Maryland's Program for the Certification of County Agricultural Land Preservation Programs
The
Maryland Department of Planning (Planning) and MALPF jointly administer the
Program for the Certification of County Agricultural Land Preservation Programs
(the “Certification Program”). Created by the Maryland General Assembly in
1990, the Certification Program lets counties keep more locally generated
agricultural land transfer tax in exchange for creating effective local land
preservation programs and continually evaluating and improving them. Program
participation by interested counties is voluntary. Counties with an effective
local agricultural land preservation program that wish to be certified apply to
both the MDP and MALPF. Sixteen of Maryland’s twenty-three counties are either
fully or conditionally certified under this Program as of June 30, 2019.
Certified
counties are allowed to keep 75% of the Agricultural Transfer Tax revenue
(uncertified counties retain 33% of the revenue). All retained funds must be
spent or encumbered for land preservation purposes within six years or the
funds revert to the Maryland Agricultural Land Preservation Fund. Retained
funds can be used to purchase land preservation easements through a local
program or a State program, used in the MALPF’s Matching Funds Program, applied
to service past debt accrued through land preservation activities, and/or used
to help pay the administrative expenses for the county’s land preservation
activities.
In
combination with easement purchases, certified counties use other land preservation
tools such as protective agricultural zoning, transfer of development rights
(TDRs), right-to-farm protection, and the establishment of agriculture as the
best use of designated land. They also must establish Priority Preservation
Areas (PPAs) in their comprehensive plans and set a farmland preservation
acreage goal for the PPA. In addition to preserving land through MALPF,
certified counties have typically also preserved land through private land
trusts, Maryland Environmental Trust (MET), the Rural Legacy Program, and the
Federal land protection programs. Uncertified counties do not necessarily have
less effective local agricultural land preservation programs but may have
chosen not to participate in the Certification Program.
2018 Statutory Changes to the Certification
Program
In 2018 the General Assembly passed and Governor Hogan signed
HB620, “County Agricultural Land Preservation Programs – Recertification and
Remittance of Unexpended Funds – Extensions.” The law clarifies that a
certified county seeking to renew its certification is requesting a
“recertification” of its current (certified) status, not a new certification.
This distinction allows for expanding the recertification period three years to
five years, which better aligns recertification periods with the ten-year cycle
of comprehensive plan updates. The legislation also extends from three years to
six years the time that counties may spend or commit to spend funds from their
local agricultural land transfer tax revenue. (As noted above, certified
counties retain 75% of the locally generated agricultural land transfer tax,
while and non-certified counties retain 33%.)
If the retained tax revenue is not spent or committed within the
prescribed time period, the funds are remitted to the State Comptroller, and
placed in the Maryland Agricultural Land Preservation Fund.
Additional Information
Certification
Program: Statutory Provisions. Annotated Code of Maryland. Title 5. State
Planning. Subtitle 5. Governmental Coordination, Cooperation, and Assistance in
Planning. §5-408. Certification of County Agricultural Land Preservation
Programs. These are the most relevant statutory provisions for the State’s
Certification Program.
Certification
Program: Regulatory Provisions. Code of Maryland Regulations (COMAR). Title 14.
Independent Agencies. Subtitle 24. Office of Planning. Chapter 08. Guidelines
for the Certification of County Agricultural Land Preservation Programs. These
are the most relevant regulatory provisions for the State’s Certification
Program.