Orange County NC Website
ORD -,q01 I - 010 <br />ORANGE COUNTY <br />BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS <br />ACTION AGENDA ITEM ABSTRACT <br />Meeting Date: March 3, 2011 <br />Action Agenda <br />Item No. 4- - (E!� <br />SUBJECT: Public Trail Easement and Triangle Land Conservancy Funding Request for the <br />Brumley Forest Nature Preserve; and Approval of Budget Amendment #7 -C <br />DEPARTMENT: Environment, Agriculture, <br />Parks and Recreation <br />(DEAPR) <br />PUBLIC HEARING: (Y /N) No <br />ATTACHMENTS: INFORMATION CONTACTS: <br />Letter from TLC President David Stancil, 245 -2510 <br />Map of Property Rich Shaw, 245 -2514 <br />Draft Public Trail Easement <br />PURPOSE: To consider the acceptance of a public trail easement through the Triangle Land <br />Conservancy's Brumley Forest Nature Preserve and a request from Triangle Land Conservancy <br />for funding assistance for its "Brumley Forest" acquisition in May 2010. <br />BACKGROUND: In May 2010, Triangle Land Conservancy (TLC) completed a multi -year <br />negotiation with the Zeist Foundation in Atlanta to acquire 613 acres of land along New Hope <br />Church Road and Old NC 10 in Chapel Hill and Eno townships. <br />The property had been owned by George and Julia Brumley, who died tragically in a 2003 <br />airplane crash. Title to the land transferred to the family's private foundation in Atlanta. The <br />landholding was one of the largest privately -held properties in Orange County. Stony Creek, a <br />major tributary of the Eno River, runs through the property and is one of several conservation <br />values (including identified prime forest) present on the site. <br />TLC purchased the property with over $4 million accumulated from state grant funds, private <br />donors, and the City of Raleigh's Upper Neuse Clean Water Initiative. The property, now known <br />as "Brumley Forest," was purchased as a bargain sale, with the Zeist Foundation donating <br />about half of the appraised market value. <br />As is standard practice, TLC will apply for property tax exemption. However, because the sale <br />took place in mid -year of 2010, a property tax bill for 2010 was generated including rollback <br />taxes from the use value tax status. A total of $216,000 in rollback taxes were paid by the <br />buyers and sellers at the closing. As a result, TLC was left with a prorated share of property tax <br />of $50,000. TLC as a non - profit entity does not qualify for use value taxation, and it is this <br />amount that has been requested from the Lands Legacy Program by the TLC President. <br />The County considered participating in the purchase of the Brumley Forest property in 2008, but <br />opted against becoming a funding partner due to the anticipated high cost of the proposed <br />