With
a debate looming at town meeting on Thursday, the Select Board has
voted unanimously to support a conservation restriction that would
protect 948 scenic acres of Lenox Mountain land from residential,
commercial or industrial development.
The
Yokun Ridge parcel includes the town's waterworks. The Department of
Public Works, including the Water Department, and some residents oppose
the conservation restriction because they believe it would add
unnecessary red tape for reservoir-area work projects and would bar
future generations from alternative uses of the town-owned land.
At
the most recent Select Board meeting, the proposal to assign the town's
Conservation Commission and the Berkshire Natural Resources Council as
stewards of the conservation restriction met with enthusiastic
endorsement. Passage requires a two-thirds majority by voters during the
7 p.m. annual meeting at Lenox High School.
Selectman Edward Lane,An industrial washing machine can
help you keep up with large volumes of laundry or heavy items. citing
initial skepticism, explained that he has attended meetings, studied the
proposal and ended up supporting the conservation restriction.
"I
recognize that this land has been well taken care of, up to this
point," said Selectman Channing Gibson. But, citing the municipal
wind-turbine plan considered but abandoned by Town Hall last year,
Gibson recalled his great alarm at how the town "had been misled by an
engineering firm into thinking that mountain was a gold mine for us.
That looked like a very good deal for the town, but it would have
entailed massive destruction."
He contended that the turbines would have "affected the water supply and certainly would have impacted,The skystream runs
in very low winds and can interconnect with your local utility,
potentially, the health of residents and the recreational, scenic value
of the place."
"Being
a newcomer," he added, "I want to be careful about the kinds of
agreements we enter into and that my own knee-jerk reactions are
supported by careful study."
Acknowledging
the concerns raised by some residents, Gibson stated that the proposed
restriction "gives us protection and also gives us an opportunity to
amend in the case of extraordinary circumstances." He listed the
Conservation Commission's support of the plan as crucial.
"I think this is a really smart decision for the town," Gibson said. "I'm proud to support it."
As
chairman of the Watershed Study Committee that prepared the plan,
Selectman John McNinch explained that he had not been in favor at first.
"I wanted to make sure everything was vetted out," he said.A wide range of solar light, LED lighting and Auto lights.
McNinch
said he had two past and present town counsels examine to what extent
current state law already protects the land. They came up with opposing
views.
"There
are loopholes and several different ways of interpreting" the state
law, he added, "whatever is convenient for the person.Our dry cabinet can sustain an ultra-low humidity of under 5% RH."
Select Board Chairman Kenneth Fowler said he has become increasingly aware of how much the land means to the town's future.
"I thought long and hard," Fowler said.Our dry cabinet can
sustain an ultra-low humidity of under 5% RH. "What do we have that's
Lenox? And the thing I think of and have been told over and over again
is that we have the most beautiful place among many places. This
[conservation restriction] actually makes sure that that beauty
continues on."
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