Posts Tagged ‘Main-Land Development Consultants’

Main-Land hires Tim Gallant as GIS Coordinator

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

For Immediate Release
June 4, 2009

Contact: Darryl Brown, President/Owner of Main-Land Development Consultants
(207) 897-6752 or darryl@main-landdevelopment.com

Main-Land Development Consultants hires Tim Gallant as GIS Coordinator
-The Rumford native is also a land surveyor in training-

timtestLIVERMORE FALLS- Main-Land Development Consultants has hired Tim Gallant as the firm’s first Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Coordinator.

Gallant, 29, is a Rumford native who graduated from Mountain Valley High School and received his Bachelor of Science degree in forestry from UMaine in 2002.

He recently returned to the region from southern Maine, where he worked at Corner Post Land Surveying, Inc. in Springvale as a Survey Project Manager. He now lives in Wayne with his wife, Heather.

As the GIS Coordinator at Main-Land, Gallant is responsible for creating, analyzing, organizing and managing the GIS data collected for clients and by other parties in preparation for presentation to local planning boards and state agencies and use by Main-Land’s team of engineers.

He also works under the firm’s licensed surveyors to perform all aspects of land surveying, as well as wetlands delineation.

Many Maine municipalities are now utilizing GIS to map a myriad of features of the town, including road networks, zoning overlays, water/sewer infrastructure and the state’s GIS office currently catalogs spatial maps of Maine’s traits from topography to wetlands to wildlife
habitats.

By adding a GIS division to the firm, Main-Land can now utilize those existing maps to quickly gather data for client projects without ever
leaving the office.

“Having on-site GIS capabilities is a huge asset to us because in a faster, more cost-efficient way than ever before, we are able to provide our clients with more information about their land. As a result, our clients can be better educated about the limitations and opportunities for developing their site in a responsible, effective manner, ” said Darryl Brown, president of Main-Land Development Consultants. “It is also helpful to our engineers because they are now able to design projects with a much deeper understanding of the characteristics of the client’s land. We’re excited to have Tim join our team and help integrate this powerful technology into everything we do.”

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.

Look for the article on Tim’s hiring here in the Lewiston Sun Journal, and in other newspapers around Western Maine.

Watch out: Locational element added to LD 1333

Monday, May 18th, 2009

As you know from our previous post, all unsavory pieces of L.D. 1268 were eliminated by the Committee, a major victory that is attributed to the hard work of all of you who spoke out against this potentially paralyzing piece of legislation.

However, in response, DEP has worked to insert language into an amendment to LD 1333, An Act to Establish Climate and Energy Planning in Maine that would give that agency sweeping authority related to the site law that they’d previously hoped to gain through LD 1268. This would be a back door approach to potentially add the “locational element” that we at Main-Land Development Consultants so vigorously opposed with L.D. 1268.

We clearly believe LD 1333 should be defeated as a result, and will do everything in our power to ensure that happens. In the meantime, we encourage you to please contact your legislators (House and Senate Members) to let them know of your opposition to L.D. 1333 and thank them for their support of LD 1268.

LD 1268 moves to Maine House with ALL objectional portions pulled

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Great news!!! After months of hard work to fight LD 1268: An Act to Update the Site Location of Development Laws, we here at Main-Land Development Consultants can happily report that the Joint Standing Committee on Natural Resources has moved forward with a bill that ensures rural Maine will remain open to responsible development.

Following dozens of very thoughtful and persuasive testimonies at the LD 1268 public hearing in mid-April, the Natural Resources Committee held two work sessions on the bill- one on April 28 and the other on May 8. Main-Land Development Consultants owner Darryl Brown, who has led the challenge to this bill from the beginning, was invited by the committee to participate in both sessions, and was there last Friday when the committee voted unanimously to pass a completely modified version of LD 1268 which had every single aspect of the bill that we at Main-Land and other opponents from around the state found disagreeable removed

Specifically, the following provisions were eliminated from the legislation.

-Everything relating to the location elements – this is in reference to the piece that would have restricted DEP approved projects to only those areas where towns had identified designated growth areas;
-the definition of “significant groundwater aquifer” and changed the groundwater standard. Basically, the existing language in the law stays as is;
-the exceptions for a lot of 40 acres or more in the definition of “subdivision.” Again, the 40 acre exception remains as is;
-the low-density subdivision exemption. We are still able to create a “low density subdivision” without triggering the Site Law;
-and,all of the additional bonding requirements that the legislation tried to do.

Also, the new legislation
-changed the exception for a sale or lease of a lot to an abutter in the definition of “subdivision”. Existing language in the law remains unchanged in relation to transfers to abutters;
-and changed the exception for a common lot created with a conservation easement in the definition of “subdivision.”

The new bill, which actually contains some potentially positive provisions for the development community (issues relating to long-term construction, providing broader permitting authority to MDOT projects and providing municipalities a method to substitute local stormwater permits for state permits) now moves to the House and then to the Senate, where it is expected to be passed in both places without discussion.

In the meantime, please know how grateful all of us at Main-Land Development Consultants are for your continued contributions, support and encouragement throughout this process. Whether you attended one of our seven forums around Western Maine, or bravely told the committee how LD 1268 would hurt your community, you were an invaluable part of the process that helped protect rural Maine and its future. Thank you


Home | About Us | Our Family | Planning | Surveying | Environmental Mapping | Soils Testing, Mapping | Engineering | Municipal Services | Environmental Site Assessment | Projects | Latest News | Forms | Client Area

The Latest News for Main-Land Development Consultants is proudly powered by WordPress