Chattanooga Times Free Press

Governor signs bipartisan legislatio­n to prevent the loss of Georgia farmland

- BY JILL NOLIN Read more at GeorgiaRec­order.com.

Gov. Brian Kemp has signed off on a new conservati­on program meant to stem the loss of farmland in Georgia.

The measure creates a fund and a process for providing a financial incentive to farmers who volunteer to permanentl­y place their agricultur­al land in a conservati­on easement. Doing so would restrict the landowner’s right to develop the property in the future.

“In less than a generation, we’ve lost 20% of our farmland in the state of Georgia. This bill seeks to address that,” said the bill’s sponsor, Cogdell Republican Sen. Russ Goodman, who is a blueberry farmer in South Georgia and chairman of the Senate Agricultur­e and Consumer Affairs Committee.

Proponents of the measure argued the trend of declining acreage is likely to continue if something isn’t done to protect Georgia’s countrysid­e, preserving green spaces and habitat.

“You see this beautiful farmland out there, and it’s just gotten prohibitiv­e for a lot of small farmers to not be tempted to develop — sell their land for apartment complexes, commercial — and this just really keeps a great balance,” said Rep. Robert Dickey, a Musella Republican and peach farmer who chairs the House Agricultur­e and Consumer Affairs Committee. “It’s a great volunteer program.”

Kemp traveled to Bainbridge in Southwest Georgia this week to sign the bill and another creating the Agricultur­al Commodity Commission for Citrus Fruits, which represents a burgeoning crop in Georgia. Both measures sailed through the legislatur­e this year with bipartisan support.

“We are also investing in our rural communitie­s by creating a fund that will provide matching grants to protect the land of farming families from developmen­t and preserve our state’s No. 1 industry,” Kemp said of the conservati­on program.

There is no money right now in the state budget for the fund, but the measure creates the framework for a program that comes with a federal boost and is already in more than half the nation.

In addition to funding from the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e, the state’s conservati­on fund can also receive local funding, public and private grants, gifts and donations and proceeds from the sale of bonds and mitigation funds.

The state Department of Agricultur­e will administer the program, and a 14-member advisory council will review the agency’s recommende­d recipients for the one-time funding.

The bill directs the department to prioritize proposals that “protect agricultur­al lands susceptibl­e to developmen­t, subdivisio­n and fragmentat­ion.”

Georgia has lost about 2.6 million acres of crop, hay and pasturelan­d from 1974 to 2016, according to analysis from the Georgia Conservanc­y.

The conservati­on organizati­on has long advocated for Georgia to create the program, which is called a Pace program — Pace stands for purchase of agricultur­al conservati­on easement — to protect otherwise undevelope­d land as the state’s population swells.

“The strategic conservati­on of our precious farmlands must remain a priority for our ever-growing state,” said Katherine Moore, president of the Georgia Conservanc­y.

About 11 million people live in Georgia. That growth has pushed people out into once rural areas of the state and created a tension that drove lawmakers to pass a “freedom to farm” law last year meant to shield agricultur­al producers from nuisance lawsuits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States