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Moore honored for saving farmland with CFT

SHARON —Sharon resident Nick Moore was honored with a 2012 Farmland Preservation Pathfinder Award, presented to him at the annual meeting of the Working Lands Alliance (WLA) on Dec. 3 at the state capitol in Hartford.Leah Mayor, WLA project director, said, “The awards, established in 2003, recognize individuals and groups that have significantly advanced farmland preservation through leadership, advocacy, planning and education.”Moore, interviewed by The Lakeville Journal the following week, said he was surprised to be one of the two individuals honored with the award.The Working Lands Alliance is a coalition of more than 200 land trusts and similar organizations in Connecticut. Its mission is to bolster the state’s purchase and developments rights program, which began in 1978 under Gov. Ella Grasso.Funding for the state program fell through, so the WLA was created in 1998 to help keep those programs going. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy spoke at this year’s annual meeting, before the awards were presented. Moore was given the Pathfinder Award, which is award to those who “have logged countless hours and great successes in the name of preserving Connecticut’s most valuable and vulnerable resource—our farmland,” Mayor said in a WLA press release.Moore is a member of the board and a past president of the Connecticut Farmland Trust, which has protected 27 farms and more than 2,100 acres since it was founded in 2002. The trust just earned accreditation from the Working Lands Alliance in September 2012. Moore owns a farm in Sharon that is leased to Scott Garay and Nina Bennet, who operate a dairy farm with their own herd of between 150 and 175 registered Holsteins. It is one of the last remaining active dairy farms in Litchfield County. Moore and his wife, Leslie, have three grown children, two of whom live in New York and one who lives in Scotland.He is very active in Christ Church Episcopal in Sharon, where he is helping to restore the 1818 steeple, which was taken down several years ago.Moore has served on the board of the Salisbury Visiting Nurse Association and the board of the Town Hill School (which is now part of the Indian Mountain School). He was chairman of the Zoning Board of Appeals and served on the Sharon Land Trust. He is active with the Land Trust Alliance.But the Connecticut Farmland Trust, he said, is his real passion.When asked what current land preservation issues are important, Moore replied, “One is the fiscal cliff and the idea that charitable deductions will be cut back or disallowed. A lot of land trusts and nonprofits, especially in this area, depend on generous charitable contributions.” “When you look around,” he added, “you see things that would not have happened without such support, like the Twin Oaks field.”Speaking about the Farmland Trust, Moore said, “It’s a government program that actually works.”

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Fallen tree downs power lines, blocks Route 112

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Photo by Nathan Miller

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Juneteenth graduation celebrates Berkshire’s next generation of leaders

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Provided

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