Conservation council looks to protect farmland

NORTH EAST — The Conservation Advisory Council (CAC) is determined to implement a farmland preservation program in the town and hopes to apply for a grant through the Municipal Agricultural and Farmland Protection Plan Development Request for Application (RFA) program that will be made available on the New York State Department of Agriculture & Markets’ Web site Sept. 26.

“The grants are going to be awarded on a first-come first-served basis,� CAC Chairwoman Dianne Engleke told the Town Board during its business meeting Sept. 13. “We decided we want to apply.�

To do so, the Town Board will have to pass a resolution stating that it will make a financial commitment to the project, no less than 5 percent of the requested grant amount. The CAC is seeking a $25,000 grant; the town, therefore, would need to commit a minimum of $1,666. The maximum amount of local funding the town can contribute is $8,333. The local share can be, in part, in the form of in-kind services and may also include funding from Dutchess County or other entities, excluding New York state.

“Protecting the business of agriculture takes away the sentimental idea of preserving agriculture,� Engleke told the board. “The benefits of preserving agriculture are that it creates a community-wide program; it reduces sprawl; preserves viewsheds; it preserves national resources; and it preserves a land use with positive tax benefits.�

The CAC has to first identify pieces of property and explain why they are valuable before it can hope to garner any grant dollars.

Town Supervisor Dave Sherman spoke about the difference between North East and other towns that may be looking for the same grant.

“You’re dealing with some communities that are very suburban versus ours, that is more agricultural,� he said. “There’s a broad difference there.�

“We did take a lot of what other communities did and shape it to our own needs,� Engleke said. “The Harlem Valley definitely has more pressure and is in risk of losing its farmland.�

In fact, there have been indications the state Legislature may soon take measures to make local farmland protection mandatory.

“I like this because it’s something that our local government is doing and I don’t know how we can really go wrong,� Councilman Dave McGhee said. “It’s not going to cost a great deal of money; I would like to see us go for it.�

“A lot of this leg work is done,� said Councilman Dan Briggs. “Some of the impetus is coming from the county, that the town has to have its own farmland protection.�

The state is also keen on the local municipalities having a stake in farmland preservation.

“Home rule is the cornerstone of land use planning in New York state,� said state Agriculture Commissioner Patrick Hooker in a recent release about the grant. “One of the most important duties granted by the legislature to a municipal government is the authority to undertake comprehensive planning and to regulate land use.

“Local government can play a vital role in farmland protection by creating a supportive business environment for agriculture by insuring that comprehensive plans and land use regulations contain clear language and explicit policies that are supportive of the local agriculture industry,� Hooker added.

The Town Board gave the CAC a nod to proceed with getting the grant application together, which it will review before it’s submitted to the state.

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