D2—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 31,1981 Maryland puts its money on preserving farmland. BY JOYCE BUPP beyond their typically-tight young Staff Correspondent farmer budget. WALKERSVILLE. Md. In 1977, the Maryland legislature Robert and Cookie Ramsburg can had authorized the creation of ag smile about it now, looking back, districts, and made provisions for But for awhile, James, their the purchase of development younger son, has had an awful easements as funding was raised, worry on his nine-year-old mind. Administration of the program is He was afraid the family, which by the Maryland Agricultural also includes big brother Michael, Land Preservation Foundation, 17, was going to have to move off county governing bodies and an the farm. agricultural preservation advisory James doesn’t worry about that board within the county five of the any longer. In late August, the n hi® state board members and Bams burgs became Maryland’s three of the five county board first fanner tenants to purchase members must be farmers, their landlord’s farm, with the help Minimum size for an ag distort is of the sale of development 100 acres. Seventy percent of that onwmonta must be Class I and II sous, and be Their 216 acres of gently rolling located in agriculture zoning. Frederick County ground is Monies for easement sales are to productive, growing high yielding come from general or special stale crops of com and hay for the dairy fund appropriations, and by grants herd of 100 Holsteins, plus young ° r transfers from government or S tock. private sources. But another crop dots the Half of the state funds are surrounding area creeping allotted to all counties, and the suburbia spilling over from the other half is then distributed to city of Frederick, just a few miles counties with matching funds, at west And just one farm out the the rate of 60 percent state monies road, the housing development to 40 per cent county monies, and Discovery looms, peopled largely limited to .a maximum of one with urban-weary escapes from million dollars to any one county, the metropolitan areas of A local subdivision also could Washington, D.C. transfer open space monies to the Since 1971, the Ramsburgs had Foundation, which in turn could be been leasing this operation, plus an used only to purchase agriculture additional 140 rented acres in the easements within that subdivision valleysouthof Walkeraville, where Stauffer, who’d entered the real the first heights of the Appalachian estate business following his Mountainsdotthehorizon. retirement fromi active farming ui As early as 1973, they’d men- f 96 ®* recognized the ag distnet tioned to farm owner, Stuart easement plan as a possible Stauffer their interest in pur- method to realize his investment chasing the farm. At that time, from the land. With the deveicp- Stauffer wanted to maintain ment potential sold to the Foun ownership of the operation, and dation, the remaining agricultural was satisfied with the tenancy of value of the farm just might be the Ramsburgs. The arrangement within reach of the young farm continued for several years, with couple. Bob and Cookie, at their own Thus, the Stauffer farm became expenses and with Stauffer’s Frederick County’s first to start permission, adding a farm shop the lengthy procedure toward and calf bam to the outbuildings. selling development easements, “Buying a farm was about the and keeping the land in hay rather farthest thing from my mind,” Bob than homes, relates of the mid-summer day of Ffrsl st*P> though, was to have 1979, when Stauffer unexpectedly the farm declared an ag district, offered them first chance at That application, had to be ap purchasing the farm. proved by local, county and Both Bob and Cookie were finally, the state board. And to deeply involved in community pass the county’s planning and activities, especially with the zoning approval, a potential ag Maryland Farm Bureau, where district must first fit into the both were serving in leadership county’s 25-year comprehensive roles with the organization’s young land use plan, farmer program. They’d even “We are especially happy that reduced the size of the milking the two non-ag members of the herd because of the time they were 'county’s board were the ones to devoting to organization respon- move and second the approval for sibilities. our ag district application,” As intensely as they wanted the recalls Bob. Another area farm farm, both knew the purchase district applicant was not so for price, with the land located as tunate. His application was development potential even though rejected because the land was in a zoned agriculturally, was simply section listed in the long-range The Ramsburg’s explain their reasons for Farm Bureau information director, Jack favoring the use of calf hutches to Maryland Matthews, right. One of Maryla s newest farm-owner .levation daughter, .om are Robert, families pauses for a moment with a favorite Cookie, James and Michael Ramsburg. plan as having development potential. Walkersville, just north of the Ramsburg farm, was, at the same time, annexing “open space” land into the borough, in a move geared toward systematic development at some open-ended period of time. A 38-acre panel of the Ramsburgs’ was included in that annexation, most of it designated flood plain and therefore not geared to homes. It remains largely pasture land for the Ramsburg ' dairy herd, although extremely heavy rains occasionally put the flat, stream bordered piece under muddy water. After passing local and comity boards, the ag districting approval came from the state level late last summer. Butthe battle was only half over. Now It was time to go back to the local level, starting all over in the _ 'procedure, to secure easement sale approval. And that took nearly another year. Finally, early this past summer, a “yes” came down from the Foundation on the easement purchase. Values are set on a formula that takes into consideration me land’s proximity to roads and metropolitan areas, soil types, slope, and acreage. Because each easement situation is a new one, every case must be taken into special study to determine just what the easement is worth. In late August, legal surveys searches had been complete the Foundation had set aside a chunk of Frederick County against development, and Bob and Cookie were bonafide members of the farm mortgage-paying set. For the next 25 years, the Ramsburg farm is locked into agriculture use. That is the sole deed restriction, recorded on- the legal titles to the farm. “We had to sign papers stating that we would comply, tjrould maintain it for ag use,” adds Bob. “Other than that, we can do almost anything with it but build houses there.” There are no restrictions on posting the land to keep the public out, since easement sales, me'law. states, grant the public no.access rights. The plan also allows for the original landowner who sold the easements to construct a home for himself and one for each child, but that permission will be granted per owner and children only once. And housing constructed for tenants, at the rate of one home per 100 acres, is permitted. Condemnation rights' are in-, eluded in the ag preservation law. According to Maryland Extension Leaflet 88, a summary of the law, “any state or county agency may acquire by condemnation land which is under an agricultural preservation easement. The agency, however, is required to pay the landowner fair market value less the amount paid to the landowner for the easement.” ' After the 25-year period, the landowner at that time may call for a termination review if he wishes out of the land preservation program. The Foundation will have 180 days to study an opt-out request, and must do an on-site inspection, plus hold a public hearing. As in the other steps to sign-up preservation land, the state board can give approved only after the county would have ap proved termination.. If termination is' approved, the landowner can buy back the easements at fair market value, based on an appraisal for which he would pay. If a landowner fails to DON'T BE SLOW Call Now To Place Your CLASSIFIED AD • Ph; 717-394-3047 or 717-626-1164 repurchase the easement within six months, he must wait another five years before again applying for a termination. Will the ag district and easement route guarantee that farmland will stay cropped and not paved? Or, is it a method of buying time, with landowners a quarter-century from now ready to buy back easements in order to sell for even higher development returns? Neither the Foundation, nor the Farm Bureau which worked long and hard for the legislation, nor Bob and Cookie Ramsburg, really care to venture a guess. And right now, that’s the least of the Ramsburg’s concerns. “I’m not sure how our sons would get it out at that time,” speculates Bob, “But I do know that if we hadn’t gotten it signed up, they’d never have to worry about that problem, because we simply would never have gotten the farm.” The Ramsburgs have special praise for the efforts of - Royd Smith, chairman of the county’s land preservation committee. Before Maryland even thought much about a land preservation system, they say, Smith was working privately by his own convictions toward saving far mland. As of July 1981, 287 Maryland farms, representing almost 41,400 acres, were signed up in ag districting. Of that group, 49 had sold easements, representing nearly 7,900 acres, and 16,906 acres in 104 farms were applying for easement sales. Carroll County leads the sign ups, with 78 properties in *ag districts, 30 sales of easements, and 36 easement sales pending. Second is Anne Arundel with 38 ag districts but only one easement sale, and a dozen pending. Most of ag district sign-up ac tivity is takings place in areas adjacent to the~ cities, with Baltimore, Caroline, Frederick, Howard and Washington counties also setting aside several thousand acres for agriculture’s future. iHs