Discretionary Easements

Discretionary Easements are a means of reducing property taxes on a parcel of land that is less than ten acres in size, which does not qualify for current use, but which has certain other characteristics which the town desires to preserve. These characteristics are broadly defined in NH RSA 79-C3.

In order to qualify for a discretionary easement the following must occur:

    1. Complete a Discretionary Easement Application with the town Tax Assessor.
    2. The Conservation Commission will review the application and make a favorable recommendation to the town council.
    3. The Town Council will approve or deny the request. The Town council is allowed by NH law to deny requests based solely on the loss of tax revenue.

 

Derry Conservation Commission

Discretionary Easement Review Criteria

This policy will be used by the Conservation Commission to make recommendations to the town council on whether an applicant’s land qualifies for a discretionary easement by meeting the tests of demonstrated public benefit under RSA 79-C:3 II section (a), (b), and (c)

Applicant can qualify using any one of the following sections: A1, A2, B, or C

RSA 79-C:3 Qualifying Land

II. (a) (1) General Public has regular opportunity for access to and use of the land for pedestrian purposes

To qualify the land must meet the first two criteria (under (a)(1)) AND at least one other of the following conditions:

II.(a)(2) and the land has conservation and recreational values which make it attractive for public use.

To qualify the land must provide at least one conservation and one recreational value:

Conservation values:

Recreation values:

II(b) A relatively natural habitat for fish, wildlife, or plants or similar ecosystems(must meet criteria for IIB(1) AND one or more conditions under IIB(2))

(1) Relatively natural state shall mean land in which native trees and shrubs are allowed to grow without cutting. The land shall not be actively farmed, or logged and the land must not be grassed. The terrain must not have evidence of past or active disturbance by mining ,grading or man-made excavations.

  1. (and) Rare or endangered or threatened species are present;

Rare, Endangered, or Threatened species must be documented by the NH Natural Heritage Inventory

(or) property must abut town or state owned conservation areas:

(or) property must represent a high quality native terrestrial or aquatic ecosystem.

 

II.(c) Preservation of open space land where:

(1) There is scenic enjoyment by the general public from a public way or from public waters where at least one of the following exist:

(2) (or) The open space protection is pursuant to a clearly delineated federal, state, or local conservation policy.[ I.e. Local Open Space & Recreation Master Plan, State of NH Office of State Planning document, or related federal document (Land & Water Conservation Fund document).

A favorable recommendation by the Conservation Commission does not guarantee that a discretionary easement will be granted. The town council must approve of all discretionary easements.