valley Land Trust Allegheny Valley Trails Association Armstrong Cty Conservancy Charitable Trust Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania Bedminster Regional Land Conservancy Berks County Conservancy Brandywine Conservancy Buck Hill Conservation Foundation Central Pennsylvania Conservancy Centre County Farmland Trust Chestnut Hill Historical Society ClearWater Conservancy Conservancy of Montgomery County The Conservation Fund, Pennsylvania Office Countryside Conservancy Delaware Highlands Conservancy E.L. Rose Conservancy of Susquehanna Cty East Nantmeal Land Trust Eden Hill Conservancy Evergreen Conservancy Farm and Natural Lands Trust of York Cty Foundation for Sustainable Forests Fox Chapel Land Conservation Trust French & Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust French Creek Valley Conservancy Green Space Alliance Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association Heritage Conservancy Hollow Oak Land Trust Independence Conservancy Keystone Conservation Trust Lackawanna Valley Conservancy Lancaster County Conservancy Lancaster Farmland Trust Land Conservancy of Adams County Land Conservancy for Southern Chester Cty Lebanon Valley Conservancy London Britain Land Trust Manada Conservancy Merrill Linn Land & Waterways Conservancy Mid-Atlantic Karst Conservancy Mokoma Conservancy Montgomery County Lands Trust Montour Trail Council Mount Nittany Conservancy Natural Lands Trust The Nature Conservancy North American Land Trust North Branch Land Trust Northcentral PA Conservancy Open Land Conservancy of Chester County Pennsbury Land Trust Pennsylvania Recreation & Park Society Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust Pine Creek Land Conservation Trust Pine Creek Valley Watershed Association Pocono Heritage Land Trust The Radnor Conservancy Regional Trail Corporation Schuylkill County Conservancy Somerset County Conservancy Susquehanna Greenways Partnership The Trust for Public Land Tinicum Conservancy Tricounty Rails to Trails The Wallace Trust West Pikeland Land Trust Western Pennsylvania Conservancy Westmoreland Land Trust Wild Waterways Conservancy Inc. Wildlands Conservancy Willistown Conservation Trust Wissahickon Valley Watershed Association The ConserveLand newsletter is supported by the Growing Greener Program of the Bureau of Recreation & Conservation, Pennsylvania Department of Conservation & Natural Resources. Fall 2013 NonProfit Org US POSTAGE 119 Pine Street, 1st floor Harrisburg, PA 17101-1453 ConserveLand.org Nicole Faraguna, Editor nfaraguna@conserveland.org ConserveLand PAID Kutztown, PA Permit No. 12 Page 8