The TCC helps conserve & manage special lands for recreation & wildlife
updated March 2025
The Town of Tamworth owns several properties that were donated to Town for conservation purposes. The Conservation Commission stewards these lands and maintains trails on some of them.
The Conservation Commission also works with landowners who want to conserve their land, as long as the property meets the Commission's priorities: 1) protecting the shores of ponds and streams, 2) conserving agricultural land and/or enhancing connectivity for wildlife between the Sandwich Range & the Ossipee Mountains.
Much of this work is in cooperation with other organizations, including...
Chocorua Lake Conservancy
The Society for Protection of NH Forests
Lakes Region Conservation Trust
Green Mountain Conservation Group
Conserving Local Lands & the Impacts on Local Taxes
Over several decades in New Hampshire, there have been occasional local "cost of community services" studies that "indicate that, for each dollar of tax revenues generated, open space land requires less than one dollar in public services. The same cannot be said for residential development." This is because, when land is developed, it requires municipal services like fire & police protection, and support for schools and roads. "These studies join others conducted in New England that show open space land returns more in property taxes than it costs in public services. These studies are not anti-development; they are simply a tool for local officials to understand their property tax situation more thoroughly, so informed decisions can be made." (Quotes from this summary of Current Use - it's an older document, but the state's Current Use program has been pretty much the same for a long time).
The largest recent (2022) New-England-wide study of data from 1400 towns for 1990-2015 includes an excellent discussion of past studies. Its overall findings: "These results provide evidence that land protection does not have a substantial impact on property taxes," with an average of less than $1 in increased property tax per $100,000 value, with some higher (up to $30 per $100,000 value) and some lower (i.e. property tax reductions) in different towns. Email ccchair@tamworthnh.gov for a copy of that paper for your personal use.
In Tamworth, the Conservation Commission is the local steward of town conservation lands & trails and some conservation easements. Other non-profit land trusts conserve other properties. The Town - and the State of NH (e.g. Hemenway & White Lake) - were given conservation lands decades ago, but there have been no additional Town-owned conservation lands for a long time. In recent decades, conservation of open space has been at the discretion of land-owners. The Conservation Commission has facilitated some of these conservation efforts. We use strict criteria to evaluate each situation to ensure it has significant public benefit. And the Select Board must approve every such transaction involving the Town. The Commission always welcomes input & discussion. Read more on these pages, and come to a Commission meeting.
What is Conservation Land?
As the name implies, conservation land is land that is intended to be kept in a natural or near-natural state. Development of the property is either entirely prohibited or restricted to improvements necessary for certain allowed activities. These activities are most commonly agriculture, forestry, and recreation. A property can become conservation land by either of two methods:
Fee-simple ownership. These properties are owned outright by either land trust organizations or government agencies whose missions include the protection of natural resources. For example, the US Forest Service, NH Fish and Game, NH Division of Forests and Lands, NH Division of Parks and Recreation, and the Town of Tamworth all own property in Tamworth that is considered to be conservation land. Private land trusts that own land in Tamworth include the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests, Lakes Region Conservation Trust, Green Mountain Conservation Group, and Chocorua Lake Conservancy, among others.
Current Use. This is a NH state program that provides an incentive to landowners through property tax reductions. “The Current Use tax incentive is available to qualifying landowners who maintain their land as undeveloped forest, farm, or open space. Current Use supports wildlife conservation and outdoor recreation by encouraging the preservation of open land throughout the state” (see Fish & Game website for further information). Land placed in Current Use can still, eventually, be fully developed and is not permanently protected. However, a fee is charged when the land is taken out of Current Use by the landowner.
See this history and discussion of Current Use, including a summary of local tax implications.
Conservation Easement. In order to grasp what a conservation easement is, it helps to understand that land ownership consists of a bundle of separate rights. For example, a landowner could sell the mineral rights to a petroleum company while still keeping their property to use as a residence or business. Likewise, the landowner could grant a right-of-way across the property for use for a road or utility line. In a conservation easement, the landowner is relinquishing certain rights of development and granting them to a land trust. In return, the land trust agrees to not exercise the rights and to monitor and defend the property against anyone who tries to exercise the relinquished rights. This is a legally binding contract, usually publicly recorded in the Registry of Deeds, and usually extends in perpetuity.
Deed Restriction or Deed Covenant. Placing restrictions in a land ownership deed regarding what can be done with a property is long-time practice. In NH, this form of land protection was advanced by the Chocorua Lake Conservancy beginning in the mid-1900s. The difference between a deed restriction and the more modern conservation easement, is that a deed restriction does not as clearly and formally transfer any rights. The use of conservation easement has generally replaced the use of deed restrictions for conservation purposes. See the CLC discussion regarding their historic and current land protections around Chocorua Lake.
For more information on conservation easements, visit these pages:
Land Trust Alliance
The Nature Conservancy
Conservation Land in Tamworth
These three pages outline how the Conservation Commission is involved in land conservation:
The Legacy: early land protection efforts
Local Support: land conservation in town planning
How Much does this Cost the Town?
Nothing. In fact, conservation land subsidizes the town residents. Every municipal cost of services study done in NH has shown that taxes collected from conservation land are greater than the cost of services rendered for the properties. Conservation land is assessed and taxed like other property, sometimes at a lower tax rate. But it doesn't add to local school enrollment, emergency services, or most other town expenses. In addition, conservation land helps keep the landscape in a condition attractive to tourism, vacation home owners, hunters and fishermen, as well as contributing to a healthy forest industry. A recent study showed that employment rates rise after land is conserved. In total, conservation land more than pays for itself and attracts additional monetary benefits.
How does all this Affect the Future Development of Tamworth?
It is difficult if not impossible to estimate what the town could or would look like down the road. However, a recent Build-out Analysis completed for the Planning Board provides some perspectives (2025; see it here).
Remember that demographic trends are always subject to change, so any estimate may need revision twenty years down the road. And because the creation of conservation land is mainly up to the landowner, it is the most difficult factor to predict. However, it's a virtual certainty that more properties in Tamworth will become conservation land. All the Town can do is decide whether or not to continue to participate by identifying candidate properties that are consistent with the goals of the Town Master Plan and the Conservation Commission’s and Town’s priorities.
Easement monitoring is a critical responsibility of the Conservation Commission.
Conservation Easement Process gives a brief explanation of how TCC acquires an easement.
For more information: ccchair@tamworthnh.gov.