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The Mountain Conservation Trust of Georgia (MCTGA) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit land trust that promotes land protection, collaborative partnerships and education in order to conserve natural resources, especially the mountains and foothills of North Georgia, founded in 1991.
Kentucky Natural Lands Trust (Kentucky) Office of Kentucky Nature Preserves (Kentucky) Oklahoma Native Plant Society (Oklahoma) Southern Environmental Law Center (Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia) Tennessee Native Plant Society (Tennessee) Texas Campaign for the Environment (Texas) Torreya Guardians (Georgia)
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Lula Lake Land Trust is an 8,000 acre land trust that includes Lula Lake and Lula Falls in the area around Lookout Mountain, Georgia outside Chattanooga, Tennessee. The area includes hiking trails and viewpoints. The property is accessible on set days at 5000 Lula Lake Road. [1]
Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1962. It consists of 2,762 acres (11.18 km 2) of saltwater marsh, grassland, mixed deciduous woods, and cropland located on an abandoned military airfield in McIntosh County, Georgia, north of the intersection of Route 131 and Harris Neck Airport Road, about 30 miles (48 km) southwest of Savannah, Georgia.
The Georgia Land Conservation Program (GLCP) works to permanently protect land and water resources in the U.S. state of Georgia through public/private partnerships. [1] Created in 2005 by former Governor Sonny Perdue through the Georgia Land Conservation Act, [ 2 ] the GLCP provides grants, low-interest loans, and tax credits to achieve ...
A community land trust or (CLT) is a nonprofit corporation that holds land on behalf of a place-based community, while serving as the long-term steward for affordable housing, community gardens, civic buildings, commercial spaces and other community assets on behalf of a community.
New Communities was a 5,700-acre (23 km 2) land trust and farm collective owned and operated by approximately a dozen black farmers from 1969 to 1985. Once one of the largest-acreage African American-owned properties in the United States, it was situated in Southwest Georgia.