Current through August 26, 2024
(1) ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. The department may
provide funding to a governmental unit holding a runoff management grant
agreement under s.
NR 153.21 for any of the following:
(a) Acquire land in fee or an easement
identified in the grant application for the construction of a structural urban
best management practice.
(b)
Acquire land in fee or an easement identified in the grant application for land
which is contributing or will contribute nonpoint source pollution. This
includes property acquisition to support best management practices such as
critical area stabilization, riparian buffers, wetland restoration and the
abandonment or relocation of livestock and livestock facilities.
(c) Acquire land in fee or an easement to
abandon or relocate livestock or livestock facilities provided that any of the
following conditions are met:
1. The
acquisition is an eligible best management practice.
2. If the acquisition amount is greater than
the amount of funding required to install best management practices at the
site, the acquisition may be selected as the cost-effective best management
practice if the department concurs that the acquisition is justified based on
the additional degree of water quality protection.
3. If the acquisition amount is less than the
amount required to install best management practices and the landowner is
unwilling to sell the property right, the department may use the acquisition
amount as a cost-share ceiling on the cost of installing the best management
practice.
(2)
MUTUAL AGREEMENT AND DURATION. The landowner and the department shall mutually
agree to the conducting of an appraisal. Easements, including donated
conservation easements, shall be acquired for perpetuity.
(3) DONATED EASEMENTS. The department may
authorize, in writing, any governmental unit, qualified non-profit
organization, or person to use grant funds under this chapter to enter into
easements or accept a donated conservation easement consistent with the grant
application and runoff management grant. Upon acceptance of a donated easement
under s.
NR 154.03(2)
(c), the department shall appraise the
easement and issue a written opinion on the value or issue a statement of value
of the easement.
(4) GRANTS TO THE
DEPARTMENT FOR EASEMENT PURCHASE. The department may distribute grants and aids
to itself for the purchase of easements in a priority watershed area. For
purposes of this subsection, a priority watershed or priority lake project is
considered to retain its project status through the end of the tenth year
beyond the expiration date of the nonpoint source grant agreement entered into
under s.
NR 120.12.
(5) ACQUISITION PROPOSALS.
(a) A governmental unit requesting runoff
management grant funds under this section for the acquisition of property in
fee or an easement shall submit an acquisition proposal to the department for
its review and approval. The acquisition proposal shall be submitted with the
runoff management grant application or grant amendment request.
(b) The acquisition proposal for fee title or
easement shall include all of the following:
1. A description of the purpose for acquiring
the land and how the acquisition will meet applicable goals of the project for
which the grant is applied.
2. A
copy of the appropriate county, township, topographic, and local land use
planning maps showing the proposed acquisition.
3. A description of how the proposed
acquisition complements other nonpoint source pollution abatement program
efforts.
4. Other information the
department may request.
(c) For fee title acquisition, the following
additional information is required as part of the acquisition proposal:
1. A description of the land management plan
for the property, including a list of any owner-occupants or tenants that
occupy the buildings or land to be acquired, a general time frame for project
completion, and a description of how long-term management will be provided.
Identification of other governmental units that will be involved in management
and their respective roles shall also be included.
2. An estimate of overall acquisition and
annual maintenance costs, including the number of parcels and acres to be
acquired which notes the number of improved parcels involved.
(6) GENERAL PROVISIONS.
(a) Governmental units shall acquire and
manage property acquired with a runoff management grant in accordance with all
applicable local, state, and federal laws and regulations.
(b) After approval of the acquisition
proposal and receipt of a grant from the department, a governmental unit shall
obtain an appraisal for each property.
1. All
appraisals shall be subject to department review and approval.
2. After it has received approval from the
department, the governmental unit may act on the appraisal.
3. All appraisals shall be conducted by a
certified or licensed appraiser as described in ch. 458, Stats., and chs.
SPS
85 to 86.
4. All acquisitions with a fair market value
of more than $350,000 shall require 2 appraisals. The department may require a
second appraisal for property valued under $350,000 if the department finds
that the property presents a difficult appraisal problem or if the first
appraisal is unacceptable.
(c) Property may be purchased only from
willing sellers. The governmental unit shall provide the seller with a just
compensation statement, which identifies the fair market value of the property,
as determined by an appraiser meeting the requirements listed in par. (b) 3.
and which describes the benefits due to the seller in exchange for the transfer
of the seller's property.
(d) If
applicable, relocation plans shall be developed in accordance with ch. Adm
92.
(e) Property acquired with a
runoff management grant shall be maintained and managed in accordance with the
provisions, conditions, and scope description in the grant contract.
(f) A governmental unit may be allowed to
acquire property prior to entering into a runoff management grant agreement,
provided that the governmental unit has received written approval from the
department prior to purchasing the targeted property. The governmental unit
shall submit a written statement to the department, which explains the special
circumstances justifying the need to acquire the property at that time. Prior
to runoff management grant reimbursement for the acquisition, the governmental
unit shall establish the value of the property in accordance with par.
(b).
(g) The governmental unit
shall record in the office of the register of deeds for each county in which
property is located the deed which vests title or a property interest in the
governmental unit and which references the interest of the state of Wisconsin
in the property under the terms of the grant contract.
(7) STATE COST-SHARE RATE.
(a) The maximum allowable state cost-share
rate for the acquisition of property under this chapter is 70 percent, except
that the maximum allowable state cost-share shall be 50 percent when the
purpose of the acquisition is to support a structural urban best management
practice.
(b) The cost share rate
shall be applied to the lesser of the following 2 amounts:
1. The acquisition cost of the
property.
2. The certified
appraisal value as determined by the department and reasonable costs related to
the purchase of the property limited to the cost of appraisals, land surveys,
relocation payments, title evidence, recording fees, historical and cultural
assessments required by the department, and environmental inspections and
assessments. Reasonable costs do not include attorneys fees, environmental
clean up costs, brokerage fees paid by the buyer, real estate transfer taxes,
or any other cost not identified in this subdivision.
(c) The department may not reimburse
acquisition costs related to purchase of the property until the property
acquisition has been completed.
(8) CRITERIA. The department shall consider
the following criteria when determining whether to provide funding for the
proposed acquisition:
(a) The degree to which
the acquisition of the property would provide for the protection or improvement
of water quality.
(b) The degree to
which the acquisition of the property would provide for protection or
improvement of other aspects of the natural ecosystem such as fish, wildlife,
wetlands, or natural beauty.
(c)
The degree to which the acquisition of the property would complement other
watershed management efforts.