The Herald-Courier

Genesee Valley Conservancy protects Old Acres Farm


Located on the rolling hills between Leicester and Perry, the Smithgall family has protected 1,316 acres of highly productive and scenic farmland with Genesee Valley Conservancy.

Four conservation easements placed on the farm will prevent subdivision and conversion to non-farm uses that would impair and cover the highly productive soils that have sustained the Old Acres Farm for four generations.

Since 1950, the Smithgall family has farmed these lands, first as a small Guernsey farm with chickens and hogs. Today, the farm has a large Holstein herd and grows cash crops.

Parents David and Mindy Smithgall and their son, Chris, and wife, Emily, have been pursuing protection options for their farm since 2007.

 

Conservation easements

Designed to allow continued private ownership of the land, the four conservation easements in place allow the Smithgalls to continue to operate their farm, rotate crops and make agricultural improvements. 

In the future, the Smithgalls can pass land on to their heirs or sell their land, and conservation easements will remain in place. All future owners of these lands will also need to follow the conservation easements by keeping this farmland viable for agricultural uses.

Genesee Valley Conservancy, for its part, is now charged with ensuring these easement agreements are upheld. Today, and forever into the future, the Conservancy will work with the owners of these lands to ensure the farmland is available for agricultural use and not covered by development.

 

Soils

The soils protected by this project represent some of the most productive in the state. With 36 percent classified as United States Department of Agriculture Prime soils and another 27 percent classified as New York State Important Soils, these soils are highly productive. 

 

Letchworth State Park protections

Just over 2,000 feet from a portion of the farm is Letchworth State Park. This section of the farm is a wetland area that drains into the park, forming the 200 foot Craspey Clay Falls near the high banks recreation area.

Special protections were written into the conservation easement for this 19-acre area surrounding to ensure the wetland complex remains intact and water draining through the wetland is cleaned before it enters the creek and flows into Letchworth and the Genesee River.

 

View

Old Acres Farm is a commanding part of the view when traveling between Livingston County and Wyoming County on Route 39. Especially when you are headed east, from the higher elevations in Wyoming, driving down the rolling hills into Livingston County, the lands of this farm are a highly prominent part of the view that expands for miles on a clear day.

Over 7.25 miles of road frontage has also been protected as part of this project, providing views of the rural landscape for the thousands that drive by the farm each day.

 

The first, but not last

As the first farmland protection project in the town of Perry, opportunities to work with other landowners are being pursued. With additional important farmland and natural resources in Perry, staff of the Genesee Valley Conservancy say the agency hopes to expand on the success of the Smithgall project. 

Since this project was selected by the state as a priority, a Wyoming County selection program has been created to help promote farmland protection opportunities to landowners in the area. The program involves public workshops to inform landowners on details of the program and how conservation easements would affect the future of their farm. The program seeks applications from interested farms and scores the importance of those lands in order to prioritize the highest priority projects for future conservation opportunities.

 

Partnership made it possible

This project was the result of a collaboration between Genesee Valley Conservancy, Wyoming County Board of Supervisors, Wyoming County Agricultural and Farmland Protection Board, Wyoming County Soil and Water, town of Perry, Wyoming County Cornell Cooperative Extension, and the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets.

This project was also supported by the Livingston County Board of Supervisors, Agricultural and Farmland Protection Board, and the town of Leicester.

Livingston County holds a to similarly informational and selection program to prioritize farmland protection efforts for farms interested in protection opportunities.

So far, the collaborative efforts between Genesee Valley Conservancy and Wyoming and Livingston counties has resulted in over $14 million invested in protecting over 10,300 acres of some of the state’s most productive agricultural lands in the Genesee Valley.

 

In summary

All of the municipalities and parties involved in the project recognize that highly productive land is critical to the local economy, maintaining the tax base and providing for the economic future of the region. 

Genesee Valley Conservancy works throughout the Genesee River watershed to protect high quality habitat, open space and farmland and now oversees the protection of 20,691 acres.

Farmland owners in Wyoming and Livingston Counties interested in pursuing conservation options for their property should contact the Genesee Valley Conservancy for more information and about each county’s local farmland protection program.

As the local land conservation organization operating in the Genesee Valley, the Conservancy has surpassed its goal of protecting 20,000 acres by 2020. With the Old Acres Farm project, the organization has now had a hand in protecting 20,691 acres since its founding in 1990. 

As Genesee Valley Conservancy enters 2020, it will celebrate its 30th anniversary. With conservation projects in seven counties, the organization works with over 100 landowners to ensure important local properties are protected for the next generation. The Conservancy also owns a series of nature preserves that have public access and educational opportunities in Steuben and Livingston counties.

Looking ahead, the organization is pursuing its fifth nature preserve to provide public access opportunities and is beginning its push to work towards protecting 30,000 acres in the Genesee Valley.

Emily, Madison, Chris, David, Mindy Smithgall holding a sign to mark the historic effort to permanently protect their fourth generation family farm. Photo provided

Emily, Madison, Chris, David, Mindy Smithgall holding a sign to mark the historic effort to permanently protect their fourth generation family farm. Photo provided

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