The farms, approved for conservation easement purchases by the State Agricultural Land Preservation Board, represent an $9.8 million investment to ensure that Pennsylvania farmers have the resources they need to continue supporting families, communities, and jobs.
“Pennsylvania's location — near ports, interstates, railways, and 40 percent of the U.S. population — makes our state a great place to do business," Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding said. “If your business is farming, that location brings fierce competition from developers willing to pay top dollar for your land. Keeping prime farmland from becoming warehouses, housing developments, or parking lots is a critical investment the Shapiro Administration is making in partnership with farm families and county and local governments to feed our families, and our economy, and our future."
Pennsylvania leads the nation in preserved farmland.
Since 1988, when voters overwhelmingly supported creation of the Farmland Preservation Program, Pennsylvania has protected 6,392 farms and 639,254 acres in 58 counties from future development, investing more than $1.7 billion in state, county, and local funds.
The state partners with county, and sometimes local government and nonprofits to purchase development rights, ensuring a strong future for farming and food security. By selling development rights, farm owners ensure that their farms will remain productive farms and never be sold to developers.
Kyle Henninger and Beth Kramer's Farm in Lehigh County's Weisenberg Township is the seventh the family has preserved in an area where land is highly sought after for development. More than 477 acres of high-quality land on the family's farms will continue to be dedicated to feeding future generations of Pennsylvanians.
Click Here for a list of farms preserved.
These purchases multiply Pennsylvania dollars invested in conservation initiatives, including the $154 million Agricultural Conservation Assistance Program, supporting farmers' efforts to reduce water pollution and improve soil quality, along with Clean & Green tax incentives, Resource Enhancement and Protection dollars, and other funding that is supporting Pennsylvania farmers in conserving and enhancing the clean water and healthy soil they need to be productive in the future.
To learn more about this program, visit Agriculture’s Farmland Preservation Program webpage.
Related Article:
-- Natural Lands Preserves 95 Acres Of Forest, Waterways, Historical Farm In Chester County [PaEN]
[Posted: June 14, 2024] PA Environment Digest
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