FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Bryan Levin, (614) 563-6974, Bryan.Levin@agri.ohio.gov
ODA ANNOUNCES NEW FARMLAND PRESERVATION COMMITMENTS
Farm owners in Clinton, Delaware, Fayette, Huron, Licking, Madison and Morrow counties join the program
REYNOLDSBURG, Ohio (January 2, 2024) – More Ohio farmland will remain Ohio farmland. The Ohio Department of Agriculture (ODA) is proud to announce multiple new additions to the Farmland Preservation program:
- Michael S. Bentley (Fayette County) - 191 acres
- Linda J. Hudson (Madison County) - 152 acres
- Benjamin J. Watkins (Delaware County) - 100 acres
- Timothy George Moss (Huron County) - 131 acres
- David A. Felumlee (Licking County) - 61 acres
- Patricia A. Walrath (Licking County) - 116 acres
- Robert A. Barker and Dorothy V. Barker (Morrow County) – 160 acres
- Bean Bros, LLC (Clinton County) – 46 acres
In 2023, 29 farms joined the program.
Agricultural land is a key part of Ohio’s landscape. Preserving this land is essential. An agricultural easement in Farmland Preservation is a voluntary agreement between the landowner and ODA, where the landowner agrees to perpetually maintain the land predominately in agricultural use. In exchange, the landowner is either compensated or may be entitled to a tax deduction.
In partnership with ODA, local sponsors Fayette Soil and Water Conservation District, Madison County Commissioners, Delaware County Commissioners, Western Reserve Land Conservancy, Licking Soil and Water Conservation District, Morrow Soil and Water Conservation District and Clinton Soil and Water Conservation District respectively played significant roles in securing these agreements.
Since the Office of Farmland Preservation began in 1998, 709 farms totaling 105,856 acres have entered into agreements. This enables Ohio to continually be a top producer, aiding not just Ohioans, but all Americans.
Funds from the purchase of these easements are invested in the local economy by the landowners who use them by expanding their farming operations, purchasing new equipment, reducing debt, adding conservation practices, planning for retirement, sending their children to college or for other purposes. When the state purchases a farmland easement, the proceeds are plowed into Ohio’s economy and our agriculture industry is preserved for future generations.
Felumlee Farm
Dawn Felumlee and David Felumlee at closing
Walrath Farm
Patricia Walrath at closing
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