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Another 1,916 Acres Of Farmland Preserved

Another 1,916 acres of prime farmland on 23 farms are now protected from development and will forever remain in agricultural use, Agriculture Secretary Russell C. Redding said this week in announcing the latest action by Pennsylvania's nation-leading farmland preservation program.
           "Preserving farmland is critical to our ability to feed our citizens and transition our farms to future generations," said Secretary Redding. "Pennsylvania's leadership in farmland preservation simply would not be possible without the dedicated farmers who have made the enduring decision to preserve their land in perpetuity. Thanks to them, we have been able to safeguard nearly 450,000 acres and secure our ability to produce the food, fiber and fuel that sustains Pennsylvania."
            The newly preserved farms are in Adams, Berks, Butler, Chester, Franklin, Lancaster, Lehigh, Northampton, Perry and Wayne counties.
            Since 2003, the Gov. Rendell's administration has worked to make Pennsylvania the national leader in farmland preservation, achieving eight milestones. These included the preservation of the 4,000th farm, which was celebrated in June on the Zimmerman Farm in Lebanon County, and the 400,000th acre, recognized in 2008 at the Graver Farm in Northampton County.
            Pennsylvania leads the nation in the number of farms and acres preserved. In the program's 22-year history, 4,096 farms and 444,647 acres have been preserved, approximately half of which were safeguarded during the Rendell administration.
            Recognizing the need for resources and succession-planning tools for owners of preserved farms, Gov. Rendell created the Center for Farm Transitions in 2004 to support transferring ownership of a farm from one generation to the next and business planning. The center hosts workshops for owners of preserved farms and resources are available online.
            Since 1988, state, county, township and federal partners have invested more than $1 billion in farmland preservation funds. In 2005, the Growing Greener II bond issue provided $80 million to accelerate the rate of preservation and preserved an additional 33,713 acres. In total, the state has invested $337 million in farmland preservation since 2003.
            The Growing Greener bond issue monies have now been exhausted.
            The farmland preservation program works through the Pennsylvania Agricultural Conservation Easement Purchase Program, launched in 1988 to help slow the loss of prime farmland to agricultural uses. The program enables state, county and local governments to purchase conservation easements, also called development rights, from owners of quality farmland.
            For more information, visit the Farmland Preservation webpage.


12/13/2010

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