HARRISBURG, Dec. 12, 2013 – Pennsylvania’s 25-year-old agricultural land preservation movement acted today to protect another 878 acres of Berks County farmland, Sen. Judy Schwank said.

“Nine more tracts of prime Berks County farmland are now protected from development,” Schwank said. “This means, once again, that agriculture will continue on as one of this region’s biggest economic engines producing the tastiest produce, meat and dairy not only for Pennsylvanians but people throughout the world.”

The Pennsylvania Agricultural Land Preservation Board, of which Schwank is a member, approved the preservation of the following farms:

Ronald Bordner                                 Perry Township                             26.4 acres

Robert & Dianne Ketterer               Albany Township                           117.1 acres

Ronnie & Lynn Folk                         Upper Bern Township                   137.6 acres

Richard Greib                                    Upper Bern Township                   51.6 acres

Ernest E. Heckman                          Windsor Township                         189 acres

Charles & Christi Loverich              Upper Tulpehocken Township    75 acres

Phares & Ellen Newswanger#1      Maxatawny Township                   125.4 acres

Phares & Ellen Newswanger#2     Maxatawny Township                   50 acres

Dalton & Dorothy Zimmerman     Upper Tulpehocken Township    105.7 acres

The farms are being preserved through the purchase of $1.8 million worth of conservation easements.

Since its inception in 1988, the commonwealth has protected 4,532 farms totaling 484,270 acres. Berks County counts 668 farms in the statewide total and 66,994 acres. And, it remains the leading county in the number of acres of farmland that have been preserved.

El objetivo a largo plazo del programa estatal es preservar permanentemente las tierras agrícolas. Los titulares de las servidumbres tienen derecho a impedir el desarrollo o las mejoras del terreno para fines distintos de la producción agrícola.

La administración local, del condado o estatal -o cualquier combinación de las tres- puede comprar servidumbres.

Los condados que decidan tener un programa de compra de servidumbres deben crear una junta de preservación de tierras agrícolas.

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