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Van Buren County Receives a Grant to Preserve 219-acre Family Farm

By Anna Spidel

The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has awarded grants to seven Michigan counties for farmland preservation.

In April, MDARD announced farmland preservation grant awards for seven counties designed to protect agricultural lands from being developed.

Van Buren County received $312,600. The county’s Community Services Director Lisa Ransler said the Van Buren County Land Preservation Board applied for the grant to preserve a 219-acre farm owned by 6th- generation farmer Carl Druskovich.

Ransler said the board will use the money to purchase the land's development rights from Druskovich.

“He’ll never be able to develop it, so we’re just giving him a little bit in exchange for that permanent easement for agriculture," Ransler said.

The deal works by using the grant money to compensate Druskovich in exchange for giving up his development rights. He will then own the land indefinitely without development rights, which means the land can only be used for farming.

“He will have his 219 acres permanently reserved for agriculture. Only agriculture will happen on these [acres] moving forward," Ransler said.

Because the county will own the development rights but not the land, that means no development can happen on the land unless the Druskovich family were to eventually sell the 219 acres to the Land Preservation Board.

Ransler says the idea is to ensure the land continues to be used for agriculture into the future.

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