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Plum Creek
News & Updates
Groups file with LURC to dismiss
Plum Creek's zoning petition
By Clarke Canfield, Associated Press Writer | July 27, 2007
PORTLAND, Maine --Two conservation groups opposed to a massive development
in the Moosehead Lake region filed a motion Friday with the Land Use Regulation
Commission seeking to have the developer's zoning petition dismissed.
LURC, which serves as the planning and zoning agency for the state's unorganized
areas, lacks the legal authority to approve Plum Creek Timber Co.'s "concept
plan" for its land in the Moosehead Lake area, according to RESTORE:
The North Woods and the Forest Ecology Network.
The groups said LURC can't approve a plan that will prevent anybody --
LURC, the Legislature or the citizen-initiative process -- from changing
it over the 30-year life of the plan.
The motion is the latest turn in Plum Creek's proposal to create Maine's
largest subdivision. For the development, the company is seeking a zoning
change on 420,000 acres in the Moosehead region as part of a 30-year plan
to develop nearly 1,000 house lots and two resorts.
Jym St. Pierre, director of RESTORE: The North Woods, said his group and
the Forest Ecology Network asked two attorneys to analyze LURC's legal
power in approving the plan.
Their conclusion, he said, was that LURC doesn't have the authority to
grant a landowner a 30-year exemption from zoning changes. Under the current
proposal, the zoning of the land couldn't be changed for three decades
without approval from both LURC and Plum Creek, he said.
"Unless and until LURC has clear legislative authorization to give
away its ability to make zoning changes that may be necessary over the
next three decades, the Land Use Regulation Commission should immediately
stop processing Plum Creek's rezoning petition," St. Pierre said.
Luke Muzzy of Plum Creek said Friday that the company is simply following
a process established by LURC. There have been several other concept plans
in the 20- to 30-year range that have been approved LURC since the 1980s,
he said.
"We're not making up a new process. We're following a process that
other land owners have been using for the past 20 years," he said.
Plum Creek's plan has come under attack from the start from conservation
groups and others who say it is inappropriate for an area that serves
as the gateway to Maine's North Woods.
Plum Creek says the plan permanently protects some 400,000 acres from
development, while preserving the character of the area and guaranteeing
public access. Supporters say the development would help the region's
sagging economy and draw more tourists.
Jonathan Carter, head of the Forest Ecology Network, said Plum Creek is
seeking "contract zoning" on its land.
"LURC doesn't have the authority to grant contract zoning,"
Carter said. "Only the Legislature has that authority."
© Copyright 2007 Associated Press.
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