University of Illinois McHenry County Extension notes
For details, call the Extension at (815) 338-3737 or stop in at 1102 McConnell Road, Woodstock.
A new program offered by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources can help qualified landowners to reduce their property taxes while providing natural resource habitats.
The program is the Illinois "Conservation Stewardship Program." It will be applicable to 2008 property tax valuations that are payable in 2009. It provides property tax incentives for landowners who develop and follow conservation management plans for woodlands, prairies or wetlands.
Applications and details are now available online at dnr.state.il.us under the IDNR home page "What's New" section.
Land accepted into the Conservation Stewardship Program will be valued at 5 percent of market value for property tax purposes.
Landowners who wish to receive the special valuation for unimproved land provided by this law are required to prepare a Conservation Management Plan according to rules developed by the Department of Natural Resources. That plan will describe how the land will be managed to protect and maintain environmental resources.
When a Conservation Management Plan is approved, DNR will notify the Department of Revenue. Revenue will then notify the appropriate county assessor of the properties that have qualified for the special valuation and the necessary adjustment in the valuation will be made.
Sale or transfer of land enrolled in the Conservation Stewardship Program does not affect the valuation of the land unless the acreage requirement is no longer met or the use of the land changes.
Land eligible for enrollment includes five or more adjacent acres of unimproved land (unimproved land means woodlands, prairie, wetlands or other vacant and undeveloped land that is not used for any residential or commercial purpose that materially disturbs the land).
Other details of land eligibility are on the Web site. Submission of a conservation management plan to DNR will be treated as compliance with the requirements of that plan until DNR can review the plan.
If a landowner fails to comply with their approved conservation management plan, the land will be removed from the program and the landowner will be required to pay the difference between the actual taxes paid and what the taxes would have been without the reduced valuation.
People with questions about the Conservation Stewardship Program or the application process can e-mail dnr.cmp@illinois.gov. Questions will be answered by return e-mail unless you indicate a preference for a phone call and include your phone number.