Without digging up the original controversy, I will comment on a very common misunderstanding of the general public on easements in general. If you look at various databases of "conservation"easements in the region it looks like there are lot of them
https://site.tplgis.org/NCED/interactivemap/ ripe for the visit. Unfortunately for the general public, an easement in no way guarantees any rights to public access. When a landowner sells an easement, he is selling a set of particular rights and only those rights to a third party. That third party then owns those rights into perpetuity and is required to ensure that the rights are protected. The third party is not allowed to expand those rights, only the current owner of the land can do so. Conservation easements can be quite loose or quite broad and in many cases the organizations buying easements are very focused on what they want to accomplish at the least cost, and public access is quite low on their priorities unless required by their funding source. Dealing with public access is messy and expensive and many landowners are predominantly interested in the protecting lands from future development while retaining their current rights including privacy. Thus, many easements have zero public access rights and even when there are public rights include,d like on Forest Legacy funded projects, the landowners and easement owners may elect not make this public or make provisions for public access.