AlaskaNews
My Feed

Content discovery

Topics

Issues and interests

Locations

News by place

Organizations

Agencies, boards, and groups

Elections

Elections and time-bounded civic events

Calendar

Upcoming meetings and civic events

Source material

Speakers

People quoted on the platform

Transcripts

Search every public meeting (subscribers)

Video Clips

Quoted moments on video

Photos

Community gallery

Podcasts

Articles read aloud

How It WorksLog inSign up
AlaskaNewsAlaska News

Local news, from the source.

Public meetings deserve coverage.
Every claim links to the original source.

Browse

  • My Feed
  • Topics
  • Locations
  • Organizations
  • Elections
  • Speakers
  • TranscriptsSubscribers
  • Podcasts
  • Calendar
  • Photos
  • Video Clips

Get involved

  • Subscribe
  • Submit a Tip
  • Join a Community
  • Become a Journalist
  • Compute Volunteers
  • About
  • Contact

Resources

  • RSS
  • How It Works
  • API
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Community News LLC. All rights reserved.

Part of the Community News platform

House panel hears bill to ease farmland leasing, lower costs for Alaska growers

House panel hears bill to ease farmland leasing, lower costs for Alaska growers

by Alaska News·May 9, 2026(4w ago)
3 min read9 viewsCapitol Room 124, Juneau, AlaskaAI
Share

The Alaska House Resources Committee heard testimony on legislation that would change how the state leases agricultural land to farmers, shifting from appraisal-based pricing to below-market rates and merit-based selection.

House Bill 296 would create a new leasing program allowing farmers to select state parcels and apply to rent them at rates below market value. Costly appraisals and surveys would only be required if the Department of Natural Resources commissioner deems them necessary. The bill would also allow DNR to add a merit-based component to agricultural land sales rather than awarding parcels solely to the highest bidder, using a regulation-based scoring system.

Representative Donna Mears said the bill makes it easier for farmers to lease state land and for DNR to ensure state land sold for agricultural purposes remains in agricultural production.

The legislation responds to testimony that current appraisal methods price farmers out of state land. Emily Garrity, owner-operator of Twitter Creek Gardens in Homer, told the committee she applied in April 2023 to lease 4.5 acres of state land near her existing two-acre vegetable operation. Initially estimated at $1,000 per year, the lease fee jumped to $9,360 annually after DNR required an appraisal.

Garrity said the land was appraised at $117,000, which sets a lease fee at a record high value for agricultural land use of $9,360 per year for 4.5 acres. That works out to over $2,000 per acre.

She noted the four other active crop production leases statewide carry annual rates between less than $1 and $90 per acre, according to information she provided the committee. Grazing leases start at 3 cents per acre, and the Kenai Peninsula Borough leases agricultural land for $15 per acre.

Alaska has only four active crop production leases statewide, while an estimated 90 individuals actively seek farmland through the Alaska Farm Link Program, according to testimony from Margaret Adsett of the Alaska Farmland Trust.

Adsett said the challenge is not the lack of interest in farming, but a lack of affordable and accessible land. She noted that in the Mat-Su Borough alone, more than 3,000 acres of farmland have been lost over the last decade, while developed land increased by 23,000 acres. Fee-simple land in the core Mat-Su area now sells for $45,000 to $75,000 per acre.

The bill would also give DNR authority to assess civil penalties for violations of agricultural covenants rather than using the extreme measure of repossessing land. Rachel Longacre, chief of operations for DNR's Division of Mining, Land and Water, said current law provides no middle ground for enforcement.

Longacre said oftentimes there is farm housing or residential housing to support the farming activity on the land. She said literally the state would be taking away somebody's home. This bill helps provide civil penalties to help encourage that enforcement, she said.

Sources

Based on: View Transcript

This article cites 209 chunks.

Alaska State LegislatureEnvironmentAlaska

AI-assisted, reviewed by editors. Spot an error?

Reviewed by News Bot

Related Coverage

Senate Finance Advances Agricultural Leasing Reform After Farmer Cites $9,000 Annual Fee

Alaska News · 1mo ago · 2 views · 90% match

House Resources passes agricultural land lease bill unanimously

Alaska News · 3w ago · 1 views · 87% match

Alaska lawmakers debate farm tax break for horses, flowers

Alaska News · 3w ago · 4 views · 82% match

Alaska House panel expands farm tax breaks to flowers, hay

Alaska News · 2w ago · 1 views · 81% match

House panel hears bill to let small Alaska fishermen process, sell catch directly

Alaska News · 1mo ago · 4 views · 80% match

HB 296 is part of Governor Mike Dunleavy's CROP Act, which also includes Senate Bill 211. Alaska News previously reported that the Senate Finance Committee advanced similar agricultural leasing reforms after hearing Garrity's testimony about the $9,000 annual fee.

The committee adopted a committee substitute for the bill on a 6-1 vote, with Representative Prox voting no. Staff said the changes were largely done on the Senate side in collaboration with the department to make the bill more workable. The CS adds an immediate effective date for DNR to draft regulations implementing HB 296 and makes the bill's provisions effective Jan. 1, 2027.

Rod Arno of the Alaska Outdoor Council raised concerns about public access to state lands sold or leased for agriculture. Longacre said existing statutes mandate that DNR maintain public access through easements when disposing of land, typically around rather than through parcels.

Representative Fields said he would work with Arno and the bill sponsor to ensure the bill preserves access to hunting and fishing grounds, particularly where state agricultural land is contiguous with other state lands.

The committee held the bill over for another hearing.

Stay informed. Support what matters.

Free, permanent access to local news you can verify. Subscribe to support Alaska News and go ad-free.

SubscribeHow it works →Sign up free

Community photos

Have a photo that captures this story? Share it — the community votes on covers.

+ Sign up to add a photo

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.