Greenspace Reserve Established in 2018 by the World Environmental Conservancy

More than twenty families living in Thomas Overby and Spring Forest subdivisions in Sharpsburg now may sleep better. Dr. Luciana Pires, Director of World Environmental Conservancy, Inc. (WEC) announced today that WEC has accepted a charitable donation of seven acres of land adjacent to these residential subdivisions and is preserving it as perpetual greenspace. A new office for Discovery Counseling and Assessment Center headed by Dr. Bruce Grant is underway on Highway 34 on the remainder of the original land parcel, being built by Tomco Construction and developed by Sylvan Manor, a division of Peachtree Medical Properties, LLC.

The 7 acre tract of wooded land is estimated to absorb around 18 tons of carbon dioxide annually through photosynthesis. Preservation of around 10 times this amount of forested land would be required to offset the automobile emissions produced by the entire neighborhood. Shockingly, more than 200,000 acres of forest are destroyed every day (150 acres lost per minute) around the world. Conservation of small and large forested areas is a critical international priority and is a foremost goal of our organization,” notes Dr. Pires who is a research meteorologist and the founder of WEC ( www.worldenvironmentalconservancy.org ) .

The Declaration of Perpetual Greenspace Restriction placed on the land tract is on file at BK 4763 PG 74-81 in the Superior Court Records of Coweta County.