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Conservation Tax Incentives Pass
Senate
Waiting on President's Signature
posted August 7, 2006
Strong new conservation tax incentives backed by millions of American
hunters and anglers are included in a bill passed by the Senate.
The
legislation passed by the House last week and by the Senate last night will
expand the options for making the above arrangements by bringing in more
moderate income family farmers and ranchers. These landowners will now be able
to voluntarily opt for a significant tax benefit in exchange for donating a
conservation easement that restricts future development of their land. Such
easements keep more land in agriculture and conserve wildlife habitat and open
space. The House and Senate approved language: · Raises the
maximum deduction a donor can take for donating a conservation easement from
30% of their adjusted gross income (AGI) in any year to 50%; · Allows
qualified farmers and ranchers to deduct up to 100% of their AGI; and ·
Increases the number of years over which a donor can take deductions from 6
years to 16 years.
The Pension Protection Act of 2006, which contains
the new conservation tax incentives, is now headed to the White House for
President Bush's signature. Matt Connolly, President of the Theodore
Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, which helped coordinate sportsmen's and
wildlife conservation organizations' participation in a multi-year coalition
effort aimed at supporting the conservation tax incentive approved by Congress,
said today, "The inclusion of better conservation tax incentives in this
legislation shows members of Congress and our federal policymakers got the
message loud and clear from the millions of Americans who want to give more
landowners options for carrying out better land stewardship."
Russ Shay
of the Land Trust Alliance (LTA), who co-chairs TRCP's conservation tax
incentive initiative observed, "By adding their collective voice, hunters and
anglers played an important role in making this legislation a reality." The LTA
has provided critical, sustained leadership for the past two years as this
issue has been dealt with in Washington.
The Association of Fish and
Wildlife's Gary Taylor, who also co-chairs TRCP's initiative on conservation
tax incentives today said, "When you talk to the folks on the ground including
state fish and wildlife managers who use tax incentives to protect large blocks
of habitat, they'll tell you the incentives represent an invaluable
conservation tool. This expansion of the tool's use dramatically expands the
amount of land and water we can save."
Many of the nation's 40 million
sportsmen are intimately familiar with the benefits of conservation tax
incentives and the way the groups they belong to have used them to benefit fish
and game species. Hunting- and fishing-oriented conservation groups like Ducks
Unlimited, Pheasants Forever, the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation and Trout
Unlimited have used conservation tax incentives, including easements, to
implement arrangements with landowners that benefit not only ducks, pheasants,
elk, and trout, but a wide variety of other species. Land trusts belonging to
the LTA throughout the country and organizations like the Nature Conservancy,
the Conservation Fund and the Trust for Public Land have used easements to
stabilize key habitat. In an era of tight budgets, state and federal agencies
have found it difficult to conserve more land, but through conservation tax
incentive deals, land is often donated to them to expand public areas or to
create new areas.
James L. Connaughton, Chairman of the White House
Council on Environmental Quality stated today, "This new conservation easement
law is another important step in realizing the President's vision for
cooperative conservation. It helps fulfill the President's commitment to
landowners, sportsmen, and conservationists to provide substantial new
incentives to landowners who want to commit their land to open space while
keeping our nation's working farms and ranches working."
theChattanoogan.com
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