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The Community Land Trust: An
Alternative |
[Reprinted from the
Whole Earth Papers, No.17, published in 1982 by Global
Education Associates]
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While the Community Land Trust as an organization is an innovative
concept in relation to recent conventional patterns of land holding in
the United States, it has its roots deep in the tradition of the early
settlers in New England who brought the practice of the "commons"
with them from England. The Community Land Trust is not merely a method
of holding land in common; it is rather a means for holding land by the
community for the "common good." In our present world, this
means holding land not only to protect it from overdevelopment on the
one hand but also to ensure both that the best land is preserved for
farmland and that ecologically sensitive areas such as hillsides subject
to erosion) are not disturbed in the process of development.
In this sense, the Community Land Trust (CLT) is closely related in
concept to non-profit land-holding organizations like conservation
trusts. Other examples in New England are the Trustees of Reservations
in Massachusetts, Maine Coast Heritage Trust, Lake Champlain Islands
Trust and the Berkshire Conservation Trust.
Unlike many private organizations which hold land for use in common,
the CLT is open to anyone in the surrounding community and does not have
individual memberships which can be bought and sold. By such provision,
the CLT aims for a public or quasi-public status in order to avoid
control of those using the land and the tendency to revert to individual
ownership.
Moreover, land held by a CLT is not necessarily contiguous nor limited
in the total acreage held. One CLT in Vermont, for example, holds 400
acres of land in several tracts, none of which is contiguous.
The CLT has a purpose which goes beyond simple preservation of land. It
recognizes that human beings are ultimately a part of the total
ecological reality and that in order to reach ecologically sound goals,
we must also support economically sound objectives. For this reason the
CLT encourages an approach to land use planning which includes a mixture
of housing and farmland in ways that are mutually compatible and
supportable.
In general, this means planning tracts of land in such a way that the
houses do not intrude, or minimally intrude, on the open space farmland
or forest. Just as important, however, from an economic viewpoint, the
CLT recognizes that in order for fanners, young farmers in particular,
to gain access to land for farming, the land must be made available to
them, at comparatively low cost relative to the cost of land for
development. In addition, they must also have long-term security on the
land.
Without such long-term security, farmers are not encouraged to build up
the soil in ways that prevent erosion and protect the land for future
generations. Recent studies by the Conservation Foundation in
Washington, D.C. have demonstrated that the dangerous increase in soil
erosion throughout the U.S. can, in part at least, be attributed to the
increase in short-term tenant farming.
In its approach to planning for land presently owned in South Egremont,
the Community Land Trust in the Southern Berkshires hopes to demonstrate
how these dual environmental and social objectives can be realized on a
specific tract of land. While paying a fair market price for the land,
the Community Land Trust's plans call for ultimate densities of
approximately 5 acres of land per household on the entire 100-acre tract
it intends to purchase (currently only 10 acres are owned by the
Community Land Trust). Within the limitations of current zoning
regulations, it intends to site these houses in such a way as to
minimally intrude on the best farm and forest land.
Similar kinds of planning where farmland and housing form an integrated
pattern are being tried in different parts of the country. Some of these
efforts are organized as CLTs One such mixed planned development is in
Greene County, Virginia on a tract of 300 acres called Farm Colony. One
hundred and fifty acre are being retained as farmland for growing crops
and raising cattle while a 40-acre segment is a wooded preserve.
Forty-eight homesites will occupy the remainder of the land with an
overall density of about six acres per homesite.
Near Uniontown, Pennsylvania there is another example known as the New
Village project sponsored by the Institute for Man and Science in
Rensselaerville, New York. This project, now under construction, calls
for all housing to be located on 78 acres, leaving another 100 acres
completely intact for open space and farming. In addition, the plan "takes
advantage of natural terrain provide solar access to each lot and use
natural drainage paths for water."
Yet another example of this type of rural planning is a project
proposed for a 300-acre site in Frankford Township, New Jersey, a
rolling area of farms and forest. If a standard subdivision layout were
used, each of the houses would be placed on a 3-acre lot, making
agricultural use impossible and giving the land an intensely developed
look.
But, according to the proposal, all of the residential units would be
constructed in clusters of four to eight houses utilizing only about one
half of the total acreage and leaving the other half to be leased to
farmers, subject to a deed restriction prohibiting development. Other
wooded portions of the site would be open to residents for common
recreational use.
In the above examples, as in the case of the CLT in the Southern
Berkshires, the cost of the land itself would be primarily carried by
the house lots. In this way the remainder of the land can be offered to
farmers - at a price which they can afford to pay.
The method, common to all CLTs in the country, by which both the
farmland, as well as the housesites, are offered to users is through a
long-term lease (99 years) which is both automatically renewable and
inheritable.
The user pays the trust a regular monthly rental for the land and the
trust in turn pays the taxes as well as the cost of the land purchased
from the income. Properly managed and financed, the income from such
rentals is generally sufficient to create a revolving loan fund for the
purchase of additional land. The trust, in return for helping users gain
access to land, imposes lease conditions that prevent the user from
building more than necessary structures, or farming it in ways that
might damage the soil.
The users, however, become owners of any buildings or other
improvements which they place on the land, but they are not permitted to
sell or sublease the land itself, which remains permanently owned by the
trust. This concept of separating the ownership of the land from the
ownership of improvements, while fundamental to the purpose and
objectives of the CLT, is at once strange to many people accustomed to
viewing "property" as a combination of both land and
buildings. It is somewhat foreign to our legal conventions which, until
recently, at least, have not separated the "development rights"
from the bundle of rights which are included under "fee simple"
title.
Today, however, there is both a proliferation of buildings built on
leased land in urban areas, and a growing recognition of "development
rights" as a separate right (similar to mineral rights, easement
rights and water rights). Holding the "development rights"
while the user retains the "usership rights" is not as
difficult to put forward as it once was.
Bankers are occasionally perplexed as to how to place a mortgage on a
building which rests on leased land. Furthermore, Farmers Home
Administration, which has been giving mortgages for many years to
families owning homes on land leased from tribal reservations, has been
itself reluctant to make loans on leased land elsewhere in the country.
Recently, however, the FHA has done so, setting a precedent.
One cannot, therefore, blame local bankers who have not had any
experience with such a practice. However, in those places where the
experience has been acquired, bankers have discovered that not only is
it possible but actually advantageous and more secure than the usual
mortgage loan. In the town of Southampton, Pennsylvania (now a suburb of
Philadelphia), the local banks began making such mortgages back in the
1930s to a local Community Land Trust which eventually developed into a
group of 80 house owners on some 200 acres of land. Members of this CLT
have found the local banks not only willing to give mortgages but eager
to offer them at the most favorable rates.
In the long run, the Community Land Trust concept could provide an
alternative to the zoning concept, which is an urban invention and does
not adapt well to the needs of rural communities. Looked at from this
viewpoint, the Community Land Trust can be seen as an innovative tool
for planning.
The CLT depends for success upon the voluntary initiative of its
members to give it positive support. Members of the Community Land
Trust, through their voluntary effort, are helping to provide not only
for themselves, but for the community as a whole. They are looking
towards the future when open space in land will be seen as not merely a
rural amenity but also a necessity for producing locally grown food no
longer available from California, Texas or Florida.
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