![]() (Adjusted tract area is gross acreage minus constrained land including wetlands, floodplains, steep slopes, rock outcrops, lakes and ponds.) The development rights are severed and transferred by a deed of transferable development rights which can be recorded simultaneously with but not before recordation of the conservation easement preserving the sending site. The number of rights available for transfer is calculated by dividing the adjusted tract area by the minimum size requirement for a lot served by on-site septic within the zoning district of the subject parcel. ![]() The conservation easement is permanent but the owner of the site can subsequently buy back development rights if the easement is rescinded through the agreement of all the easement beneficiaries. The easement designates Chestnuthill Township and a conservation organization acceptable to the Township as the beneficiaries. To qualify for transferable rights, at least 80 percent of a sending site must be restricted by conservation easement. Sending sites are identified on the Chestnuthill Township Official Map as having considerations for recreation, watershed protection, parkland, open space or agriculture. In 2002, the Township adopted a transferable development rights ordinance designed to preserve prime farmland, sensitive natural areas and rural character. The Township of Chestnuthill, population 14,418 (2000), lies 70 miles west of New York City in Monroe County, Pennsylvania.
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