Orange County NC Website
Trinity School Conservation Easement Draft 8128/03 <br />Natural Heritage Program in December 1988. The native plants and animals known to exist in <br />this river corridor include white oak, red oak, beech, mountain holly, red-shouldered hawk, <br />green-backed heron, green snake, pickerel frog and the dwarf waterdog. <br />The Easement Area provides land area for outdoor recreation by, or the education of, the <br />students and members of the faculty of Trinity School and the general public, specifically the <br />trail corridor along New Hope Creek, which is expected to_receive heavy recreational use by the <br />citizens of both Orange and Durham counties. <br />The Easement Area includes land within the New Hope Creek riparian corridor, which <br />has been recognized by Orange County as having significance as a wildlife corridor and is <br />identified on Pages 2.2-41 of the Land Use Element of the Orange County Comprehensive Plan <br />as the Korstian Division/Duke Forest section of the New Hope Creek Refuge System. It is a <br />primary purpose of this Easement to protect the undeveloped nature of the Grantors' Property <br />and, in doing so, helping to protect the natural area and wildlife habitat associated with this area. <br />The conservation purposes of this easement, notwithstanding anything to the contrary <br />contained herein, are also recognized by, and this Conservation Easement will also serve, the <br />following clearly delineated governmental conservation policies: <br />(1) the Orange County Board of Commissioners' goal (adopted June 21, 1999) to <br />identify and coordinate the preservation of the County's most significant natural areas; and <br />(2) the Land Use Element of the Orange County Comprehensive Plan (adopted <br />September 2, 1981 as amended) with its goal of conserving and protecting Orange County's <br />significant "Resource Protection Areas" from adverse development impacts, including county <br />Natural Areas, wildlife corridors and lands placed by individual property owners into <br />conservation easements; and <br />(3) the New Hope Corridor Open Space Master Plan, which was adopted by <br />Orange County in the spring of 1989, and which recognizes the need to preserve recommended <br />wildlife corridors along the upstream areas of New Hope Creek; and <br />(4) the protection of similar Orange County properties designed to protect <br />conservation and open space values through conservation easements granted to the Grantee and <br />others in the vicinity of the Grantors' Property; and <br />(5) Article 17 of the North Carolina General Statutes NCGS 113A-24, entitled <br />Conservation, Farmland and Open Space Protection and Coordination, otherwise known as the <br />"Million Acre Initiative," which provides that the State of North Carolina shall encourage, <br />facilitate, plan, coordinate, and support appropriate federal, State, local, and private land <br />protection efforts so that an additional one million acres of farmland, open space and <br />