Ohio Admin. Code 901-2-05 - Application ranking system
(A) Prior to accepting applications for
matching grants, the director shall notify and make available, through various
farm organizations, charitable organizations, and political subdivisions the
following:
(1) The procedure for applying for
matching grants;
(2) The
application for matching grants; and
(3) The application ranking system which is
outlined in paragraphs (B) and (C) of this rule and section
901.22 of the Revised
Code.
(B) The
application ranking system shall be comprised of several criterion as indicated
in paragraph (C) of this rule. The ranking system will assign a score for each
criterion based on the weighted score range as indicated. The total score for
all criterion
criteria is one hundred points. Prior to each
application funding round the director, with the advice of the farmland
preservation advisory board, or if a certified local sponsor is participating,
the certified local sponsor shall determine the specific value within this
range for each ranking criterion as indicated in paragraph (C) of this rule.
Applications approved by the director will then be submitted for phase two
evaluation.
(C) The application
ranking system criterion
criteria shall be comprised as follows:
(1) Soil types and agricultural
productivity;
. Range: fifteen to thirty points. Emphasis for
matching grants is placed on soils which are classified as prime or officially
designated unique or locally important.
(2) Protected areas. Range: fifteen to thirty
points. Emphasis for matching grants is placed on land that is adjacent to or
in close proximity, in a formula approved during the certification process by
the director or otherwise mathematically defined by the director, to
agricultural land or other land that is conducive to agriculture, whether such
land is in the process of being protected or is already permanently protected
such that a buffer from development exists between land proposed for
agricultural easement and areas that have been developed or likely will be
developed for purposes other than agriculture. These protected areas include,
but are not limited to, the following:
(a)
Land that has already been permanently protected from development through
agricultural or conservation easements;
(b) Flood pools and other normally
undevelopable waterbodies;
(c)
Parks, open spaces, forests, nature preserves,
and other natural areas that are not protected from development through
conservation easements, but have permanent deed
restrictions or other restrictions which the director determines could protect
agricultural land;
(d) Publicly
owned agricultural research lands that the director determines could protect
agricultural land; and
(e)
Airports, military bases, or other developed areas that the director determines
could be appropriately buffered by agricultural land.
(3) Use of best management practices
including approved conservation plans;
. Range: five to ten points. Emphasis for matching
grants may be given to, but is not limited to, the landowner who certification
from the natural resource conservation service, soil and water conservation
district, or other generally accepted qualified organization, as determined by
the director, stating that the operation of the application property includes
best management practices utilizing appropriate conservation standards, has a
forestry management plan approved by the Ohio department of natural resources
or qualified organization, as determined by the director, if applicable, and
has a history of substantial compliance with federal and state agricultural
laws.
(4) Development pressure.
Range: fifteen to thirty points. Emphasis for
matching grants is placed on farmland faced with potential development pressure
that is likely to affect the ability of the farm operator to conduct
agricultural activities or cause conversion of the agricultural land to
nonagricultural uses. Development factors may include, but are not limited to,
the following:
(a) Roadway distance from any
border of the property to sanitary sewer and water;
(b) Roadway distance to the nearest freeway
interchanges;
(c) Application
property public roadway frontage; and
(d) Development pressure as measured by
activity such as an increase in lot splits, well or septic permits, traffic
counts, or other indicators determined by the director to accurately measure
such pressure.
(5) A
local comprehensive land use plan which identifies areas for agricultural
protection. Range: fifteen to thirty points.
Emphasis for matching grants may be placed on, but is not limited to,
application properties which are located within a designated agricultural area
of a political subdivision's long range
long-range plan and where the political subdivision
has adopted specific action to protect the area, such as zoning where
agriculture is the predominant land use, a commitment not to extend utilities,
or initiate any non-agricultural development activity.
(6) Other criteria as approved by the
director. Range fifteen to thirty points. These criteria include, but are not
limited to, the following:
(a) Application
property location relative to a metropolitan statistical area;
(b) Application property enrollment in the
agricultural security area program;
(c) Historic or archaeological
designation;
(d) Century farm
designation by the director; and
(e) Application property with local match
higher than the required twenty-five per cent minimum, through cash or
donation.
(D)
For each funding round, the director may adopt some
or all of
guidelines, including but not limited
to, the following guidelines:
(1) A limit on the number of application
properties, acres, or dollar amount funded per county;
(2) A limit on the number of application
properties per grantor;
(3) A limit
on the dollar amount funded per certified local sponsor;
(4) A maximum dollar amount per acre of
matching grant funds; and
or
(5) A
maximum dollar amount of matching grant funds per landowner shall not exceed
one million dollars, as required by section
901.22 of the Revised
Code.
Notes
Promulgated Under: 119.03
Statutory Authority: 901.22
Rule Amplifies: 901.21, 901.22, 901.23
Prior Effective Dates: 02/01/2002, 02/21/2005, 03/21/2006, 10/28/2010, 01/07/2013, 03/21/2016
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