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The Wall Street Journal - February 7, 2007
by Rachel Emma Silverman
Tax Break With A View
Muscoe R.H. Garnett Jr.'s farm in Loretto, Va.,
hasn't changed much since the family acquired it in the 1600s. Now, the retired
insurance executive has made sure it will stay that way.
Encouraged by recent tax legislation, Mr. Garnett has placed a "conservation
easement" on much of his property, located about 80 miles from Washington, D.C.
The move permanently shields the rolling pastures, timber forests and croplands
from being turned into a housing subdivision or business park. Under the
easement, which is a binding agreement typically made with a land trust, the
Garnett family still owns the land and can continue to use it for farming and
timber but most of it can never be developed.
Landowners who place conservation easements on their scenic, environmentally
sensitive or historic properties have long been able to get tax breaks from the
federal government, and some states have also begun offering tax incentives.
Now, a little-noticed provision in the wide-ranging pension law Congress passed
last summer has made the federal tax breaks even more generous. Conservation
groups say this has spurred a sharp increase in the number of landowners
interested in placing easements on their property.
"The incentives are fantastic, and I don't think a lot of people realize it,"
Mr. Garnett says.
But the expanded federal incentives, backed by some influential lawmakers from
agricultural states, are due to expire at the end of this year, unless Congress
acts to extend them. (A bill recently introduced in the Senate would make the
changes permanent, and President Bush also called for them to be made permanent
in this week's budget proposal.) For now, landowners might need to act quickly,
since conservation easements can take several months to put together.
Here's how it works: A landowner typically donates a conservation easement to a
land trust, a type of non-profit organization that helps put together the
easement and monitors its restrictions over time. The value of the donation for
income-tax purposes generally is the difference between the land's unrestricted
value and its new value with limited development or usage rights.
Be careful, though. The Internal Revenue Service and Congress in recent years
have been concerned with easement abuses in which donors have taken inflated
deductions or placed restrictions on land with little conservation value, such
as golf courses. The new law includes stiffer rules and penalties regarding
appraisals, to prevent donors from overstating the deduction for their land. The
IRS says it is currently auditing hundreds of easements.
But the law is designed to encourage easement donations by allowing larger tax
deductions. Landowners can now deduct the value of a donation up to 50% of their
adjusted gross income per year, up from the previous ceiling of 30%. That means
if your adjusted gross income is $100,000, you are now eligible for as much as a
$50,000 tax deduction a year, instead of $30,000. And if your income is too low
to deduct the full amount of your gift in one year, you can now carry forward
the deduction for 15 additional years, up from five years previously.
Property held in family limited partnerships, limited liability companies and
some types of corporations may also be able to take advantage of the increased
deduction limits, says Stephen J. Small, a Boston tax lawyer who specializes in
conservation easements.
The law is even more generous for career farmers and ranchers who earn at least
half their income from their land. These property owners, who are often
land-rich, but cash-poor, can now deduct up to 100% of their income. "If you're
a farmer you could pay no federal income taxes for 16 years," says Rand
Wentworth, president of the Land Trust Alliance, a coalition of 1,600 land
trusts across the country.
Colorado rancher Jay Fetcher in recent years placed conservation easements on
two large parcels of his 2,000-acre cattle ranch near ski resort Steamboat
Springs. The first donation, on 1,350 acres, was worth about $1.1 million for
tax purposes. But Mr. Fetcher, limited at the time to deducting a small portion
of his income, was able to take only about $60,000 of that donation in
deductions over six years. "We left almost all of the donation on the table," he
says.
Mr. Fetcher is planning this year to make another easement donation on 270 acres
to a Colorado land trust. He expects the value of the donation will be about
$1.2 million, and thinks he will be able to recoup roughly half that amount
because of the higher federal tax deductions and an increase in state tax
credits. "The changes helped us," says Mr. Fetcher. Still, he says the financial
incentives are secondary to his desire to preserve the land, in his family since
1949, with its sweeping views of mountains and pine forest. "Our family has no
desire to ever see the ranch developed. That's at the beginning of it all," says
Mr. Fetcher.
The tax-rule change has generated sharply increased interest in conservation
easements, say land trust officials from Washington and Wyoming to Georgia.
"Some landowners whom we've been talking to for five or almost 10 years say that
now it makes economic sense for them," says Laurie Wayburn, president of the
Pacific Forest Trust in San Francisco.
Conservation easements can generate other tax benefits, too. They can cut estate
taxes, because the land is considered to be worth less under an easement. A
growing number of states offer a range of income tax breaks. Colorado and
Virginia, for example, give donors state income tax credits that are
transferable, which means that landowners who don't need the tax credits can
sell the credits to other taxpayers for instant cash. You may even get a
property tax break, depending on where you live.
Conservation easements can vary. A farm owner, for instance, could still retain
the right to farm the land and to build a couple additional homes or barns, but
could limit the land from being further subdivided. Property owners can sell
their land, but buyers are obligated to honor the easement.
Peter Bance recently placed a conservation easement on 65 acres of the Virginia
farmland that has been in his family since 1840. The property was zoned to allow
construction of six housing sites, and he donated the rights to five of those
sites to a state-run land trust. (He kept one site in case a descendant wanted
to build a house in the future.) "We think we have a piece of heaven and we hope
to keep it that way for generations to come," says Mr. Bance, 55, who is an
executive with Wachovia Corp.
If you're thinking of doing a conservation easement, it's best to contact a land
trust in your area to find out if your property qualifies. (Try www.lta.org, the
Web site of the Land Trust Alliance.) There's no minimum size, but in order to
get a tax deduction the property has to meet certain criteria, such as having
significant environmental, scenic or historic value. Also, be sure to work with
a tax and legal adviser familiar with local applicable laws.
The land has to be appraised (try www.appraisers.org, the Web site of the
American Society of Appraisers) and may need to be surveyed, which can cost a
few thousand dollars. There are also legal fees to draw up the easement, which
can cost several thousand dollars, depending on the complexity of the deal. Some
land trusts also recommend landowners make cash donations to the land trust to
help fund the organization's future monitoring of the easement.
Because easements are placed in perpetuity, a family has to be sure it wants to
permanently restrict development -- and the potential for a big windfall --
before committing.
Several months ago, after discussions with his wife, children and grandchildren,
Eslick Daniel placed a conservation easement on his 200-acre farm in Columbia,
Tenn., near Nashville. The easement on the farm, called "Sweet Easy," limits
development, except for a couple of building sites that Dr. Daniel's descendants
could use for housing. For Dr. Daniel, 65 years old and a retired orthopedic
surgeon, the tax incentives weren't a factor. "We wanted to keep it where it
would be open land for our family and for other people," he says.
Write to Rachel Emma Silverman at
rachel.silverman@wsj.com
and
support land conservation efforts.
The Payette Land Trust is a non profit (501© 3) dedicated to protecting
and preserving open space in Valley County.
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