Archive for March, 2009

Main-Land names Charles Buker Chief of Surveying

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

LIVERMORE FALLS- Charles Buker, a surveyor at Main-Land Development Consultants, has been promoted to chief of surveying.

In his new position, Buker, 28, is responsible for overseeing the firm’s seven-person survey crew as they complete survey work throughout Franklin, Oxford, Somerset and Kennebec counties. In addition to coordinating surveyor schedules, he also performs boundary and topographic surveys and assists Main-Land engineers in site design.

He is the firm’s youngest-ever chief of surveying.

Buker joined Main-Land in 2002 as a survey technician, directly following his graduation from the University of Maine with a Bachelor of Science degree. He is a member of the Maine Society of Land Surveyors and the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping.

“As chief of surveying, Charles will provide our company’s clients a consistent and informed point of contact who will ensure expedited and accurate resolution of all land survey inquiries,” said Darryl Brown, president of Main-Land Development Consultants. “Having grown up in Androscoggin County and graduating from the University of Maine at Orono makes Charles a particularly valuable member of our team as he understands and appreciates the places where our clients are planning projects.”

A graduate of Edward Little High School, Buker and his wife, Whitney, live in Auburn.

Click here to read more about our surveying services or to contact Charles about a potential western Maine survey project. And here to see the story in the Lewiston Sun Journal.

ABOUT MAIN-LAND DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANTS
Main-Land Development Consultants has been providing land use planning services including surveying, soils testing, mapping, engineering, permitting and wastewater design to both public and private projects throughout western Maine and beyond since 1974. The company, now in its 35th year, is based in Livermore Falls and can be found online at www.main-landdevelopment.com. For more information, call (207) 897- 6752.

MLDC’s Site Law forum series: Next stop in Bridgton

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Bridgton forum to consider impact of proposed land development law changes
The event is being put on by the Livermore Falls based Main-Land Development Consultants

BRIDGTON- An upcoming public forum will allow area residents to learn more about massive reforms to Maine’s land development policy being proposed by the state’s Department of Environmental Protection.

The March 17 forum is the fourth in a series of seven forums around western Maine being put on by Main-Land Development Consultants-a Livermore Falls-based land planning firm – in response to the Maine DEP’s proposed changes to the Site Location of Development Law.

75 people attended the first forum in the series, held in Bethel on February 25.

Darryl Brown, president/owner of Main-Land and a former legislator, said he initiated the series over concerns that the proposed changes to the law and rules related to it could drastically slow down – if not all together stop – development in the state.

The Act to Update the Site Location of Development Law, sponsored by Rep. Bob Duchesne (D- Hudson), does not yet have an LD (legislative document) number but is expected to be taken up this session, says Brown.

If enacted, it would limit large scale non-residential development to designated growth zones, urban compact zones, census designated areas or those areas served by public sewer systems. Meanwhile, if a residential development larger than 30 acres is proposed outside these zones, that development would be classified as a conservation subdivision, requiring the preservation of at least 55 percent of the land area.

The law changes would also prohibit the disturbances of slopes 20 percent or greater, which could limit projects in Maine’s mountainous regions, and give the state the authority to review proposed project contractors.

“In nearly four decades as a land planner, never have I been more worried about the impact of a piece of legislation than I am now,” explained Brown, who along with engineers from his firm, will be presenting an overview of the DEP’s proposal and its potential impacts on western Maine at the forum. “This would essentially prohibit development in rural Maine and the jobs and revenue it brings. In these trying economic times, we should be encouraging investment in our communities, not legislatively preventing it.”

DEP has held informational meetings on its plan in Portland and Augusta, which Brown and his staff attended, but he says many western Maine small business owners didn’t know about those meetings, or have the time to go to. He hopes through the forums, stakeholders will be educated about the law and rules changes that are proposed, and be empowered to participate in future public hearings when the state Legislature considers the act later this session.

“We want these forums to be educational, not accusatory,” stressed Brown. “From our perspective, there are both positive and negative portions of the MDEP’s proposal and it is our objective to simply present to people potential impacts of the changes in their area so that if they wish, they can be an informed voice in the process of developing this public policy that will shape the landscape of Maine’s future.”

The forum will be held from 8 to 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, March 17 at the Bridgton Town Office at 3 Chase Street. It is open to the public and coffee and light refreshments will be provided.

Subsequent forums will be held in Skowhegan (March 19), Auburn (March 24) and Kingfield (March 26).

For more information, contact Darryl Brown at 897-6752 or darryl@main-landdevelopment.com.

ABOUT MAIN-LAND DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANTS
Main-Land Development Consultants has been providing land use planning services including surveying, soils testing, mapping, engineering, permitting and wastewater design to both public and private projects throughout western Maine and beyond since 1974. The company, now in its 35th year, is based in Livermore Falls and can be found online at www.main-landdevelopment.com. For more information, call (207) 897- 6752.

Site Law forum series featured in Lewiston Sun Journal

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

Reporter Leslie Dixon from the Lewiston Sun Journal did a great job letting that paper’s Oxford Hills readers know about our Site Law impact forum series

Here is her story, which ran in March 3, 2009 issue of the Sun Journal (You can also see it here on the Sun Journal’s website if you missed the printed version):

Site development change subject of forums
By Leslie H. Dixon, Staff Writer

NORWAY – The impact of proposed legislation designed to limit large-scale nonresidential development to specific areas will be the topic of public forums this month in Norway, Bridgton, Auburn and Kingfield.

If enacted, the Act to Update the Site Location of Development Law would limit large scale nonresidential development to designated growth zones, urban compact zones, census designated areas or those areas served by public sewer systems, according to Darryl Brown, president of the Main-Land Development Consultants of Livermore Falls.

The legislation and would also prohibit disturbance of slopes 20 percent or greater, limiting projects in Maine’s mountainous regions, and give the Department of Environmental Protection the authority to approve or reject site contractors selected for project construction.

It is sponsored by Rep. Bob Duchesne, D-Hudson,

“We’re not trying to be confrontational,” Brown said Monday. “That’s not our goal. Our goal is to educate. Very few people knew this was happening.”

Local officials, including town managers, Planning Board members, and others such as builders and attorneys have been invited to the first forum from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Friday, at the Norway Legion Hall on Main Street.

Forums are also scheduled for Bridgton on March 17, Auburn on March 24 and Kingfield March 26.

Brown said the proposed amendment to the existing site laws developed in the 1970s would require developments of certain size be restricted to specific areas such as growth areas. “There are some 200 towns that don’t even have comprehensive plans,” said Brown of the step towns must take before a growth area can be designated.

For example, he said, if Lowe’s wanted to locate in Waterford it would be impossible under the pending legislation because Waterford has no urban compact zone, growth area or public sewer. Norway and Paris have public sewer, but it is not far reaching, making development difficult, he said.

Brown said the legislation also proposed that if a developer can not place a residential subdivision in a growth area, it can be placed outside of one but only if 55 percent of the land area is donated to open space or conservation land.

In addition to Brown, Tom DuBois and Bob Berry, engineers at Main Land Development Consultants will be at the forum.


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