DLNR News Release-Apply Now For Conservation Acquisition Assistance From Hawai’i Forest Legacy Programs, July 19, 2019
Posted on Jul 19, 2019 in Latest Department News(Honolulu) – Are you a private landowner interested in protecting and managing your forest lands and leaving a long-term legacy for your family and the people of Hawaii? The Department of Land and Natural Resources Division of Forestry and Wildlife (DOFAW) is seeking new projects for federally-funded forest acquisition programs: The Hawaiʻi Forest Legacy Program.
The Hawaiʻi Forest Legacy Program works with private landowners, state and county agencies, and conservation non-profit groups to protect forests from conversion to non-forest uses and promote sustainable, working forests. This program accepts both conservation easement and fee title acquisitions from willing private landowners for forested lands. Landowners may participate in the Program by either selling their property outright or by retaining ownership and selling only a portion of the property’s development rights. The use of a conservation easement, a legal agreement between a landowner and a non-profit land trust or governmental agency, allows the land to remain in private ownership while ensuring that its environmental values are retained. More than 2.6 million acres of threatened private forests in the U.S. have been protected under the Forest Legacy Program.
Applications are due August 19, 2019.
“In Hawaii, DLNR has protected over 50,000 acres through the Forest Legacy Program with the help of land trusts and conservation-minded landowners. We are currently working to complete program funded projects to protect an additional 6,800 acres of important forested lands and are excited about developing new projects for the upcoming funding cycle,” said DLNR Chair Suzanne Case.
The most recently completed Forest Legacy Program project was the purchase of the Helemano Wilderness Area in 2018, which will result in Oʻahu residents gaining new outdoor recreational opportunities, watershed protection and improvement of habitat for native species. The DLNR will be working with the community over the coming year to create a management plan for this area.
The Forest Legacy Program is an important tool in a state where approximately 66 percent of forests are privately owned. These forests help provide our isolated island chain its most precious resource: fresh water. Hawaii’s tropical forests have suffered from clearing, invasive species, and conversion for other uses. The state has identified certain forest lands as important and in need of permanent protection through the program. Priorities include protection of Hawaii’s unique and fragile environmental resources, watershed health and rare and/or endangered species, scenic beauty, recreation and forests used for traditional cultural practices. Forests that provide economic benefits that help diversify Hawaii’s economy is also a major program goal.
Landowners, counties and non-profits interested in participating in the Forest Legacy Program are encouraged to contact Tanya Rubenstein at the DLNR Division of Forestry and Wildlife at (808) 587-0027 or by email at [email protected] to discuss their property and/or interest in the programs prior to applying.
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RESOURCES
(All images/video courtesy: DLNR)
Hawaiʻi Forest Legacy Program Website:
https://dlnr.hawaii.gov/forestry/lap/forest-legacy/
USDA Forest Service Forest Legacy Program Website:
https://www.fs.fed.us/managing-land/private-land/forest-legacy
Photograph: (Helemano Wilderness Area Forest Legacy Project)
Media contact:
AJ McWhorter
Communications Specialist
Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources
808-587-0396 (Communications Office)