HomeMy WebLinkAboutChico News & Review George Nicholas 9/2/2016 Chico News&Review-From Greenline to greenbelt-Feature Story-Local Stories-July 19,2012
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From Greenfinegreenbelt
Land Trust pursuing purchase of development rights along Chico's
Greenline
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If the Northern California Regional Land Trust
(NCRLT) has its way, the southwest section
of Chico's Greenline will become an
unalterable greenbelt made up of agricultural
properties forever protected from subdivision
and development.
r
"The mission of the land trust is to �
i
strengthen the political line that the
Greenline is with some kind of permanent
line that is brought about by placing
agricultural easements on those properties sod
they can never be developed,”Tod
Kimmelshue, president of the board of
directors of the NCRLT, said recently.
Kimmelshue—who"grew up on a family farm
in Durham," where he still lives and farms
almonds and walnuts with four siblings who
co-own the farm with him—is also a past
president of the Butte County Farm Bureau. George Nicolaus stands in the midst of walnut trees
"The farming community is pretty pleased and rows of cucumber,gourd and squash vines
with how long the Greenline has held," he growing on his 146-acre farm near Comanche Creek
added. in southwest Chico. Last year, Nicolaus put the
Hegan Lane property into an agricultural-easement
Kimmelshue "grew up valuing agriculture and agreement with the Northern California Regional
the farming community," he said, so it Land Trust to protect it from future development.
makes sense that his work with the NCRLT PHOTO BY CHRISTINE G.K. LAPADO-BREGLIA
involves a concerted effort to"save and
protect prime farmland" along southwest
and futureedevine from elopm devossible elopment entering
into tion Go to www about the Northerin Ea"Iifo�rnialiifRe-g"lion to learn more
p Y g w,llbm 1. �,1� a ni � � � nal Land Trust and
agricultural-easement agreements with towwthe Butte County Farm eaiBureI oiruri to find out more about
lan
Such ag-easement agreements serve as deed
restrictions over what can be done with the Related stories this week:
property; in other words, the property can be 1'llhie fiwm°eeirmlllliiurmeat ii 0
used only for agricultural purposes, in A special issue on the eve of its 30th anniversary.
perpetuity.
purposes to
purchaethe
development
rigtsfrm Decades
"1..after
helping establish the Greenline, lane
ssthe farming p ty Dolan zoning
boundary should remain intact.
southwest side of Chico will stay in farmingf
Most.'ifli,i�,,,: Ilmlmmllhm
forever," Kimmelshue said. "It's kind of .:!�!.:��:.{�.!o.IIII,.Iitl,m,mrem,,ll,m;;m„m„m,m„m„m„m",m„
common knowledge that it is some of the h owners of 55 acres in south Chico want to
finest soil in Butte County and has good come inside the Greenline but politics, they say, is
water availability through aquifers. The water keeping them out.
is only 20 to 30 feet below the surface—
versus 200 to 300 feet below, as it is in other Everybody agr' egg tms!A Ex
versusm msi��urm: ��m°
parts of California—so it doesn't cost a lot of should be developed. They just can't
money to get it to the surface." agree on how to do that.
Southwest Chico's rich soil, he added, is
,'very deep and very well-suited for tree Related stories:
crops such as almonds and walnuts.” IIIt,�,ct,murig,1,?1,
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George Nicolaus. In the summer of Northern California Regional Land Trust board president
Enter
EnterTod Kimmelshue shares the dirt on agricultural
2011, Nicolaus, a local nut farmer since
easements. CN&R, 12.15.11.
1977, sold the development rights to the
https://www.newsrevi ew.com/chico/from-greenl i ne-to-greenbelt/content?oid=6775318 1/2
9/2/2016 Chico News&Review-From Greenline to greenbelt-Feature Story-Local Stories-July 19,2012
146-acre Hegan Lane property he and his
wife Connie own and farm along the Advertisement
Greenline to the NCRLT.
"We acquired this property in '05," said
Nicolaus. "It was second-generation almonds
at that time," which meant that only almonds
had been growing there for decades. Unlike
row-crop farms, on which crops are rotated
often to help eliminate pathogens in the soil,
the orchard was long-standing and in dire
need of being replanted with a different type
of tree so as not to put undue stress on the
soil.
Nicolaus decided to replace the almond trees
with walnut trees. There were "significant
costs," however, associated with removing
the almond trees, preparing the soil to plant
walnuts and replanting the orchard, Nicolaus
said.
"In the course of all that, back in '09 I
became aware of Northern California
Regional Land Trust's interest in preserving
North State agriculture," said Nicolaus. That's
when he entered into a discussion with the
nonprofit to pursue an agricultural-easement agreement for his entire property"with one exception—we
reserved space for one home.
"The zoning here is A-20—agriculture, with a 20-acre minimum—so you could have seven 20-acre parcels
out here, seven homes out here," he said. "And ranchettes are often a sought-after home site." Selling his
property's development rights to the NCRLT helped Nicolaus both with the expense of retooling his orchard
and with keeping it from being developed.
"In 35 years, I've seen a lot of this land [in southwest Chico] go from productive agriculture to homes.
Development pressure would potentially be there [on this property] at some point," he observed. "The
[area's] combination of climate, well-drained soils and adequate water—those things are a unique
combination. Once that land's converted from agriculture to other uses, such as residential, it's gone.
"Nor-Cal Regional Land Trust's willingness to compensate me as a land owner to agree not to develop [my
land] seemed like a good trade-off."
While the purchase of the Nicolauses' property as an agricultural easement is the NCRLT's only Greenline
acquisition thus far, the organization intends"to build on that parcel of land," as Kimmelshue put it. The
NCRLT is currently"talking with adjoining landowners [about selling their development rights]—a two-year
process—and we plan to go all up and down the Greenline to see if we can purchase the development
rights."
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