Posts Tagged ‘Bethel Maine Surveyors’

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.

Bethel forum on proposed Site Location Law changes draws 75

Thursday, February 26th, 2009


75 concerned citizens from bankers to business owners, Realtors to contractors crowded the Bethel Inn Conference Center on Wednesday morning to hear Main-Land’s presentation on the potential impacts of the Maine Department of Environmental Protection’s proposed changes to the Site Location of Development Law.

Main-Land President/Owner Darryl Brown told attendees that “In the 37 years I’ve been doing this, I’ve never heard of any changes that are more sweeping than these. If enacted as proposed, this could dramatically slow down or altogether stop development in Maine.”

Especially given the trying times the state and the country is facing economically, “This is absolutely the wrong time for a proposal like this to see the light of day,” he stressed.

Of particular concern is that if enacted, the changes to the Site Location of Development Law 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. It would also require the preservation of at least 55 percent of the land area within residential subdivisions larger than 30 acres and prohibit the disturbances of slopes 20 percent or greater.

Attendees of the Bethel forum, which is the first of seven in the series Main-Land is sponsoring, were also particularly concerned with a provision in the proposed act to update the law that would allow MDEP to approve or reject site contractors selected by an applicant for project construction.

In a question-and-answer session following Main-Land’s presentation, several attendees commended the company for being proactive in educating those who would most be impacted by the law about its affects.

Main-Land’s next forum on this issue will be held from 8 to 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, March 3 in Farmington at the Fairbanks Meeting House. You can read our press release announcing that event here in the Morning Sentinel and here on the Daily Bulldog (an online news source for Franklin County). There will also be a forum next Friday in Norway/South Paris at the Norway Legion Hall, also beginning at 8 a.m. All are welcome to attend.

And, you can click here to read coverage of our Bethel forum in the Lewiston Sun Journal.

Main-Land survey crew hard at work in Bethel

Thursday, February 26th, 2009


In our ongoing efforts to update our new website which launched last week, I recently headed out into the field to shoot some of our Main-Land survey crew working over in the Bethel area. Despite the two plus feet of snow that had fallen earlier in the week, the crew was hard at work setting pins for their latest project.

Here is Roman



And Scott



If you are looking for a land surveyor in western Maine from Rangeley to Rumford, Bethel to Bridgton to Belgrade, we encourage you to contact our chief of surveying, Chuck Buker.


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