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763 Acres Conserved in Clarke County for 2009

For Immediate Release
Bob Lazaro
PEC Director of Communications
571-225-0198

 

763 Acres Conserved in Clarke County for 2009

Over 325,000 Acres Conserved in the Piedmont

 

Clarke County Conservation

Over 700 acres were conserved in Clarke County during 2009.

 


In 2009, residents of the Piedmont protected 18,065 acres of open space through the use of conservation easements. In Clarke County, 763 acres were preserved in 2009 bringing the grand total of more than 19,566 acres of privately conserved land in the County.

The movement to protect privately-held rural land from development has been experiencing tremendous momentum in Virginia's Piedmont region, with landowners conserving an average of 22,270 acres every year for the last five years. The total for 2009 brings the number of acres conserved in the nine counties served by the Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC) to 325,530 acres, an acreage that is larger than Shenandoah National Park

"We're immensely pleased at what communities in the Piedmont have been able to accomplish to provide a legacy of conserved open space for our children and future generations," says Chris Miller, President of PEC. "When it comes to conservation, this is one of the most successful regions in the entire country."

The Piedmont region continues to lead the state of Virginia, which is among the top five states in the nation for protecting land through private conservation easements. The nine counties of Virginia's Piedmont -- including Loudoun, Clarke, Fauquier, Culpeper, Rappahannock, Madison, Orange, Greene, and Albemarle -- have conserved more land than almost any state in the nation.

Bob Lee, the Executive Director of the Virginia Outdoors Foundation (VOF) said, "Working with PEC and others, VOF was able to protect more than 10,000 acres in PEC's region in 2009 and 55,000 acres statewide," said VOF Executive Director Bob Lee. "From historic Montpelier in Orange County to the drinking water supply for the Town of Purcellville in Loudoun County, our easements ensure that Virginia's cultural and natural resources are being protected for future generations."

Easements also support two major industries of the Piedmont: agriculture and tourism. Like other landowners, farmers can gain needed capital by placing an easement on their land and earning a substantial state tax credit which they may either use or sell. Farmers also benefit from reduced appraisal values on their land, which lightens their tax burden. In Clarke many landowners also have the option of working with the Clarke County Conservation Easement Authority, a publicly supported program that purchases easements on working farms and lands with valuable natural resources.

Protecting the integrity of the rural landscape also preserves essential historic resources, provides vital habitat for wildlife, and safeguards the scenic views and recreation opportunities that sustain a high quality of life in the Piedmont. "Conservation easements help us to take care of many of the things that people in this region care about the most," says Don Loock, PEC Land Conservation Officer for Clarke County.

PEC operates an office in the Clarke County. For information about land conservation in Clarke you can contact Don Loock at 540-522-4222 or via email at dloock[at]pecva.org.

 

 

 

 

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