Orange County NC Website
Attachment A <br />Orange County <br />Lands Legacy Program <br />Department of Environment, Agriculture, Parks and Recreation <br />Orange County's Lands Legacy Program was created by a board of commissioners' resolution <br />on April 4, 2000. The purpose and mission is to work with willing landowners and other <br />partners to protect and conserve the county's most important natural and cultural resource lands <br />before they are damaged or destroyed. The program is administered by the Department of <br />Environment, Agriculture, Parks and Recreation (DEAPR). <br />Through Lands Legacy, the County has completed projects in all seven townships. That success <br />was achieved with the help of many partners, including dozens of landowners interested in <br />conserving their land through the granting of permanent conservation easements. Other key <br />partners included Triangle Land Conservancy, Eno River Association, OWASA, Duke <br />University, and other local governments. The County has 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 />Over the first 12 years of Lands Legacy, Orange County acquired land for seven new parks, <br />preserved all or portions of 16 active farms (1,700 acres), and conserved nearly 600 acres of <br />natural open space in the Eno River, Cane Creek, Little River, and New Hope Creek watersheds <br />upstream of public water supply intakes. A list of completed projects is attached. <br />An evolving focus for the program <br />Lands Legacy was established to protect the following types of land: <br />• Parkland <br />• Natural areas and wildlife habitat (including prime forests) <br />• Riparian buffers (especially in public water supply watersheds) <br />• Prime farmland <br />• Historic and cultural sites <br />During the first few years Lands Legacy focused on parkland acquisition, then shifted its focus to <br />farmland preservation, responding to farmer interests and grants for purchasing conservation <br />easements. More recently, the program has worked to conserve land along rivers and streams <br />thereby helping to protect our public water supplies and securing areas for low- impact recreation. <br />The cost of conservation <br />Orange County's land conservation over <br />the past 12 years cost the County $3,726 <br />per acre —much less than 1% of the <br />County's budget over that period. Those <br />funds went toward the direct conservation <br />of 3,030 acres by the County, plus an <br />additional 1,236 acres acquired by the <br />State for Eno River State Park and for the <br />portion of Little River Park located in <br />Durham County. <br />K <br />