The Disappearing Landscape in The Guardian
In the Saturday, July 19, 2008 edition of The Guardian there’s a cover story titled The Disappearing Landscape that reviews land use issues on Prince Edward Island and mentions the work of the Land Trust.
The article reads, in part:
With the way farming has been going, farmers on P.E.I. are keener than ever to sell their land, says John Cousins, a farmer in Park Corner.
“We’re like the Piping Plover. We’re a dying breed,’’ said Cousins, who’s also on the board of the Lucy Maud Montgomery Land Trust.
The trust’s mandate is to preserve the scenic agricultural land along P.E.I.’s North Shore by finding alternatives to
development.Cousins sold the development rights to part of his land to the land trust, so he could keep farming it.
The land trust has bought the development rights to about 130 acres of land between French River and Sea View.
But the price of land has been steadily rising and the trust is having trouble raising enough money to buy development rights.
If buying five acres of land or less, the average price per acre for all types of land nearly tripled between 1994, when the land trust was founded, and 2004. It rose from about $16,500 to about $43,000.The trust has been petitioning the provincial and federal governments for support.”

