What is a Land Trust?
Land trusts are local, independent nonprofit
organizations that work with landowners who want to protect open land for
conservation, recreation, and other public benefit. Land trusts may
acquire land through donation or purchase, hold negotiated conservation
easements, use partial development to finance the protection of the rest of the
land, or utilize life estates that allow the owners to live on the land for
their lifetime, after which the land reverts to the land trust.
In addition to direct land conservation,
grassroots land trusts often educate public decision-makers about the
ecological and economic benefits of protecting open space, and frequently plan
and conduct environmental education programs for their communities' school
children.
Land trusts are at the vanguard of the trend
toward local self-sufficiency and individual action to address today's
conservation challenges. There are currently over 1,500 individual land
trust organizations in the country.
According to the
Land
Trust Alliance, these local and regional groups have helped to conserve
over 9.3 million acres of productive farm and forest land, sensitive watershed areas,
scenic and recreational lands, and important wetlands and wildlife habitat. Orient Land Trust has protected 2,100 acres.
While some of the land trusts are
professionally staffed organizations with long experience in conserving land,
over half of the nation's land trusts are small groups run solely by
volunteers. Orient Land Trust has a
staff of ten employees.
Land trusts succeed because they operate in
the private sector and use flexible, voluntary methods of land conservation.
In recent years, the role of nonprofit land trusts in conserving
community open space has become increasingly central to conservation in
America.
As people look more and more to local,
non-governmental solutions to protecting key resources, local and regional land
trusts are shouldering more and more responsibility for land conservation.
Orient Land Trust has a
mission
to preserve the natural
resources, wildlife habitat, open space, and historic and geologic features of
the northern San Luis Valley for the enjoyment of current and future
generations. Please consider joining the
land trust as a
financial
donor or by working with OLT to
conserve your
lands here in the northern San
Luis Valley.
For additional
information on how you can work together with OLT
to protect and conserve land in the northern San Luis Valley: