The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Will preserve stay wild after sale?

Family in talks with state over 14,000-acre Pine Log — with backup to sell to developers if state deal fails.

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

The family that owns the 14,000acre Pine Log Wildlife Management Area in Bartow County is in talks to sell the property to the state, potentiall­y preserving land that the owners have pitched for residentia­l, commercial and industrial developmen­t over the next two decades.

Pine Log and thousands of additional acres in Bartow and Cherokee counties, about an hour northwest of Atlanta, have been on the market since last year. The Neel family, which amassed some 19,500 acres of land over the past century, contemplat­ed selling their property for future developmen­t.

Negotiatio­ns with the state Department of Natural Resources, which has operated the Pine Log preserve for 46 years, are ongoing, the family’s lawyer told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. But the owners’ price — said to be in the hundreds of millions — has not been met.

“If DNR would come forward and say, ‘Hell, we’ll give you $400 million for this,’ they would sell it tomorrow,” Neel family attorney Jim Ramseur said.

Bartow County has become a prime spot for industrial projects as large companies search for swaths of undevelope­d land within Atlanta’s orbit, and the Neel family land is among the biggest available tracts in the state. Multibilli­on-dollar solar panel and electric vehicle battery plants have been announced recently in the county, and the Neel family’s plans to sell their land to developers rankled residents.

“Ten years ago, they were still able to farm and move their combine equipment from their fields back and forth. And Bartow County had not exploded in growth,” Ramseur said. “It’s just time. They can no longer farm it effectivel­y.”

Talks with Georgia DNR were first reported by the Atlanta Business Chronicle.

The DNR in a statement said that it “is working hard to investigat­e all opportunit­ies to provide public recreation­al access on this property into the future.”

A state purchase, however, isn’t a sure thing. The family is pursuing a developmen­t backup plan in case talks fall through.

A 20-year developmen­t plan for 16,500 contiguous acres owned by the Neels and outlined in a Developmen­t of Regional Impact filing calls for 16,500 residentia­l units, about 16.5 million square feet of industrial space, 800 acres for commercial developmen­t and nearly 4,000 acres for mining and debris recycling. About 5,000 acres of would be preserved as greenspace.

The proposal is so massive it would involve rewriting Bartow County’s zoning code.

The possibilit­y of no state deal has locals worried their beloved preserve could be lost to a developmen­t of unpreceden­ted scale for Bartow County.

“Places like this, large contiguous wilderness areas, are disappeari­ng rapidly, and if some of it is not preserved, one day we’re going to be in a real problem,” said Reece Monroe, who started a petition to urge the state to buy the property. It’s amassed more than 11,000 signatures.

Ramseur said the Neel family wants the Pine Log WMA to remain open to the public, which would not be guaranteed if the DNR negotiatio­ns fail. If the land is developed, the 5,000 acres of anticipate­d greenspace could become part of private, gated neighborho­ods.

“The outcry from the citizens is, and I hate to say this, but they’ve been spoiled with a private property’s backyard that opened up 46 years ago,” he said. “So, what they want is 14,000 acres or more, what the DNR wants is 14,000 acres or more, and the family is perfectly contented with that providing that the fair market value was met.”

Explosive growth

The size of the Neel family’s properties is hard to imagine.

The entire 19,500-acre portfolio could hold the equivalent of eight Midtown Atlantas. The family created the Aubrey Corporatio­n, which has 33 members as stakeholde­rs, to manage the land.

Given the explosive industrial growth along I-75 near Cartersvil­le, Ramseur said the family constantly turns down offers.

“They have, over the past five years, turned down one-off offers from every Tom, Dick and Harry because it just was not right,” he said. “… They’re passionate about it, and they just didn’t want to do it piecemeal.”

Since 2017, Bartow County has seen one industrial project after another.

Chick-fil-a built its first distributi­on center in Cartersvil­le, which employs more than 220 workers. The county’s Anheuser-busch plant announced an expansion in 2020. Duluth Training Company and Webstauran­t-Store announced distributi­on centers last year, which will combine for another 500 jobs.

But the county’s two largest economic developmen­t projects are still to come.

In December, South Korean conglomera­tes SK Innovation and Hyundai Motor Group announced a sprawling EV bat--

tery plant, which will create more than 3,500 jobs and ranks as the third-largest corporate investment in state history, according to Gov. Brian Kemp’s office. Weeks later, solar panel maker Qcells announced a $2.5 billion Georgia expansion that includes a Bartow County plant with 2,500 workers.

County leaders are grap- pling with how to provide housing and infrastruc­ture for the influx of expected workers. Richard Osborne, the county’s zoning administra­tor, said the 16,500-acre contiguous property is a once-in-a-lifetime oppor- tunity to plan for this type of rapid growth. He said the county will not rush that process.

“These mega-regional developmen­ts take decades to complete,” he said.

Preserving nature

Once he learned the land could be sold to developers, Monroe rallied local support with his petition to try to convince the DNR to prior- itize buying the land.

“Some of my earliest mem- ories were fishing on Stamp Creek, which runs through the heart of that Wildlife Management Area,” he said. “It’s always been a part of life for a large part of our community.”

Monroe said he knows change will come to Bartow County, given the number of economic develop- ment announceme­nts. But he said he’s optimistic that growth can coincide with the preservati­on of the pub- lic wildlife area.

“There’s been a lot of new industrial, commercial growth, which is not always necessaril­y a bad thing,” Monroe said. “I’m not totally against that, but it shouldn’t be at the sake of our mountains and trout streams and watersheds.”

If the DNR buys the Pine Log land, there’s still more than 2,000 acres of the 16,500-acre tract that will likely be sold for industrial and residentia­l developmen­t, Ramseur said. The Neel family is also marketing its remaining 3,000 acres in Cherokee.

Monroe said his priority right now is to preserve the Pine Log WMA and that other rezoning requests will warrant their own scrutiny.

“It’s loud and clear that Bartow County residents do not want more high-density housing,” he

 ?? That So far, COURTESY family’s ?? Bob Neel, whose family owns more than 19,000 acres in north Georgia, including the Pine Log Wildlife Management Area, is negotiatin­g to sell much of land to the state of Georgia. the asking price — reported to be in the hundreds of millions — has not been met.
That So far, COURTESY family’s Bob Neel, whose family owns more than 19,000 acres in north Georgia, including the Pine Log Wildlife Management Area, is negotiatin­g to sell much of land to the state of Georgia. the asking price — reported to be in the hundreds of millions — has not been met.
 ?? COURTESY ?? Bartow County has become a prime spot for industrial projects as large companies search for swaths of undevelope­d land, such as the Neel family’s Pine Log Wildlife Management Area (above), within Atlanta’s orbit.
COURTESY Bartow County has become a prime spot for industrial projects as large companies search for swaths of undevelope­d land, such as the Neel family’s Pine Log Wildlife Management Area (above), within Atlanta’s orbit.

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