saving the land: columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property

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  • 7/30/2019 Saving the Land: Columbia Farmer Plans the Future of His Historic Property

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    COLUMBIA MISSOURIAN

    Saving the land: Columbia farmer plans thefuture of his historic property

    ByMatthew Schacht

    December 5, 2012 | 6:00 a.m. CST

    Cattle eat feed Nov. 19 on Alan Easley's 105-acre farm just south of Columbia. Easley is keeping the

    cattle farm but selling a 20-acre plot of land across the road, which will be the first time the land has

    been out of the Easley family since the farm started 170 years ago. | Kile Brewer

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    Housing developments can be seen in the distance Tuesday afternoon as a gate hangs open at plot

    of land owned by Alan Easley. The plot is a part of Easley's family farm that he has decided to sell,

    opening up an opportunity for more housing developments to move into the currently rural area.

    | Kile Brewer

    Alan Easley drives his Dodge pickup away from his herd of cattle after feeding them the morning of

    Nov. 19. Easley's cattle stay on his 105-acre farm on the east side of Bearfield Road as the road has

    become too busy for him to move cattle to the 20-acre field across the street. | Kile Brewer

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

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    After feeding cattle on Nov. 19, Alan Easley stands outside the original barn on his family farm.

    Easley has recently decided to sell a portion of his family's land. | Kile Brewer

    Alan Easley stands Nov. 19 facing the barn on his family farm. Easley has worked on the land his

    whole life, but he's decided to sell a 20-acre portion that has become unused. | Kile Brewer

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    Alan Easley straddles a gate outside the barn on his property south of Columbia. "I couldn't do that

    before I got my new knee from Sears," Easley said after hopping off the gate, referring to the knee

    replacement surgery he had recently. | Kile Brewer

    The original farmhouse sits on Alan Easley's 105-acre farm just south of Columbia. Besides some

    additions, the house is 140 years old and has been in the family since it was built. Easley's son lives

    in the house currently. | Kile Brewer

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    The Easley family owned 378.67 acres in 1875, according to this plat map provided by the Missouri

    State Historical Society. The amount of land owned by the Easleys fluctuated over the decades, but

    the family always maintained a farm in the area. The map also contains other familiar family names,

    such as the Lenior family, which donated land for the Lenior retirement community adjacent to U.S.

    63. | Matthew Schacht

    In 1993, the Easleys owned about 106 acres, according to this plat map from the State Historical

    Society. Alan Easley's cattle graze on this parcel today. In 2004, the Philips land next door would be

    purchased by the city and later become the A. Perry Philips Park. | Matthew Schacht

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    number of century farms in each

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    On the next hill over, he can show you an empty barn where his

    grandfather Edward Easley Sr. kept work horses and mules. The

    barn's frame is held together without nails, its beams locked

    together by a jigsaw puzzle of beams, wooden pegs and joints. The

    walls of the red barn are rotting up from the ground.

    Easley points across the yard toward a sunken area of earth wherehis father kept a root cellar. A flagstone pathway still leads to the

    cellar's doorway. Easley got rid of the cellar after it flooded. Still, no

    matter how much dirt he piles onto the spot, the cellar's footprint

    refuses to disappear.

    Next to the ruined cellar is a white, wooden farmhouse. The front

    rooms are the oldest, built in 1872, Easley says. The house's crumbling porch is decorated with

    antique wooden trim, popular after the Civil War. Cedar trees shade the yard. Easley knows which one

    had a swing hanging from it when he was a child.

    Across the street is the 21-acre pasture. Easley grazed cattle there last winter but sold it to developer

    Andy Beasley this year. On Monday, the Columbia City Council approved Beasley's request to rezone

    the land for single-family housing.

    Next year, Beasley plans to build a 67-lot subdivision called The Village at Bearfield.

    In a Nov. 8 letter to the city council, Easley asked the city to grant the rezoning request.

    "Development seems to be the only feasible option for the Easley farm," he wrote.

    Easley rests arthritic hands on an azure blue farm gate. Behind its metal bars sits the idle field that

    now belongs to Beasley.

    "Dirt-moving machines will probably be here by late December or early January, if the ground's not

    frozen," he says in a tone appropriate for a funeral.

    The farmer

    Jeff Easley, Alan's son, says his father works hard.

    I always try to get him to do something for himself, but he never does. Did you see that truck he was

    driving? He buys them when they're about to fall apart.

    He deserves to take it easy, Jeff Easley says. Asked if he ever wanted to be a farmer, Jeff smiles and

    gazes into the distance. Hell no, he says.

    Alan Easley is standing nearby. He says that when Jeff was a teenager, his son found a way to break

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    almost every piece of farm equipment Easley offered. Now Jeff likes to fix motorcycles.

    Easley still raises about 25 cows on the old farm, but he can't work like he used to. His hands are like

    vise grips, but fat knuckles show the arthritis that can make threading a nut onto a bolt tricky. He

    limps on a bad knee. When he lifts a metal farm gate, he lowers his head and grimaces so no one can

    see.

    Easley loves to tell stories. He'll tell you about the time he found a meth lab in his barn. He didn't

    know what it was, so he threw the buckets of chemicals in a trash can.

    He whoops.

    That stuff's dangerous," he says with an odd sort of merriment about escaping death. "I could have

    killed myself."

    Easley writes many of his stories. He's been published several times in farm and tractor magazines. In

    one article, he discusses his love for old farm stuff.

    "As long as it doesn't fall apart when I pick it up, it's good enough for me," he wrote.

    The farmland

    Easley knows that a developer could call him any day with a lucrative offer for more of his farmland.

    After all, that's what happened back in the spring.

    Asked what he would do with any money he might get for letting go of the farm, Easley says he'll go

    hunting with his hound dog, Cloe.

    Easley lives in a home on Turner Farm Road, farther away from Columbia and where there are fewer

    subdivisions.

    He is the legal custodian of the family's old farm, where Jeff Easley lives, but he confers with his elder

    sister, Virginia DeMarce, before making any decisions.

    Easley declines to talk about his finances. He doesn't want to fuel speculation about how much his

    land might be worth.

    "When I go to the grocery store for a cup of coffee, I don't want people saying there goes Mr.

    Moneybags," he says.

    Easley warded off developers interested in the family farm since his mother died in 2006. Refusing

    offers became more difficult after the economy got Obamasized, he says.

    One of his fields was locked between subdivisions, so when Beasley called last spring, Easley listened.

    After discussing Beasley's offer with his sister, the siblings decided to sell.

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    It seemed the logical thing to do. Automobile traffic made moving cattle to the pasture dangerous.

    Just the thought of herding cattle up Bearfield Road made Easley sick to his stomach.

    Asked why he would consider selling the farm's remaining 105 acres when he'd prefer to keep it in the

    family, Easley sighed and pointed to a treeline, beyond which houses appear in orderly rows.

    If a cow gets out and your neighbors are farmers, you don't have to worry, he said. But if a cow gets

    out into a subdivision... He falls silent.

    Over the years, Easley has had to patch his fence after automobiles crashed through it. He

    remembered that one time a sheriff's deputy called him at 2 a.m. "Alan," he said. "There's a hole in

    your fence. I'll watch your cattle while you get down here."

    The old farmer discusses how farms disappear.

    People with urban sensibilities arrive in the country. They unintentionally interrupt farm life. Farmer

    die or go out of business. The land goes fallow while increasing in value. More people arrive. Heillustrates a vicious cycle.

    "Forty years ago everything from Ponderosa Avenue on the east to Rock Quarry Road on the west, and

    from Grindstone Parkway on the north to Gans Road on the south, was all farm ground," he says. He

    describes an area about a 7 1/2 square miles in size.

    Easley can list six farms he's watched disappear in 40 years: the Nifong farm, the Frank Hall farm, the

    Cavceyfarm, the Gregory farm, the Joe Crane farm, the Philips farm.

    These were his past neighbors and his father's neighbors. The new neighbors often don't understand

    their impact on a rural community, Easley says.

    People buy those houses because they want to live in the country, but then someone builds a house

    next to them, and someone builds a house next to them, and...

    Easley laughs.

    The whole world's crazy except you and me, right?

    Saving the land

    The cattle farmer isn't interested in fighting development. He'd like to preserve his family's heritage,

    perhaps by making a city park out of his family's land. That's what his mother, Margaret Easley,

    suggested before she died.

    Easley says the city has made no offer to buy his land. If it did, the price would probably be far less

    than a developer could pay.

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    In 2007, the city paid about $24,000 per acre, or a total of about $8 million for the 320-acre Crane

    property south and east of Easley's land. The Crane property now is Gans Creek Recreation Area.

    A developer could pay much more per acre for Easley's property, says Mike Griggs, assistant director

    of the city Parks and Recreation Department

    The city compensates for its weak buying power by also providing tax credits.

    A lot of our parks are acquired through a combination of donations and purchases. A lot of owners

    and developers know they can get tax credits for selling half a piece a land to the city and donating the

    other half, Griggs said.

    In 2004, the city bought 77 acres of the former Philips farm for about $1.2 million. The following year

    developer Bristol Lakes Investment donated another 63 acres. These plots were combined to become

    A. Perry Philips Park.

    Easley's property is of interest because it could link Nifong Park with Philips Park and the GansCreek Recreation Area, Griggs says. The green corridor would be ideal for a trail like the MKT Nature

    and Fitness Trail and provide a sanctuary for wildlife.

    Griggs says he can't discuss business specifics.

    "I want to make sure that your story doesn't come out as a 'purchase negotiation' in the paper," he

    says. "Our interest is limited due to the fact that we have 460 acres adjacent to (the Easley) property.

    We usually never discuss specific properties with the media until we take a report to city council."

    Easley said he would be open to the idea of preserving the homestead. The question is whether the

    city can make a competitive offer when Easley decides to sell the farm.

    There's a lot of money to be made in developing Easley's land, Boone County Assessor Tom

    Schauwecker says.

    In his office, Schauwecker tapped his keyboard to pull up a map of Easley's property. He whistled

    when he saw that the farmland contains a sewer line.

    That brown line is the path of progress, Schauwecker said, pointing to his computer screen.

    He said that a proposed east-west highway just south of Easley's property, in the Gans Road corridor,

    adds even more value. A southern road would help support traffic from a large subdivision.

    Carol Grove is a consultant who helps property owners preserve land. After reviewing Easley's

    situation, she said the value of Easley's property for a park "cannot be understated." She points to

    development models in Kansas City and Boston, where green space has helped maintain quality living

    in dense, urban environments.

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    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60

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    Griggs says Columbia is looking 10 and 20 years into the future to preserve property in "land banks"

    so that if development becomes dense, the city has options.

    Once development occurs, the land is rarely reclaimed for nature, Grove says. "Allowing this 105 acres

    to remain field ... and be used as public space protects it and the communitys well-being."

    "There is simply no better use for it," she said.

    Supervising editor isScott Swafford.

    g the land: Columbia farmer plans the future of his historic property http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/155233/saving-the-land-co

    chacht, Matthew T. (MU-Student) Monday, December 10, 2012 11:11:31 AM Central Standard Time 00:23:df:8a:90:60