705 Skiff Mountain acres saved by Trust for Public Land

KENT — Thanks to the efforts of The Trust for Public Land, a national conservation organization, 705 acres on Skiff Mountain have now been put into conservation easements.

The easements, which were funded by the U.S. Forest Service Forest Legacy Program, protect the land from development, according to Trust for Public Land Project Manager Lisa Bassani.

“These easements are permanent and protect the land for watershed protection and to improve wildlife in the area, which is the real heart of the legacy program,� Bassani said. “The real significance of this acquisition is that the land is in a belt of unfrequented forest in northwestern Connecticut, and it is also a viewshed of the Appalachian Trail. So this is highly significant on both a regional and national level.�

The funds used for the easements total $1.97 million and were obtained through two separate federal appropriations  secured by Connecticut’s Congressional delegation.

“We started the application process to the Forest Legacy Program in 2004 and received $1.2 million of it in 2006,� Bassani said. “We received the balance of it in 2008.�

The landowners involved in the easement are Donald and Leslie Connery, who own 34 acres; Katherine, Margaret and Walter Kane, who own 318 acres; Howard Randall, who owns 81 acres; Barbara Austin Brown, who owns 85 acres; Barbara and Cyril Moore, who own 141 acres; and Oscar and Annette de la Renta, who own 46 acres.

Bassani said The Trust For Public Land received support from the Housatonic Valley Association, the Sharon Land Trust, the Kent Land Trust, the Appalachian Mountain Club and the Highlands Coalition in obtaining the easements, which will be managed by the state.

At its annual awards dinner, on Oct. 9, the Housatonic Valley Association will present its Eliot Wadsworth Greenprint Award to the Trust for Public Land for making the easement possible.

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