Farmland hearing winds down

NORTH EAST — The turnout was small at the July 26 public hearing for the town of North East’s Agricultural and Farmland Protection Plan, especially considering the number of packed (not to mention contentious) meetings that have preceded it.

The hearing lasted less than an hour and was held at the American Legion Post 178 hall. The North East Town Board presided over the meeting, which was held because a previous public hearing several months ago was not attended by a Town Board quorum and therefore did not satisfy legal requirements. At the July 26 meeting only Councilman Tim Shaffer was not in attendance.

Seven members of the public spoke; six were in favor of the board adopting the plan and one was against.

“On the whole, the plan developed is pretty good,� said Art Collings, representing both the Dutchess Land Conservancy and the Dutchess County Farmland Protection Board. He urged the board to adopt the plan and stressed the importance of soon after forming an agricultural advisory committee with a strong farming presence.

“Having farming members from the community on the committee is most important,� he said. “It’s also important for the town to be flexible and to incorporate new ideas as they come along.�

“This town has a lot of wonderful resources,� pointed out Lynn Mordas, who is chairperson of the Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan Committee (AFPPC) and a member of the Conservation Advisory Council (CAC). “We need to continue to have these farms exist here and do whatever is helpful to assist them.�

Mordas said that adopting the plan does not mandate any added financial contribution from the community. She also pointed out that there are developing ag programs at the local public schools, and the plan would help ensure there is open farmland for future generations to work.

Not everyone was in favor of the plan, however. Millerton resident Pam Michaud read a lengthy prepared statement against its adoption.

In the statement she raised concerns that she felt the farmland protection plan was less concerned with helping farmers than it was with providing a way for the wealthy to curtail development.

“Who could object to protecting nature and to helping farmers? If I thought these were the objectives of the plan, I would support it,� she read. “I do not believe, however, that it has anything to do with preserving agriculture and little to do with helping farmers. I believe it has everything to do with land grabbing, control over land use and with a deceptive, far-reaching agenda.�

Michaud’s concerns were less about the specifics of North East’s proposed plan and more about the fundamental consequences of “smart growth� and “open space preservation� in general.

“If you do go ahead with this plan, please make the guidelines such that it gives assistance only to the truly deserving, and make sure they are well informed of the cost down the line, in the precious rights they may be giving away,� she concluded emotionally.

CAC Chair Dianne Engleke said she felt the proposed plan is “very democratic, with a small ‘d,’� and that ultimately it would be up to the Town Board to decide to use any of the committee’s recommendations.

“If you don’t like them, you don’t have to act on them,� she said.

Engleke’s husband, Mark Liebergall, commented on the hard work that the many volunteers on the boards had undertaken for more than two years to get the document to where it is now. CAC member Jane Rossman seconded that sentiment and added that it was a collective effort that involved farmers, the community, the boards and the town’s farmland preservation plan consultant,  the American Farmland Trust (AFT).

Town Supervisor Dave Sherman reported that comments from the Dutchess County Department of Planning and Development had been received, recommending that the Town Board rely upon its own study of the facts in the case.

The public hearing was then closed, with the next opportunity for the board to discuss the proposed plan at its next business meeting, set for Thursday, Aug. 12, at 7 p.m. at Town Hall. Written comments will be accepted at Town Hall until Aug. 9, two weeks after the close of the hearing.

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