Appraisal for Short’s farm arrives three days before LOI deadline

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The long-awaited appraisal of the Short’s Family Farm has come in.

The market value of the 253.4 acres of land was appraised at $1.3 million in a document released to the Port of Port Townsend on Wednesday, Jan. 25.

While the final purchase price is subject to negotiation, the port previously estimated it would be in excess of $2 million.

The port first entered into a “Letter of Intent” with the Roger and Sandy Short to purchase the property in October which will expire Jan. 28, just three days after the appraisal arrived.

The farm is one of the largest privately held contiguous pieces of agricultural land and a conservation easement managed by the Jefferson Land Trust signed by the Shorts 2016 prevents the farm from ever being subdivided or converted from agriculture.

Greg Halberg, a Washington State Certified general appraiser with Halberg Pacific Appraisal Service, inspected the appraised property Jan. 16.

Halberg conducted an analysis of comparable sales of properties with similar conservation

easements on the Olympic Peninsula and Whidbey Island within a 20-mile radius over the past six years and his firm previously appraised this property for the purpose of valuing the conservation easement in April 2015.

“Based on my site visit … and conversation with Mr. Short, the seasonal flooding has gotten worse over the past several years due to a combination of factors. The reasons include continued infestation with invasive canary grass, the difficulty of clearing the drainage chokepoints annually. The long-term effect of the longer flooding season is detrimental to the health of the soil for agricultural purposes,” Halberg wrote in his assessment.

Also included in the assessment is a list of all the soils on the property, three of which are marked “prime farmland” but only “if drained.”

Erik Kingfisher, the Jefferson Land Trust’s stewardship director for the property named at a special meeting held by the port that the Jefferson County Conservation District has received a grant from the state to study the flooding issue in hopes of finding a solution to the problem.