First time poster here at Permies, though I've lurked here a little bit in the past.
So I co-own land here in southern Ontario. A group of us bought 75 acres (no well, no house, 50acres
hay 25 acres 'other' non-arable) in June 2010 with one guy having started the
project by having a corporation to be the land-owner, seeking us all out, using our money to buy the land, organizing work-weekends where us co-owners got to know eachother [{not ideal, in some ways, to buy land with people you don't know to begin with}]. We who invested to buy the land had to kick out the founder in early 2011 because we all discovered he did some sketchy things with our money (and trust). Spring 2011 saw all 8 of us besides founder get to know eachother, take the reins of the project. Growing season 2011 saw 2/8 of us living on land in tents (our girlfriends with us part-time), doing an acre and a half of veggies while drooling/dreaming of how we as a group could turn the other 73.5 acre of the property into an lush garden of eden. 2/8 other co-owners came out on weekends. Winter 2011/2012 saw all 8 (sorry, now 12) of us having regular email and skype discussions to figure out our next steps as a group: priorities for on the land; as a collective; the ways in which we needed to get organized before opening the project up to more people (some of us see 30 or so, others see 100+ people co-owning the 75 acres, in years ahead).
Anyways so what we are working with now is a corporate co-ownership model: people have shares based on their level of investment - the land is currently all communal (well, "corporate"). We have all agreed that any investment beyond $10,000 does not lead to more voting power - and even up to that ceiling, $=votes only matters if what's up for debate is so contentious that consensus-minus-1 doesn't work. We have also agreed in principle that $10,000 investment (or promise to invest that much over X years) = "rights to build a permanent structure on land, live there year round." - - So we have worked out how to formally co-own land - -
We have
alot to figure out though.
Housing: in this neck of the woods, we can only have two "houses" on the property, although, some people could live in yurts, trailers, "greenhouses" and "barns" and "garages" (notice the " ") or cabin with a
footprint under 100'sq [doesn't need a building permit for that size, and, I think lofts don't count]- - not sure yet how it would work to do 100'sq at a time, thus, build a home one room at a time. We could also do as one ecovillage here in Ontario did and build one giant house with separate units - - though for most of us that wouldn't be ideal.
So yeah we at some point have to sift through red tape, fees, and suffer higher taxes to legally subdivide the land (trying to keep chunks big enough so they can still be zoned as agriculture, for lower taxes). The next would then be: do we sever while keeping it all within the existent corporation (division A, branch B, etc,), or do we sell this chunk to Bob and Nob, that chunk to Wei and Sanjay, etc., but informally ask that they still open up part of their parcel to communal goats, forest gardens, etc.
If keeping severances communal: Not sure how to work it out, when an individual (or sub-group of us) decides to build a private house on our communal land, if the house will really be communally-owned and just leased (ex. 99yrs) to the person who designed and financed and built it; or if we can lease the land-area to the member, who then builds what is technically a private home.
We have some contention too about the balance between personal and communal land usage and food growing even long before our numbers grow and we sever the land. I feel like we're going to end up with: people having a right to a personal half acre [{this includes people who aren't even $10K investors, but, seasonal tenters}], any more space desired? and it has to be communal and/or and an exception somehow (leased for business purposes, etc).
Personally: I almost want to go the route of saving the $ to pay the fees to legally buy a 2-5-acre chunk of the land and outright OWN it.
Or... some other solution where: I can be part of a community/village and do some communal things, but also have legal private property. I want some of my own space for annuals and perennials, for personal experimentation - but am down with doing some of that communally. Meanwhile I am very agreeable to doing livestock communally. And am highly keen on doing entrepreneurial things as business partnerships. And having, somewhere on the land, a big building where we all converge for meetings, potlucks, and teach workshops to eachother and outsiders.
It sure is a shame that the .Gov has rules which would make it hard/expensive for dozens of people to co-habit a chunk of land like we want to. This issue contributed to me realizing I am not in fact a socialist but rather some kind of libertarian/anarchist.