The Georgia Department of Natural Resources has approved the purchase of approximately 2,900 acres of land from The Conservation Fund.
It’s part of a much larger swath of land around the Okefenokee Swamp that’s been at the center of intense debate for several years.
Last summer, the nonprofit announced it had acquired almost 8,000 acres of land next to the swamp, once obtained for a controversial strip-mining plan by a company called Twin Pines Minerals. The nonprofit is organizing to transfer the land to permanent conservation and retire the mineral rights so the properties can’t be mined in the future.
Stacy Funderburke with the Conservation Fund said the Georgia DNR’s purchase is the first step to making sure all 8,000 acres are protected. He said the portion the DNR bought this month “will become a new state wildlife management area called Alachua Trail WMA, right there along the eastern, southeastern edge of the Okefenokee.”
At the DNR board meeting, the board approved spending over $8 million on this first phase of the land deal. They’re looking to close on the property in August, and are looking to close on another 1,000 acres from The Conservation Fund in March 2027 as the second phase of this land deal. The total 4,000 acres will make up the Alachua Trail WMA.