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Richard H. Bennett Ph.D., Chairman <br />Hawaii Island Council, Hawaiian Islands Land Trust <br />P. 0. Box 895 <br />Honaunau, HI 96726 <br />December 13, 2018 <br />County of Hawaii, Charter Commission <br />Dear Commissioners, <br />Please hear this passionate appeal. On behalf of the land conservation community of our island, <br />I want to go on record as unyieldingly opposing any reduction in the funding formula for the <br />Open Space Fund (Public Access, Open Space and Natural Resources Preservation) including <br />the maintenance portion. <br />I make this plea for all of us that cherish the many unique lands that sustain us physically and <br />spiritually. Moreover, I make this plea to maintain the land fund. Lands that are protected by <br />private and public funds is a cost-effective measure that conserves county financial resources. <br />On first blush, this may seem counter -intuitive, but please allow me to elaborate. <br />Over the decades I have had the honor to serve in leadership positions in several land trusts, <br />including the Hawaiian Island Land Trust. There are about 1500 Land Trusts in the United <br />States and several in the state of Hawai`i, and they have worked most effectively with the <br />county. <br />Land Trusts are nonprofit corporations that work to protect lands in a wholly voluntary and cost- <br />effective manner. Lands in trust are a great benefit to their communities at minimal cost to the <br />operations of government. The Hawaiian Islands Land Trust (HILT) has worked with PONC on <br />numerous project lands and assisted this all important mission. We look forward to continuing <br />this partnership. <br />As a Trustee of the Sonoma Land Trust in California in 1995, a friend and co-founder of the <br />Marin Agricultural Land Trust became the CEO of the American Farmland Trust. Ralph Grossi <br />working with the economists of the USDA Economic Research Service, began analyses called <br />Cost of Services Studies. These now include over 151 county -based studies. These studies <br />project the costs to local government that is incurred when undeveloped lands are developed for <br />residential, commercial or agriculture use. The studies compare the property tax revenues each <br />major land uses incur and contrast that to the costs of government services required for each. <br />In summary agricultural land use, and commercial land use generate more tax revenue than the <br />services they require. In distinct contrast, residential and especially rural residential <br />development incurs about $1.27 dollars or more, in some counties over two dollars, for the cost <br />of services for each one dollar in tax revenue paid by the land owner. That is an average 27% <br />government revenue deficit accross 151 communities, for residential lands and its people that <br />require services. <br />An example county, Skagit in Washington State is similar to Hawaii County in that is mostly <br />rural undeveloped forest and agriculture farmlands, dotted by small communities. It has a <br />population of 125,000 and a land area of 1.7 thousand square miles. <br />Comm. No. 21.9 <br />