Military Readiness via Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration (REPI)

The Ward Burton Wildlife Foundation (WBWF) is working with landowners, the Army National Guard, Marine Corps, and other environmental organizations to protect three military bases: Ft. Barfoot in Virginia and Ft. Indiantown Gap in Pennsylvania, and Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia. This effort is being done through the Department of Defense’s Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration Program (REPI).

The REPI program supports the military’s mission to protect our freedom. The US military needs bases and training lands for military exercises, training, soldier skill testing, and other operations. Training restrictions, costly workarounds, and compromised training realism can result from incompatible development surrounding the installation (external encroachment) and from threatened and endangered species on the installation (internal encroachment). Title 10, Section 2684a of the United States Code authorizes the Department of Defense to form agreements with organizations like the WBWF to limit encroachments and other constraints on military training, testing, and operations by establishing buffers around installations.

The REPI program allows Ft. Barfoot, Ft. Indiantown Gap, and Marine Corps Base Quantico to work with the WBWF to encumber off-post land to protect habitat and buffer training without acquiring any new land for military branch ownership. This partnership preserves high-value habitat and limits incompatible development in the vicinity of military installations. Establishing buffer areas around Army installations limits the effects of encroachment and maximizes land inside the installation that can be used to support the installation's mission.

Foundation staff brings a personal approach to landowners, and WBWF has established great partnerships with private land trusts and state/local agencies that provide additional expertise in natural resources, conservation, and land management. With everyone working together in concert, the military missions will be protected from encroachment while the beautiful rural landscapes of Virginia and Pennsylvania will be conserved for future generations.

Participation in this REPI program is completely voluntary and is limited to properties within the military bases’ buffer areas. Landowners may also realize tax benefits on top of what the WBWF pays them for the conservation alternative chosen (e.g. conservation easement). This is truly a win-win for the landowner, military mission, localities, and conservation.