Mainspring Conservation Trust

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Property Purchased by Regional Land Trust Will Connect USFS Lands

November 28, 2017

November 28, 2017 – Almost 16 acres in western Macon County will provide better access through U.S. Forest Service land after Mainspring Conservation Trust recently acquired the property.

Known as “Rocky Cove,” the property is close to and in the viewshed of hikers on the Appalachian Trail. Mainspring will maintain the property until the Forest Service is able to acquire the parcel from the regional nonprofit.

“Rocky Cove is an example of one of our highest priorities to be added to the National Forest,” Mike Wilkins, Nantahala District Ranger says. “It is surrounded by the National Forest on three sides and is located almost a mile down a gated Forest Service road that is managed as a linear wildlife opening.”

Mainspring Land Conservation Manager Jordan Smith says this purchase helps connect Forest Service lands to each other, which has benefits to the public outside of access. “We’re happy to work with one of our biggest partners in conservation to protect important tracts such as Rocky Cove.  Inholdings in U.S. Forest Service lands often create issues when it comes to land management activities or during disasters such as the 2016 wildfires.”

Filed Under: News, Press Room

Asheville Citizen-Times: Nantahala National Forest Grows With Protected Land

November 27, 2017

By Karen Chavez
November 27, 2017

FRANKLIN – A highly prized 50-acre slice of forest will remain forever untouched as it officially becomes part of the Nantahala National Forest.

The relatively small Fires Creek parcel on the Cherokee-Clay county line of the 500,000-acre forest was the object of a contentious, decadelong battle among the private landowners, the U.S. Forest Service and forest visitors who wanted to see a wildernesslike setting remain in its natural state.

Everyone involved seemed to walk away satisfied Nov. 20 when the nonprofit Mainspring Conservation Trust closed on the property to keep Fires Creek forever preserved in conservation.

Click here to read the rest of the story on the ACT website. 

Filed Under: News, Press Room Tagged With: conservation, land purchase

Mainspring Picks Up Second Brownfield Property

November 14, 2017

Mainspring’s newly acquired brownfield property, as seen from Mainspring’s Franklin office grounds

November 13, 2017 – Ongoing efforts to revitalize the Franklin River District gained momentum this week when Mainspring Conservation Trust acquired another .67 acres in the heart of the area.

The regional land trust purchased the former Simpson Gas and Oil Company at 544 East Main Street, directly across from Mainspring’s Franklin office. Mainspring has entered into a brownfields agreement with the North Carolina Division of Environmental Quality (NCDEQ) to redevelop the former petroleum distribution facility into green space that will complement the historic  Nikwasi Mound.

A brownfield site is defined as “real property, the expansion, redevelopment, or reuse of which may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant.” Simpson Gas and Oil sold kerosene, fuel, oil, gasoline and diesel from 1951 to the mid-2000s.

“This acquisition has been in the works for more than two years,” says Ben Laseter, Mainspring Associate Director. “After we went through the extensive learning process of working with state and federal agencies on the brownfield property next door to our office, we felt like we could use that knowledge with other contaminated properties that affect significant cultural sites or properties with high conservation values. This property made perfect sense; it’s close to the Little Tennessee River, near Nikwasi Mound, and can help improve Franklin’s aesthetic at the eastern entrance to downtown.”

Laseter says projects like this could not be successful without the critical support of hundreds of individual donors to Mainspring, state and federal environmental agencies, and local entities, including the Town of Franklin, Macon County, and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. “When stakeholders, funders, and governments are willing to help Mainspring bring dollars into the economy to help us purchase, clean up and restore important lands, we have the ability to think outside the box, and that makes a huge impact in our region.”

Mainspring is currently pursuing grant funding for cleanup of the site, which it hopes to complete in 2019.

Filed Under: News, Press Room

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