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Bauer to lead Protect the Adirondacks
Posted on May 7th, 2012 Add a comment >>Peter Bauer, a longtime environmental activist, has been named executive director of Protect the Adirondacks, an organization formed in 2010 with the merger of two green groups, one of which Bauer ran.
In an interview with the Explorer, Bauer said he was drawn to Protect by the strength of its board of directors. “It was the right job at the right time with the right group of people,” he remarked.
Bauer will start his new job in early September. He is currently executive director of the Fund for Lake George, where he delved deeply into water-quality issues. Bauer went to work for the Lake George group in 2007 after resigning from the Residents’ Committee to Protect the Adirondacks. Three years later, the Residents’ Committee merged with the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks to form Protect the Adirondacks.
Chuck Clusen, co-chairman of Protect, said he was “totally exhilarated” by the appointment of Bauer. “No one is more knowledgeable of the Adirondacks,” said Clusen, an official with the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Bauer said he enjoyed his time at Fund for Lake George, but he is looking forward to working on Park-wide issues. He believes the biggest threat facing the Adirondack Park is the fragmentation of open-space lands—that is, privately owned timberlands and farmlands.
He said the Adirondack Park Agency has failed to craft a coherent policy to guide development in the open-space lands. “So what they do is react to the bad ideas of developers,” he said.
Protect is suing the APA over its decision to approve a massive development near the Big Tupper Ski Area. One of the main objections to the project is that it will fragment timberlands.
Protect plans to open an office in Lake George. Bauer will continue to live in the Lake George region with his family.
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The APA’s slippery criteria
Posted on November 17th, 2011 7 comments Add a comment >>
Preserve Associates wants to build a 706-unit development near the Big Tupper Ski Area. Photo by Carl Heilman II.
Resource Management is the most restrictive zoning category for private land in the Adirondack Park. In the debate over the Adirondack Club and Resort, one of the big questions is whether the proposed resort is suitable for RM lands.
Essentially, RM lands are timberlands. The Adirondack Park Agency Act says the primary (or best) uses of such lands include forestry, agriculture, and recreation. Housing developments are considered “secondary uses.”
The law says that residential development on RM lands is permissible “on substantial acreages or in small clusters on carefully selected and well designed sites.”
The developers contend that their design meets the standard, whereas their opponents say it doesn’t.
The APA board, which began reviewing the project Thursday, will have to decide who is right. That won’t be a simple task: APA regulations fail to define either “substantial acreages” or “small clusters.”
The developers, Preserve Associates, want to build 706 housing units on 6,234 acres near the Big Tupper Ski Area in the town of Tupper Lake. The development would include 206 single-family homes, 453 townhouse units (in 125 buildings), thirty-nine Great Camps, and eight artist cabins.
Much of the debate revolves around the Great Camps. Critics argue that these rustic mansions would be scattered around in such a way as to fragment the forest and diminish wildlife habitat.
Most of the Great Camps would be built on lots ranging from twenty to thirty acres. Eight of them would be built on larger lots, ranging from 111 to 1,211 acres.
Since most of the Great Camps would be on RM lands, the APA board will be applying the “substantial acreage” and “small clusters” tests.
APA attorney Sarah Reynolds told the board Thursday that the agency’s staff does not regard the smaller lots as “substantial acreages.” The staff feels that the larger lots do meet the criterion. But Dan Plumley of Adirondack Wild contends that “substantial acreages” should be applied only to tracts of at least a few thousand acres.
If any of the Great Camps are not on substantial acreages, the board will need to decide whether they meet the “small clusters” criterion.
Preserve Associates argues that the resort does employ cluster development in that most of the land will remain in open space. Green groups disagree. The Adirondack Council has proposed three alternative designs that would preserve more open space. In the council’s preferred design, all of the development would take place on 750 acres west of Read Road, leaving 80 percent of the land untouched. Likewise, Protect the Adirondacks proposes that most of the Great Camps be built on lots ranging from two to five acres—again leaving most of the land undeveloped.
And what if the Great Camps meet neither criterion?
That, too, is up for debate. Protect the Adirondacks argues that the criteria are mandatory, but the developers say they’re not. The APA staff agrees with the developers, but the board is not bound by the staff’s interpretation.
In short, the board is tasked with making a decision on a huge (and controversial) development without knowing what the criteria mean or even if the criteria must be applied.
By the way, no one knows what “forest fragmentation” means either.
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Gibson out as Protect’s executive director
Posted on March 19th, 2010 2 comments Add a comment >>David Gibson has stepped aside as executive director of Protect the Adirondacks, but he is continuing to work for the organization as an adviser on conservation issues, the Adirondack Explorer has learned.
Gibson had been the executive director of Protect since its creation last year, when the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks merged with the Residents’ Committee to Protect the Adirondacks. Before that, he had served as executive director of the Association since 1987.
Gibson confirmed that the board changed his title at its March 6 meeting, but he referred most questions to board members.
In another change, Protect’s board of directors has eliminated the position of Gibson’s assistant, Ken Rimany. Gibson praised Rimany for, among other things, his help in raising $1.5 million for the Center for the Forest Preserve in Niskayuna, which the Association created before the merger.
“He put his heart and soul into the organization, and he will be sorely missed,” Gibson said.
Charles Clusen, the chairman of the board, who also holds the title of chief executive officer, will take on the executive director’s duties temporarily. But Clusen said Protect is launching a search for someone to oversee the staff. This person will hold the titles of president and chief executive officer.
Asked why Gibson was not assigned the new post, Clusen replied, “It’s a matter of transformation. We’re moving on. He’s been in that job twenty-three years.”
Clusen said the changes are part of a larger initiative to strengthen Protect. “This has nothing to do with Dave’s performance or his conservation efforts,” he said. “We’re delighted he’s staying with us.”






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