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On Wed, 04 Feb 2004 19:50:31 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message news:FQ8Ub.19239$u_6.9131@lakeread04... Here is an alternative, though risky alternative. The covenants of the will/bequest are very powerful. (See my reply to Larry.) Form a non-profit community organization. Find some heirs to the estate and feel them out about contesting the city's right of posession and donating the land to the organization. I believe that when they donate the land they get a tax deduction equal to the current value of the land less the value of the original bequest. He may also want to contact the Nature Conservancy, which acquires land that's about to be made ugly in various ways. They often find ways to lock it up legally so it REALLY can't be used for disgusting purposes, like tree-less housing developments. www.nature.org They may already have their eye on the specific land anyway - it's worth making inquiries. Good advice, but be very carefull with these folks - they can be a real handfull to deal with. You need to spell out exactly how you want it done before any agreement and have an attorney check it out to be sure they have to comply to the terms of the agreement. Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ---------- "I thought I'd just go fishin', but the fish were not amused. And I caught myself just wishin' that I was in the fishes shoes. Just swimmin' in some deep blue water not a care in my head, watchin' some fool with a line and a pole hidin' by the riverbed." Joe Ely, "Back To My Old Molehill" - "Flatlanders, Wheels of Fortune - 2004" |
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