| Burke
helps Land Trust
grow as a vital Door County conservation group
By
Donna Marie Pocius
Special to DoorCountyNavigator.com
As
Door County Land Trust’s first and only executive director,
Dan Burke’s leadership has helped the organization protect
3,300 acres of Peninsula land.
While
he’s proud of that accomplishment, Burke says it’s
the little things like getting a thank you note from one of the
nonprofit organization’s 1,500 members that really tug at
his heart.
But
a big part of Burke’s job, which he has held since 1996,
is meeting with land owners, especially those who own second homes
here, telling them about the Land Trust and its programs to control
the type and amount of development that may take place in Door
County’s future.
“We’ve been very interested in the environment. Our
100-acre farm is in the Land Trust. It will be kept a single family
residence,” says Phyllis Ingwersen who lives in Sister Bay
and in Scottsdale with her husband James Ingwersen, a renowned
portrait painter.
Protecting
property from adverse development
One of the Land Trust’s popular programs is the conservation
easement, which ensures a homeowner’s property, like the
Ingwersen’s farm, will always remain grounds for a single
family residence by taking certain developmental rights away from
future owners.
“People who come to Door County or who have second homes
here are coming here for the beauty of the land, so it is very
appealing to them to work with an organization that helps ensure
their property will remain intact,” Burke explains.
“Other
people can come and live on the land, but it (a conservation
easement) is basically controlling the type and amount of development
that will take place on the property in the future.”
For example, a property owner with 10 acres may sleep easy knowing
that he has entrusted rights to the Land Trust, ensuring that 9
acres remain as open land while no more than one acre is devoted
to housing. The Land Trust has 40 conservation agreements with
Door County property owners.
“Conservation is always the driving force of owners who
want to work with us. We conserve their land’s future. And
there are some tax advantages to working with us,” Burke
says.
Grants
spur land shopping spree
Following receipt of substantial federal land acquisition grants,
the Land Trust is on a shopping spree. The organization is eyeing
five to six project areas including properties on Washington Island,
The Bay Shore Blufflands Preserve, White Cliff Fen and Forest and
the Kellner Fen Preserve--a coastal wetland area located north
of the Sturgeon Bay ship canal.
A
$1 million federal grant was obtained following cooperative efforts
between the Land Trust and other conservation groups—The
Nature Conservancy, The Ridges Sanctuary and the Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources.
Burke explains while each organization is distinct, they seize
opportunities to work together on grant-writing and on public awareness
projects such as an annual guided hike on protected property throughout
the Peninsula.
“We have the broadest mission, but we pretty much know what
everybody is working on,” Burke says.
To
fulfill the Land Trust mission—“to protect the
scenic beauty, rural character and ecological integrity of lands
in Door County”—Burke and his staff enter into the
conservation easement agreements, accept donations of property
and purchase land.
This land is yours; this land is mine
Burke also is on an educational mission of sorts, reaching diverse
groups such as sports enthusiasts about the Land Trust.
“I see the biggest challenge is more of an educational one.
There are a variety of groups open to us—our challenge is
to show how the Land Trust works to benefit all—sports clubs
and snowshoers and how protection of open space benefits their
loves, too. We haven’t reached out as well as we should have,” Burke
says.
By
working “collectively” Burke hopes people can preserve
rural character of Door County—the quality which attracted
them to the Peninsula in the first place.
“It’s one of the things people come here for—the
rural characteristic, and the more people who come the more it
erodes. It is no one’s fault, but collectively it is a concern,” he
says.
“There are tools in place with organizations like ours helping
us to have both—people living and working and still open
space which we all love up here.”
To learn more about the Door County Land Trust, visit www.doorcountylandtrust.org
Donna Marie Pocius, an Egg Harbor-based freelance writer, is a
frequent contributor to DoorCountyNavigator.com. Contact her at
donnamarie@dcwis.com
Donna
Marie Pocius is an Egg Harbor, Wisconsin-based freelance writer.

Gerhard F. C. Miller, artist
Karsten Topelmann & Ellen Sprogo-Topelmann
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