Continued Losses of Open Space Can Adversely Affect
Rural Economies
By Norman Dicks & Lynn Scarlett
Each year, an estimated 2 million acres of America's farms, ranches, forests, wildlife habitat, and other open spaces are fragmented into smaller parcels or lost to development, according to the President's Annual Economic Report to Congress.
Each year, an estimated 2 million acres of America's farms, ranches, forests, wildlife habitat, and other open spaces are fragmented into smaller parcels or lost to development, according to the President's Annual Economic Report to Congress.
Continued losses of this open space can adversely affect rural
economies. These losses reduce opportunities for hunting, fishing, and other
outdoor recreation and impact wildlife, water, and other resources.
Donating
a permanent conservation easement (development restriction) to a qualified
organization, such as a land trust, enables farmers and ranchers to maintain
their current operations and conserve the natural assets of rural America. In
return, landowners may deduct the value of the easement from their income
taxes.
This
tax incentive is a major reason why there now are 1,700 nonprofit land trusts
nationwide that protect 47 million acres of farms, ranches, forests, wildlife
habitat, and other open spaces -- twice as many acres as a decade ago and a
larger land area than the state of Wisconsin, according to the 2010 National
Land Trust Census.
Despite
this remarkable success, land trusts increasingly face frivolous six- and
seven-figure lawsuits from developers seeking to undermine these development
restrictions on land that they directly own or manage. Half of the land trusts
in a 2010 national survey reported a legal challenge, and one-quarter of those
land trusts were hindered by financial barriers in pursuing a legal challenge.
There is no commercial or nonprofit insurance available to cover this
liability, which far exceeds most land trusts' legal reserve funds. The IRS has
stated that a land trust could lose its tax status or ability to accept further
donations if it does not have sufficient resources to monitor or defend
conservation easements.
To
protect their investments in conservation, over 420 land trusts that protect
more than six million acres of land joined with the Land Trust Alliance to
launch their own insurance risk pool last month with $4 million in capital
funding from eight major foundations.
Thanks to this insurance risk pool,
Terrafirma Risk Retention Group LLC, which covers 75 percent of the over 8
million acres conserved by land trusts that cannot afford to self-insure
themselves individually, land trusts can now assure their communities, donors,
the IRS, other regulators, and legislators that they have the financial
capacity to sustain their conserved lands in perpetuity.
But
if we want to slow down the fragmentation or development of farms, ranches,
forests, wildlife habitat, and other open spaces, Congress must make permanent
a temporary 2006 law that increased tax incentives to conserve land.
Since
its passage, this temporary law has encouraged additional conservation
easements by raising the maximum annual deduction a landowner can take for the
donation of a conservation easement and extends the period to claim the
deduction after the time of the donation from 5 to 15 years.
The
enhanced tax incentive expired in 2009, but Congress temporarily renewed it
through the end of this year when it passed the American Taxpayer Relief Act of
2012.
In
the last Congress, 28 senators from both parties co-sponsored a bill to make
this tax incentive permanent, including the Chairman of the Senate committee
with jurisdiction over the legislation: Max Baucus (D-Mont.).
More than 310
members of the House co-sponsored a similar bill, including majorities of both
parties and the leaders of the House committee with jurisdiction over the
legislation: Ways & Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) and Ranking
Member Sander Levin (D-Mich.).
However,
Congress recessed for the election before taking action on the bills, so they
expired. In March, Baucus was joined by Finance Committee Ranking Republican
Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) in reintroducing the tax incentive bill, The Rural
Heritage Conservation Extension Act of 2013 (S. 526). Congressmen Jim Gerlach
(R-Pa.) and Mike Thompson (D-Calif.) are seeking cosponsors to introduce
similar legislation in the House.
Passage
of a tax incentive bill would help save open spaces that otherwise could
disappear.
Making
this expanded tax incentive permanent would further bolster land conservation
and sustain working lands, helping to keep landowners on their property and
achieve a broad range of conservation outcomes, including improving water
quality and reducing soil erosion.
Dicks was the U.S. Representative for
Washington's 6th congressional district from 1977 to 2013 and served as the
Chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee for Interior, Environment,
and Related Agencies as well as Ranking Member of the full House Appropriations
Committee. Scarlett was the Deputy Secretary of the Interior Department during
the Bush administration from 2005 to 2009 and currently is Co-Director of
Resources for the Futures Center for the Management of Ecological Wealth.