The Delaware Forest Service created the Forest Initiative Fund (FIF) to help address water quality, air quality, and overall life for all Delawareans in the simplest way through the planting of trees. This program is designed to enhance rural and urban forests throughout Delaware and assist landowners and communities while providing the key benefits we all need without cumbersome agreements and requirements. FIF is a no-cost share program designed to provide up to three (3) services to landowners for planting efforts in non-forested areas, known as afforestation. Services include tree installation by crews or volunteers and professional guidance and planning by professional Forestry staff.
Reforestation allows for accelerated development of forested ecosystems following natural disturbance events, such as wildfire, wind events, insect, and disease infestations, or planned timber harvests. Afforestation is a method trained foresters use to plant trees in areas that historically have not had trees. Reforestation and afforestation address emerging issues dealing with climate change by conserving and managing tree genetic diversity and sequestering carbon to counter greenhouse emissions.
The process begins with a site meeting, followed by entering into a “good faith” contract. The Delaware Forest Service will order the trees (hardwoods and specialized conifers), then crews and/or volunteers will plant the trees. We will work with landowners to monitor the trees over time. Some sites include forest edges, grass meadows, low-producing agricultural areas, and right-of-ways. The land can either be private or State-owned. Some of our partners include DelDOT, Sussex County Land Trust, and Delaware Wild Lands.
FIF exemplifies our dedication to ensuring forest sustainability through targeted programs and activities.
To properly care for the trees on your property, it is important to develop a plan for achieving your objectives, whether the goal is wood production, wildlife habitat, recreation, or a combination of these goals. The Delaware Forest Service can help develop a customized management plan for your woodlot that outlines the activities to reach your goals. In addition, staff can conduct a forest inventory (a summary of timber volumes by tree species), supervise reforestation and timber stand improvement projects, and help with timber sales by providing sample timber sale contracts and lists of potential buyers. While our staff cannot perform timber appraisals, we maintain a list of consultant foresters who can appraise timber.
Learn the benefits of sustainable forestry and some common myths about forests
The Delaware Forest Service strives to protect water quality in Delaware through its Erosion and Sediment Program. Our foresters assist loggers and landowners through site visits and educational programs to help ensure forest management activities follow Best Management Practices (BMPs) and thus comply with the Forest Practices Erosion and Sedimentation Law (Title 3, Chapter 10, Subchapter VI). Operators submit a permit before commencing forest management activities, and our staff reviews the site during the operation. If you are considering a timber harvest, please contact your local Delaware Forest Service office for a permit.
In addition, the Delaware Forest Service also administers the Delaware Seed Tree Law (Title 3, Chapter 10, Subchapter V), which was passed due to the long-term decrease in pine and yellow-poplar forests. It requires landowners to reforest all harvested sites, ten acres or more, that contained at least twenty-five percent pine and/or yellow-poplar unless the site will be developed or cleared for agriculture. The timber harvest permit also includes information regarding the Seed Tree Law. In addition to enforcing this law, our foresters help landowners meet its requirements by supervising reforestation activities.
The Forest Stewardship Program brings professional natural resource management expertise to private owners to develop plans for the sustainable management of their forests. The Delaware Forest Service will provide a trained forester to visit your land and discuss your objectives. Many landowners have several goals: enhancing wildlife or riparian habitat or producing timber. After discussing and understanding your objectives, the Delaware Forest Service forester will prepare your Forest Stewardship Plan. As the landowner, you are expected to make a good-faith effort to follow the plan and its recommendations. Cost-share programs are also available to help you implement specific strategies and practices. This increases the likelihood that private forests will remain productive and healthy and that these lands’ social, economic, and environmental benefits will be realized.
Learn more at de.gov/foreststewardship.
The Delaware Forest Service, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), offers limited-cost shares to private landowners for such activities as tree planting and timber stand improvement. These cost-share programs include the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP), the Environmental Quality Improvement Program (EQIP), and the State of Delaware Forestry Cost Share Program. Forest Service personnel work with interested landowners and the USDA to ensure the funds are properly spent. For more information, contact your service forester.
The Delaware Forest Service offers a variety of tree seedlings each spring through a cooperative effort with the Maryland Forest Service nursery in Preston. Depending on weather conditions, landowners order seedlings in the fall and early winter for delivery in mid-March to mid-April. For more information on the tree species available, visit the nursery’s website at:
Please email Laura Upham for more information on:
The Forest Initiative Fund (FIF), forest management plans and assistance with harvesting timber, watershed protection and logging regulations, forest stewardship, cost-share programs, reforestation, and the availability of low-cost seedlings.
The Commercial Forest Plantation Act (Chapter 26, “Commercial Forest Plantations,” Title 3) was established to give landowners a property tax exemption for forests managed for timber production. To qualify for this thirty (30) year exemption, landowners must have at least 10 contiguous forested acres and follow a forest management plan approved by the Delaware Forest Service.
Current law requires that the 30-year exemption be renewed upon expiration or change in ownership by sale or transfer of land rights. However, exemptions could continue automatically based on local jurisdictional guidelines. Before the sale or transfer, the seller must notify the new owner of the exemption’s existence and the plan’s nature. The notice must be on the transfer form created by the Delaware Forest Service and should be submitted to the forester before transfer. Not submitting this form will indicate failure to notify the new owner. In the case of failure to notify, the county assessment office can restore the property to the assessment list and demand payment of back taxes by the transferor for a period of time during the received exemption. The new owner of land currently under an exemption for Commercial Forest Plantations must either accept or decline the agreement to maintain the exemption status using the acceptance form.
For more details on the exemption and transfer processes, visit the links below or contact your local forester.
If you are interested in a Commercial Forest Plantation exemption or need more information on transferring the exemption, contact the respective county forester in which your county resides:
New Castle County: Contact the Dover Office at 302-698-4547
Kent County: Contact the Dover Office at 302-698-4547
Sussex County: Email Erich Burkentine or call 302-856-2893
The Delaware Forest Service staff ensures that trees harvested from our forests are fully utilized, from valuable saw timber to milling by-products like bark and sawdust. We work with the forest industry and the U.S. Forest Service to explore new opportunities for wood products, including using wood for energy production. For example, the Delaware Forest Service is studying the potential for raising fast-growing hardwood species for energy production.
Additionally, we maintain a list of primary (sawmills, loggers, etc.) and secondary wood processors (furniture makers, pallet manufacturers, etc.) for distribution to landowners and other interested parties. Please contact your local Delaware Forest Service office for a copy or View Wood Directory online.
Delaware’s forest products industry contributes $1.1 billion in economic output and directly supports about 2,000 jobs and another 2,000 in related sectors.
Read the full Delaware Forest Products Industry Report (2020)
Read the Delaware Forest Industry Fact Sheet (2017)
Email Laura Upham for more information on the Wood Utilization and Marketing Program.
The Forest Legacy Program (FLP) is funded through the U.S. Forest Service’s State and Private Forestry (S&PF) budget. It funds states to protect working forestlands threatened by development or other land uses, either through outright (fee-simple) purchases or conservation easements. A conservation easement allows the landowner to continue to own the forest; however, the easement prohibits non-forest uses such as development. Landowners who choose to sell an easement must also have a forest stewardship plan for their property that describes the activities needed to help achieve their objectives for the property; the Delaware Forest Service can write this plan with the landowner. FLP intends to ensure forestlands continue to yield the forest products we use every day, such as timber, wildlife habitat, and water quality protection. Landowner participation in FLP is entirely voluntary.
States may only use Forest Legacy funds in areas designated in their Assessment of Need (AON). The AON describes the state’s forests, their threats, and the areas within the state that contain the most important forests, which are called the Forest Legacy Areas. Once the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) approves the AON, the state can receive Legacy funds to purchase land and easements within the designated Forest Legacy areas.
Delaware’s AON was approved in December 1998, and there are four Legacy areas in Delaware – White Clay Creek, Blackbird/Blackiston, Redden/Ellendale, and Cypress Swamp (see maps below). These areas contain the highest concentrations of forests in Delaware, including significant acreage already protected through public and private ownership.
If you own forestland within any of Delaware’s Forest Legacy areas and want to protect your forest, please contact the Delaware Forest Service for more information.
To learn more about the Forest Legacy program, visit www.fs.fed.us/
Delaware’s Forestland Preservation Program protects forestlands through perpetual conservation easements. A conservation easement is a permanent deed restriction whereby the landowner still owns the property but certain activities, such as development, are prohibited. The owner can sell the property, but all future owners must follow the same restrictions. This program is designed to protect working forests; therefore, the easements allow forest management activities, including timber harvests, to continue. Landowners can harvest timber anytime on their property if they follow a forest management plan prepared by a professional forester. The program also does not affect hunting activities on the property.
For more information on Delaware’s Forestland Preservation Program, please visit the following links:
Email Chris Miller for more information on the Forestry Legacy Program and the Forestland Preservation Program.
Related Topics: conservation, farms, forest conservation, Forest Legacy Program, forest stewardship plan, Forestland Preservation Program, landowner assistance, reforestation, water quality