Butler decides to step away from Planning Board

PINE PLAINS — After spending more than two decades serving the town of Pine Plains in various capacities as it has carefully prepared for zoning codes and all of its consequences, current Planning Board Chairman Rick Butler has announced that he will not return to the volunteer board at the start of the new year.

“I have decided not to seek a full term on the Pine Plains Planning Board, and accordingly will be leaving my post as chairman of that board at the end of 2010,� he stated in a letter sent to town Supervisor Gregg Pulver and the rest of the Town Board, which was read into the minutes of the Nov. 18 Town Board meeting. “I have been fortunate to have a role in the adoption of the town’s zoning law, a goal I set more than 20 years ago, shortly after joining the Zoning Commission that was active in the late 1980s.�

Butler said he takes “great pride� in having helped in the development and adoption of many of the town’s key documents, including its comprehensive plan, highway specifications, subdivision regulations and its designated critical environmental area.

“Collectively we have placed Pine Plains in a favorable position with regards to shaping the future development of our town, our community, our home,� he wrote, adding in a later interview that he feels that now, after so much work has been accomplished, it’s the right time for him to move on to other things.

Butler also explained that in addition to feeling like “the big picture� has been addressed through his work with his colleagues, he has other reasons for not remaining on the board.

“I guess there are a variety of things that have happened in my personal life that have caused me to redirect a lot of my time,� he said.

Town Supervisor Gregg Pulver said he understands Butler’s decision, but is sorry to see him go.

“I don’t know if I can adequately express in words what his service to this town has been,� Pulver said. “Since he was first involved in the beginning of zoning back in the ’80s, he has worked tirelessly ever since, on the Planning Board, and then on the Town Board, then back on the Planning Board. He helped put in place fair and balanced procedures to implement zoning, and he created documents to support that. He’s going to be greatly missed.�

Butler was appointed to the Planning Board, and the position of chairman, in 2010, after serving for many years as a councilman on the Town Board. It was an opportunity for him to continue the work he began so many years earlier on the original Zoning Commission.

“Serving on the Planning Board in 2010 has allowed me the opportunity to develop some of the administrative framework used to apply our new regulatory tools and see firsthand how these tools function in actual situations,� he stated. “I can say with all confidence that the framework now in place will function in the manner we have all hoped for, dependent only on the continued involvement of residents who are fair, broad-minded and having the capacity to acknowledge and consider a viewpoint other than their own.�

“He’s going to be extremely tough to replace,� Pulver said. “We’re trying to find volunteers with a broad knowledge and idea of the town and get away from narrow viewpoints. It’s good to get a wide range of opinions on our boards ... and Rick offered that. We’re going to miss his insight.�

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