Search Site   
Current News Stories
Collectors and farmers weigh in on their ‘best of best’ lists for tractors
Solutions for processing an excess of mushrooms
As 3 Illinois FFA chapters near the 100-year milestone, three more are created
Two NE Indiana women dairy farmers will deliver milk to Indy 500 winner, team members
Apple Farm Service adds Great Plains Ag equipment at its Ohio location
Flavonoid corn lines could combat corn earworm larva
Researcher shares concerns about trauma on people who farm
More opportunities for temperatures in the 70s, chances of frost low
First round of testing finds no H5N1 in milk from Hoosier Grade A dairies
From fishermen to fearless: The power of being with Jesus
Poultry feed additives could reduce Campylobacter
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Michigan awards ag preservation fund grants
 
LANSING, Mich. – Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) Acting Director Kathy Angerer and the Michigan Agricultural Preservation Fund Board awarded $1.1 million in agricultural preservation fund grants to four local farmland preservation programs to purchase and maintain permanent agricultural conservation easements.
Twenty-four local farmland preservation programs were eligible to submit applications for grant funding. The grants help local farmland preservation programs purchase development rights to preserve the land for agricultural use. Preserving farmland ensures communities have a locally sustainable source of fresh food and helps keep jobs in the agriculture community.
“Our goal is to build a legacy of sustainable farming and farmland for generations of Michiganders and Michigan grown products,” Angerer said. “These grants help local communities work together with farmers to preserve open space, protect wildlife habitat and food sources, and promote conservation for our future.”
The following local farmland preservation programs received grants preserving 492 acres:
• Ottawa County - $267,899
• Kent County - $152,000
• Berrien County - $120,000
• Barry County - $604,800
The fund distributes grants covering up to 75 percent of the costs for purchasing the development rights on agricultural land. Landowners can donate a portion of the developmental rights value toward the required 25 percent local match of the conservation easement purchase price. The fund also helps pay for some of the closing costs associated with the conservation easements.
The Agricultural Preservation Fund Board consists of seven members, including the MDARD director (or his/her designee) and the director of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (or his/her designee). The board was established through legislation enacted in 2000 to award grants to local agricultural conservation easement programs.
To qualify, a county or township must have zoning authority and an approved master plan that includes farmland preservation. They are also required to have adopted a Purchase of Development Rights Ordinance and created a plan for monitoring conservation easements. Local programs are selected based on the scoring system adopted by the board that focuses on the quality of agricultural parcels and conservation program achievements.
To learn more about the board and preservation fund, visit www.michigan.gov/farmland.
3/20/2023