Conservation Easement LegislationThe Nature Conservancy helped to write and worked to pass Nevada's conservation easement legislation in March 1983. This law allows landowners to sell or donate development rights without sacrificing land ownership. Strategic Importance The donation of a conservation easement is treated as a charitable gift, resulting in tax reductions for the landowner. The easement also lowers the property's market value, which in turn lowers the estate tax. Partners Conservation Results The Conservancy negotiated with the owners of a 14,010-acre ranch in Humboldt County to buy 1,820 acres of desert dace habitat in Soldier Meadows and a conservation easement for 5,150 additional acres in 1992. The following year, the Conservancy transferred the easement to the Bureau of Land Management at cost, for permanent protection. This protection of an endangered species was possible without economically impacting a family livestock operation. The Conservancy purchased a 140-acre private inholding along the Jarbidge River in northern Nevada. In 1998, the Conservancy sold a portion of the property with a conservation easement to restrict usage and development. As a result, this property remains on the tax rolls while its riparian habitat and floodplain - which support the endangered bull trout and numerous bird species - will be protected in perpetuity. Less than a year after helping the Conservancy acquire the nearby 788-acre River Fork Ranch in 2000, the Sturgis family donated a conservation easement on its own 723-acre working ranch. This one family is making a difference in the effort to protect open space, agricultural heritage and ecological health of the fast-changing Carson Valley. In 2001, the Conservancy received a conservation easement on the Parker Ranch through the Wetlands Reserve Program - a voluntary federal program providing financial incentives to enhance wetlands in exchange for retiring marginal agricultural land. This resulted in funding to protect and restore critical habitat on the Conservancy's 650 acres for the rare Amargosa toad, which helped to keep the species from being listed as endangered - an outcome that could have devastated the economy of the small town of Beatty. Learn more about how the Conservancy works with private landowners. |
|