n LOUDOUN
4 | n EDUCATION
VOL. 9, NO. 23
10 | n PUBLIC SAFETY
16 | n PUBLIC NOTICES
Community-Supported News. Free to all.
Debate Continues Over Best Approach to Farmland Preservation BY NORMAN K. STYER nstyer@loudounnow.com
The four-year effort to increase opportunities for agricultural operations even as western Loudoun properties are carved up into new subdivisions is nearing a final Board of Supervisors vote, but debate continues over whether the new proposed policies would hamper broader countryside conservation efforts. Following a public hearing that stretched to nearly 3 a.m. April 11, county supervisors have scheduled a June vote on the proposed zoning regulations for rural cluster subdivisions aimed at limiting development on the best spaces for farming, defined as having prime agricultural soils. The initiative was launched in 2020 seeking to address concerns that the goals of the cluster ordinance to create larger outlots designated for rural economy purposes were largely unmet. Too often, critics said, the lots were unusable for farming—located on steep slopes, wetlands, or the property’s poorest soils. Four years later, the proposed revisions would apply to properties having at least five acres of prime soils and require that at least 70% of those soils be preserved in agricultural lots. According to the county planning staff ’s research, 705 parcels covering 54,000 acres meet that criteria and the proposed regulations would be expected protect 12,250 acres of prime soil. Advocates of that approach, led by members of the Loudoun County Farm Bureau, say it would protect a critical resource while providing space for small
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APRIL 18, 2024
NextEra Power Line Route Opposed by Supervisors BY HANNA PAMPALONI
hpampaloni@loudounnow.org
Hanna Pampaloni/Loudoun Now
A member of the Loudoun Farm Bureau waits for his turn to speak about the county’s plans to preserve prime agricultural soil in the county during the April 10 Board of Supervisors meeting.
farm operations—a fast growing segment of Loudoun’s rural enterprises—to launch and thrive. Critics warn the effort would devalue properties and reduce their development potential. That’s raised worries not only of property owners, but conservation advocates seeking to preserve rural properties through permanent conservation easements. They say that reducing the potential development value undermines the economic incentives that make easements an appealing—and supporters say far more impactful—preservation tool. As of
last year, conservation easements covered nearly 73,000 acres in Loudoun, including more than 20,000 acres of prime farmland soils. Seeking to address the conflicting concerns following the Planning Commission’s review of the proposal last year, the Board of Supervisors appointed a work group comprised of representatives from each side and hired a consult to find a better solution.
The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved a resolution opposing the preliminary route of a proposed electric power transmission line across western Loudoun. The action comes two weeks after supervisors voted to intervene in the State Corporation Commission’s review of a separate Dominion Energy application to construct new transmission lines across eastern Loudoun. The western Loudoun line is planned by Florida-based NextEra Energy and has been approved by PJM Interconnection, the organization that coordinates power transmission in the region. It calls for construction of 500 kV lines that would cross Loudoun from the West Virginia border to the Aspen substation south of Leesburg. The line has been opposed by various environmental and community groups, including the Piedmont Environmental Council and the Waterford Foundation, as well as county residents who decry the impact of data centers and their
FARMLAND PRESERVATION continues on page 32
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