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| January 2010 Alliance
Action |
1) New
year brings new players to Comp Plan deliberations
2) Other community planning news
3) Bridger-Teton updates
4) Conservation Alliance annual report now available online
5) Coming Events
6) Valley Voices
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1) New
year brings new players to Comp Plan deliberations
Following a two-week hiatus over Christmas, weekly
public hearings on the draft Jackson/Teton County
Comprehensive Plan are set to resume on Thursday,
Jan. 7, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., County commissioners’ chambers,
200 S. Willow. (UPDATE: The Jan. 21 hearing has been
cancelled, due to a lack of quorum.)
Also, starting this month, the Conservation Alliance
is replacing our once-a-week Comp Plan open house
discussions with more targeted once-a-month conversations.
This month's is Jan. 12, when Christine Walker
of the Teton County Housing Authority will discuss
and answer questions about affordable housing and
the draft Comp Plan. (See Coming
Events below for
details.)
Public review of the draft continues to be shared
jointly between both the town and county planning
commissions, despite mounting pressure for a split
town-county revision process. (Marked differences
between the commissions have led many to question
how well the joint process is working.) This may
change with some new faces -- Jamie Walter replaced
Geneva Chong on the town planning commission in
December, and on Jan. 1, the newly appointed Mark
Newcomb and Peter Stewart replaced county planning
commissioners Larry Hamilton and Joe Palmer, whose
terms expired. (Visit www.jhalliance.org/takeactioncontacts.htm for
a list of all the players.)
In December, the planning commissioners began
reviewing Theme Three, “Uphold Jackson as
Heart of the Region,” resulting in some positive
steps. For instance, on Dec. 17, after a discussion
about density neutrality, they voted jointly to
recommend that residential development in town
be capped at current base amounts, with exceptions
for increases linked to commensurate decreases
in the county. A vote to cap non-residential (i.e.
commercial) development in town at current base
rates also passed jointly. The commissioners are
expected to wrap up Theme Three on Jan. 7 and then
start working on Theme Four, “Meet Our Community’s
Housing Needs.” (For a link to all of the
recommendations to date, visit www.jacksontetonplan.com/blog/2009/08/planning-commission-review. Click
here for
brief recaps of the meetings held so far.)
The Conservation Alliance will continue to provide
detailed comments and to represent our 2,000-plus
members at the weekly hearings to ensure that Jackson
Hole ends up with a plan that will actually protect
our wildlife, natural resources and quality of life.
Links to our comments are available via www.jhalliance.org/library.htm#comments.
Background information on the Comp Plan is available
at www.jhalliance.org/issuescompplan.htm.
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2) Other
community planning news
As always, the Alliance continues to monitor many
other community planning matters in addition to
the Comp Plan. Here’s a partial roundup,
but please bear in mind that all meetings are subject
to change. Call the Town of Jackson at (307) 733-3932,
Teton County at (307) 733-8094, or reach Kristy
Bruner at Kristy@jhalliance.org or
(307) 733-9417 for confirmation. If you’d
like to comment on any of these issues, contact
information for all local public officials is available
at www.jhalliance.org/takeactioncontacts.htm.
ENVIRONMENT COMMISSION: Jackson Town Council and
Teton Board of County Commissioners joint information
meeting, Jan. 4, 3 p.m., Town Hall, 150 E. Pearl.
The draft Jackson/Teton County Comprehensive Plan,
released in April 2009, included as a strategy
the establishment of an Environment Commission
to coordinate comprehensive, ecosystem-wide data
collection and to facilitate incorporating that
data into public policy. On Sept. 10, the planning
commissioners voted to recommend to the elected
officials that an Environment Commission be established
as soon as possible, preferably in time to aid
the Comp Plan review. On Sept. 14, the electeds
agreed, however, three additional meetings and
two staff reports later, they still haven’t
authorized its creation, mainly due to reluctance
on the part of the Town Council. This matter will
likely come up again at the Jan. 4 joint information
meeting, although it probably won’t be resolved
until February at the earliest. We’ll keep
you posted.
TOWN BUILDING PERMIT EXTENSIONS: Jackson Town
Council hearing, Jan. 4, 6 p.m., Town Hall, 150
E. Pearl. An item that would allow developers up
to six years (from the date of Town Council approval)
to complete their projects is on the slate for
the council’s Jan. 4 meeting. For the complete
agenda and links to details, visit www.ci.jackson.wy.us and
click on “Meeting Agendas” under the “Jackson
Government” heading.
SEARCH AND RESCUE HELIPAD AT Y INTERSECTION: Teton
Board of County Commissioners hearing, Jan. 5,
9 a.m., 200 S. Willow. On Nov. 9, the county planning
commissioners unanimously recommended approval,
with conditions, for Teton County Search and Rescue’s
proposal to build a helicopter pad and training
facility at the Y intersection of Hwy. 22 and Broadway.
Given the location of the project at a major gateway
to Jackson -- and within both the Natural Resources
and Scenic Resources overlays -- the Conservation
Alliance and others voiced concerns about whether
alternative locations had been fully explored.
County commissioners were scheduled to hear the
proposal on Dec. 15, but it was postponed to Jan.
5. (UPDATE: The county commissioners unanimously
approved this proposal at the Jan. 5 hearing, after
adding a condition requiring Search and Rescue
to monitor the reactions of deer to helicopter
takeoffs and landings.)
ANTI-IDLING ORDINANCE: Jackson Town Council workshop,
Jan. 19, 3 p.m., Town Hall, 150 E. Pearl. Town
councilors are scheduled to discuss the possibility
of adopting an ordinance that would discourage
people from letting their vehicles’ engines
run while parked.
STAGE STOP: Jackson Town Council hearing, Jan.
19, 6 p.m., Town Hall, 150 E. Pearl. On Dec. 16,
town planning commissioners approved sketch plans
for a three-story, 32,800-square-foot project one
block from the Town Square that will stretch from
North Cache Street to Glenwood Street. This by-right
development includes a hotel and retail space;
Town councilors are expected to consider the plans
on Jan. 19.
TOWN LDR AMENDMENTS: Jackson Town Council workshop,
Jan. 25, 3 p.m., Town Hall, 150 E. Pearl. Following
numerous postponements, town councilors are tentatively
scheduled to hold a workshop to consider revisions
to the flawed planned mixed-use development tool
on Jan. 25. (Visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/Alerts/2009/TownDevelopment.3-09.pdf for
background information on the PMD.) Also at this
workshop, they’re expected to discuss a proposal
that would allow accessory units within the auto-urban
residential zoning district to be sold separately
to independent owners. (One single-family residence
and two accessory-residential units are allowed
on single lots in this district, but current regulations
stipulate that all three structures must be owned
by one owner.)
PUD-AH AND PUD-PLANNED RESORT: Teton County Planning
Commission, Jan. 25, 6 p.m., 200 S. Willow. The
county planning commissioners are scheduled to
vote on a text amendment to remove the Planned
Unit Development-Affordable Housing and Planned
Unit Development-Planned Resort tools from existing
regulations. The Conservation Alliance supports
this effort to remove unpredictable planning tools
-- an effort that is particularly important during
our community's ongoing Comp Plan revision process.
Please let planning commissioners Paul Duncker,
Forrest McCarthy, Mark Newcomb, Peter Stewart and
Tony Wall know you support this proposal by emailing
them at planningcom@tetonwyo.org.
GRAVEL STUDY UPDATE: On Dec. 15, the Teton Board
of County Commissioners officially adopted the Teton
County Gravel Study as a guide for future decisions
as applications for gravel operations come up. It’s
available at www.tetonwyo.org/plan/pdplan/docs/draftgravelstudy8-17-9.pdf.
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3) Bridger-Teton
updates
NEW NATIONAL FOREST PLANNING RULE IN THE WORKS:
For several years now, court battles have been
waged over federal rules governing revisions of
national forest management plans. However, in mid
December, the National Forest Service published
a notice of intent to prepare an environmental
impact statement to analyze and disclose potential
environmental consequences associated with a new
land management planning rule. Hopefully, this
process will result in a new plan that will remove
uncertainties about how to approach forest planning
-- uncertainties that have stalled revisions to
the Bridger-Teton’s 20-year-old management
plan.
People have 60 days to share what they think should
be part of the EIS. The notice of intent, available
at http://fs.usda.gov/planningrule,
includes a set of principles that could guide development
of a new planning rule, such as an emphasis on
restoration, conservation and improved resilience
of ecosystems; watershed health; climate change
response; species diversity and wildlife habitat;
sustainability; proactive collaboration; and working
across landscapes. The deadline for your scoping
comments is Feb. 16.
FATE OF NORTH CACHE PARCEL STILL PENDING: The
Conservation Alliance is working with Bridger-Teton
officials to bring concerned people, businesses,
agencies and organizations together to figure out
how to help resolve the B-T’s need to replace
its old facilities and provide employee housing.
Our EA comments (available via www.jhalliance.org/library.htm#comments),
which identified irregularities in the Forest Service’s
decision process, have generated interest in finding
ways to fund these needs other than selling public
lands. Bridger-Teton Supervisor Kniffy Hamilton
is expected to decide on the EA later this month.
We hope that by that time, our community will have
been able to give the regional forester’s
office ideas that will help the B-T meet its needs,
while still protecting public lands. (For background
information on this issue, please visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/AllianceAction/AA.2009/Nov09AA.htm#AA3.)
CONTESTED LEASES AND HOBACK WELLS STUDIES DELAYED:
Bridger-Teton officials say that problems with
air quality analyses will further delay two environmental
studies that have been expected for months now.
One is for Plains Exploration’s Noble Basin/Eagle
Prospect master development plan (aka Hoback Wells),
which proposes building up to 136 gas wells, new
roads and other infrastructure about 7 miles southeast
of Bondurant. The other regards contested energy
development leases on some 20,000 acres farther
south in the Wyoming Range. (Visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/AllianceAction/AA.2009/Dec09AA.htm#AA5 for
more information on these leases.) The studies
now aren’t expected until sometime this spring;
we’ll keep you posted.
DEVELOPER WANTS ROADWAY THROUGH B-T SNAKE RIVER CANYON
SECTION: Developer Dick Edgcomb has asked the Forest
Service to allow a 60-foot-wide road across nearly
a mile of public land in the Wild and Scenic-designated
Snake River corridor to access a 144-acre private
parcel south of Snake River Sporting Club (formerly
called Canyon Club). Edgcomb was the original developer
of that controversial project, which included an
18-hole golf course, a clubhouse, employee housing
and 72 homes on 360 acres at the former site of Astoria
Hot Springs. Despite widespread opposition, Teton
County commissioners approved it in 2003. Snake River
Sporting Club acquired the property after Edgcomb’s
forced bankruptcy in 2005, then in late 2008, the
Sporting Club also filed for bankruptcy. Given this
history and the possibility of yet another development
in such valuable wildlife habitat, the Alliance will
be keeping a close eye on this matter as it progresses.
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4) Conservation
Alliance annual report now available online
Please visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/Reports/JHCAAnnualReport.12-09.pdf for
our 2009 annual report. It includes our financial
information from fiscal year 2008-09, as well as
our top accomplishments of 2009 and top goals for
2010, making it a great way to get all the highlights.
You’re also welcome to pick up a printed
copy at the Alliance office, 685
S. Cache St.
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5) Coming
Events
JANUARY 2010
One Tuesday per month
Conservation Alliance focused conversations on
the Comp Plan revision
4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Alliance conference room, 685
S. Cache St.
Beginning in January, our Comp Plan open houses
will start taking a different
form. Instead of general meetings held each week,
they will be more focused and timely once-a-month
meetings centered on specific issues related to
the ongoing Jackson/Teton County Comprehensive
Plan revision. We'll post meeting dates and topics
here as soon as they are scheduled - this month's
is Jan. 12; see below for details. (The town and
county planning commissioners are currently considering
changes to the second draft of the Comp Plan, which
was released in April 2009. For background info,
visit www.jhalliance.org/issuescompplan.htm.)
Saturday, Jan. 2
An introduction to winter birds of Teton Valley
2 p.m., Teton Regional Land Trust, west side of
Hwy. 33, just south of Driggs, Idaho
People interested in participating in Teton Valley's
annual bird count on Jan. 3 (see below) are encouraged
to attend this informative talk.
Sunday, Jan. 3
Teton Valley's Christmas Bird Count
Sponsored by the National Audubon Society, the
annual Christmas Bird Count is a census of birds
in the Western Hemisphere performed by volunteer
birders to help gauge the health of avian populations
and guide conservation efforts. The count is held
in different areas between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5;
Jackson Hole's was Dec. 20, and the Teton Valley,
Idaho, count is set for Jan. 3. Interested in volunteering?
Find out how by contacting local bird count compiler
Susan Patla at susan_patla@hotmail.com or attend
the Jan. 2nd event described above.
Sunday, Jan. 10
NatureMapping Training
7:30 p.m., Jackson Town Hall, 150 E. Pearl
Chuck Schneebeck will lead a training for NatureMapping Jackson Hole during the
monthly meeting of the Jackson Hole Bird Club. (The club meeting starts at 7:30
p.m.; the training is expected to start at about 8:15 p.m.) NatureMapping is
a program that trains citizens to be wildlife observers for the benefit of their
local communities. The information gathered from trained observers can help our
community come up with an accurate picture of what kinds of wildlife we have
and where they live during different times of the year, and this data could be
used for conservation efforts in Jackson Hole. Please check out this training
-- as little as 15 minutes a week of just recording what wildlife you see in
your own backyard or while you're out exploring can make a difference. More information
is available at www.naturemappingjh.org.
Tuesday, Jan. 12
Affordable housing and the draft Comp Plan
4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Alliance
conference room, 685 S. Cache St.
Christine Walker of the Teton County Housing Authority will discuss and answer
your questions about Theme Four of the draft Jackson/Teton County Comprehensive
Plan, "Meet Our Community's Housing Needs." Theme Four is currently
being reviewed by the joint town and county planning commissions and Christine's
insights should be helpful for people wishing to make comments on this issue.
Tuesday, Jan. 19
Alliance Grassroots Group get-together
6 to 7:30 p.m., Snake River Brew Pub, 265 S.
Millward
Please join us upstairs at the Brew Pub on Jan.
19 for the second meeting of the Conservation Alliance's
Grassroots Group, aimed at community members in
their 20s and 30s who want to get more involved
in local and regional environmental advocacy. We'll
talk about Jackson Hole's Comp Plan, parks, energy
development and any other issues that are important
to you. Questions? Contact Becky Tillson at rebecca@jhalliance.org or
(307) 733-9417.
Wednesday, Jan. 20
Alliance info lunch: Presentation by mountaineer
Stephen Koch
Noon to 1 p.m., Alliance conference room, 685 S.
Cache St.
Mountaineer Stephen Koch will join us for our info
lunch on Jan. 20 to talk about his experiences
in the Tetons. Hear Koch tell about his connections
with this place he calls home and the importance
of the Conservation Alliance's Don't Poach the
Powder program to help keep Jackson Hole wild.
(Click here for some
info on Don't Poach.) Koch is a professional speaker,
climber, snowboarder and mountain guide, and is
a pioneer in the field of snowboard mountaineering.
His list of worldwide alpine ascents and descents
include many notable firsts, most of which have
never been repeated. He is the first person to
snowboard all the major Teton Peaks in Wyoming,
and the first and only person to snowboard on the
Seven Summits, the highest peak on each continent.
Meet at the Alliance conference room from noon
till 1 p.m. Bring your lunch; we'll provide beverages
and snacks.
Saturday, Jan. 23
Citizen naturalist expedition in the Bondurant
area
9 a.m. to 4 p.m., meet at the Bondurant Elementary
School
Defenders of Wildlife is inviting the public to join this outing to learn about
wintering wildlife and the challenges they face in the Bondurant area. Click
here for details.
Friday, Jan. 29
Community Potluck Dinner to celebrate wildlife
6 p.m., National Museum of Wildlife Art, 2.5
miles north of Jackson
Everyone interested in Jackson Hole's wildlife is invited to a community potluck
dinner hosted by the Meg and Bert Raynes Wildlife Fund and the National Museum
of Wildlife Art on Jan. 29. In Bert Raynes' words, the plan for the evening "is
to keep any formal talk to a minimum and conversational chatter to just below
a roar...except perhaps for a mention of NatureMapping and early results of local
observations of our regional wildlife." (See the Jan. 10 item above for
info on NatureMapping.) Bring a dish
to share, and
please call Carol
or Chuck Schneebeck
at (307) 733-1582
if you have any
questions or
click
here for
the flier.
FEBRUARY 2010
Wednesday, Feb. 10
Citizen Lobbyist Training
Cheyenne, Wyoming
The Equality State Policy Center is offering a
day-long crash course on how to get the attention
of state legislators; it takes place on Feb. 10,
the third day of the Wyoming Legislature's upcoming
budget session. Visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/Alerts/2010/LobbyistTraining.2-10.pdf for details.
Wednesday, Feb. 17
Alliance info lunch: Status of the wolverine in
the Greater Yellowstone
Noon to 1 p.m., Alliance conference room, 685 S.
Cache St.
Jason Wilmot, executive director of the Northern
Rockies Conservation Cooperative and field director
for the Absaroka Beartooth Wolverine Project, will
give a presentation on how this species is faring
in the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem. Topics of discussion
will include the results of the past five years of
research, the big questions for future research projects,
the upcoming Endangered Species Act listing decision,
conservation scenarios, and what you and your skis
can do to help protect wolverine in the Tetons. Bring
your questions and your sense of adventure! Also
bring your lunch; we'll provide beverages and snacks.
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6) Valley
Voices
“We can serve the cause of life on earth
better if we move through our anxiety….
We have an obligation to move toward hope and commitment.”
- Michael Lerner
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Alliance Action is a publication of the Jackson
Hole Conservation Alliance. The Conservation Alliance
is a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) organization dedicated
to responsible land stewardship in Jackson Hole
to ensure that human activities are in harmony
with the area’s irreplaceable wildlife, scenic,
and other natural resources. We’re located
at 685 South Cache Street in Jackson, Wyoming.
Our mailing address is P.O. Box 2728, Jackson,
WY 83001-2728 and our phone number is (307) 733-9417.
If you'd like to sign up to receive our monthly
Alliance Action via email, please click
here.
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