Saturday, September 7, 2013

Conservation Easements

One Woman’s Courageous Fight Against Sustainable Tyranny

Martha Bonata bought 64 acres of beautiful farm land in Fauquier County seven years ago. The barn was in disrepair and the land hadn’t been well taken care of. She set out to change that, spending thousands to turn the barn into a quaint little store. She brought in over 150 rescued animals, including goats, ducks, turkeys, even an emus.

She used the store to sell items grown on the property, including tomatoes and eggs. In addition, Martha is incredibly talented in crafting decorative and useful items from her farm sources. For example, her emus’ feathers, which it drops on the ground, are turned into jewelry. She created a wooden item that contains small slits on each of its four sides. In the slits she stuffs bits of wool discarded by her sheep. The item’s purpose was to hang in the yard so birds can use the bits of wool to make their nests. Above all, Martha turned the farm into a classic organic farm of naturally grown produce.

Everything was looking great for a lady anxious to get her hands in the dirt. Oh yes, there was just one small detail brought up during the negotiation for the purchase of the property. The Piedmont Environmental Council slipped in a conservation easement on the property.  This specific easement did not pay any cash to Martha nor did it provide any tax credits. All the benefits went to PEC. Martha signed the document because she had been told conservation easements were a way to protect the farm from being developed. She was for that.

But there is one major aspect of Martha’s value system that doesn’t fit the PEC profile for the perfect small farmer. She believes in private property rights. And that’s when the trouble started.  Space does not allow a full description of the battles Martha has faced over her attempts to farm her land. Here is the “Cliff notes” version:

Martha does not live on the farm, she owns a home in another location. The conservation easement she signed said she could have a small 1600 square foot residence on the property. She never used the facility as a residence.

The Fauquier County planning board suddenly issued notice that Martha would be fined for selling items that were not produced on her farm, something she never actually did. And they warned that she needed another permit in order to use the facility for events.

She was immediately threatened with fines of $5000 a day for each violation brought by the County. The evidence used against her by the county was a photo of a children’s birthday party that Martha had posted on her face book page, allegedly proving that she had rented out the barn for a party. in fact, it was a private party for personal friends. No money exchanged hands for the facility. But the battle was on.

Martha began to learn what a powerful weapon conservation easements can be in the hands of those who wanted to control her actions. The easement gave the PEC the right to occasionally inspect the property for “violations’ of the easement. Suddenly Martha was informed that PEC inspectors would visit the farm to investigate the “living quarters.” Rather than a random, occasional, or annual visit, PEC came back again and again; demanding to look into her private closets; even banning her right to video tape the inspections on her own property.

The PEC found fault with a simple water nozzle Martha had purchased to use in washing her animals. Somehow that was a violation. There is an old cemetery on the property dating back to 1832. In it are buried the families of former residents of the area and black slaves. To keep the farm animals from walking though the cemetery, Martha installed a simple fence. “Violation,” said PEC, “It damages the view shed.” On and on went the harassment over such idiotic claims. Along with it came thousands of dollars of legal expenses as Martha fought to defend herself.

Eventually, as a result of non-stop pressure and the threat of fines from the County, plus the pressure from PEC, not to mention a “coincidental” IRS audit, Martha was forced to close her little store, seriously damaging a major part of her ability to earn income from the farm.

Worse, county officials have made outrageous claims in attempts to justify their actions. They claim that Martha’s small store, and others like it on local farms, will lead to the establishment of Walmarts in rural areas. And most recently one official has made the claim on local television that her store is the pathway to junk yards and car lots.

What was her real crime? She had challenged county planning restrictions. And in doing so, she had become a threat to their authority and that of the PEC, which is the driving force behind county controls over private property.

These are the results of the implementation of Sustainable Development policy and why the American Policy Center is dedicated to stopping it. For more information about Sustainable Development, Agenda 21 and how to stop it, go to APC’s web site, www.americanpolicy.org and join the fight to end this tyranny over American citizens and your property rights.

Freedom For Liberty Farm - Video (https://vimeo.com/73774312)
https://vimeo.com/73774312 Click here to view the video (https://vimeo.com/73774312)

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NewsWire Articles

Sustainable Development Financing Committee Holds First Meeting (http://uncsd.iisd.org/news/sustainable-development-financing-committee-holds-first-meeting/213259/)

UNCED   |   Financing, Committee members discussed modalities for its work, an outreach strategy for communication with the UN General Assembly (UNGA) and stakeholders, and ways to organize itself for future sessions, according to a briefing provided on 30 August 2013.

“The three cluster topics are: financing needs and qualitative considerations, including the impact of the domestic and international environment; mobilization of resources and their effective use, as well as the efficiency of the financial system; and institutional arrangements, policy coherence, governance issues, and synergies.”

Please read the above sentence and tell me if you can make sense of it.  For instance, “mobilization of resources and their effective use.”  What resources?  Human resources?  What other resources are they able to mobilize?  Synergies?  Huh?  I think all of that is Newspeak for,  “We are trying to say we are taking control of everything on earth but don’t want to say it in understandable language... [Click here to read more (http://uncsd.iisd.org/news/sustainable-development-financing-committee-holds-first-meeting/213259/) ]

Sustainable Development Picking Up In Southwest Riverside County or an Ode to Agenda 21 by the Useful Idiots of Riverside County (http://lakeelsinore wildomar.patch.com/groups/business-news/p/sustainable-development-picking-up-in-southwest-riverside-county_68ba5e82)

Lake Elsinore Wildomar Patch   |   “The move toward more sustainable living has come from the very top.  In 2010, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities was created by the Obama administration “to help communities realize their visions for a more prosperous future.”  The article has the mayor  denying that it could possibly take away property rights and freedom, that this “means building smart with the future in mind.”  He neglects to say that future will make communism look desirable... [Click here to read more (http://lakeelsinore-wildomar.patch.com/groups/business-news/p/sustainable-development-picking-up-in-southwest-riverside-county_68ba5e82) ]

What is Sustainable Development (http://www.worldbank.org/depweb/english/sd.html)

The World Bank Group   |   “How do we decide whose needs are met? Poor or rich people? Citizens or immigrants? People living in cities or in the countryside? People in one country or another?  You or your neighbor? The environment or the corporation? This generation or the next generation? When there has to be a trade off, whose needs should go first?”  Ah, how easy to make everything seem like you have to pick one or the other -- citizens or immigrants, rich or poor, and on and on.   Read on: “For example, if you listed clean air to breathe, but also listed a car for transportation, your needs might conflict.”  Car or air, one or the other; supposedly you can’t have both.  What a load of road apples.  And all of this is from the World Bank.  Do they really think that we are dumb enough to swallow that it is an either/or world?  They are spending too much time around their useful idiots... [Click here to read more (http://www.worldbank.org/depweb/english/sd.html) ]
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Special Report: Agenda 21 and How to Stop It

http://store.americanpolicy.org/products/special-report-agenda-21-and-how-to-stop-itHere it is. The best little booklet yet offered on “Agenda 21 and How to Stop It.” This new tool is a must for local activists looking for effective ways to fight Sustainable Dev elopement in their local community.

Written by nationally-recognized Agenda 21 expert Tom DeWeese, this 35 page booklet gives a brief, but detailed overview of Agenda 21, its origins; details of the infamous “three Es;” the four ways Agenda 21 is implemented throughout the nation; and details on some of the main Planners who are enforcing the policy of Sustainable Development.

In addition, the booklet, produced by American Policy Center, includes brand new step by step ideas on how to fight back in local communities, including definitions on property rights useful in writing legislation and a “Resolution to Protect Citizens’ Property Rights,” that is becoming a valuable new tool across the nation to challenge local planning regulations.

The booklet is colorfully illustrated with graphics created by Carroll County, Maryland Commissioner Richard Rothschild, the elected official who led his county to be the first to oppose Sustainable Development infringement policies.

Click here to purchase this booklet (http://store.americanpolicy.org/products/special-report-agenda-21-and-how-to-stop-it)

Source: (http://us1.campaignarchive1.com/?u=3af5d41d21ad9fce53c86ba9d&id=75e3099493&e=5f675b1de6) http://americanpolicy.org APC Newswire Produced by American Policy Center Tom DeWeese, President
Kathleen Marquardt, Editor

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