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PRESS RELEASE
Conservation Milestone Reached
For-Profit
Company with Conservation Attitude Protects Bald Eagle State Park
Viewshed and
Wildlife Habitat
Harrisburg,
Pa (October 10, 2005) – Today marks a major
milestone in land
conservation in Pennsylvania
and
an outstanding example of “smart growth” development for the nation.
A for-profit real estate company, Appalachian Land & Conservation
Services
Co., LLC (www.appalachianland.us), has donated to the Pennsylvania
Department
of Conservation and Natural Resources conservation easements on 250
acres
adjacent to both Bald Eagle State Park and State Game Lands 323 in Centre
County (Howard
Township).
The donation of
another conservation easement on an additional 99-acre parcel adjoining
the
park and State Game Lands is planned pending resolution of an access
issue.
Praise from
the conservation community, the Pennsylvania
Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, and the timber
industry for
the donation was swift and unanimous:
"The donation of these conservation easements protects the view from
Bald
Eagle State Park for all of our citizens to enjoy, without any
required expenditure of state dollars," Department of Conservation
and Natural Resources Secretary Michael DiBerardinis said. "We
consider the lands that adjoin our state parks and forests very
important
for conservation and habitat protection, and we thank Appalachian Land
&
Conservation Services for their generous donation to the Commonwealth."
The protected land maintains approximately three miles of frontage on
the
6,000-acre park, and is nearly all of the remaining private land
sandwiched
between the park and the 2,500-acre State Game Lands 323, which runs
along Bald Eagle
Mountain.
The protected properties form a substantial portion of the park’s
viewshed visible from the 1,730-acre Sayer’s Lake,
which
is the park’s centerpiece.
Audubon Pennsylvania’s
Executive Director, Tim Schaeffer, noted that what happens on private
land can
impact public lands: "Bald Eagle Ridge is a critical flyway for
migrating
birds of prey -- including Golden Eagles, Northern Goshawks, and
Red-tailed Hawks -- and is one of Pennsylvania's
82 Important Bird Areas. In addition, Bald Eagle State Park
is a
birder’s paradise. This donation by Appalachian Land &
Conservation
Services to DCNR is a wonderful statement about how development can be
done
responsibly and with wildlife needs in mind. Audubon commends
this
company for their outstanding action, and we hope that others follow
where they
are leading."
Appalachian
was also successful in facilitating the commitment
to donate a conservation easement by the other private landowner on an
adjoining 115-acre property. That land is also unzoned,
sandwiched
between the park and the Game Lands, and adjoins existing public water
and a
planned public sewer connection.
All of the
land is unzoned, meaning that any sort of
development – residential, recreational, or commercial – could have
occurred. Building lots with scenic views over lakes and other
water
bodies are in demand, especially in the rapidly growing State
College real estate market. Therefore, a significant
impact
on the park’s viewshed and watershed was averted. By allowing
only a
handful of homes on hundreds of acres, the donation also averts major
impacts,
encroachments and the imposition of safety zones by many landowners on
the
adjoining Game Lands.
Marci Mowery, president of
the Pennsylvania Parks
and Forests Foundation said “The lands surrounding Pennsylvania’s
beautiful state parks are an increasing magnet for development.
Unfortunately, there is not enough money to purchase all of the land
necessary
to effectively buffer our parks. Fortunately, charity-minded
individuals
and companies like ALCS exist and these donated conservation easements
are a
prime example. ALCS has done a wonderful thing at Bald Eagle
State Park
and I salute and thank them for their generosity and help in protecting
the
viewshed surrounding the third largest lake in the Pennsylvania
Park system.”
These donated development rights mark the first time that DCNR has
accepted a
conservation easement, with significant implications for future land
protection
efforts in the Commonwealth, because some areas of Pennsylvania are not
yet
served by non-profit land trusts, which would naturally be inclined to
hold
conservation easements. This transaction also marks the first
time that a
for-profit real estate development company has actively pursued the
acquisition
of sensitive and highly valuable development land with the intention of
protecting it.

View of
“Eagle View” and Bald Eagle Mountain
from across Sayer’s Lake.
Photo
by Josh First
Five
parcels from four different owners were acquired over
an 18-month period with the express intention of preserving the scenic
properties from over-development. The conservation easements
allow one
large home, a barn, and two outbuildings to be built on each
parcel. A
pond, pool, horse riding ring, and tennis courts may also be built on
each
parcel, but they must be clustered together. The parcels are 18,
35, 39,
99, and 160 acres in size. Appalachian did not subdivide these
heavily forested
properties, and no subdivision may ever occur.
The conservation easements, which are perpetual and run with the deed
irrespective of who owns the properties, require commercial forestry on
each
parcel according to best management practices. The forests are on
a
100-year rotation and require management at 20-year intervals.
Paul
Lyskava, Executive Director of the Pennsylvania Forest
Products Association, said "The Pennsylvania Forest Products
Association
welcomes this kind of private sector-led conservation of forested open
space. The essence of the agreement maintains the land in private
ownership while protecting it from future development and providing a
guarantee
that it will continue to be managed for the sustainable yield of timber
and forest
products.” He concluded, “ALCS has provided a common-sense
approach
that minimizes government involvement, respects property owner rights,
ensures
future forests, and provides a critical on-going supply of timber to
our
industry, thus supporting the state's rural economy."
Appalachian
Land & Conservation Services is
pioneering the confluence of capitalism and conservation. The
company’s
approach is based on the premise that open land is the Earth’s natural
capital;
it is an endowment for the future that must be used carefully in the
present. This approach is a unique and unprecedented method for
protecting open space. It is made necessary because land trusts
are
chronically under-funded, and new and creative methods are needed to
bolster
and advance open space and natural lands protection.
Andy
Loza, Executive Director of the PA Land Trust
Association, said, “Appalachian demonstrates the power of private
conservation
tools and the modest tax benefits available for charitable conservation
donations. Everyone wins. The public gets important scenic
and
wildlife areas protected. Private landowners retain land
ownership.
Sustainable forestry ensures a stable timber supply. The
developer makes
a profit. I congratulate Appalachian on its thoughtful approach
to
conservation and making
money.”
Appalachian’s
president and CEO, Josh First, said “Bald
Eagle State Park is a special place, and like all of Pennsylvania’s
rugged,
wide-open special places it is evocative of our nation’s frontier and
symbolic of
our Yankee spirit. Preserving places like this as cultural
touchstones is
important. We will make a good profit when we sell these lands,
not a
killing, and a good profit is good enough.” First concluded,
“Smart
growth development and donating conservation easements make good
business
sense. When conservation pays, it creates incentives to do the
right
thing. While we currently have the field to ourselves, we’d
welcome
competition.”
Centre County
is home to State College and Penn
State University
(University Park), and is
rapidly
growing. Bald Eagle
State Park is
just three minutes
from the interchange of interstate highways I-99 and I-80, and takes
about 20
minutes to reach from State College. Bald
Eagle
Creek, a high quality trout stream, runs into the park below the
properties,
and the Centre County Greenway runs past the properties at the foot of
the
mountain.
“The
conservation easements provided by ALCS represent the
use of smart-growth planning that other companies in the land
development
business would do well to use as an example,” said state Rep. Mike
Hanna,
D-Clinton/Centre. “This arrangement will preserve the beautiful scenery
found
in and around Bald Eagle State Park, protect habitat for area wildlife,
reduce
stress on local watersheds, and safeguard hundreds of acres from
inappropriate
or harmful zoning decisions in the future,” he said.
Due to the properties’ proximity to the village
of Mount Eagle, their
location on Bald Eagle
Mountain,
and their scenic views over Sayer’s Lake at
Bald Eagle
State Park (formerly called Bald Eagle’s Nest by local
Indians), the
parcels are being marketed together as “Eagle View” and are listed by
WarMark
Realty in Centre County
(814 632-3101).
Appalachian is actively pursuing other significant land acquisitions in
central
Pennsylvania in order to
implement the same kind of vision and
conservation benefits as were achieved at the Bald Eagle State Park
project. The mission of Appalachian Land & Conservation
Services Co.,
LLC, is to advance conservation goals and values by protecting working
landscapes and environmental quality through the use of private markets
and
innovative real estate transactions. Additionally, in its
consulting
capacity Appalachian provides outstanding value to its non-profit and
corporate
clients in the areas of real estate consultation, project planning,
project
development, project-specific fundraising, and environmental and
agricultural
policy and regulation.
For further information contact Josh First,
Appalachian Land
& Conservation Services Co., LLC (717) 232-8335 or jfirst1044@aol.com, and Christina Novak at DCNR (717)
772-9101 or cnovak@state.pa.us.
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