|

Open Space Institute Celebrates New Jersey
Conservation Loan Fund’s First Year
New Partnerships Will Expand Scope and Services
of Program in 2004
New York, NY, May 24, 2004--- One year ago, the Open
Space Institute launched the New Jersey Conservation Loan Fund (NJCLF)
to assist the land preservation community in protecting what remains
of New Jersey’s rapidly disappearing natural areas. Since
then, NJCLF has made five loans—a total of $3.2 million---to
assist in the conservation of over 10,000 acres of land with a total
appraised value of more than $25 million. Two new partnerships will
allow the program to enhance its assistance to the New Jersey land
trust community in 2004.
Initial funding for the loan fund came from the Geraldine R. Dodge
Foundation (www.grdodge.org), which invested $2.5 million to establish
a low-cost bridge-financing fund. Land trusts have used NJCLF loan
fund monies to purchase land and easements where public acquisition
funds have been delayed, or to complete time-sensitive transactions
while arranging for permanent private funding.
“We are very excited about OSI’s work, and about the
impact we have been able to achieve in preserving open space,”
said Robert Perry, director of environment and animal welfare programs
at the Morristown-based Dodge Foundation. “The loan fund seems
to be serving exactly the purpose we had envisioned, and we are
heartened by the recent expansion of this collaborative effort and
proposed program changes for 2004.”
Recognizing NJCLF’s success, the Philadelphia-based William
Penn Foundation (www.wpennfdn.org), which has an extensive emphasis
in southern New Jersey, joined with Dodge and OSI by investing an
additional $1 million. According to Andrew Johnson, program officer
for the William Penn’s Environment and Communities Program,
“this collaboration will leverage the impact of our philanthropy
and help our grantees expand the scale and accelerate the pace of
their efforts to preserve regionally significant watershed lands
in the Pinelands, the Barnegat Bay watershed and the Delaware River
and Bay watersheds.”
The following projects are among those for which OSI’s New
Jersey Conservation Loan Fund has provided interim financing since
its inception in January, 2003 (see www.osiny.org for more detailed
descriptions):
- The Delaware & Raritan Greenway’s (www.delrargreenway.org)
acquisition of a 58-acre easement in the Sourland Mountains to
protect migratory bird habitat, provide trail corridors, and preserve
open views along the ridge in East Amwell, Hunterdon County.
- The Morris Land Conservancy’s (www.morrislandconservancy.org)
acquisition of an easement to protect 240 acres buffering the
Paulinskill Wildlife Management Area in Hampton Township, Sussex
County.
- D&R Greenway borrowed bridge funds to pay off a seller-held
mortgage on a 14-acre parcel in Princeton Township, Mercer County.
The parcel expands the Stony Brook greenway stretching from Hopewell
and the Sourlands into the Princeton community, protecting the
lower Stony Brook watershed and its woodland habitat, and expanding
interpretive trail networks within this developed suburban region.
- New Jersey Conservation Foundation’s (NJCF) (www.njconservation.org)
recent acquisition in Burlington County of 9,400 acres of ecologically
valuable land within the Pinelands Preservation Area. Known as
“Heart of the Pines,” the project will also link and
increase public access to state-owned conservation lands.
To close the “Heart of the Pines” project, NJCF raised
nearly half of the $12 million purchase price and utilized a $1.5
million loan from the NJCLF to move forward with the December closing.
“We have a lot of work ahead of us to ensure the preservation
of this spectacular land,” said Michele Byers, NJCF’s
executive director. “The OSI loan funds have given us some
essential breathing room while we pull together other funding.”
Peter Howell, director of OSI’s Conservation Loan Fund, said
OSI was pleased with the program’s early success but stressed
the need to raise more loan capital and help support transactions
in new and more effective ways.
To achieve its goals, OSI recently contracted with the newly formed
non-profit Conservation Resources Inc. (CRI), and its president,
Michael Catania, to administer the loan fund. In partnership with
OSI, Catania and CRI will work with regional and local conservation
organizations to make innovative use of NJCLF loan funds.
“Michael brings extraordinary expertise and knowledge from
his deep involvement in land protection in New Jersey over the past
30 years,” Howell said. “We are delighted to enter into
a partnership with CRI and look forward to working together to ensure
the highest and best use of loan funds,” added Howell.
“I’m delighted to join OSI and the Dodge and Penn Foundations
in this effort,” said Catania. “I believe that this
collaboration will allow each of the partners to make a bigger difference
in preserving the natural legacy of New Jersey for future generations.”
For more information about the Open Space Institute and the New
Jersey Conservation Loan Fund, log on to www.osiny.org.
To inquire about potential loans, please contact Michael Catania,
president of Conservation Resources Inc., at michaelcatania007@msn.com
or 973-543-4437.
The Open Space Institute (www.osiny.org) is a non-profit land conservation
organization that protects significant recreational, environmental,
agricultural and historic landscapes. Founded in 1963, OSI has protected
more than 90,000 acres in New York State. Through its Northern Forest
Protection Fund, OSI has assisted in the protection of close to
875,000 acres in northern NY, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.
OSI’s New Jersey Conservation Loan Fund has helped protect
over 10,000 acres in the nation’s most densely populated state.
|