PACE
Up one levelLinks to the state PACE (Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easement) and descriptions of PACE and MORE farmland preservation activities in Shelby County.
- Residential Sprawl is eating up farmland in Shelby County
- Since 1997, 20.2% of Shelby County's residential growth has gone into farmland, without any zone changes. See the file below for the numbers of residential units approved by the Triple S Planning Commission in rural and urban areas for the years of 1998 through 2004.
- PACE status map for Shelby County
- View a map of Shelby County that shows past applications to the state PACE program, purchased easements, and donated easements.
- PACE farm family named Farmer of the Year
- The 2005 Shelby County Kiwainis Club's Farmer of the Year is the Paul T. Case family, a PACE farm family in northern Shelby County. See the link below for the story.
- Survey of Shelby County PACE Farms - how they used their easement money
- Click the following file for the results of a 2004 survey of Shelby County's PACE farm owners to see how they used their money from their sell of the agricultural conservation easements.
- KY PACE program
- To view the information about the state PACE program, click the title.
- Lexington - Fayette PDR Program
- Visit this site to learn about Kentucky's only local purchase of conservation easements program.
- National Assessment of Agricultural Conservation Easement Programs
- View a recent report entitled "The National Assessement of Agricultural Easements Programs."
- AFT assessment of the Maryland program
- Maryland - 25 Years of Farmland Protection: An Evaluation of the Maryland Agricultural Land Preservation Foundation
- Status of State PACE programs
- View a Fact Sheet from The American Farmland Trust on the Status of State PACE Programs.
- AFT critic of Agricultural Conservation Easements
- View an American Farmland Trust fact sheet critic of Agricultural Conservation Easements.
- Evaluation of Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program (FRPP)
- A survey, done by the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, of owners of agricultural land whose development rights were sold in part through the federal Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program, summarizes its findings. One of the findings of the survey was that "80% believe that in 5 years their land would sell for a higher price than currently, even with its development rights removed."