Pennsylvania ends 2022 continuing to lead the nation, having protected 170 farms and 13,069 acres this year.
Since 1988, Pennsylvania has protected 6,148 farms and 619,191 acres in 58 counties from future development, investing more than $1.6 billion in our agriculture industry's ability to feed our families and our economy.
"Protecting prime farmland from development is one of the most important investments we make in our economy, our environment, and our quality of life," Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding said. "These farm families, together with every level of government, are investing in guarding their legacies and ensuring that other Pennsylvania families will have food, green spaces, income and jobs in the future."
The newly preserved farms are in Adams, Beaver, Berks, Blair, Bucks, Cambria, Chester, Cumberland, Lancaster, Lawrence, Lehigh, Montgomery, Northampton, Perry, Tioga, Union, Westmoreland, and York counties.
By selling their land's development rights, landowners ensure that their farms will remain farms and never be sold to developers. Farm families often sell their land at below market value, donate additional land, or agree to conservation practices on their farms in order to leverage additional federal and state money to preserve more family farms.
Pennsylvania partners with county and sometimes local governments and non-profits to purchase development rights, ensuring a strong future for farming and food security.
Among farms preserved at today's State Agricultural Land Preservation Board meeting:
-- Four farms, including three Adams County standardbred horse farms and Brookhart Farms in Perry County, are federally funded, which will leverage additional funds for future easement purchases.
-- Sutliff Farms in Northampton County is the second farm preserved by the family and creates a cluster of nine protected farms in the county, which faces pressure from developers because of its prime location close to major markets and transportation.
Click Here for a complete list of farms protected.
Pennsylvania's Farmland Preservation Program recently secured a $7.85 million grant from the USDA's Regional Conservation Partnership Program to support climate-smart conservation on preserved Pennsylvania farms.
The dollars will further multiply Wolf Administration investments in conservation in the 2022-'23 budget, which devotes $220 million to the new Clean Streams Fund.
The fund includes $154 million to establish a new Agricultural Conservation Assistance Program supporting farmers' efforts to reduce water pollution and improve soil quality, and $22 million to increase funding for the existing Nutrient Management Fund, which supports technical assistance to farms to reduce run-off.
Visit Agriculture's Farmland Preservation Program webpage for more information on this program.
Related Articles:
-- Natural Lands Preserves 278 Acres Of Former Pocono Drag Lodge In Luzerne County [PaEN]
-- French & Pickering Creeks Conservation Trust Preserves 4.45 More Acres And Connects Trails In Chester County [PaEN]
-- York Daily Record: Farm & Natural Lands Trust Helps Preserve Acreage And York County’s Quality Of Life
[Posted: December 15, 2022] PA Environment Digest
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