Devilβs Lake expansion highlights imminent loss of Knowles-Nelson funding

A sign acknowledging Stewardship program support at Firemen's Park in Verona. (Photo by Henry Redman/Wisconsin Examiner)
Early last month, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources announced a deal to add 100 acres toΒ Devilβs Lake State Park, expanding recreational opportunities at one of the DNRβs most popular properties. The move also calls attention to the dwindling life of the Knowles-Nelson Stewardship grant program that made the acquisition possible.Β
The nearly 40-year-old stewardship grant program has long been a bipartisan success story, allowing the purchase and protection of hundreds of thousands of acres of land across the state.Β
Growing opposition to the program within a subset of the Republicans in control of both chambers of the state Legislature β stemming from a combination of antagonism toward land conservation and concerns about the property tax base of Northwoods communities β stymied multiple legislative efforts to re-authorize the program beyond its set expiration at the end of June.Β
The Devilβs Lake purchase marks what could be one of the last major actions of the stewardship grant program, which has allocated more than $1.2 billion to conserve more than 700,000 acres of Wisconsin land over its lifetime.Β
The program had about $5.5 million remaining as of early April, according to DNR spokesperson Molly Meister. That money is divided into a number of categories, with $2.9 million earmarked for acquiring general easements β agreements with landowners that conserve and protect the land without transferring ownership β and $1.3 million set aside for general land acquisitions. Another $666,667 is meant for acquiring easements specifically for the Ice Age Trail, plus $8,333 for Ice Age Trail land acquisitions. An additional $600,000 is set aside for acquiring land for county forests.Β
Meister told the Wisconsin Examiner in an email that the money set aside for the DNR to acquire land itself is expected to be fully used by the time the program expires, while the money set aside for easements will largely be used, but the exact amount is dependent on the agency finding interested landowners.Β
βWe are currently negotiating with landowners who have expressed a willing interest in selling their land to the department and anticipate all Stewardship general fee acquisition funds to be encumbered before the end of June,β she said.Β Easement acquisitions, Ice Age Trail (both fee and easement), and County Forest acquisition is a similar process, but as you have noted, depends on willing landowners looking to acquire an easement versus an outright purchase in the remaining months. We expect a significant amount, but not all, of these funds will be encumbered before the end of June.β
While the program is set to expire, there are ongoing Knowles-Nelson projects around the state that have already been funded through the grant program yet wonβt be completed for a few years. Meister said that program staff will close out those active projects before moving to other jobs within the DNR. The rest of the agency has also faced significant cutbacks in recent decades, due to budget constraints and Republican opposition to environmental protection initiatives.Β
βIt will take several years to close out currently active projects. Staff will continue to work on finishing up these projects,β Meister said. βAfter these projects are closed out, DNR staff will continue working on other department priorities. Over the past 20 years, we have lost over 500 FTE positions, so there is always more work to do.β
David Grusznski, the Milwaukee programs director for The Conservation Fund, the land conservation non-profit that facilitated the DNRβs purchase of the Devilβs Lake property, told the Examiner that through the stewardship program, the DNR has often been able to function as the last piece of the funding puzzle for projects that conserve land and provide access to that land for the public.Β
βItβs very rare that one pot of money funds an entire acquisition, so money is always being leveraged with other peopleβs money,β he said. βSo without the state stewardship funding being able to bring in a portion of that money, we, a lot of partners, are going to be unable to leverage federal dollars, state, city or county dollars that may be available. And weβre going to have to really rely pretty heavily on private fundraising, which is going to be extremely difficult.β
Now, he said, non-profits and land trusts across the state are coming to terms with the pending loss β which will push planned projects years into the future while putting organizations across the state in direct competition over the same pot of private philanthropy money.Β
βI think this is all really just starting to set in with a lot of people across the state,β Grusznski said, βas far as the money is not there β what do we do?β
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