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Conservation Easements, A Strategy to Check Development,
Preserve River Flow
An incentive-based approach to conservation
by Joe Gelt
Yet another conservation easement has been worked
out along the Babocomari River, making the fourth such agreement in the
area since January. The total area now protected stands at 1,410.2 acres
and 4.61 miles of river.
What is occurring along the Babocamari River reflects a national trend:
the increased use of conservation easements as a strategy to protect natural
resources. According to the Land Trust Alliance the amount of land protected
by local and state land trusts using easements doubled to 6.2 million
acres between 2000 and 2005.
In brief, a conservation easement is a legal agreement between a landowner
and a land trust or government agency that permanently limits uses of
the land for the purpose of protecting its conservation values. By agreeing
to an easement landowners give up some of the rights associated with the
land; they still own the land, however, and can pass it to heirs or sell
it, with the easement in force.
Many and varied are the lands protected by conservation easements: coastlines;
farm and ranchland; historical or cultural landscapes; scenic views; streams
and rivers; trails; wetlands; wildlife areas; and working forests. In
Arizona, a state anxious to preserve its few remaining flowing rivers,
conservation easements are especially useful as a river management tool.
Any river with private ownership of land along side it that has conservation
value is a candidate for conservation easements.
Conservation easements along the San Pedro
Consider the San Pedro River: with its reduced flows raising concerns,
the river is a veritable active easement area, with many conservation
easements having been negotiated with more in the works. Experiences along
the San Pedro demonstrate the workings of conservation easements as well
as their possibilities and effectiveness as a river management tool.
The Brophy family, owners Babacomari Ranch, has been a willing partner
to working out conservation easements. The ranch is located along the
Babocomari River, a key tributary to the San Pedro River. In the recent
agreement, mentioned above, The Nature Conservancy purchased an easement
protecting 487.3 acres of grasslands that contain valuable wetland habitat.
Over time, Fort Huachuca will reimburse TNC $1.9 million for the easement.
Earlier this year Fort Huachuca purchased two other ranch easements, adjacent
to one another, for $830,000 to block development along the Babocomari
River corridor. Later the Bureau of Land Management purchased a third
ranch easement for $2.7 million that protects 674.6 acres including three
and one-half miles of the Babocomari River channel.
In allowing an easement, a property owner accepts an obligation. Tom Collazo,
TNC associate state director, explains: “Every conservation easement
is acquiring a partial interest in a property and what type of partial
interest you acquire depends on your conservation objects and what you
can reasonable negotiate with the landowner, what the landowner is willing
to give up in other words”
The main conservation objective along the San Pedro is to limit water
use, with property owners relinquishing water rights by accepting a conservation
easement. The U.S. Geological Survey has identified the shallow aquifer
underlying the Babocomari River as one of the most important contributors
to the San
Pedro aquifer in the upper San Pedro Valley.
Collazo says the TNC views the Babacomari ranch easements “as the
first installment of a much larger, long-term program to protect as much
of the Babocomari River corridor and watershed as possible. ... The Brophy
family has identified about 16,000 acres of ranch they would like to see
placed under conservation easements.”
Department of Defense involved with easements
Of the three key players involved in purchasing the ranch easements —
The Nature Conservancy, the Bureau of Land Management and Fort Huachuca,
the fort might stand out as an unlikely partner in a conservation deal.
Part of its interest in the easements, however, is preventing development
that would encroach on the fort and interfere with its operations. Confronting
economic pressures, ranch owners and landowners are increasingly in need
of financial resources to maintain their operations. By selling an easement
they needn’t resort to selling their land for development. Fort
Huachuca has an interest in preventing development.
Fort Huachuca also has a natural resource interest in establishing conservation
easements. The fort is legally obligated under an agreement with the U.
S. Fish and Wildlife Service to offset water withdrawals with water recharge
by 2011 as part of an effort to conserve endangered and threatened species
dependent upon the Upper San Pedro River ecosystem. The water savings
resulting from the easements count as credits toward the army’s
goal of reducing groundwater pumping.
Earlier TNC had worked with Fort Huachuca to acquire easements along the
San Pedro River in the Palominas area, where the river crosses the border
into the United States from Mexico. In that situation, TNC acquired property,
then, through conservation easements, restricted groundwater pumping and
development. It then resold the property to private buyers with the easements
reserved. The fort paid for the easements and received credit under its
biological opinion for the number of acre feet of water the easements
reduced.
In the San Pedro watershed, 7,762 acres are set aside as easements, held
by the TNC, BLM and the Bureau.
Three-Links Farm conservation easement
In 2002 TNC purchased the Three-Links Farm, an alfalfa farm that pumps
more than 3,200 acre-feet per year. Located about 15 miles north of Benson,
the farm includes more than six-miles of San Pedro River, with rare cotton
weed-willow riparian habitat. At the time of purchase, the San Pedro was
not flowing year round on the entire farm or for miles downstream. TNC
purchased the property intending to restore and enhance both groundwater
levels and surface flows through about 20 miles of the river.
Collazo says, “We turned off the pumps, and we have seen dramatic
recovery of stream flow not only on the property but for quite a ways
down river as well and subsequently a dramatic increase in cottonwood-
willow habitat and willow flycatcher populations and number of other riparian
related species.”
TNC is financing the purchase by reselling portions of the property to
private owners, bound with a conservation easement. The easement greatly
limited the residential development rights and restricted groundwater
pumping. Property that could have been divided into hundreds of house
lots was limited to ten homes. Easements reduced the 3,200 acre-feet of
water used annually on the farm by 90 percent to 300 acre feet, a net
saving of 2900 acre feet per annum.
The easements were sold to the Bureau of Reclamation for mitigation credit
applicable to work it undertook to modify Roosevelt Dam. That project
resulted in the flooding of habitat of the Southwest willow flycatcher,
an endangered species. The purchase of the Three-Links Farm easements
will protect habitat of the endangered bird, offsetting the loss at Roosevelt
Lake.
Cost of Conservation Easements
The costs of conservation easements vary. Cost is decided by having an
appraiser determined the value of the land without the easement and then
its value with an easement. The difference between the two appraisals
is the cost of the easement. Generally an easement diminishes the value
of property from 20 to 80 percent; the average is about 50 percent.
The appraisal value depends on the market condition of the property and
the type and severity of the restriction the easement imposes on the property.
In the case of the Three-Links Farm a fairly substantial amount of the
purchase value of the property was represented by the easement.
The value of property with an easement can be an issue when property taxes
are determined. An owner of property reduced in value due to an conservation
easement might not unreasonably expect that the property tax should be
reduced. In Arizona, county assessors have generally not agreed. Some
states have adopted legislation requiring that property tax assessments
must take the diminished development potential into account.
With funds usually in short supply, organizations need to prioritize areas
for their conservation easement efforts. TNC is focusing on the Verde
and San Pedro rivers, although its activities along the Verde has so far
been mostly purchases rather than working out easements. It is an area,
however, considered ripe for further conservation easement activity.
Colazzo explains: “You focus your resources on a few places where
you can retire a lot of water use or preclude a lot of new water use.
You need a private landowner community predisposed to want to work with
you, and you need partners, the public and political support for the funding.
“We evaluated where are all the ingredients are present, and those
two rivers seem to be the places where we can see things coming together.”

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