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Guide to Landowner's
Options
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Protection
by Conservation Easement If you want to provide for your land, yet retain ownership of it, then a conservation easement may be the option for you. A conservation easement ( 39 Ill. Rev Statutes 401 ) is a way for a landowner to voluntarily place permanent restrictions on future use of his or her land, thereby protecting its particular natural attributes. This legal agreement provides for a conservation agency to hold the easement and enforce the restrictions. Your responsibilities and rewards of ownership continue, and unless specified otherwise, you retain full control over public access. Conservation easement enabling legislation allows a property owner to dedicate an easement to a unit of local government, or to a non-profit agency incorporated for conservation purposes. In McHenry County the typical receivers of conservation easements tend to be municipalites, the McHenry County Conservation District, the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission, and the Land Conservancy of McHenry County. The restrictions placed in a conservation easement are tailored to suit your particular property and situation. Generally, the restrictions are placed on the property in order to retain its natural, scenic, historic, or open space characteristics, and to protect against inadvertant or interntional destruction of those features. For example , the easement may state that the land will remain in a natural, undisturbed condition, or it may allow some limited use, such as farming, or timber management. A conservation easement may be placed on all or a portion of your property. For instance, you may wish to protect a stream and a prairie buffer along it, and still be allowed to develop the rest of your land. The restrictions, then, would only apply to that part of your property described in the easement. The remainder of your property, not under an easement, may increase in value because of the adjoining protected land. A conservation easement is permanent and binds all present and future owners of the eased land. it is recorded like any other title interest, and goes with the land whether it is transferred by sale, by gift, or by devise. Monitoring and enforcement of the restrictions is the responsibility of the conservation agency holding the easement. You may continue to use and enjoy the land in the same way that you always have as long as you are in compliance with the terms of the easement, which you have negotiated cooperatively with the conservation agency. Easements normally are written with language which encourages good land stewardship practices. People grant conservation easements primarily because they wish to protect land which they value and which will be important for its landscaper features in the future. Their greatest reward is their sense of satisfaction at having protected something of value. However, the financial benefits of granting a conservation easement in perpetuity can also be important. A conservation easement will affect the market value of the land to the extent that it limits its potential development and use potential. It is the effect on the market value that is important when considering the financial aspects of easements. Income
Taxes You should have a qualified appraiser determine the value of your charitable deduction. In most cases the tax law requires that you obtain a written appraisal before the tax return is filed for the yea of the deduction. A summary of the appraisal, signed by the appraiser, and the conservation agency, must be attached to the return. The cost of the appraisal, and any surveying or legal fees, are also deductible. Estate
Taxes Gift
Taxes Property Taxes In summary, the conservation easement is an effective and flexible land protection technique. it allows you to retain ownership, to receive tax advantages, and it represents a tangible commitment to the preservation of McHenry County's natural heritage and rural landscape. |
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The Land Conservancy of McHenry County Box 352 Woodstock, Il. 60098 815 337-9502 info@conserveMC.org |