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Adjusted Deduction Helps Protect Important Resources

In 2006, Congress changed the tax incentive for voluntary conservation donations – donations by private landowners that retire development rights to protect significant wildlife, scenic, and historic resources.

That change enables family farmers, ranchers, and other moderate-income landowners to get a significant tax benefit for such donations, which simply wasn’t possible under prior law. 

That opens the door to voluntary, landowner-led conservation on millions of acres of land across the country.  Most such donations are made to local, community-based charities dedicated to keeping land in agriculture, conserving important wildlife habitats, and protecting important open space and historic resources.  

But the 2006 law will expire at the end of 2007!       

How It Works

The 2006 law:

  • Raised the maximum deduction a donor can take for donating a conservation easement from 30% of their adjusted gross income (AGI) in any year to 50%;
  • Allowed qualified farmers and ranchers to deduct up to 100% of their AGI; and
  • Increased the number of years over which a donor can take deductions from 6 years to 16 years.

Under prior law, an agricultural landowner earning $50,000 a year who donated a conservation easement worth $1 million could take a total of no more than $90,000 in tax deductions!  Under the new law, that landowner can take as much as $800,000 in tax deductions – still less than the full value of their donation, but a significant increase.

Conservation Incentive Combined with Solid Tax Reforms

The 2006 law also set higher standards for appraisers and appraisals of all donated property, and set higher penalties for abusive appraisals.  Conservationists support this to ensure the integrity of the charitable donation process.  The law also tightened restrictions on donations of easements to protect historic buildings.  These reforms do not expire at the end of this year.

Widespread Support

Passage of the 2006 law was supported by a wide variety of organizations, including:

 

American Bird Conservancy
American Farmland Trust
American Fisheries Society
American Sportfishing Association
Archery Trade Association
ArrowSport
BASS/ESPN Outdoors
Bear Trust International
Berkley Conservation Institute
Bowhunting Preservation Alliance
Campfire Club of America
Civil War Preservation Trust
Dallas Safari Club
Ducks Unlimited
Houston Safari Club
Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies
Izaak Walton League of America
Land Trust Alliance
National Audubon Society

National Shooting Sports Foundation
North American Grouse Partnership
Pheasants Forever
Piedmont Environmental Council
Quail Unlimited
Quality Deer Management Association
Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
Safari Club International
Scenic America
Texas Wildlife Association
The Conservation Fund
The Nature Conservancy
The Wildlife Society
Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership
Trout Unlimited
Trust for Public Land
Whitetails Unlimited
Wildlife Management Institute


How You Can Help

Please ask your Senators to cosponsor S. 469, legislation introduced by Senators Max Baucus (D-MT) and Charles Grassley (R-IA).  This legislation would make the 2006 incentive a permanent part of tax law.

Similar legislation will be introduced soon in the House of Representatives.  Please ask your Representative to support making the new incentive for conservation by private landowners a permanent part of the tax law.

This momentum to make the new incentive permanent is also supported by President Bush.  The President’s budget for fiscal year 2008 released in February included a provision that also supports making the new incentive permanent.

For more information, please contact:
           
Russell Shay
Land Trust Alliance
rshay@lta.org
202-638-4725