FY 25 Harford County Government Proposed Operating Budget
PLANNING AND ZONING Ag Preservation County Cost Center 064270
ORIGIN/PURPOSE: The Maryland General Assembly enacted House Bill No. 1481, efective July 1, 1992, authorizing the Harford County Council to impose a Transfer Tax. Subsequently, the County Council enacted Bill No. 93-3 to add new Article IV, Transfer Tax, to Chapter 123, Finance and Taxation, of the Harford County Code which imposes a 1% Transfer Tax on any instruments of writing that convey title to, or a leasehold interest in, real property, efective July 1, 1993; ffty percent of the proceeds are dedicated to the County's agricultural land preservation program. The Harford County Council, via Bill No. 93-2, added language to the Harford County Code authorizing the establishment of the Harford County Land Preservation Program to preserve productive agricultural land and woodland. The program is administered by the Department of Planning and Zoning and the Harford County Agricultural Land Preservation Advisory Board. The Harford County Agricultural Land Preservation Program allows land owners to preserve productive farmland for future generations through the use of conservation easements; the land owner receives payment for selling their development rights and/or via a tax credit. Easement purchases may be settled in a lump sum payment, or may be handled through an Installment Purchase Agreement (IPA) between the County and the seller. The agreement sets payment terms, including the fxed interest rate on which the landowner will receive annual payments. An IPA may be up to 30 years in length with interest and a small portion of the principal being paid annually. At the end of the term, the landowner will receive a lump sum payment constituting the remainder of the principal. This fnal payment is made with the proceeds of a stripped-coupon U.S. Treasury obligation purchased at settlement and held by the County until maturity. The funding included in the annual budget appropriation represents anticipated expenses for new easement purchases, required annual payments of IPAs, scheduled balloon payments on IPAs, and other associated expenses and obligations. The county's dedicated Agricultural Preservation fund maintains funding levels sufcient to meet the full obligations under the program at the time of settlement through to the completion of agreed payments. Due to the timing of Council approvals of easements, the completion of required surveys and documents, and fnal settlement dates, the preservation process for one property may span more than one fscal year. Transfer Tax revenue not expended during the fscal year in which it was budgeted reverts to the dedicated Agricultural Preservation fund and is made available for expenditure on eligible land preservation in future fscal years in the form of appropriated fund balance.
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