Farmland plan adopted

NORTH EAST — After what has seemed to many to have been an interminable and suspenseful period, the town of North East has officially adopted an Agricultural and Farmland Protection Plan (AFPP). The entire Town Board did so unanimously at its business meeting on Thursday, Sept. 9.

“I’m glad that the project has come to fruition,� said town Supervisor Dave Sherman, days after the vote was finalized, noting there’s still more work to be done.

The plan must be forwarded to the Dutchess County Agriculture and Farmland Protection Board for review and approval, before moving on to the county Legislature for its approval. It must then be sent to the commissioner of the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets for a final OK.

“Obviously the plan contains many elements and suggests paths the town can take in the future, not all of which will be pursued, maybe, but some will provide guidance for us to begin to revise some of our regulations to make us more compatible to provide a healthier and more viable environment for agriculture in our community,� Sherman said, adding the town’s Conservation Advisory Council (CAC) also has an interest in following up with the plan and setting up an Agricultural Advisory Committee/Council (AAC).

An AAC would follow up on the plan’s recommendations and provide assistance and advice to other boards, like the Planning Board and the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA), when dealing with ag-related issues. CAC Chair Dianne Engleke, who was instrumental in getting the AFPP drafted and adopted, agreed that next step will be key in cementing the new plan’s success.

“I’m obviously pleased the Town Board [adopted the plan],� she said. “The next step will be perhaps even more challenging than getting the plan passed — passing the right to farm law — and then appointing an Agricultural Advisory Council, which will be crucial to the implementation of the plan.�

Engleke specified that those on the AAC will not simply be existing CAC members, unless those on the CAC apply for the positions with the Town Board and go through the application and interview process. Ideally the AAC will consist of community members directly concerned with agriculture. She guessed there will be between three and five members on the advisory council, with specific terms yet to be determined. Many of those details will be gleaned from other communities with similar committees; the key, Engleke said, is that the committee will be an advisory one.

“I don’t think they would have the force of law that the Planning Board or zoning board has, though the Town Board would have to decide that,� she said. “I think they would be advisory to the Town Board, which is overworked, as all existing boards are. Not enough farmers are represented [in law making], and this group can answer questions like, ‘How does this affect farms?’ We could get the benefit of their expertise.�

Sherman agreed the plan will be instrumental for the town as it moves forward, whether tackling development issues or dealing directly with farming issues.

“It will provide guidance for us to begin to revise some of our regulations to make them more compatible to provide a healthier and more viable environment for agriculture in our community,� he said. “It will help open the eyes of Town Board members and other folks involved in the development of regulations and the refinement of regulations as to what we can do to improve the local environment [to make it more hospitable to farmers and agricultural operations].�

“The plan has ideas for making ag products more attractive to the larger public, and talks of ways of bringing the ag industry here and taking farm products and making them into consumer products,� Engleke said. “There are ways to preserve farmland, which the town could decide if the tools are applicable. I’m hoping there could be a place where farmers with questions could go. They could come first to a farm plan, with the beginnings of saving farmland locally, and not have to go to the county or state. [We could offer farmers and others, tools,] and a plan that will be valuable and not just words on paper. It will depend on the motivation and commitment of the community.�

The plan was drafted thanks to a $25,000 state grant the town was awarded in February 2008 by the Department of Ag and Markets; the board passed the resolution adopting the plan this month. Engleke said she felt “relieved� the process was drawing to an end, and more importantly that it had the board’s support.

“It would have been disheartening if it did not pass,� she said. “I am pleased and I think the town has something really good to work with here.

“The state saw us as being so well-situated. We’re physically blessed to grow things but also to be close to large markets,� she added. “So this was a good place to have a farm plan, and for it not to be adopted here would have been a real disappointment.�

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