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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-06-17 TB 6-17-21 Page 1 of 13 TOWN OF DRYDEN TOWN BOARD MEETING June 17, 2021 Via Zoom Hybrid Present: Supervisor Jason Leifer, Cl Daniel Lamb, Cl James Skaley, Cl Loren Sparling, Cl Leonardo Vargas-Mendez Elected Officials: Bambi L. Avery, Town Clerk Rick Young, Highway/DPW Superintendent Other Town Staff: Ray Burger, Planning Director Peter Walsh, Town Attorney Supv Leifer called the meeting to order at 6:08 p.m. Board members and audience recited the pledge of allegiance. Supv Leifer acknowledged the passing of Tom Hatfield, who had served two terms on the Town Board. He had served on the Planning Board since 2002, volunteered for Neptune Fire Company and also did work for other departments as an accountant. Supv Leifer said Tom was a super volunteer and we need more people like Tom to step up when the community needs them. He put his heart into the whole town. Cl Lamb said Tom knew the town and served it well. His institutional knowledge will be missed on the Planning Board. He always found a middle ground. The Planning Board is working on a formal resolution for presentation in July. There was a moment of silence in Tom’s honor. APPROVAL OF MINUTES RESOLUTION #123 (2021) – APPROVE MINUTES Supv Leifer offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby approves the meeting minutes of May 13 and May 20, 2021. 2nd Cl Lamb Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes COUNTY ELECTED OFFICIALS CALL NOTES There was discussion about holding open meetings. The County has had several days of zero new positive cases in the past week and there are currently only 7 active cases. The current executive order allowing remote meetings expires July 6. The county was asked to develop some operational guidelines for all boards. If there is a sort of county -wide standards, residents will know from one area to another what to expect. The Planning Board will hold a hybrid next week. TB 6-17-21 Page 2 of 13 HIGHWAY/DPW DEPT R Young would like to purchase a 1996 Broce Broom (road sweeper) off the Onondaga County Contract for an amount not to exceed $16,000. Board members were provided with details last week. RESOLUTION #124 (2021) – AUTHORIZE PURCHASE OF 1996 BROCE BROOM Supv Leifer offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby authorizes the purchase of a 1996 Broce Broom Model RJ300 at a cost not to exceed $16,000.00. 2nd Cl Lamb Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes R Young shared information with the board about the AlpinePure Ionization air purification unit that will be installed at town hall while the HVAC repairs are being made. They’ve been working the last week or two on repairing the system. The highway crew has been busy paving and road trimming. Leisure Lane, Mill Street, Star Stanton Hill Road, Sunset West, Sunset Circle, parts of Pinckney Road (bridge area), and Ferguson Road have been paved. A lot of work on the trestles on the trail has been done. They discovered more damage and rot than anticipated, so they have made appropriate adjustments to strengthen them. They will be doing roadside mowing and R Young asked people to let them know if there are areas that should not be mowed. T hey try to work with everyone but need to keep the line of sight open. PUBLIC HEARING CONTRACT WITH NYSDOT Supv Leifer opened the public hearing at 6:30. Purpose of the public hearing is hear comments on whether the town should agree to let NYSDOT manage the acquisition of a right- of-way to build a pedestrian bridge over Route 13 for the rail trail. The town has 2.2 million dollars for this project and will be seeking more funding. The Town Board voted to accept the chosen alternative earlier this year. The agreement with NYSDOT is posted on the website. Bob Beck, 54 West Malloryville Rd, read the attached statement. Judy Pierpont, 111 Pleasant Hollow Road, said she is excited that the town is nearing completion of this section of the Dryden Rail Trail, a project that has been imagined and studied for decades. She thanked the Town Board, the Planning Boa rd and the Rail Trail Task Force and the many, many volunteers who have helped to make this trail a reality. They just need a few more easements and a way to cross Route 13 to make it complete. She thinks the task force has found the most feasible way for trail users to get across this dangerous road. Many, many options were considered and rejected as unreasonable or unsafe. There must be efficient passage across Route 13 that will not endanger people’s lives. In particular, we don’t want users to cross in front of traffic. The DOT was insistent that even a user -operated light TB 6-17-21 Page 3 of 13 would not deter some walkers or riders from trying to make it across the highway. A detour away from the trail itself, such as down to the undercrossing at Fall Creek, would be too often disregarded in favor of a direct and quick crossing. Users might also ignore a detour up to the four-way light at the junction of Route 366, which is also a risky crossing involving users negotiating a complex intersection. The decision to construct a bridge was largely a matter of complying with DOT safety standards, although a tunnel was also considered. A bridge, it turned out, would be cheaper than a tunnel. This version of the plans drawn by Erdman Anthony is the least expensive of the 11 they offered. It is also the most conservative regarding how much land would be required to build a ramp at a specified slope. It does appear that this is the most reasonable and cost-effective way of getting across Route 13 safely. The viability of the trail as safe and useful depends on this bridge. The whole notion of an alternative to transportation as well as a link to other communities depends on safe passage over a bridge. If we agree that this is a community asset, a public recreational benefit for all, then she thinks we need to support this resolution to acquire the small amounts of land required for the ramp access. Bear in mind that it is still possible that the owners will grant easements on the land on either side and the DOT will not need to acquire it after all. But in the case that the owners are not willing, she agrees that the DOT should be given the contractual power to acquire the needed land. Otherwise, this important, long-awaited project will not come to completion. That would be a great loss and a disservice to the community and people elsewhere who may find it a desirable destination. She thinks the town should contract with DOT to pursue the acquisition land as a necessary part of the trail completion. Fred Crass said he and his wife own 3 Hall Woods Road. Since the beginning of Wilcox Press and when Mahlon Perkins was the town attorney, Betty Gail Downing owned that piece of property. When the building was being built he and his wife asked for a re-survey. The sign says 23 acres and when Wilcox built the building it was only 14.7 acres. DEC came in and the land on the south side of the railroad bed is a designated wetland. Hall Woods Road is a dead end and the people there want to keep it that way. It’s bad enough that they wanted to cut down their trees on the railroad bed. It gives the houses there some privacy. Their house has always been in the woods. He has the most road frontage of any house on the roa d and owns property all the way to Saunders Concrete and has a 50’ right -of-way on Pinckney Road. He has been opposed to this. He doesn’t want the noise or the traffic on the road. Cutting the trees on the railroad bed will make him wide open to Route 13 and all their privacy will be gone. Bob Beck said the trees that were planted on southerly edge of the railroad bed (parallel to Hall Woods Road) will be left place. They are asking for 8’ of the 33’ on the printshop side of the centerline of the former railbed. They intend to leave the trees there and add additional gravel for the trail to widen the railbed as needed in order to leave those trees there. They know those are important as screening for the neighbors on Hall Woods Road. They are going to extra trouble to protect that screening vegetation, and minimize as much as they can the removal of vegetation between the railbed and Hall Woods Road. That will remain a dead end road just as it is. Alice Green said no motorized vehicles are permitted on the trail – no motorcycles or vehicles coming from Route 13 will enter the trail. B Beck added there may be occasional maintenance vehicles or emergency vehicles. They do allow quiet ebikes. They want to make sure the neighbors on Hall Woods Road understand what the plan is. There will be an open house on June 30 from 5-8 at Neptune Fire Station in Dryden for those who want to learn more detail about the project, ask questions and share concerns. Alice Green, 609 Fall Creek Road, said her colleagues from the Rail Trail Task Force have made it clear that the RTTF and the bridge subcommittee did not take this decision lightly TB 6-17-21 Page 4 of 13 to request that DOT assist us in acquiring these small properties that are critical in order to cross Route 13 in a safe way. One of the things that is important to point out is that this is a recreational corridor, but is also a transportation corridor. That is one of the reasons that DOT was insistent there be a safe bridge that goes straight across Route 13 for those who are commuting. Over the past five years they have heard from people who would like to be able to ride their bikes or get an ebike and ride to their jobs in Ithaca. It is not just a recreational trail. It is a transportation corridor and that is why we received more than 2 million dollars in grants for this project. For those who say let’s wait until we have acquired all the outstanding easements in phase 3, that is exactly the kind of thinking that has kept this important corr idor from connecting Dryden for over 40 years. She was one of the homeowners along a different section of the railbed when the Town decided in the 1970s not to turn the LVRR bed into a recreational and transportation corridor when it was abandoned. She thinks the town made a terrific mistake and two generations of residents have been unable to use that corridor that connects the town from east to west. She thanked the town for being forward thinking this time and for approving the contract to build this bridge. She’ll appreciate a vote on this small step to get the DOT involved in helping us acquire the small properties needed to make the connection of the bridge a reality. F Crass asked about the bridge rampway and how it would be contained. Cl Lamb explained there will be wing walls and encouraged Mr Crass to come to the open house on June 20 and see the drawings. The public hearing was closed at 6:57 p.m. COUNTY BRIEFING Martha Robertson was unable to attend and emailed an update (attached). PLANNING DEPT The monthly report is attached. The comp plan update effort is ongoing. The next steering committee meeting is next Wednesday with the intent to get out a review draft to the advisory boards in August and to the public after that. The Planning Board will hold a public hearing as part of the process, probably in September. Cl Lamb noted that 2020 census data will be available in August and will be able to be incorporated. On June 30 at Neptune Fire Hall from 5-8 p.m. the design team for the Route 13 pedestrian bridge will hold an open house. A draft report was submitted to DOT today. PRESENTATION BY DOMINION ENERGY Supv Leifer explained that as part of the approval and permit for refitting the turbines, each year the company will present an update to the town regarding emissions and ongoings at the plant. Don Houser introduced Gary Comerford and explained that on November 1, 2020 Dominion Energy sold the natural gas business to Berkshire Hathaway Energy and the operating company is Eastern Gas Transmission and Storage. They are now known as BHE GT&S. The attached slides were reviewed. He acknowledged the memo and questions submitted by residents (attached) and said they are not prepared to make comments on any proposed regulations during the current comment period. The first questions have to do with tanks. BHE GT&S has a waste oil tank and a lube oil tank, so there wouldn’t be concerns of VOCs from those. They are n ot a facility that has fuel holding tanks, no gas or diesel that would have a VOC issue. TB 6-17-21 Page 5 of 13 Q 3 - They use gas starters on engines 2 and 3 and they will be replaced with electric starters so there will be no issue. Q 4a – They do not have bleed devices at this station and have an internal program through all the stations to replace bleed devices with no or low bleed equipment across the entire system. Q 4b – Unit 4 was retrofitted with a pressurized hold on May 4 of this year. The new units (5 & 6) will be installed with electric driven seal boost pumps to extend pressurized holds as long as possible without blowdowns. Q 4c – Yes, they do use portable ZVACs to reduce pressure on the lines when doing any linework to capture any gas so it is not vented. Q 5 – yes, they have centrifugal compressors. Unit 4 has dry gas seals. Units 2 & 3 have wet seals but will be retired in this project. With respect to future LDAR requirements, no comment will be made on proposed regulations. Q 6 – There are no reciprocating compressors at the station. Q 7a – They don’t have that information tonight. Q 7b – They discussed notifying the town of planned blowdowns years ago. T hey use the chair of the Safety & Preparedness Committee, who gets a notification that then goes to Swift911. Citizens would like more advance notification and D Houser said they will talk about it with operations staff. Q 7c – Is a forward-looking question about regulations. Q 7d - They have not, but knows it has been well publicized. Q 8 - Is a forward-looking question about regulations. Q 9a – They don’t have an answer. Q 9b - There are no pigging stations, but they do have 4 launchers and 3 receivers where pigs are inserted as necessary. D Houser said they hope to get a building permit application in soon and expect to complete the project this fall. They want to have it done before the heating season. Katie Quinn-Jacobs said they would like to get the answers in writing from D Houser. The slides are available on the town website. D Houser explained that their customers are gas distribution companies, so there are takeaway points from various gas distribution companies along the way. She asked why they can’t comment on future leaning questions. D Houser explained if the company decides to make comments on proposed regulations, they will do it in writing to the DEC, not in this format. K Quinn-Jacobs said they have feedback from the community that there was a blowdown when the notification wasn’t activated. It was explained that they can only provide notification on planned blowdowns. If there is an unanticipated need for a blowdown, staff may not have time for the notification. D Houser will investigate that. TB 6-17-21 Page 6 of 13 Lizzy Evert asked why there was a delay in the p lanned upgrades. D Houser said they had always planned to start in 2021. It would have been impossible to complete after the special use permit was granted before the 2020 heating season. He did say in the process that they would not order equipment until they had approval from town and FERC. He is hoping to have the permit application to the town in the coming days and expects the project to be complete by the end of 2021. S Berg asked if the current project plan is flexible enough so that if something is finalized in the future regulations it could be incorporated into the project. There are some things already planned that would not be an issue. In general, if they know something may be coming, would it be included in the project? D Houser said there is no regulation that they have to use a ZVAC machine; they just do it. It’s just best practice. They don’t want gas loss, and want to keep it all in the system. They are always incorporating new technologies and always comply with finalized regulations. J Skaley asked what precipitates an unplanned blowdown? D Houser said it could be a number of reasons including a power outage. In that case the gates at the station would close and it is isolated from the pipeline and gas would be vented through the blowdown system. K Quinn-Jacobs asked about the Eastern Gas environmental program goals and objectives for 2021. G Comerford said their goal is to have zero noncompliance situations. They have a rigorous program for quality assurance to make sure records are in order and a services group that maintains engines to be sure they are operating properly, and emissions are below permitted levels. Title 5 reports are submitted to DEC. They have climate and GHG initiatives and often do voluntary work. They try to stay ahead of regulations to know they are doing best management practices whenever possible. One of their top goals is a cl ean environment and a safe workplace for their staff. There are industry groups that they work with and methane programs initiated by the EPA that are voluntary. They participate to see what the latest technology is. They always try to stay out in front . D Houser said they have extended their giving program to the new company and are always looking for community or environmental projects to support. In the coming weeks the portal to apply will be open at BHEGTS.com for groups with projects that need funding. Lizzie Everett said Dominion was open about allowing a tour of the facilities and wondered if the new company will allow this. D Houser will find out. NYSDOT Contract Cl Lamb said this resolution and choice of alternative was exhaustively reviewed by the Rail Trail Task Force folks. Resolution #125 (2021) - Regarding entering a contract with NYSDOT as it relates to the proposed Route 13 pedestrian bridge. Also accepting the recommendations of the Dryden Rail Trail Task Force to establish Alternative 11 as the preferred bridge design alternative. Supv Leifer offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: WHEREAS, the Dryden Town Board established the Dryden Rail Trail Task Force to guide the establishment of the Dryden Rail Trail, and TB 6-17-21 Page 7 of 13 WHEREAS, on March 19, 2020 the Town Board via Resolution 49 (2020) approved the Project for the Dryden Rail Trail Phase 2 (PIN 395071), a project to build a pedestrian bridge over Route 13, and WHEREAS, the Rail Trail Task Force unanimously recommends that the Town enter a contract with NYSDOT to authorize the agency to manage the acquisition pr ocess of portions of two parcels necessary for the Rt. 13 bridge project, and WHEREAS, the Town appreciates the tremendous expertise of the Rail Trail Task Force members, their meticulous oversight of this project, and their recommendation, and WHEREAS, the Rail Trail Task Force recommends Alternative 11 as the preferred alternative, NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Town accepts Alternative 11 as the preferred alternative, and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Supervisor of the Town of Dryden is hereby authorized to execute a contract with NYSDOT authorizing the agency to manage the acquisition process of portions of two parcels necessary for the Rt. 13 bridge project. Alternative 11 TB 6-17-21 Page 8 of 13 2nd Cl Lamb Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes ELLIS HOLLOW ROAD The board has received and reviewed a petition for a reduced speed limit and other traffic mitigations on Ellis Hollow Road. After discussion, the board passed the following resolution that will be sent to the county highway manager who will review it and send it on to the NYS Department of Transportation. NYSDOT will determine whether the speed limit will be reduced, but other mitigations may be able to be made locally. RESOLUTION #126 (2021) – REQUEST REDUCED SPEED LIMIT AND OTHER TRAFFIC MITIGATION MEASURES ON ELLIS HOLLOW ROAD Supv Leifer offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: Whereas, Ellis Hollow Road in the Town of Dryden h as become more densely populated and more heavily travelled over the years, yet retains a speed limit of 45 miles per hour, and Whereas, the Town Board is concerned with the safety of pedestrians and cyclists as well as residents of Ellis Hollow Road and the travelling public, and TB 6-17-21 Page 9 of 13 Whereas, the Town Board has received a petition and communications from residents requesting a reduction in the speed limit and other traffic mitigations and safety measures on Ellis Hollow Road, now therefore, be it RESOLVED, that the Dryden Town Board hereby requests that the speed limit on Ellis Hollow Road in the Town of Dryden be reduced to 40 mph and requests that NYS Department of Transportation conduct a study of the area to determine whether such a reduction in spee d limit is warranted, and it is further RESOLVED, that this board will pass the petition received on to Tompkins County Highway and the NYS Department of Transportation and request that the traffic mitigations and safety measures are considered. 2nd Cl Vargas-Mendez Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes CONTRACT FOR RESUBMISSION OF CDBG APPLICATION The town was not successful in its application for CDBG funding for the consolidated sewer district in the 2020 round. G & G Consulting has submitted a proposal to resubmit the application for the 2021 round of funding. RESOLUTION #127 (2021) – APPROVE CONTRACT WITH G & G CONSULTING FOR RESUBMISSION OF CDBG GRANT APPLICATION FOR CONSOLIDATED SEWER Cl Skaley offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: Whereas, G&G Municipal Consulting and Grant Writing (G&G), has previously submitted a CDBG application to fund the Varna sewer project and, Whereas, the Office of Community Renewal reviewed 118 applications but only funded 22 and, Whereas, the Town of Dryden was not funded possibly due to lack of sufficient available funds and, Whereas, G&G has submitted a proposal to resubmit the Varna Sewer application to fund the sewer project for up to $1,250,000, and Whereas, G&G has proposed to resubmit this application for $2500 about half the initial fee for the original application with costs to be borne by the sewer fund balance, be it therefore, Resolved that the Town agrees to resubmit the CDBG application and authorizes the Town Supervisor to sign a contract for resubmittal. 2nd Supv Leifer Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes TB 6-17-21 Page 10 of 13 CONTRACT FOR SUBMISSION OF CDBG APPLICATION FOR SIDEWALKS G & G Consulting has submitted a proposal to prepare an application for CDBG funding for sidewalks in Varna. The income survey previously prepared by G & G will be helpful in this instance. There is $3,000 currently budgeted for Varna development, and the other $900 can come from fund balance, or some other budget line. We will need a budget modification. RESOLUTION #128 (2021) - APPROVE CONTRACT WITH G & G CONSULTING FOR RESUBMISSION OF CDBG GRANT APPLICATION FOR SIDEWALKS IN VARNA Cl Skaley offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: Whereas, G&G Municipal Consulting and Grant Writing (G&G), has previously submitted a CDBG application to fund the Varna sewer project has conducted an income survey for the Hamlet of Varna showing that the Hamlet's average median income is only about 64% of the average median income and CDBG grants typically fund only low to moderate income areas, and Whereas, the NYSDOT will be repaving and upgrading the corridor for RT 366 through the Hamlet of Varna during 2022 and will be constructing a sidewalk on the south side of the road between Forest Home Dr and Mt. Pleasant Rd, but has insufficient funds to construct a sidewalk on the north side of the road, and Whereas, NYSDOT will not allow bike lanes unless there are sidewalks on both sides of the road, and Whereas, both sidewalks and bike lanes are asked for in the Varna Community Development Plan, and Whereas, G&G has proposed to submit a CDBG application through the Combined Fund Application (CFA) to fund approximately 2420 linear feet of sidewalk from Forest Home Drive to Freese Rd at a cost of $3900, and Whereas, this contract would be funded by a line item in the current budget for Varna Community Development Implementation showing $3000 in Line A-820.412 with the remaining $900 to be taken from Fund Balance, be it therefore Resolved that the Town agrees to submit a CDBG application for sidewalks in Varna and authorizes the Town Supervisor to sign a contract with G&G. 2nd Cl Vargas-Mendez Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes Cl Skaley thanked the town clerk and bookkeeper for help in gathering documents and moving forward with the budget work related to the Varna water and sewer projects. He h as submitted the remaining missing documents this afternoon and everything has been completed with EFC for the sewer except for two title documents for easements that the town attorney is working on. TB 6-17-21 Page 11 of 13 Atty Walsh reported he has been working with Dondi Harner of TG Miller and Cornell to identify what is necessary to bring the easements into date. Cornell is doing flow metering to determine the actual flow of sewage through the 16” line that leads to the city at Thurston Avenue to determine how much reserve capacity they have in that line. So they are w orking on legal framework to bring those agreements up to date. If they cannot make a determination in a timely manner, they will ask for a memorandum of understanding. Cl Skaley will be applying for short-term funding through EFC and the title documents have to be submitted before any funds can be transferred to the town. Cl Lamb said he has talked with Heather McDaniel who helps advocate for CDBG applications for the county. Cl Skaley will prepare information for Cl Lamb to share with her. RECREATION DEPARTMENT Written report is attached. COMMUNITY GARDEN SPACE Communication was received from the person in charge of the community garden and they are concerned about plans to develop recreational fields in that area. There is no final plan yet about where the fields are proposed, but will likely be able to accommodate the garden. ADVISORY BOARD UPDATES Supv Leifer reported that Dryden Lake dam will be replaced, contrary to the rumors he has heard. He talked with DEC last week and they know what we want and are going to do it. They don’t want a barrage of phone calls and petitions. Because it doesn’t appear as a line item in a capital budget doesn’t mean it isn’t budgeted for. They are working on the design, getting information on the volume of the lake, and they know it is a recreational feature of the park. When they have something to show us, they will let us know. It may be a year or more. We don’t need people running around and bothering DEC about it. Safety & Preparedness Committee – Katie Quinn-Jacobs reported that Dana Magnuson is stepping down and they have elected Christina Dravis as their new chair, and will need that approved by the board. The committee has been working on updating their bylaws. C Dravis will be sending them to the board for review. RESOLUTION #129 (2021) – APPOINT CHRISTINA DRAVIS CHAIR OF SAFETY & PREPAREDNESS COMMITTEE Cl Lamb offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby appoints Christina Dravis to serve as chair of the Safety and Preparedness Committee. 2nd Supv Leifer Roll Call Vote Cl Sparling Yes Cl Vargas-Mendez Yes Cl Skaley Yes Cl Lamb Yes Supv Leifer Yes TB 6-17-21 Page 12 of 13 K Quinn-Jacobs said there were recent complaints regarding Cornell’s odorant station from residents of Genung Road and other adjacent roads. There was a leak early on a Thursday and they could smell it the following Tuesday. Cornell did eventually fix it. There are communications pieces not in place for when this happens. VFD didn’t have access to the building and didn’t know what to do. That needs to be updated because it is not just the odorant; people were wakened in the night because it was so strong. She asked specifically if it was only mercaptan that was leaking. Gary Stewart said there was methane also leaking, though it was small. They need a better response process for questions. Cornell said they are not required to file an incident report. The expectation is that the town will do something. G Stewart gave them a flyer with an emergency number for people to call. Perhaps it can be posted on the town’s website. C Dravis is working with the Varna Fire Department to get more coordination between them and Cornell. G Stewart gave them the name of an environmental contact at Cornell. C Dravis will take over the Swift911 role for the Borger subscription starting in July. The backup is Ellie Kramer. They will have an opening on the committee because Katie Quinn- Jacobs is also stepping down. Planning Board – Members are all engaged as steering committee members on the comp plan update. They are reviewing a draft and there is editing work to be done. Edits will be incorporated by the consultant. The steering committee will discuss whether to give the advisory boards an isolated comment period and then go public or run it concurrently. There will likely be a public presentation in August followed by a September public hearing in front of the Planning Board and an October public hearing for the Town Board. Rail Trail Task Force – They have been busy as previously discussed. Cl Lamb has spent time preparing submissions to Senator Gillibrand and Senator Schumer for earmarks. They have made the first cut and there is more work to do. The work being done on the Game Farm trestles is exciting. Broadband Committee – They had a good meeting last week and a timetable is forming. At the next agenda meeting there will be a contract to approve for someone to build the customer website for promotion and signups. It should be up before the end of the summer. R Burger talked with the Village of Dryden about rights-of-way in village needed to run the fiber. They have bids for the customer service contract and potentially for running fiber on the roads. Securing the fiber may be difficult, but they should be able to do it. They now have a tool to project what the long-range finances will look like based in subscription, bond rates, and how much grant money is received. The person who developed the tool will be meeting with the committee members. The project will pay for itself and then the town will clear quite a bit of money. Conservation Board – The next meeting is June 22. The board was informed of a spotted lantern fly infestation in Ithaca. Lantern flies basically attack a single tree, in this case a tree of heaven. They suck the liquid out of that tree and expel honey dew which gets mold on it. They severely impact apple orchards and grape vineyards. The infestation was spotted early, and Ithaca is currently working on the eradication of egg masses through the pesticide treatment of trees of heaven. Recreation & Youth Commission – The next meeting is June 23. Rural Youth services overcharged Dryden $1,702.40 for the OURS program last year and the town will be credited that amount this year. The Southworth Library is holding Let’s Talk Dryden Conversation series. The goal is to create more social and education activities for adults and to create trust in the community at large. Meeting dates and times are available on the library’s website. TB 6-17-21 Page 13 of 13 Ag Committee – The June 9 minutes are yet to be distributed. Much of the previous committee meeting was devoted to a conversation between the committee and Alice Green representing the comprehensive plan update subcommittee. This is hopefully the first of many discussions working toward climate resilient farms in Dryden. Cl Sparling reported he attended a webinar series entitled “Farming in a Changing Climate – Implications of climate Change on the Future of Agriculture” and there is a lot of information in the two webinars. They did speak on specific strategies that northeastern farms should undertake to adapt and mitigate climate change. Climate Smart Communities Task Force – The Energywi$e event at Dryden Agway was a success with 18 signups for free home energy assessments at last count . The next meeting is Monday, and they will discuss the actual results. Community Choice Aggregation has received notice that they were awarded $50,000 of their $72,000 project budget for their proposal from the Park Foundation. They’ll have to discuss how to cover the remaining $22,000. A subgroup of the committee drafted a job description for a project manager that they hope to get posted by the end of the month once the grant contract is signed. Another subgroup is forming to develop the MOU between the municipalities and Sustainable Tompkins. The Town of Dryden signed on with this group to basically get solar to the entire area and ultimately culminating in green jobs. CITIZENS PRIVILEGE None There being no further business, on motion made, seconded and unanimously carried, the meeting was adjourned at 8:51 p.m. Respectfully submitted, Bambi L. Avery Town Clerk