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Alberta land trust 2009 03 3 of 6-dedicated stewardship funding
1. MODULE #3
Dedicated Stewardship Funding
Training Module
April 2010
This project is made possible through a grant from the Alberta Real Estate Foundation
Prepared by: Sue Michalsky, Paskwa Consultants Ltd., Tel: 306-295-3696
Email:suemichalsky@sasktel.net
2. Dedicated Stewardship Funding Training Module
Learning Outcomes:
1. Understand how dedicated funds can help the land trust uphold its
responsibilities and the promises made to the public when accepting a
conservation easement or acquiring a fee simple property.
2. Be able to determine the long term costs associated with monitoring and
defending conservation easements.
3. Be able to determine how much funding will be needed to care for a fee simple
property over time and meet your land trust’s goals.
4. Understand different methods for calculating stewardship fund contribution
amounts based on easement stewardship costs
5. Be able to determine whether a steady source of operating income or a 1
designated fund(s) provides the best assurance of the financial resources your
land trust needs to meet its property management responsibilities.
6. Know how to assess your current stewardship funding situation for adequacy
and understand options for increasing it.
7. Know how to create a stewardship fund policy for your land trust.
3. GLOSSARY
Affirmative obligations - A clause in the restrictions section of the conservation easement
that requires the landowner or the land trust to conduct management in a certain manner
or to meet a certain goal.
Baseline Documentation Report - The legal record of the site and condition of the resource;
included in the easement or deed package.
Capital costs - A one-time cost to purchase a large physical asset, after which there will be
only recurring operational or maintenance costs.
Conservation Easement - A legal agreement between a landowner and a qualified
conservation organization or government agency that limits a property's uses in order to
protect the property's conservation values. It is a voluntary, written agreement that is
registered on title to the land in Alberta in accordance with the Alberta Land Titles Act. It
binds current and future owners of the land.
Day rate - A labour rate used in budgeting that incorporates salary, benefits, overhead to
support the employee (both physical and labour), and time spent on associated
administration.
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Dedicated Stewardship Fund - A dedicated, but not necessarily permanent, source of funds
for a land trust to cover the costs of conservation easement monitoring and land
management. A dedicated fund may be an endowment or may be a fund from which the
principal can be expended under certain circumstances.
Encroachment - Extension of a structure, portion of a structure, or destructive activity onto
someone else's property without permission.
Endowment - A fund which is kept in perpetuity to provide interest and dividend earnings
for the benefit of a charitable cause.
Financial model - A mathematical representation of key financial and operational
relationships. Comprising of one or several sets of equations, it is used in analyzing how an
organization will react to different economic situations or events, and in estimating the
outcome of financial decisions before committing any funds.
Infringements – Violation of another’s rights. Includes encroachment and violations.
Liability - The responsibility of a land trust to ensure that negligence or inappropriate
actions do not result in bodily injury or property damage.
Monitoring - The act of observing and keeping a record of the activities and conservation
values associated with a conservation property.
Operating budget - A detailed projection of all estimated income and expenses based on
forecasted revenue during a given period (usually one year). It generally consists of several
4. sub-budgets, most important one being the revenue budget which is prepared first. Since
an operating budget is a short term budget, capital costs are excluded because they are
long-term costs.
Operating reserve - An amount of money set aside because building components or
equipment will wear out in a relatively short time and need to be replaced. Operating
reserves are often merely an accounting entry as a phantom expense item reducing net
operating income. This ensures the funds for replacement are available when required.
Overhead - The ongoing administrative expenses of an organization which cannot be
attributed to any specific business activity, but are still necessary for the organization to
function. Examples include rent, utilities, and insurance.
Reserved rights – rights of development specifically exempted in a conservation easement
agreement, such as the right to replace or construct additions to buildings, which are
otherwise restricted by the CE agreement.
Stewardship budget - A detailed projection of estimated stewardship annual and capital
replacement costs for a fiscal year. The budget often provides detail by property and is
based on estimated stewardship income.
Stewardship endowment - A dedicated, permanent source of funds for a land trust to cover
the costs of conservation easement monitoring and land management in perpetuity.
Violations - Breaking, breaching or contravening the restrictions and affirmative
obligations outlined in a conservation easement agreement to the detriment of the 3
conservation values of a property.
5. BACKGROUND
When a land trust accepts a fee simple property or conservation easement (CE), it promises
to ensure that the land’s conservation values remain protected forever. To fulfill this
promise to future generations, land trusts should analyze potential activities that could
occur over time related to the CE or fee simple property following securement. Such an
analysis enables the land trust to determine their financial obligations into the future.
To be responsible stewards of the land, land trusts need to understand the financial
implications of their long term stewardship obligations, have a plan to meet these
obligations and manage their financial resources prudently so that future staff and
volunteers are able to fulfill their commitments.
Long term stewardship is important to the land trust community and the public over time
for the following reasons:
• It allows the land trust to meet long term land conservation goals.
• It maintains long term credibility in the community where the land trust works.
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• It ensures long term securement tools have longevity.
• It maintains public support which influences donor support, and therefore financial
security into the future.
The surest way to prepare for the costs of stewardship commitments is to set up a
dedicated fund that is managed separately from the land trust’s operating budget.
However, there are many variations of funding stewardship costs including:
• Funding at least a portion of annual stewardship costs from the income generated
from a dedicated fund.
• Paying stewardship costs from the annual operating budget and reinvesting the
dedicated fund income to increase that fund’s growth until the fund reaches a
certain targeted level.
• Funding stewardship expenses from sources other than a dedicated fund, such as
operating funds, membership income and/or dedicated government funding for
land trusts.
Stewardship costs associated with monitoring and managing CEs and fee simple properties
are predictable and trackable from year to year. Therefore, it is possible to estimate the
dollar amount required to fund stewardship activities well into the future. However, there
will also be times when a land trust needs to defend a CE or deal with legal encroachment
6. on fee simple lands. These legal defence costs are irregular and unpredictable. For this
reason, the Best Practices Training Module for the Alberta Land Trust Alliance
recommends that stewardship and legal defence funds be established separately.
Land trusts commonly use one of the two following dedicated fund models to prepare for
stewardship and enforcement costs:
1. Combined Stewardship Fund and Legal Defence Fund
Some land trusts plan for major defence funding to come from the principal of the
dedicated stewardship fund. The income of the fund may be available for annual
stewardship, but the principal is expended only in the case of a major legal defence action.
As a result, such a fund is not a true “endowment,” because the principal may be
withdrawn. One problem with this approach is that the fund may be drained to address an
expensive legal challenge. If an organization finds itself in the unenviable position of
defending two or more violations or potential violations simultaneously, it might
jeopardize the entire stewardship program by depleting the overall fund.
2. Separate Stewardship and Legal Defence Funds
Alternatively, a land trust may establish a true stewardship endowment (from which
income but not principal may be spent) to cover routine stewardship expenses, and set up
a separate dedicated fund (from which income and principal may be withdrawn) for the
defence of CEs and liability associated with fee simple properties. Every land trust must be 5
prepared to pay significant legal expenses at some point in time. Although it is difficult to
project actual costs or the frequency with which legal defence expenses will be incurred,
the Land Trust Alliance in the US recommends that to fully fund an enforcement action or
other litigation, a land trust needs a minimum of $50,000 in its legal defence fund. The
more fee simple properties or CEs a land trust holds, the larger the legal defence fund
should be.
The distinction between a stewardship and a legal defence fund is not readily apparent.
Land trusts must determine their own distinction. In most cases baseline documentation
and monitoring fit clearly into stewardship while defending conservation agreements and
conservation values in a court of law fit clearly into legal defence. In between those actions
is a gray zone of activities that can be allocated to either fund depending on the land trust’s
preference. For example, some land trusts include any component of binding arbitration as
legal defence whereas other land trusts place mediation into stewardship.
This training module addressed the requirements for a dedicated stewardship fund only
and deals only peripherally with legal defence. For more detailed treatment of legal defence
requirements, see the work prepared by the Miistakis Institute of the Rockies on behalf of
the Foothills Land Trust in Appendix A.
7. The following sections are dedicated to the provision of information and guidance for land
trusts seeking to build a dedicated stewardship fund. Much of the following information is
extracted from the Land Trust Alliance’s “Determining Stewardship Costs and Raising and
Managing Dedicated Funds”, and adapted for the Alberta Land Trust Alliance.
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8. WHAT VARIABLES INFLUENCE STEWARDSHIP COSTS?
A land trust’s stewardship program should be tailored to the types of CEs and fee simple
properties it holds, the land resources it protects and the partners with whom it works. All
land trusts must plan to fund the following major stewardship activities:
1. Baseline documentation (although many land trusts consider this item a
transactional cost),
2. Regular, periodic monitoring,
3. Land management activities,
4. Maintaining ongoing landowner /partner / public relationships,
5. Administrative costs or overhead, and
6. Legal costs in response to liability, violations or encroachments.
STEWARDSHIP COSTS FOR CONSERVATION EASEMENTS
The costs associated with CE stewardship programs will vary, depending on the methods a
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land trust uses for monitoring, whether staff or volunteers are involved, the complexity of
easement provisions and land management requirements and the likelihood of violations,
encroachments and liability. Using information from its stewardship program, a land trust
can determine costs for current activities and projects into the future. Costs for CE
enforcement, including legal and other CE defence costs, should also be forecast.
Some of the major costs associated with stewarding conservation easements include:
Labour Costs: All land trusts, whether they currently use paid staff or volunteers for
easement stewardship, must consider labour costs. Volunteer-based land trusts need to
consider if and when the organization will need easement stewardship staff, even if
volunteers complete the job today. Paid staff time almost always increases as easement
stewardship programs mature. Even if the land trust continues to use volunteer monitors
as the volume of monitoring increases, staff will be required to manage volunteer training
and scheduling.
When evaluating the costs of staff time (salary and benefits) or volunteer time for routine
monitoring, a land trust should consider the following activities:
• Preparing for and visiting the property during annual monitoring. Routine
monitoring may require expert advice that is not available from staff or volunteers.
9. Experts such as appraisers, agrologists, foresters, wetland ecologists or wildlife
biologists may be called in for certain monitoring tasks or to answer questions that
arise during monitoring.
• Answering landowner questions; communicating with other interested parties, such
as neighbours or the local governing body; reporting and keeping good records; and
communicating with the board and staff about stewardship issues.
• Following up on problems or questions that arise during the monitoring visit.
• Additional monitoring visits when reserved rights are exercised. For example, CEs
that allow subdivision or the construction of new residences are more costly to
monitor than those that do not. If a land trusts accepts an easement that includes
reserved rights or other activities for which land trust review and approval will be
needed, it should factor in the cost of this time. In some cases, paid consultants, such
as natural resource experts, architects, land use planners or legal advisors, may be
needed as well. These visits allow the land trust to spot any possible
misunderstandings or errors before construction is completed and can go a long
way toward building landowner trust.
• Extra monitoring if a CE involves affirmative obligations of the landowner for
specific management activities.
• Overseeing volunteer monitoring programs (e.g., arranging for training and
supporting volunteers, tracking paperwork and following up on problems). 8
• Maintaining good relationships with landowners can involve time and expense
beyond the required monitoring functions, and the stewardship cost estimate
should consider these extra costs. Strong relationships with landowners are based
on person-to-person contact with the organization. Some land trusts work toward a
more proactive relationship with easement landowners to foster good
communication and land management. Some prepare and send regular newsletters
to their easement landowners; others hold annual events to gather easement
landowners for fun and education. These outreach activities can help keep
landowners attentive to the easement and offer additional information or
opportunities for collaborative resource improvement projects with the land trust
or related organizations.
• Land trusts should pay special attention to cultivating a relationship with the new
landowner when a CE property changes hands. Land trusts that have experienced
turnover to “second generation” landowners know that at this point enforcement
challenges commonly begin. Most land trusts try to meet with a new landowner as
soon as possible to review the easement, answer questions and head off potential
conflicts. Land trusts should factor in extra time for cultivating relationships with
new landowners. Timely, consistent education and treatment of landowner requests
10. is often the best method for ensuring strong, constructive landowner relationships,
and is often the best defence against possible violations.
Office Overhead: Because organizations usually need an office and associated amenities to
run a CE program, some land trusts add a factor for overhead into their easement
stewardship cost calculation. Estimates may be based on a percentage of actual office
overhead costs or on a percentage of estimated CE stewardship costs and then added on to
the stewardship estimate. If a land trust incorporates overhead into the CE stewardship
calculation, it should be used consistently from easement to easement.
Travel and Mileage: Depending upon the size of the land trust’s service area, travel costs
can be anywhere from an incidental cost to a significant expense. Some larger land trusts
hold easements that are located more than a day’s drive from their headquarters. In
addition to the mileage, accommodations and meals, travel time can become a substantial
cost.
Supplies and Equipment: Cost of supplies is usually a relatively minor component of
easement stewardship costs. Consider, for example, the costs of cameras, image processing,
GPS units, fireproof file cabinets, copying and mailing, along with any expenses unique to a
program. Dedicated computers, vehicles and aerial imagery are examples of additional
costs that can be incurred when CE programs become large.
Storage and Records Management: Land trusts should consider storage and 9
recordkeeping as part of the cost of a CE stewardship program. Costs associated with
recordkeeping include:
• Direct costs (such as fireproof files, archival materials, etc.)
• Labor costs (staff time involved in documentation of landowner contacts and other
functions)
• Administrative support (filing, mailing, database updates, etc.) This often-
overlooked aspect of stewardship expense is one that becomes substantial once an
organization has accepted a large number of easements.
Legal Costs: Over time, monitoring activities inevitably result in legal questions about CE
interpretation, compliance issues, process and other points of law. Sometimes these
questions come directly from the landowner as a request for easement interpretation,
discretionary approval or amendment. For the CE holder, having ready access to an
attorney is essential. Some land trusts keep an attorney on staff or on retainer and some
seek advice from members of their board of directors who have a legal background. These
approaches can help keep legal costs down, but for some situations it may be necessary to
hire outside counsel. CE holders should consider these predictable, ongoing legal expenses
in their stewardship planning.
Additional Management Costs with Affirmative Obligations: If a land trust accepts
affirmative obligations in a CE, it must estimate these ongoing stewardship costs as well.
11. While affirmative obligations are often supported by the original landowner, subsequent
landowners may be less enthusiastic about this level of “partnership” with the land trust.
The land trust will need to calculate the time and resources necessary to implement these
provisions into the future. These costs could include:
• Habit management activities such as weed control, prescribed burns and species
monitoring or inventories. Habitat improvement investments can range from one
volunteer workday to a major, multiyear restoration project involving heavy
equipment. The challenge, when factoring in this cost on an annual basis, is to be
realistic. Land trusts frequently underestimate the true cost of these types of
activities.
• Opening land to the public can lead to additional stewardship expenses, particularly
to resolve conflicting uses, maintenance issues and landowner concerns. For
example, if a land trust accepts responsibility for trail maintenance on a CE
property, it should plan for regular monitoring, maintenance to keep the trail up to
acceptable standards and perhaps collaboration with public user groups on trail
issues.
• If a CE requires that educational activities are to take place on the protected land,
the land trust will need to allocate sufficient time to ensure that these events are
conducted.
• Some land trusts include CE provisions that require cooperation with the landowner 10
to provide demonstration projects on the CE land — usually in a specific location or
relating to a specific habitat improvement.
12. STEWARDSHIP COSTS FOR FEE SIMPLE PROPERTIES
Stewardship of fee-owned properties is a complex enterprise because of the wide range of
activities land trusts may undertake, from simple monitoring to removing invasive species
to managing public recreational use. Managing fee simple properties is an evolving field
within the land trust community. Every property poses both typical and unique
management challenges. Also, impacts on the land and uses of the land are not static, and
many of the challenges that land trusts will face in the future are not well defined or even
contemplated today.
Costs will vary from land trust to land trust and property to property because stewardship
will involve different activities on different properties. Stewardship activities range from
basic monitoring to ensuring that the property is secure and free of encroachments; to
conducting detailed inventories of natural resources and ecological attributes, along with
extensive management activities; to improving wildlife habitat, controlling invasive
species, or generating income from agriculture, recreation or forestry. The land trust must
also consider donor, neighbour and community expectations when determining
appropriate stewardship activities. If a land trust uses public or foundation money to
acquire a property, the grant agreements may have conditions requiring certain
stewardship activities designed to protect the investment of the funder and help achieve its
programmatic mission. Once a land trust determines its goals for a property and how to
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achieve them, it can then begin to put together estimates of costs for current and future
stewardship activities.
In general, land trusts must plan for four types of stewardship costs:
• Start-up costs
• Annual costs
• Capital expenses
• Capital replacement costs
Start-Up Costs: When the land trust first acquires a property, it needs to take some actions
immediately. Start-up activities can include:
• Holding a dedication ceremony
• Contacting neighbours
• Preparing lease agreements
• Surveying and posting boundaries and hazards
• Cleaning up garbage
• Conducting natural and cultural resources inventories
• Locating species at risk
• Fencing
• Installing gates at trailheads or to block roads
• Constructing or repairing trail and parking areas
13. • Removing buildings or known hazards
• Erecting entrance signs
• Purchasing or preparing maps and aerial photographs
• Preparing a baseline documentation report and management plan
• Preparing a property brochure
These expenditures begin transforming a property into a protected area. They may be one-
time costs, or occasional recurring costs.
Start-up costs are most often considered to be one-time, initial expenditures. They can be
calculated early in a land acquisition project and be incorporated into that project’s budget.
The cost of installing gates, signs and other structures can usually be easily calculated
based on the cost of materials and staff or contractor time. It is generally not appropriate
to pay for these costs from restricted endowments, because they are more properly
analogous to capital costs, not operating costs. Therefore, land trusts should raise funds
specifically for start-up costs, just as they would for capital costs, and not mix these funds
with those that are designed to generate annual income from interest on endowment
principal.
Annual Costs: Most of a land trust’s stewardship costs are annual expenses for monitoring
and managing the property. In calculating the amount needed for its stewardship fund, 12
each land trust must remember that it needs to generate enough money from interest on its
fund to cover these annual costs (as well as additional interest to put back into the fund to
at least keep the principal even with inflation). A comprehensive list of annual costs
incurred in land ownership is outlined below, but it is not necessarily a complete list. Each
property, each locality, and each land trust may have unique needs. Before assuming
responsibility for a property, a land trust should make its best effort to factor in all the
annual costs associated with that property, and budget accordingly.
• The land trust’s property should be monitored regularly (see Stewardship
Monitoring Training Module for detail on activities), according to the needs of a
particular site. Most land trusts will want to budget for staff or a consultant’s time to
do monitoring or to supervise volunteer monitors.
• Signs, buildings, trails, roads, dams, bridges, walkways, docks, fences, gates,
boundaries, registration boxes, parking areas, etc., need to be maintained. Costs
may include material expenses and staff or consultant time.
• The costs of purchasing (or renting) and maintaining equipment used in
management should be considered in a project’s annual expenses.
• Depending on the land trust’s conservation objectives for the property, a variety of
resource management activities may be needed on a recurring basis. These might
include for example, control of noxious weeds or other exotic species, mowing,
14. prescribed burning, plantings, maintenance of scenic views, pest control, water
quality monitoring, grazing or installing nesting structures.
• There are a number of administrative activities a land trust must undertake as part
of its overall stewardship program. These may not be attributable to a particular
property but should be funded by the stewardship fund. These include staff time
and other costs associated with overseeing the program, developing stewardship
policies, public relations activities that are part of stewardship, maintaining records,
annual budgeting, filing tax forms, hiring interns, coordinating volunteers and
managing a computerized database, if applicable.
• Each municipality has its own rules governing the payment of property taxes by
nonprofit organizations. In some, land trusts have the option of applying for
agricultural or open space classification, which greatly reduces their tax burden.
• To protect itself from liability, every land trust should carry liability insurance
sufficient to cover all properties and their structures. The cost of liability insurance
varies substantially depending on the use of the property and other factors and may
change over time. In addition, a land trust may wish to carry property damage and
replacement insurance on any buildings or other structures associated with a fee
simple property.
• When a land trust owns a parcel of land, however small, the land trust becomes part
of the local community. It now has neighbours with whom it should communicate its
land management plans, even if that means leaving the property in its natural state. 13
The amount of staff time required to build and maintain these relationships and to
process related paperwork is substantial. Public relations costs are particularly
important if a property is considered a “cornerstone” of a local community and
there are residents or groups that have a strong interest in its use and
management.There are any number of leases into which a land trust may enter. All
will require oversight. Building leases are common when a land trust acquires
properties with buildings for which it has no programmatic use. Being a landlord
carries with it substantial responsibilities for maintenance, tenant communications
and occasionally unpleasant activities such as disputes and evictions. There are legal
costs for preparing leases and rental agreements, and for resolution of disputes.
Leasing agricultural land to farmers, recreational leases and other land resource
leases are generally less complex to administer. If land or structures are leased to
other parties by the land trust, the cost of having counsel review and renew the
leases periodically should be considered.
Replacement and Capital Costs: Normally, if the land trust must purchase or acquire
major equipment to accomplish property maintenance (e.g., a tractor to mow fields), or is
building a structure or installing a new feature that costs more than a certain amount, that
expense is considered capital. If capital equipment is purchased that can be used on more
than one property, the land trust can choose to allocate a portion of the cost to each
appropriate property or simply account for it in the overall stewardship budget. Knowing
15. when a new property will require the land trust to purchase additional equipment is
important so that fundraising goals can be adjusted to reflect the added expense to the
organization.
If possible, capital needs associated with a property should be calculated up front as part of
the land acquisition process. While a stewardship fund that covers routine annual
maintenance costs may be ideal, a land trust also needs to plan for occasional replacement
costs, larger capital improvements or other contingencies. These costs might include
replacement, repair or maintenance of the following:
• Brochures
• Trailhead or road barriers
• Equipment purchase and maintenance
• Signs and registration box
• Boundary signs/brushing out boundaries
• Bridges and walkways
• Buildings, fences and other structures
Although capital costs should generally not be funded from a dedicated stewardship fund,
the costs associated with replacement of those capital items should be calculated and
extrapolated to an annual cost. A sufficient amount should be added to the property’s
stewardship fund to generate the required annual return. If a property contains buildings, 14
it is essential that the land trust be certain that its budget includes the costs associated with
ongoing maintenance and periodic capital improvements, utilities, property damage
insurance, etc.
In some situations a substantial management activity (e.g., native grassland or forest
restoration or restoring water flow to a wetland) is needed early in the land’s ownership to
restore the property to a desired natural condition; associated costs may be substantial. In
this case, such expenses should be handled as capital costs or start-up costs.
16. HOW ARE STEWARDSHIP ENDOWMENTS CALCULATED?
Land trusts use a wide variety of stewardship protocols, depending on their staffing level,
number and nature of fee simple properties and CEs held and overall organizational
capacity. This diversity is one of the greatest strengths of the land trust community.
However, it also means that there is no single right way to calculate long-term stewardship
costs that apply to all organizations conserving land.
When calculating the annual costs associated with land stewardship, it helps to imagine all
possible tasks, and then assign an average time factor and frequency for each. If a land trust
already has a stewardship program in place with 50 or more properties, it likely has
accurate and useful information on stewardship costs at its fingertips. With these numbers,
a land trust can see its total stewardship program costs and begin to evaluate patterns in
the overall management of CEs and fee simple properties.
Carefully tracking costs per property will help predict future expenses and determine
stewardship fund contribution amounts. Tracking data is extremely helpful in determining
what it will cost to steward a CE over time, and in building a program that is efficient, 15
effective and sustainable. While it may not seem crucial to track volunteer time, doing so is
useful when calculating in kind contributions and when transitioning from volunteers to
paid staff. Tracking is sometimes difficult in small, volunteer managed land trusts or in
very large centrally managed land trusts. A compromise might be for relevant staff or
volunteers to track the time and tasks involved in stewardship.
Land trusts need to consider the future as they establish funds for land stewardship.
Creating separate funds for each fee property may make sense when a land trust owns only
a few properties, but over time, managing multiple funds can become an accounting
nightmare. Most larger land trusts will want to consider having a general “Land
Stewardship Fund” from which income is drawn annually to cover stewardship and
management costs on the full set of properties owned by the organization.
This tactic is less cumbersome than administering numerous separate endowments or
dedicated funds, many of which could be subject to specific donor restrictions and limits
that must be carefully reviewed and tracked before they can be spent.
Once the start-up costs, capital costs and annual tasks and their associated costs have been
determined, land trusts can use straightforward financial models to project what amount of
17. funding needs to be set aside into a stewardship or endowment fund to generate income
that will pay for the stewardship program into perpetuity.
Land trusts use a variety of methods to develop the per-property estimate of costs and
stewardship contribution. The more common are case-by-case, flat fee, and hybrids of
these two.
Case by case calculations involve predetermining the tasks and cost estimates associated
with each property and estimating how much endowment funding is need to produce that
amount of income annually at a given minimum or average interest rate.
Benefits of the case-by-case approach include:
• Tasks are identified in advance, and cost estimates can be based on known data.
• The stewardship contribution amount can be tailored to reflect the actual property
particulars, as needed, placing fair burden on the properties that will be most
expensive to steward.
• It is easy to explain and understand and provides excellent background for
prospective project funders when the land trust makes its case for why a
stewardship contribution is needed. 16
Challenges with the case-by-case approach include:
• It takes time and experience to develop an effective formula.
• The land trust needs to regularly review the formula’s assumptions, which involves
tracking expenses.
• The formula must be used by knowledgeable staff or volunteers who are able to
interpret the complexity of each property and apply the assumptions of the formula
consistently.
• It can require difficult risk assessment for particular CE clauses or land management
activities. For example, if grassland restoration is a stipulation of a conservation
easement or a management action for a fee simple property, the risk that the initial
seeding is unsuccessful should be incorporated into the cost for this property.
Flat fee models are based on average CE and fee simple stewardship costs. Some land
trusts determine a flat fee amount by creating a model line-by-line calculation of cost for an
“average” property. Better yet, land trusts that have good internal cost tracking data may
determine the flat fee amount by dividing their actual overall annual stewardship expenses
by the number of properties held.
Benefits of the flat fee approach include:
18. • The calculation is simple to understand, can be adjusted as expenses increase and
can be easily explained to the public.
• The flat fee allows the land trust to say “our stewardship contribution is X dollars
per property secured,” thereby limiting lengthy negotiations over funding amounts.
• It is consistent with all landowners in a service area and may limit the conversations
among neighbours as to why stewardship contributions varied from property to
property.
• It works well in land trusts where property tend to be similar in nature and size,
and/or the conservation easements use fairly standard clauses.
Drawbacks of the flat fee approach include:
• Solid cost information for the entire stewardship program, preferably for at least a
few years, is needed.
• Land trusts may have widely varying conservation easements or fee simple
properties with different complexities and “risk-related” clauses or activities which
makes it difficult to adapt this model to their work.
• Because this model uses averages costs, the land trust has less of an incentive to
track and assess the true costs of certain CE clauses or types of management
activities that are time consuming or risky from a stewardship perspective. If actual
stewardship costs are not tracked, a significant risk exists that stewardship will be 17
underfunded over time.
The flat fee model is used by many Alberta land trusts. Stewardship fees per property
range from $10,000 to $45,000.
Some land trusts have developed “hybrid” models that combine the advantages of the case-
by-case and flat fee models. These hybrids start with a base stewardship contribution
amount that
covers standard cost elements for an average CE or fee simple property and then adjusts
the contribution amount upward to reflect factors that may make stewardship more
difficult or time consuming to monitor. Such factors may include:
• Reserved rights associated with a CE, such as subdivision and building rights
• Public access
• Affirmative obligations of the land trust or of the landowner for specific types of
management such as restoration activities
• Detailed monitoring requirements
• Reporting requirements to funders
• Distance from land trust office
• Property size
19. Developing a hybrid formula can allow land trusts to keep most stewardship contribution
requests to potential funders relatively straightforward, while requiring properties with
greater stewardship challenges to have better funding.
Some land trusts calculate stewardship contribution amounts based on the easement’s
value or the overall property value. In this method, a portion of the easement or property
value is sought as a one-time contribution to the stewardship fund. Several Alberta land
trusts use this model and stewardship fees range from 10 to 15% of property or CE values.
In many cases, percentage of value models do not lead the land trust to stewardship fund
contribution amounts that accurately reflect their ongoing financial responsibilities for CE
or fee simple properties. Land trusts that use this method may run into problems because
the costs of stewardship are not related to the initial value of the conservation easement or
the land. Organizations that choose to use this approach should regularly assess whether
the inputs to the stewardship fund are adequate to support their long-term stewardship
obligations. The percentage of value approach can be most problematic for a land trust that
works in an area with wide variation in property values.
18
20. SOME GUIDELINES FOR ESTIMATING STEWARDSHIP COSTS
Some rules of thumb are provided below to help with calculating stewardship costs and
dedicated fund requirements.
• 5% is a commonly used interest rate (see documents in Additional Resources
section for examples) for calculating long term investment of endowments
• As a guideline for planning labour needs, consider that one full-time trained staff
person or volunteer may be able to oversee the stewardship of 50–100 CEs in a year
as determined by the experience of members of the Land Trust Alliance. However,
this figure is highly dependent upon CE program variables and should be carefully
evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Actual ratios vary depending on the depth of the
relationship the land trust wishes to develop with the landowner, the complexity of
the CE, the travel time to and between properties and the size of properties.
• US land trust experience shows that up to 5% of CE properties may change hands
annually, although this number varies by region and type of property.
• The desired stewardship funding for fee lands is often higher than for conservation
easements, because there are generally many more responsibilities associated with
fee land ownership than conservation easement stewardship. 19
• For land trusts with staff, an hourly or daily rate should be established that covers
the actual salary of the staff involved, plus benefits and overhead. Alberta land trust
day rates for staff vary between $400 and $600/day. This rate should be budgeted, if
not for each property, in a combined “property stewardship” budget. If the land
trust uses volunteers to perform most or all of its stewardship work, the number of
work days dedicated to each property or to the land trust’s overall property
stewardship activities should be documented. Then, if future tasks are reassigned to
paid staff, there is a way to estimate the cost.
• Each land trust needs to assess if it will incorporate a portion of its organizational
overhead (rent, electricity, records storage, insurance, equipment rental or
purchase, telecommunications costs, supplies, heat, etc.) into the calculations for the
costs of its stewardship program. There are a number of ways to budget overhead. It
can be factored by adding a figure equal to a percentage of the staff time allocated to
stewardship activities. Alternatively, the land trust’s overhead costs can be
calculated from its total annual operating budget and assigned to each part of the
organization as a percentage of the overall budget.
• Public access to land trust property almost always adds complexity to stewardship.
How much complexity and cost is a function of how much and what type of public
recreation is allowed. Most of the costs fall under administrative costs, staff time,
start-up costs, insurance, maintenance, equipment costs, public relations, etc., but
21. the land trust should have a public use policy for its lands and a specific plan for
each property, based on the capacity of the land to accommodate these uses and the
land trust’s capacity to manage them. Larger land trusts sometimes categorize their
ownerships into various types, with some being identified for more intensive
recreational use, and therefore investment, and others for lower intensity use. It is
generally safe to assume that if public use is allowed or encouraged, that use will
continue to grow over time and demand a greater investment of financial resources.
• It’s relatively easy to determine the annual maintenance costs for items that require
only periodic maintenance. To calculate the amount of stewardship funding
required for periodic, but not annual, maintenance (e.g., roof replacement, paving,
painting), determine their costs, and then amortize the amounts over the time
period between their completions. For example, assume a sign must be painted
every five years. To determine the amount of endowment funding needed to cover
the cost, assume one fifth of the cost will occur annually. Then determine the
amount of endowment needed to generate this amount of income on an annual
basis.
• Land trusts should define what level of expense (e.g., > $1,000) is large enough to be
classified as a capital expense, and define when such an expense is considered
“capital” versus “maintenance.” Smaller equipment purchases (saws, tools, work
clothing, etc.) are generally budgeted as annual equipment expenses, especially if
the equipment is subject to wear and tear and must be replaced regularly. 20
• There are other items that can add to stewardship costs, including wildlife control,
emergency and natural disaster response, etc. To ensure that all potential costs
associated with stewarding a property have been considered, a land trust should
take the time to prepare a management plan, develop a budget and carefully
consider every possible event or activity that might occur over the course of the
land trust’s ownership. Not every item will need to be budgeted for in every year,
but anticipating potential surprises is a lot better than actually being surprised. It is
a good idea to include a contingency line in your budget, even if it is only 5–10
percent of the property or organizational stewardship budget, to allow for
unforeseen events.
A detailed stewardship calculator has been developed for the Foothills Land Trust by
the Miistakis Institute for the Rockies. See the Additional Resources section for
information on where to obtain this resource.
22. HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?
It can be difficult and daunting to determine the size of dedicated stewardship funding
necessary to steward land trust properties and CEs into perpetuity. Not only is each
property unique in terms of stewardship requirements, but costs will vary depending on
whether land trusts use staff, volunteers, contractors or partners to undertake
stewardship. The guidelines below are based on stewardship budgets that include only
annual and periodic costs and exclude start-up, capital costs and major legal defence funds.
It is desirable for a land trust to have an endowment or dedicated fund (yielding a 5
percent rate of return) sufficient to cover between 75 and 100 percent of its annual
stewardship costs; or If the land trust does not calculate its annual stewardship costs, to
have an endowment or dedicated fund sufficient to generate enough income to cover an
annual cost of between $500 and $750 per property (equal to an endowment/dedicated
fund amount per property of $10,000 to $15,000)
It is acceptable for a land trust to have an endowment or dedicated fund that covers less 21
than 75 percent of its annual stewardship costs (or that has less than a minimum of
$10,000 per property) if:
A. There is some other dedicated and secure source of income;
B. A credible fundraising plan that enables the land trust to raise the desirable funds
within five years; and
C. The funds required to be raised each year do not exceed 50 percent of the land
trust’s annual budget.
It is least desirable for a land trust to have no stewardship endowment or dedicated fund
or for a land trust to have an endowment or dedicated fund that covers less than 75 percent
of its annual stewardship costs (or that has less than a minimum of $10,000 per property)
and the land trust is lacking either A, B or C, above.
23. ARE THERE ALTERNATIVES TO A DEDICATED STEWARDSHIP
ENDOWMENT?
It can be discouraging to realize that the income from an endowment does not cover the
annual costs of land stewardship. However, this situation is common. In these cases, the
land trust is, in fact, subsidizing these activities through its operating budget, and some
land trusts have consciously decided that this is an appropriate way for them to operate.
For many older land trusts, early acquisitions came with minimal stewardship funding or
the anticipated costs of stewardship were exceeded by the actual expenses as time
progressed and costs increased. As a result the choice is to continue to subsidize
stewardship or take steps to increase the dedicated fund.
As a guide, if there is no dedicated stewardship fund, a land trust should have:
• A strong operating reserve, a long history of member contributions to these causes
or dedication of special event money to stewardship, and fairly low stewardship
expenses compared to the overall budget, or
22
• A strong operating reserve supplemented by income generated from the property or
other sources.
24. WHAT ARE THE POTENTIAL SOURCES OF FUNDING FOR LONG
TERM STEWARDSHIP?
Stewardship funding should be obtained at or before securement of a conservation
property, whether CE or fee simple. If funding cannot be secured at that time, the land trust
should have a plan to obtain those funds. Some land trusts plan to fund stewardship
through their operating budgets and secure funding from appropriate sources annually.
Capital campaigns, grants, sales of nonconservation real estate, timber sales, agricultural
leases, recreational leases and cooperative management agreements are all tools that have
been successfully employed to ensure funds for proper long-term stewardship.
Some land trusts prefer to raise all the funds needed to provide an endowment of sufficient
size to generate annual income for all stewardship needs, while others have crafted plans
that depend on an endowment (or dedicated fund) along with annual income.
The following funding sources are those most commonly tapped by land trusts: 23
Landowner Contributions: Many land trusts ask their easement and property donors to
consider making a contribution to the stewardship fund, either as a one-time gift or as a
contribution made over time. Landowners can also assist with local fundraising
particularly for fee simple purchases or in CE situations where neighbours may benefit
from the values conserved in some way.
Income from the Property: Income can be generated from fee simple properties which
may offset some of the many expenses. For example, the property could be leased for
agricultural, forestry or recreational use. The income from leases should, at a minimum, be
designed to cover the costs of administering the lease and ideally to generate income to
cover other stewardship costs. Rarely will leases cover all of a property’s stewardship
costs. Costs for administrating leases should be rolled into staff time budgets, legal expense
budgets and perhaps administrative overhead.
Local Fundraising: Land trusts can seek stewardship funds from neighbours,
municipalities and other project partners. Some create fundraising drives or events. When
land or conservation easements are purchased, land trusts commonly mount a campaign to
raise acquisition funds, rolling transaction costs and the stewardship contribution into
overall fundraising goals.
Major Donors: Land trusts may cultivate major donors by educating them about the
importance of stewardship and the challenges of raising stewardship funds.
25. Grant Support: Certain public and private grant programs support land stewardship
funds. For purchased land or conservation easements, grants may be an excellent source
for stewardship funds when the stewardship fund contribution is presented as part of
overall project costs.
Transfers from the Organizational Operating Budget: Some land trusts have built their
easement stewardship funds using occasional and/or routine transfers from the operating
budget. For example, some organizations have started their dedicated stewardship funds
with a significant transfer of funds from the operating budget or from surplus funds. Others
make an annual contribution based on a percentage of the operating budget so that all the
land trust’s members and financial supporters share in long-term stewardship.
Planned Giving: Land trusts may seek planned gifts from major donors for the dedicated
stewardship fund. Such gifts can include bequests of land and money, gifts of cash and
securities, and noncash gifts that can be liquidated. This technique has been used
successfully by land trusts that are “catching up” their stewardship endowment.
Conservation Buyer Programs: Donated lands protected by a conservation easement and
sold to a conservation friendly purchaser is another way to raise funds for a dedicated
stewardship fund.
Profit Making Business Arm: Some land trusts develop an affiliated subsidiary or
organization that undertakes profitable ventures relating to the work of the land trust and
donates or grants the profits from that business back into the land trust. The Land
24
Conservancy of BC is an example of a land trust that undertakes fundraising through a
business arm. TLC operates gift shops, mail and web order catalogues, tea rooms, heritage
facility rentals, holiday cottage rentals, boat cruises and holiday programs.
The following table is taken from the Edmonton and Area Land Trust Business Plan 2006 -
2010 and provides a guideline for land trusts of potential funding sources that may be
relevant to Alberta.
26. 25
In addition to fundraising, there are also methods to reduce funding requirements over the
long term. Some of these techniques are summarized below:
• Consistent and regular communications with landowners improves and enhances
relationships with CE landowners and landowners neighbouring land trust
properties. Stewardship and education of landowners reduces the likelihood of CE
violations and encroachment onto fee simple lands. It can also reduce costs
associated with securing neighbouring properties.
• CE restrictions associated with wildlife habitat, affirmative obligations and reserved
rights are more likely to result in CE violations. Fee simple properties that allow
public access, especially in the absence of an onsite steward, are more likely to
suffer illegal damage or encroachment. Drafting CE agreements and property
management plans to avoid high risk clauses or activities can significantly reduce
stewardship and legal defence costs.
27. What If Stewardship Funds Are Not Available at Closing?
Most land trust professionals find that it is preferable to have all of the stewardship funding
in hand before a property is secured. However, there will be circumstances in which it is
not possible to have the funds at closing, and flexibility is appropriate. If a land trust
chooses to close without the necessary funds, it should have a solid plan for how they will
be obtained, ideally within five years, and a board policy committing the funds for this
purpose. Such plans may draw upon a variety of techniques, for example: Create and
implement a long-term plan to raise stewardship funds from other sources. Some
organizations determine that, overall, only a portion of their stewardship funding will come
from landowners and acquisition-related fundraising at securement. These organizations
make a policy decision to raise the balance over time from other sources. Fundraising from
sources such as grants, bequests and operating budget transfers can be implemented over a
period of years, supplementing contributions made at the time of easement acquisition and
completing overall fundraising goals. Many land trusts that have substantial stewardship
funds have built them over time using these alternative sources. In fact, most land trusts
that are satisfied with the current size of their stewardship fund have used major gifts as a
significant part of reaching their funding goals.
26
28. RULES AROUND STEWARDSHIP ENDOWMENTS AND DEDICATED FUNDS
To comply with CRA regulations with respect to disbursement quotas for charitable
organizations, all donations made to a true stewardship endowment must be accompanied
by a direct statement from the donor stating that the donation is to be held in trust by the
Land Trust for a minimum of ten years in order to meet the enduring property definition in
the Income Tax Act (http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/tx/chrts/plcy/csp/csp-t06-eng.html).
In a fundraising campaign for the securement of a specific property, it is important to
specify in all public campaign literature, letters to donors and communications with the
public that funds received will be used for both acquisition costs and stewardship costs.
These funds then become restricted to these uses and cannot be expended for any other
purpose. If a land trust establishes a fundraising campaign exclusively for land stewardship
purposes, it must decide whether to ask for funds only for a select property or properties,
or for a general land stewardship fund. Either way, once those funds are donated, if the
land trust has told a donor that his or her contribution will be used for a specific purpose,
then those funds must be accounted for separately and used as specified.
27
Similarly, if a land trust raises funds for land stewardship and tell donors that the funds will
be used exclusively for an endowment, the land trust must have an endowment policy that
includes investment guidelines, spending guidelines and a specific list of activities that can
be supported by income from the endowment. Tracking donations to either “unrestricted”
(board-designated) stewardship funds or “restricted” stewardship endowments is
essential.
Stewardship funding must be accounted accurately and periodically audited in order for
the land trust to meet its responsibility to use its funds as it promised donors.
29. HOW DOES A LAND TRUST BUILD A DEDICATED STEWARDSHIP
FUND?
When a land trust acquires a fee simple property or enters into a CE agreement, it
essentially promises the landowner, land trust members and funders, the community, the
CRA and the general public that it will fulfill its obligations to conserve that property in
perpetuity. Making such promises requires the land trust to prepare on many levels,
including financially. A land trust should create and implement a written policy that
addresses how stewardship will be funded into perpetuity. The steps and policies for
building a dedicated stewardship fund include:
1. Identify the wide array of tasks, and the associated time and expenses, needed to
monitor, defend and administer each conservation easement it holds.
2. Identify the wide array of activities and the associated time needed to monitor,
manage, and administer each fee simple property it owns.
3. Annually review its stewardship responsibilities, and make a determination as to
how it will meet those needs.
4. Hold periodic discussions with the board to discuss organizational funding needed
to run the stewardship program. 28
5. Track costs and staff and/or volunteer time spent on all aspects of easement
stewardship, not only monitoring time and expense.
6. Periodically revise the budget for stewardship expenses based upon the past
experience of the organization.
7. Determine the long-term stewardship and enforcement expenses for each property
before it is secured.
8. Secure funds sufficient to cover these expenses at the time of securement (or have a
plan to secure these funds and a policy committing funds to this purpose).
9. Have dedicated and separate funds or other sources of funds to support
stewardship and enforcement.
10. Monitor how stewardship expenses are funded in the organizational budget, and
proactively assess and evaluate if any adjustments need to be made. (Monitoring
expenses is particularly important if part or all of the stewardship funding comes
from operating or project income.)
11. Periodically assess current thinking and knowledge regarding this topic from the
larger land trust community, as land trusts across the country grow in their
understanding and sophistication of stewardship and its associated financial
implications.
12. Have a written stewardship fund policy.
30. A written stewardship fund policy that a land trust follows is useful for a number of
reasons:
• The policy provides direction to volunteers, staff and board members in its
stewardship funding decisions.
• It ensures continuity over time as individuals involved with stewardship funding
enter and leave the organization.
• It explains the land trust’s stewardship fund(s) expectations to donors, members
and the general public.
• It demonstrates to land donors that the land trust is committed to manage every
property that it acquires responsibly.
• It assures the land trust community, government entities and the media that the
land trust is acting responsibly to care for the land assets for which is has been
entrusted.
The components of a stewardship fund policy could include the following considerations:
1. Land trust philosophy: Why is a stewardship fund necessary?
2. Purpose of the fund: What stewardship costs will the fund cover? Will it be used to
support monitoring expenses for CEs only, or enforcement as well? Will it be used to
cover monitoring and management expenses for fee simple properties or will it also
cover capital expenditures? Are there separate funds for different purposes?
29
3. Managing the Fund
a. Building the fund: What methods are used to secure funds with the
easement, and what sources are used? What is the target amount per
easement or fee simple property to be deposited to the fund? How is the
target amount calculated? Under what circumstances will the land trust
secure a property without an accompanying stewardship contribution?
How will the land trust add appropriate funding later?
b. Fund management goals and guidelines: Can all of the income be used, or
will part of it be reinvested to grow the fund? What are the rules for
spending income? Is it a true endowment, in which principal cannot be
invaded? If it is not a true endowment and principal can be withdrawn,
what are the criteria for principal drawdown? Is specific board approval
required for principal drawdown? How much can be withdrawn?
Earnings or growth only? How will it be replenished?
c. Authority governing management of the fund: Who is in charge of
securing contributions, investing and managing the fund, and making
decisions? Who has authority to withdraw from the fund?
4. Review: What is the process by which the policy will be reviewed and updated?
31. ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
A Stewardship, Monitoring and Costing Guide for Natural Heritage Conservation
Agreements: A manual developed to assist land trusts in owning natural heritage
properties and holding conservation agreements. Draft 2009. Ontario Heritage Trust and
the Ontario Land Trust Alliance. By Barbara Heidenreich.
Conservation Capacity and Enforcement Capability: A research report. 2007. The Land
Trust Alliance. By Sylvia Bates
Conservation Easement Stewardship. 2008. Standards and Practices Curriculum. The
Land Trust Alliance
Conservation Easement Stewardship Endowments. 2008. Land Trust Alliance Fact Sheet.
2 p.
Determining Stewardship Costs and Raising and Managing Dedicated Funds. 2007. 30
The Land Trust Alliance. By Paul Doscher, Brenda Lind, Ellen Sturgis, and Chris West
ISBN 978-0-943915-22-7
Stewardship Calculator & User Manual. 2010. Prepared for the Foothills Land Trust by
the Miistakis Institute for the Rockies. www.foothillslandtrust.org
Ten Most Frequently Asked Endowment Questions. 2008. Hamilton Community
Foundation. 2 p.
The Conservation Easement Handbook, 2nd Edition by Byers, Elizabeth and Karin
Marchetti Ponte
32. APPENDIX A: ENFORCEMENT AND LEGAL DEFENSE: PREPARED
FOR FOOTHILLS LAND TRUST BY MIISTAKIS INSTITUTE FOR THE
ROCKIES
Introduction
A land trust holding conservation easement agreement (CEA) is responsible for ensuring the purpose of the
easement is maintained by monitoring for violations, enforcing the CEA when a violation occurs and defending the
CEA in the event of a legal challenge. Enforcement and defense are essential components of a land trusts
stewardship system. Enforcement is the result of the discovery of a violation and the resolution of the violation in a
manner that upholds the purpose of the CEA. There are many tools at a landowner’s disposal to help settle violations
amicably, although in rare cases a land trust may be in a situation where to uphold the purpose of the CEA litigation
becomes necessary. Legal defense is a response by a land trust when the CEA is challenged by legal action from a
landowner, neighbor or a third party, usually to modify or terminate the CEA.
A CEA is a legally binding contract between the landowner and a land trust that holds the CEA. Ideally this
relationship is one that is cultivated and maintained over time and is initiated as soon as possible with new 1
landowners. However, it is likely inevitable that over time disagreements may arise between the land trust
responsible for upholding the terms of the CEA and the landowner. The issue may be a disagreement in interpreting
the CEA restrictions, an intentional or accidental violation to the CEA by the landowner, neighbor or third party
and/or a legal challenge to the CEA. The risk of a land trust having to defend an easement due to violations or a
legal challenge is real and acquiring financial resources or putting plans in place to address legal defense is a key
component to a land trusts long term financial planning. A land trust must ensure they have the funds to enforce and
defend a CEA should they need to.
How common are violations?
It is difficult to calculate the risk a land trust faces in holding CEA’s, especially in Canada where the CEA is a
relatively new tool (the oldest CE legislation in Canada is only 15 years old). There are no official statistics in
Canada on how often minor or major violations occur, the number of cases settled out of court or cases that have
gone to trial. These statistics are important for land trusts to cost out the expenses associated with enforcement and
legal defense. However, lessons can be drawn from the United States where CEA have been used as a conservation
tool for over 100 years.
The majority of easement violations are caused by the landowner or a third party who did not understand the
easement restrictions or were not aware of the conservation easement. A 2007 research project by the LTA suggests
that for every 20 CEA held by a land trust; the land trust should expect one violation to some degree annually. The
LTA suggests as a guide, “a land trust can expect 1 litigated easement violation over a 10-year period for every 300
easements it holds. A land trust can also expect 1 easement enforcement action (not necessarily litigated) costing
more than $2,500 to resolve, over a 10-year period, for every 100 easements it holds.” A review of this guideline by
Land Trusts suggested easement violation rate will increase in the future and the above guidelines are modest.
33. Interestingly, a 2008 conservation defense insurance survey reported an increase in the rate of easement violations
over previous years, this was likely due to a recent increase in land transfers to a next generation of landowners.
In most cases landowners are willing to correct the mistake. However sometimes this is not the case and a land trust
responsible for resolution of the violation may need to use a series of approaches, such as communication and
education, letters, amendments to CEA, mediation and in extreme cases, legal action to uphold the CEA. In 2004, a
Conservation Easement Violation and Amendment Study tracked the results of 75 major violations in the US, 52
were resolved outside of court while 23 were resolved by the courts. Major violations included boundary disputes,
timber harvest and/or structures being built outside CEA designated building envelopes. Of the 23 reported cases
that were decided by the courts 20 had good conservation results.
The most common major violations included:
• prohibited surface alterations,
• prohibited cutting of vegetation, and
• construction of prohibited or unauthorized structures.
From these cases land trusts learned they needed to change polices and documentation including:
• documenting the landowner’s intent at the signing of the CEA,
• very clear language in easement documents,
• a notification process for new landowners,
• increased efforts to maintain open and communicative relationship with landowners and
• more frequent monitoring.
Variables influencing violation rates
There are a number of variables that can influence a land trusts easement violation rate, many of which the land trust
can control.
The Land Trust Alliance (LTA) has identified a number of variables that may influence risk to a land trust:
• Number of CEA’s held by a land trust (more easements = more risk)
• Types of restrictions (affirmative obligations = more risks),
• Quality of CEA, baseline agreement and monitoring reports (clearly written CEA, baseline and monitoring
report that follow a consistent policy = less risk)
• Consistency in monitoring (regular monitoring = less risk)
• Record keeping (well kept, clearly written records = less risk), and
• Relationship with landowner (open and communicative relationships with landowner = less risk).
Many of these variables can be influenced by land trusts to reduce the risk associated with a CEA. A land trust can
reduce the risk of easement violations and increases its ability to defend an easement by maintaining healthy
relationships with the landowner, ensuring good record keeping and developing a violation resolution policy and
procedure to guide enforcement of conservation easements.
Maintain healthy landowner relations
Land trust experts consulted in Canada and the Land Trust Alliance literature stress the importance of building and
maintaining healthy landowner relationships. Violations and challenges are often associated with second or third
generation landowners who did not enter into the CEA with the land trust. A policy geared toward new landowners,
such as meeting and reviewing the CEA with new landowners as soon as possible is important. Surveys in the US
indicate violations by new landowners often occur prior to meetings held with the land trust holding the easement.
Often, land trusts are not notified hand of an owner change and many land trust do not have a mechanism to be
notified when threre is a new owner. Regular communication with the landowner will help to increase the likelihood
that a land trust is aware of an ownership change. Regular communication with the landowner is the first line of
34. enforcement and legal defense and should be considered a high stewardship priority. Many land trusts work with
landowners on habitat management projects (weed pulls, fence mending, and water systems), publish newsletters
and host workshops to help communicate best management practices. Outreach activities with the landowner help
to strengthen the relationship between landowners and land trusts and also establish communication channels
reducing the risk of violations and challenges to the CEA.
Clarity of language and Record Keeping
Other areas where a land trust can help to reduce risk relates to the development and implementation of protocols
around CEA, baseline documentation and monitoring reports. All of these documents may be needed to help uphold
the easement in court. A land trust needs to consider all official documents as lines of defense and therefore remove
all vague language from templates and protocols, ensure the intent or purpose of the CEA is well defined, maintain
good records of all communications with landowners and maintain clear, consistent baseline and monitoring reports.
It is highly advised that landowners and land trusts sign baselines and monitoring reports to help document
communication and agreement over the condition of the land.
The wording of easement restrictions should be carefully considered . A landowner should be able to easily interpret
the restrictions to increase likelihood of compliance. In addition, a land trust needs to have detailed documentation
on how they are monitoring the property to determine if restrictions have been violated. Some CEA have affirmative
obligations, whereby a clause in the CEA outlines management goals or conditions that need to be met. For example
an affirmative obligation may be that range health condition must be maintained at a certain score. A land trust with
affirmative obligations needs to consider how they will monitor and measure the clause to ensure property is in
compliance.
Developing protocols for maintaining, storing and destroying records also represents an important line of defense for
a land trust.
Creating a Conservation Easement Violation Policy
It is advisable for a land trust to develop a conservation easement violation policy and outline a procedure for
responding to violations (see Handling Violation below). Conservation easement violation policies typically revolve
around two key premises, a land trust seeks to communicate and address violations with a landowner in a non
adversarial way and a land trust seeks to address violations quickly to uphold and protect the purpose of the
easement. The policy includes information about who within the land trust - staff, volunteer or board member, is
responsible for reporting the violation and communicating with the landowner. In addition the land trust should
outline a procedure for resolving violations that would include at which point in the process a land trust contacts an
attorney or seeks legal advice.
All violations are not created equally and it is advisable that a land trust be able to rate the severity of the violation
in relation to the CEA purpose or intent. To assist in rating the severity and scope of a violation the LTA has
identified different types of violations, such as minor, moderate and major.
A minor violation includes activities that negatively impacts the CEA purpose but can be restored to original
condition at minor costs or activities where a slight amendment to the CEA to accommodate the violation would
have little to no effect on the overall purposes of the CEA. For example a minor violation may include a building
that occurs only slightly outside the permitted building envelope. Minor amendments can provide the land trust with
more flexibility for resolving a violation but the land trust needs to be aware of Environment Canada requirements
for amendments when the CEA was first granted under the Eco-gift program.
A moderate violation includes activities that negatively impact the purpose of the CEA, but can often be mitigated
and may occur on a small area, such as prohibited improvements to a road. A major violation includes activities that
have a significant negative impact on CEA purpose and are often relatively permanent. For example construction of
a house that is not permitted within the CEA agreement or subdivision of the land when it is not permitted.
35. There are also violations where the terms or purposes of the CEA are not impacted by the violation; these are often
referred to as technical lapses. For example, a landowner may replace a structure as permitted in the CEA but fail to
notify the land trust as per the agreement. In this case there is no impact to the conservation value of the property
and the intent of the CE is upheld.
The conservation easement violation policy can be designed to address violations according to their level of severity
and scope.
Another factor to consider when developing a conservation easement violation policy is if the landowner is required
to reimburse the land trust in the event of a violation requiring remediation. Some land trusts have clauses in the
CEA whereby the landowner is required to reimburse the costs associated with enforcement by a land trust,
Handling Violations
The LTA suggests seven steps for addressing violations:
1. identify a potential violation (through monitoring),
2. document the potential violation,
3. review documentation,
4. determine if it is a violation and the severity of violation in relation to the purpose of the easement,
5. identify potential mitigation factors and choose the appropriate action,
6. work with the landowner to address violations, and
7. record the final resolution and lessons learned.
The goal for a land trust is to implement a violation resolution with the landowner that ensures the purpose of the
CEA is upheld. There are a number of violation resolution tools that a land trust can employee to help resolve a
violation, such as education, negotiation, remediation, amendments, mediation or judicial. Likely a land trust will
use a combination of these tools to address each situation and the line between these tools is often blurred.
Violations are typically caused by landowners, who do not understand or have misinterpreted the CEA. Having a
positive conversation with the landowners about their goals and needs and engaging in creative problem solving
with the landowner can help to build relationships. If the violation is a result of a misinterpretation it may help to
walk through the CEA with the landowner again.
It is important that a land trust have a person they trust negotiate with the landowner to resolve the violation.
Negotiation involves understanding the landowners needs and goals and working with them to develop a solution
that remediate the violation. Remediation is a process for ensuring the conservation value of the property is restored
should the violation have negative impact. It is important for the land trust to be flexible when developing solutions,
for example, a violation where a landowner builds outside of the building envelop may be resolved through
mitigation or offsets else where on the property, such as giving up an areas where development was permitted in the
CEA. This resolution would require amending the CEA to remove the building areas from the CEA and permit
activity in the building envelope where the violation occurred. Over all the intent or purpose of the CEA is upheld. If
the CEA is part of the Ecogift program, the land trust may need to seek advice from the program to ensure the
amendment is acceptable.
If a resolution between the landowner and land trust can not be reached, an independent third party mediator may be
appropriate. Mediation is not binding, so if a resolution is not achieved, the land trust may consider litigation.
Litigation is a tool of last resort, when all other options to work with a landowner have failed. Taking a landowner to
court is costly, time consuming and damaging to relationship building. However, in rare cases there may be no
other options.
36. Many land trusts have developed flowcharts on how to handle easement violations that assist the land trust in
addressing the violation. In addition, some have developed procedural templates for dealing with violations (for
examples of these templates refer to Managing CE in Perpetuity published by the LTA). Procedures for addressing
violations should consider who determined the best course of action and who in the land trust organization should be
in contact with the landowner to present a resolution. For violations deemed major, land trusts should consider legal
advice before approaching a landowner.
A land trust should also identify who pays for the costs of addressing violations, in some cases the landowner is
required to pay the costs back to the land trust associated with enforcement of easement violations or legal defense.
However some land trusts prefer not to charge the landowner if a violation is settled through communication
between a landowner and land trust as a way of maintaining good relations. However, many land trust have a clause
in the CEA that requires the landowner pay for the legal costs associated with a law suit.
Amending a CEA
A land trust may recognize that an amendment to a CEA may strengthen the CEA or improve the ability of a land
trust to defend the CEA. Usually a land trust has a policy that all amendments result in a neutral or positive change
to the conservation value of the property. For example a landowner may want to remove the building rights from a
CEA or change the location of a building envelope and it does not result in a negative impact to the intent of the
CEA. The landowner in this case may request an amendment to the CEA. Most land trusts will face the issue of
having to amend an easement to clarify language or intent of CEA or resolve a violation where there is no loss of
conservation value to CEA. Amending a CEA is an evolving field and requires each situation to be assessed in the
context of the CEA, local law and requires a balance approach of upholding the conservation interests of the
property and maintaining good landowner relations.
Within the land trust community there is some disagreement on how often a land trust should consider an
amendment; from almost never (it should always be discouraged), to amend at will. A land trust needs to engage in
discussion with the board to decide on their philosophy and develop an amendment policy to guide future decisions.
External Risks
In addition to variables the land trust can control, a survey by the University of Wisconsin (Betterley Risk
Consultants, 2008) highlights some external variables influencing the risk to a CEA being challenged legally, such
as,
• Increasing real estate prices as a result of alternative land uses,
• Conversion rate: changes in surrounding land use, such as development pressure or cultivation
• Sales of conserved land to successor owners, and
• Third party trespass
A land trust may not be able to control external variables, but understanding these variables in the context of the
local setting can assist a land trust in assessing the risk to a CEA. For example, although not a common occurrence,
a property’s value for development may become so high, it becomes a possibility that a developer may purchase the
land and try to terminate the CEA in court. The amount a developer could make from a development on the CEA
property would enable the developer to justify the expense of litigation. Even though it is likely the CEA would be
upheld, the land trust would need to have a substantial amount of funding available for legal defense in this case.
Therefore a CEA associated with areas where land prices and land use conversion rates are high are at a higher risk
and need more attentive monitoring and communication with landowners than other CE properties.
Risk also increases with landowner succession, therefore a land trust should have a mechanism in place whereby
they know when land exchanges hands and are able to communicate and meet with the new landowner to review the
37. CEA as soon as possible. Land trusts have identified higher levels of violations associated with new landowners
especially where communication between the landowner and land trust didn’t occur in a timely fashion.
In addition, there are cases where a third party trespasses and violates an easement, such as a neighbor, oil and gas
development and/or utility company removing vegetation or trees. Many land trusts stress the importance of getting
to know neighbors to CEA properties they hold. This can be done through meet and greet events or workshops
hosted by the land trust. In addition, designing best practice manuals and working with the landowner and utilities
or resource extraction companies can help to reduce the impact on the conservation value of the CEA.
How much is enough for enforcement and legal defense.
The costs to a land trust of addressing a violation is difficult to determine, the LTA suggests a land trust can expect
to 1 violation per 20 conservation easements annually. The costs associated depend on a variety of factors, severity
and scope of violation, relationship with landowner and tool used to resolve the violation. It is prudent that a land
trust think about incorporating some funds into their stewardship calculations to cover enforcement of violations that
are settled out of court. Guidelines from the LTA suggest that a land trust should have $5000 put away for
enforcement actions (not litigation) and an addition 150-300 per easement once the land trust holds more than 15
easements.
Although a land trust aims to avoid going to court, sometimes to enforce a CEA or defend against a challenge a land
trust may find it has no other choice. This can be costly for a land trust. A review in 2005 of US land trusts indicated
that the average litigation costs “range from $25,000 to $250,000 for a typical trial in a typical jurisdiction. The
average historic cost of all claims was $38,000 including those that did not go to a full trial. This does not capture
the risk of an appeals process.” Although these are average costs, there are several examples where land trusts spent
well over $250,000 on outside litigation fees to protect or enforce an easement.
The Land Trust Alliance has a guideline for legal defense for litigation purposes, whereby a land trust acquires at a
minimum amount of $50,000. After a land trust has acquired fifteen CEA an additional $1,500-3,000 should be
added to the fund for each CEA.
A land trust should consider costs associated with enforcement and legal defense as components of its stewardship
programming. Many land trusts have developed dedicated stewardship funding to cover the costs of managing a land
trust in perpetuity which includes funding for enforcement and defense. Most of the costs associated with
stewardship can be accurately estimated, while costs associated with enforcement and legal defense are difficult to
assess. If a land trust uses the principle of a stewardship fund to pay for legal defense, they need to have a plan in
place to replenish it. Alternatively, a land trust may create a separate legal defense fund and institute a defense fund
policy on how the money can be spent. There is some consideration that a dedicated legal defense fund may help to
deter legal challenges by landowners.
There are various mechanisms for generating funds for defense funding and likely a combination of fundraising
approaches can be used (refer to Module 3 for fundraising ideas). The Ontario Heritage Trust moves some of the
interest generated annually from their stewardship endowment for each property (5 %) and transfers it to a legal
defense fund to help the fund grow over time.
Defense Fund Policy
It is recommended that a land trust develop a policy around legal defense funding, that highlights how funds are
acquired, identifies a financial model and when a land trust accesses legal defense funding. If a land trust develops
separate stewardship and legal defense funds, there needs to be clarity on when an activity is considered stewardship
vs. legal defense. Through consultation with individuals running land trusts in Alberta, the general consensus was
that minor, moderate and major violations resolved between the land trust and landowner and legal council relating
to interpretations of the CEA, amendments to the CEA are all considered stewardship. When an enforcement action
requires mediation or litigation, or if the land trust is challenged legal defense funding is utilized.
38. Funding Legal Defense
Land trusts address enforcement and legal defense through different methods, such as
1. Self insuring- A land trust secured fund specifically set aside for legal defense.
2. In-house counsel
3. Retained and/or pro bono counsel
A common practice is for a land trust to self insure whereby they set up a fund for legal defense. However, a survey
of the US land trust community in 2005 noted that many land trusts did not currently have adequate funding put
aside to address legal defense. Only 19% of interviewed land trusts had sufficient funds to address one major legal
defense resulting in a trial (based on $70,000 as a conservative cost for going to trial). It is important to consider
how the land trust plans to raise funds for legal defense and how they might reimburse the funds should the funds be
used.
Larger land trusts will usually have legal council on staff to provide advice and address challenges and enforcement
issues. Smaller land trusts may consider acquiring board members that can provide some legal council pro bono.
A small land trust may not have the resources to adequately address legal defense. The LTA has been investigating
community approaches for addressing and learning about enforcement and legal defense.
Community Approach to Legal Defense
There is some concern, that in the future there will be an increase in the risk of challenges to CEA’s as land prices
increase, there is an increase in the number of second generation landowners, and/or land uses in the area change to
be less conducive to conservation. These factors may contribute to a CEA being challenged in court as a landowner
attempts to modify or overturn the CEA. A land trust needs to be in a position to legally defend and uphold an
easement. It can be difficult for a land trust to build the resources to defend an easement, especially if the potential
financial gain by the landowner is greater than what the land trust is able to contribute toward defense.
Research projects in the US have explored community approaches to reduce the burden of legal defense. Some of
the activities include forums for sharing knowledge and lessons learned, relying on third party assistance or
development of communal defense insurance. Discussion on communal approaches is less developed among
Canadian land trusts likely because CEA are a newer conservation tool, landowners who signed the CEA are still on
the property and cases of litigation in Canada are rare. Regardless, it is advisable that the land trust community
prepare itself for the possibility of a challenge. The ideas explored below are to instigate discussion within the land
trust community. Communal approaches have not been fully explored in the Canadian legal context.
Legal Defense Learning Centre
The LTA has developed a legal defense learning centre, whereby land trusts can review documents, reports and
results of court cases to help inform their practices and reduce the risk of challenges. A Canadian equivalent
whereby land trusts can share lessons learned from enforcement and challenges will help the community proactively
reduce the risk of challenges.
Third Party Assistance
There are examples where a third party may help a land trust defend a CEA, such as government support, non-
profits designed to protect conservation interests (e.g. Ecojustice),or pooled legal advice from law schools or law
firms.
In the US, a number of states actively protect the intent of a CEA because it represents a public service. For
example, the state of Massachusetts provides legal defense support to conservation easements, as all CEA are
40. Doren, J.V. 2004. onservation Easement Violation & Amendment Study: Major Violation Follow-Up Questionnaire.
Land Trust Alliance.
Doscher, P., B. Lind, E. Sturgis and C. West. 2007. Determining Stewardship Costs and Raising and managing
Dedicated Funds. The Land Trust Alliance.
Heidenreisch, B. Draft 2009. A Stewardship, Monitoring and Costing Guide for Natural Heritage Conservation
Agreements. Ontario Heritage Trust and Ontario Land Trust Alliance.
Michalsky, S. 2010. Dedicated Stewardship Funding Training Module 3. Alberta Land Trust Alliance.
Rately- Beach L. 2009. Managing Conservation Easements in Perpetuity: Fulfilling the Promise of Permanence
through Keeping Records, Managing Amendments and Upholding Conservation Easement Integrity. Land Trust
Alliance.
Watkins, M.J. 2007. The Management of Private Conservation Lands by Land Trusts in Canada. Faculty of
Graduate Studies, University of Guelph.