Updated: 
April, 2005
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All About Community Development in Portage County
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  Community Development

Welcome to the Portage County
Community Development Program

All About Community Development in Portage County

Defining Community Development in
Portage County

As educators within Ohio's land grant university, we help people by assisting them to identify needs and resources to improve their communities.  We recognize and appreciate the uniqueness of each community and encourage communities to develop capacity and create vitality to enhance citizens' lives.

The Community Development educational areas in Portage County:

  • Farm Land Preservation
  • Community Based Planning
  • Community Leadership
  • Public Issues Education
  • Economic Development


As Community Development professionals we value:

  • Education as a means to help people identify assets, capacities, needs, resources, and solutions
  • Civic involvement (or participation) to improve the quality of community/ neighbor hood life
  • Internal and external collaborations and partnerships
  • The uniqueness of individuals and communities/neighborhoods
  • The applied and theoretical dimensions of community development
  • The development of viable communities through the wise use of natural, economic, social, and human resources
  • Information and knowledge as a basis for decisions


Q: WHY FARMLAND PRESERVATION?

A:  Portage County has been losing, on average, the equivalent of ten 100-acre farms per year.  The pattern of development - road frontage , five acre or larger lots, scattered  in open fields - have eroded our farmland and open spaces and are contributing to the loss of Portage County's rural character.  Public costs - police, fire, schools, sewers, etc., - have increased significantly over the past ten years thus creating an increased tax burden on the citizens of our county.

Q:  DON'T MORE HOMES GENERATE REVENUE FOR THE COUNTY BY INCREASING THE TAX BASE?

A:  Yes.  New homes do generate a tax base.  However, they also demand police, fire, roads, schools and other publicly funded services.  Research studies conducted across the country have shown that for every $1.00 that a new home generates in taxes, it takes between $1.25 and $1.50 to support the needed services.  Most of this cost is in schools.  For every $1.00 that industry generates, it takes about 60 cents to supply the services, and for every $1.00 generated by agriculture, it takes only 30 cents to support those farms.

Q:  DO WE NEED TO STOP DEVELOPMENT?

A:  NO.  Farmland Preservation is NOT about stopping development.  It is about BALANCING our economic growth and development while protecting the economic base of our agricultural industry, thus preserving the rural character of our community.  It is PLANNED PRO-GROWTH.  We need to provide for homes, industry and agriculture.

Q:  HOW CAN WE PRESERVE OR PROTECT OUR FARMLAND AND AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY?

A: There are many "tools" that we can employ to help preserve and protect the agricultural industry.  They range from individual choices farmers can make, such as changing agricultural enterprises and becoming more efficient in their farming operations, to publicly supported programs such as the Purchase of Development Rights (PDR) and Transfer of Development Rights (TDR), to changes in the patterns of development, such as conservation subdivisions which promote conservation of agricultural lands and open spaces.

Q:  WHAT IS A CONSERVATION SUBDIVISION?

A:  In a conservation subdivision, reduced restrictions on setbacks and minimum lot sizes allow the builder and developer to modify the manner in which the homes are arranged.  They are designed and planned to conserve the special characteristics of a parcel of land.  Typically, the developer is required to set aside 50% of the development for open space which retains the rural character of the community and maintains open spaces for wildlife, agricultural production or environmental protection.

Q:  WHAT IS A PDR PROGRAM?

A:  Purchase of Development Rights (PDR) is a program that allows landowners to sell the right to develop their land.

All pieces of the property have a "bundle of rights".  For example, an owner may sell the mineral rights but still own and retain the land.  The same concept applies to the development rights.  The landowner may sell off the right to develop the land and still own and retain the land itself.  The rights to develop are retired and held by a non-profit corporation as a conservation easement.

Q:  HOW MUCH DOES THE OWNER GET IF HE SELLS HIS DEVELOPMENT RIGHTS?

A:  The land would be appraised based on its agricultural production potential as well as its value if it were to be sold for development.  The difference between its agricultural production value and the value for development is considered the development rights value.  For example, if the agricultural production value was $2,000 per acre and the value, if sold for development, is $6,000 per acre, the development rights value is $4,000 per acre.  In most programs, the landowner receives between 85 and 100 percent of its development rights value.

Q:  WHO PAYS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT RIGHTS?

A:  In most cases, the cost of a PDR program is supported by residents of the county.  The monies are generated in many ways including donations, sales taxes, real estate transfer taxes, bond issues, and other public revenue.    In almost all cases, the citizens have to vote favorably for the revenue source before a program is successful.  One option which may be available to Portage County citizens is the one-quarter sales tax which was being used to retire the bond to finance the jail.  The jail is paid for and that tax expired.  The county commissioners can ask the votes to approve a similar tax which would be dedicated to farmland preservation.


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Connections to Web Sites

The Ohio State University Related Links

Extension Community Development
http://www-comdev.ag.ohio-state.edu/
Data Center
http://www.ag.ohio-state.edu/~dataunit

State Government
Connect Ohio
http://www.connectohio.com
State of Ohio Front Page
http://www.state.oh.us
Ohio Department of Development
http://www.odod.ohio.gov
Ohio Department of Development, Office of Strategic Research
http://www.odod.ohio.gov/osr/dataline.htm

Legislative Information
Legislative Information Service
http://www.lis.state.oh.us

Data and Demograhics Information
US Bureau of the Census
http://www.census.gov/
American Chamber of Commerce Researchers Association
http://www.accra.org
National Agricultural Statistics Service
http://www.usda.gov/nass/
National Center for Education Statistics
http://www.ed.gov/NCES/
US Geological Society
http://www.usgs.gov/
US Bureau of Labor Statistics
http://www.bls.gov/
US Department of Labor
http://www.dol.gov/
Department of Commerce Economic Statistics
http://www.doc.gov/bureaus/econ.htm 

Miscellaneous Resources

University of Illinois
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/
US Environmental Protection Agency
http://www.epa.gov/
Small Business Administration
http://www.sba.gov/
Center for Rural America
http://www.aces.uiuc.edu/~fra/
Rocky Mountain Institute
http://www.rmi.org/
American Planning Association (APA)
http://www.planning.org/
Sustainability
http://www.subjectmatters.com/indicators/
University of Minnesota's Economic Development Policy Program
http://www.hhh.umn.edu/Centers/SLP/edweb/home.htm
Business Retention & Expansion International
http://www.brei.org/
Kellogg Foundation
http://www.unl.edu/kellogg/index.html
Indiana Economic Development Academy
http://www.bsu.edu/IEDA/

Rural Development Centers
North Central Center for Rural Development
http://www.ag.iastate.edu/centers/rdev/RuralDev.html
Norteast Center for Rural Development
http://www.cas.psu.edu/docs/casconf/nercrd/nercrd.html
South Rural Development Center
http://ext.msstate.edu/srdc/
Western Rural Development Center
http://osu.orst.edu/dept/WRDC/
 

 

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All educational programs conducted by Ohio State University Extension are available to clientele on a nondiscriminatory basis without regard to race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, gender, age, disability or Vietnam-era veteran status.

Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Keith L. Smith, Director, Ohio State University Extension.
TDD # 1 (800) 589-8292 (Ohio only) or (614) 292-1868