A well-funded, politically influential environmental group based in Fauquier County, Va., stands accused of colluding with government officials and real estate moguls to force a local farmer into selling a highly coveted parcel of land.
The Piedmont Environmental Council, a 501(c)(3) tax exempt group, and the husband-wife real estate team of Phillip and Patricia Thomas, who are members of the PEC, lobbied a zoning administrator and members of the elected county Board of Supervisors to issue zoning citations against the property, according to a lawsuit filed in the Fauquier County Circuit Court last September.
Piedmont Environmental Council Charlottesville office. (Photo: Piedmont Environmental Council Twitter)
Matthew Vadum, a senior editor with the Capital Research Center, which studies funding of politically aligned non-profits, describes the PEC as a “well-funded activist group” that is well-positioned to wage legal battles. Indeed, between 2008 and 2012, the PEC pulled in almost $26 million, according to its most recent IRS Form 990.
Notable backers include left-leaning philanthropies such as the Tides Foundation ($155,000 since 2000) and the Surdna Foundation ($150,000 since 2002), as well as environmental donors such as the Agua Fund ($1,777,000 since 2003) and the Mars Foundation ($500,000 since 2004).”
Initial hearings, now tentatively set for this fall, have been delayed for months because, according to Martha Boneta, the Fauquier County farmer who filed the suit, the PEC has declined to turn over documents she requested as part of the discovery process. Boneta sued PEC on behalf of her company, the Piedmont Agricultural Academy.
If Boneta prevails, the PEC would be forced to surrender its authority to conduct investigations of the property known as “Liberty Farm,” “Paris Farm” and other names, which Boneta owns and operates in the Paris, Va., area of the county.
Martha Boneta claims a local environmental group conspired with her county government to harass her with zoning violations. (Photo: Martha Boneta)
The PEC claims in
a document posted online the inspections are necessary to ensure Boneta complies with the terms of a conservation easement that was put in place to “safeguard the historic and scenic values of the property.”
The PEC signed the easement before it sold the farm to Boneta and contends she is bound by its terms.
But in her suit, Boneta argues the PEC overstepped the state law governing easements when it entered into the partnership with Thomas. “In agreeing to assist Thomas in enforcing the conservation easement, either jointly or under Thomas’s name, the PEC exceeded its authority to act as a qualified holder of the Virginia Conservation Easement Act,” the suit says.
The Signal has acquired a copy of a “Joint Representation and Confidentiality Agreement” the PEC entered into with Thomas and his wife in early 2010. The agreement says there is a “mutuality of interest in a common representation” where the legal disputes concerning the Boneta farm are concerned. Thomas is the owner of Thomas and Talbot Real Estate, based in Middleburg, Va. The firm’s website identifies at least four other Thomas and Talbot realtors who are members of the PEC.
What conservation easements are all about
Conservation easements initially were set up to benefit financially distressed landowners who received tax credits in exchange for agreeing to preclude future development on their property. Typically, property owners enter into a legally binding agreement with a non-profit group such as a land trust or government agency. The owner who sells the easement is the “grantor,” and the non-profit group that receives the easement is the “grantee.” The grantor maintains ownership but agrees to terms on the use of the property that assure it will be conserved
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