Orange County NC Website
~-S <br />tJrange County' <br />Lands L~a~y Prag~ra~n <br />,~ ~'e~c-wear' retrospective <br />This year marks the 10`'' Anniversary for the Lands Legacy Program. The program was adopted <br />in 2000 with a truly ambitious mission: to work with willing landowners and conservation <br />partners to protect Orange County's most important natural and cultural resource lands before <br />they are severely damaged or destroyed. This anniversary is an opportunity to reflect on the <br />program's successes, and to assess how it might to adapt to changing conditions. <br />It was started ten years ago <br />In 1999, while the world was counting down to the start of a new millennium, Orange County <br />was developing an ambitious new program to help counter some alarming trends. While <br />population growth, residential development, and land prices were rising steadily, the availability <br />of parks and recreation facilities, farmland, prime <br />forestland were declining. The county lost important <br />natural and cultural heritage sites to land-use conversions. <br />Although there had been excellent work by local land trusts <br />and others to conserve special places like Duke Forest and <br />Eno River State Park, and to protect water supplies at Cane <br />Creek and University Lake, the rising tide of development <br />was threatening to overwhelm those efforts. The Orange <br />County Board of Commissioners decided to become a <br />more active partner in conserving lands that help give the <br />county its identity, places that would be sorely missed if <br />they were erased from the landscape due to changes in land <br />use. The board adopted the Lands Legacy program in <br />April.2000... <br />A Laads Legacy Program <br />for Oraage Coaaty <br />_.. <br />:~,~k_ <br />~: . __ _ <br />~'"~` . <br />'. ~~ ; <br />L..~ - ~° <br />as adopted by the <br />Orange Countg Board of Commissioners <br />APp~ ., 2noo <br />o<e„~,~~.~~ <br />Rnvimomeni e~ Recouroe Couerration Depar:mem <br />How has Lands Legacy worked thus far? <br />Through Lands Legacy, the County has completed projects in all seven townships. That success <br />is due in part to many partners, including dozens of landowners interested in conserving their <br />land through various means, including the granting of conservation easements. Other key <br />partners included Triangle Land Conservancy, Eno River Association, OWASA, Duke <br />University, and other local governments. The County also partnered with state and federal <br />agencies that awarded over $5 million in grants for park acquisition construction and for <br />conserving farms and open space. <br />A Case Study in Partnership: New Hope Preserve <br />Orange County joined several partners in completing an important section of the New Hope Corridor <br />Master Plan. The County, in collaboration with Triangle Land Conservancy, Durham County, Town <br />of Chapel Hill, and Durham City, has assembled several land parcels for the New Hope Preserve, <br />which will preserve open. space between Duke Forest and Jordan Lake. The partners adopted a joint <br />master plan for the Hollow Rock Access Area-a future 75-acre park located at the intersection of <br />Erwin and Pickett roads. Further collaboration is underway for park construction and operation. <br />4 <br />