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The Rural Areas

" In the late 1950's, agricultural and open space preservation arose as a social and economic issue. The loss of agricultural and open space land, as a metropolitan planning issue, was expressed in terms of metropolitan needs and problems--the need to preserve open space and the diseconomy in building the costly infrastructure to serve scattered suburban development. This was at the heart of the issue in 1956 when Maryland, the first state to do so, enacted a law to provide preferential assessments on farmland in the hope of encouraging farmers not to sell their property to developers. Today. 42 states have enacted this type of legislation. Despite preferential assessment programs, however, development pressure has continued to erode farmland..."

From the Policy Framework of the Preservation of Agriculture and Rural Open Space Master Plan (1980)

The Rural Areas encompass the 93,000 acre Agricultural Reserve, along with the larger rural communities of Damascus and Poolesville and a number of small rural crossroads such as Beallsville, Sunshine, and Dickerson.

Current Projects

Rural Area East (east of I-270)

Rural Area West (west of I-270)

Additional Resources

Printed copies of these plans are available at the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission's Montgomery Regional Office, 8787 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, Maryland, 2nd Floor - Information Counter.