Z. Smith Reynolds Continues Conservation Support

Foundation makes 3-year grant to CTNC

The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation is continuing its generous support of our conservation efforts with a three-year, $225,000 grant.

The recent gift from the Foundation, based in Winston-Salem, will help us accelerate land and water protection, providing a strong foundation for healthy communities across the state through our support, promotion and representation of North Carolina’s 23 local land trusts, and our protection of land along the Blue Ridge Parkway.

By working with willing landowners to protect their properties, land trusts help protect drinking water supplies, parkland and trails, working farms and forests, wildlife habitat, and other natural areas. In North Carolina, they’re increasingly working with banks and the real estate community to protect foreclosed properties that have high conservation value; connecting more people especially children and their parents with nature; opening more land trust properties to the public; and creating alliances with people and communities who have not traditionally worked with or been served by land trusts.

CTNC helps their work by providing grants, making loans for land acquisitions, leading efforts to promote government funding and policy support for conservation, and building public awareness of the benefits of land conservation. We also work directly with landowners to protect properties along the Blue Ridge Parkway’s natural and scenic corridor.

“The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation’s generous grant is critical to helping CTNC and the land trust community adopt a new definition of shared success that includes not just acres protected but access for all people to conservation’s benefits,” Associate Director Margaret Newbold said. “The Foundation’s longstanding support of land conservation and building healthy communities has made a tremendous difference in quality of life for all North Carolinians. This grant in particular will allow CTNC to help North Carolina’s land trusts carry out new strategies in land and water protection during challenging economic times.”

The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation was established in 1936 as a memorial to the youngest son of the founder of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and has made grants totaling $484 million to recipients in each of North Carolina’s 100 counties. The Foundation currently gives special attention to projects affecting community economic development, the environment, strengthening democracy, pre-collegiate education, and social justice and equity.

Walmart Helps Protect Mountain Landscape

Acres for America grant to conserve 12,000 acres

Our land protection in the Blue Ridge Mountains is getting a major boost thanks to Walmart’s Acres for America program.

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation(NFWF), using funds from the program, awarded a $500,000 grant to partners including CTNC to help protect more than 12,000 acres in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee.

The grant will help conserve a network of six tracts with native brook trout and golden wing warbler habitat, provide public access for people to enjoy the outdoors and protect the natural resources that local communities depend on for clean drinking water and economic vitality. The properties include 36 miles of streams and adjoin hundreds of thousands of acres of existing public lands.

The grant was secured through a collaborative effort by the Blue Ridge Forever coalition of land trusts, CTNC, The Conservation Fund, and Appalachian Trail Conservancy, with support from Trout UnlimitedAppalachian Mountains Joint Venture and others.

“We are thankful to NFWF and Walmart for making this contribution to the future of our Blue Ridge mountains, home of some of the most biologically rich temperate forests in the world,” said Kieran Roe, executive director of Carolina Mountain Land Conservancy, one of the 12 conservation organizations that make up the Blue Ridge Forever coalition. CTNC is also a Blue Ridge Forever member.

The largest single tract targeted for the grant funds is Rocky Fork in Tennessee, at nearly 10,000 acres. The Conservation Fund, Cherokee National Forest, and the State of Tennessee acquired it in 2008 in cooperation with Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy. The grant money will assist in the protection of the final section of Rocky Fork later this year.

The remaining five tracts total 2,240 acres with 21 miles of streams in North Carolina’s Ashe, Avery, Henderson and McDowell counties. They include a 520-acre tract in Avery County that CTNC is actively working to protect.

Acres for America is a 10-year, $35 million commitment that began in 2005 between Walmart and the NFWF to preserve one acre of wildlife habitat in the United States for every acre of land developed by the company through 2015. To date, Acres for America has invested in projects in 24 states, protecting more than 687,000 acres.

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