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| April 2008
Alliance Action |
1) County
commissioners consider moratorium on subdivisions
and zone changes
2) Teton Meadows Ranch goes before
commissioners April 29
3) Comprehensive Plan survey results
now available
4) County commissioners to weigh
Wilson commercial district April 22
5) 151,000-square-foot hotel proposed
for site near 5-Way
6) Decision to keep supervisor’s
office in Jackson leads Bridger-Teton news
7) Rocky Mountain gray wolves lose
Endangered Species Act protection
8) County adopts bear conflict
amendment
9) Please Don’t Poach the
Powder
10) Give a gift to Mom, and
to Mother Earth!
11) Coming Events
12) Valley Echoes
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1) County
commissioners consider moratorium on subdivisions
and zone changes
Three development proposals are in the works
that could add more than 1,100 new homes in South
Park. This plus the fact that our community is
now updating its Comprehensive Plan has led Teton
County commissioners to consider enacting a moratorium
on subdivisions and zone changes until the updated
plan is adopted.
At the April 1 board meeting, Commissioner Ben
Ellis proposed a "temporary freeze in large
lot subdivisions and zoning changes" on
parcels larger than 20 acres. Ellis did not request
immediate action on the moratorium itself, but
rather a vote to consider the proposal in future
public hearings before the Planning Commission
and Teton Board of County Commissioners. After
30 minutes of public comment, the board voted
4 to 1 to request a recommendation and/or hearing
on the moratorium proposal at the Planning Commission
level. Uncertain as to whether the moratorium
would apply to Teton Meadows Ranch, commissioners
didn’t change previously scheduled hearing
dates for that development proposal (see #2 below).
Hearings regarding the moratorium were set as
follows:
April 14, Teton County Planning Commission, 6
p.m., County commissioners’ chambers, 200
S. Willow
(At this same meeting, the planning commissioners
are also scheduled to hear about a recommendation
to increase the affordable housing "fee in lieu,"
which developers may pay instead of actually
building the affordable homes required to mitigate
for the impacts of their development. According
to a planning staff report, "Projects using an
in-lieu fee are currently paying to house only
about one-tenth of the population required to
be housed by the regulations. As a result, either
the required percentage of people to be housed
in each new development is not met, or the public
subsidizes the remainder of the developer's obligation.")
April 24, Teton Board of County Commissioners,
1:30 p.m., same location (THIS MORATORIUM DISCUSSION
HAS BEEN CONTINUED TO MAY 6, 1:30 p.m., County commissioners'
chambers, 200 S. Willow.)
Since the Comp Plan is supposed
to guide growth, not the other way around, the
Conservation Alliance strongly supports enacting
a moratorium to give our community the chance
it needs to shape future development before development
shapes us. A moratorium is a common planning
tool used by communities in the process of working
on their comprehensive plans. Present conditions
in Teton County --
a rapid influx of large development proposals
at the same time as our Comp Plan update process
-- warrant a moratorium enactment. For more information,
please visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/PressReleases/MoratoriumPR.3-08.pdf.
Please let the commissioners know what you think:
Teton County Planning Commissioners: planningcom@tetonwyo.org
Tony Wall, Joseph Palmer, Larry Hamilton, Forrest
McCarthy, Paul Duncker
The Teton Board of County Commissioners: (307)
733-8094 or commissioners@tetonwyo.org
Andy
Schwartz, Leland Christensen, Ben Ellis, Bill
Paddleford, Hank Phibbs
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2) Teton
Meadows Ranch goes before commissioners April
29
After setting numerous conditions at a hearing
on March 10, Teton County planning commissioners
voted 3 to 2 to approve the Teton Meadows Ranch
sketch plan. The proposal now passes to the Teton
Board of County Commissioners, which has scheduled
its first hearing for April 29, 9 a.m., at Snow
King Resort’s Grand Room. Commissioners
also set two tentative dates for public comment:
May 7, 6 p.m. at Snow King Resort's Teton Room
(changed from Snow King ice rink meeting room);
and May 13, 9 a.m., at Snow King Resort’s
Grand Room. (It’s
possible these hearings could be affected by what
comes of the moratorium discussion, described in
#1 above. We'll keep you posted.)
Teton Meadows Ranch is currently proposed as
a 500-unit Planned Unit Development for Affordable
Housing on the 288-acre Seherr-Thoss property
(now zoned rural) at the southern end of South
Park. The Conservation Alliance does not support
the present proposal because it departs from:
current zoning; fundamental principles of smart
growth; and consistent application of affordable
housing planning tools.
Please see our fact sheet at www.jhalliance.org/Library/Alerts/TetonMeadowsFAQ.3-20-08.pdf or
contact Kristy Bruner at (307) 733-9417 or kristy@jhalliance.org for
more information.
Also please contact the Teton County commissioners
with your questions and concerns:
Andy Schwartz, Leland Christensen, Ben Ellis,
Bill Paddleford, Hank Phibbs
(307) 733-8094 or commissioners@tetonwyo.org
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3) Comprehensive
Plan survey results now available
The online survey on the Comp Plan “future
growth” scenarios wrapped up at the end
of March, and you can view the results at www.jacksontetonplan.com/survey.
More than 950 people took the online poll --
a majority of 37.9 percent picked “Provide
stewardship of wildlife habitat and other environmentally
sensitive areas” as the highest priority
for Jackson and Teton County. “Manage growth
responsibly” was ranked the second highest
priority.
As the next step, planners say they intend to
meld the Jan. 30 public meeting results, plus
votes gathered via the online and phone surveys,
into a hybrid land-use scenario that will most
closely reflect what the community wants. During
the next series of public meetings, set for May
14 to 16, people will get the chance to review
and provide comments on this “preferred
land-use scenario.” (See www.jhalliance.org/issuescompplan.htm for
links to more information.)
The next set of public meetings is scheduled
as follows:
May 14, Charrette Meetings at 2 and
6 p.m., St. John's Episcopal Church Parish Hall,
170 N. Glenwood St.
May 15, Technical Advisory Group Meeting, 9 to
11 a.m., Town Hall, 150 E. Pearl
May 15, Stakeholder Advisory Group Meeting, 1 to
3 p.m., 4-H Building, 255 W. Deloney
May 15, Public Meeting, 6 to 8 p.m., Teton Science
Schools (Jackson Campus)
May 16, Jackson Town Council and
Teton County Commissioners Joint Meeting, 10 a.m.
to noon, location TDB.
Meanwhile, please check out “Balancing
Act,” our recent publication on growth
and the Comp Plan update. Look for it around
town, in April 2nd issues of the Jackson Hole
News&Guide, or pick up a copy at the Alliance
office, 685 S. Cache. It’s also available
online at www.jhalliance.org/Library/Alerts/CompPlanUpdate.2-08.pdf.
In a related matter, the Conservation Alliance
will present an overview of our Natural Resource
Overlay mapping project to elected officials during
the joint town and county information meeting on
April 7, 3 to 5 p.m., Town Council chambers, 150
E. Pearl. The NRO is a designation on zoning maps
that shows the location of lands with special wildlife
values that are subject to more stringent development
regulations. During the past year, the Alliance
teamed up with the Conservation Research Center
of Teton Science Schools, the Wyoming Game and
Fish Department and others to compile and map the
best available scientific data on wildlife habitat
in Teton County. We’re sharing the maps with
the community, the town and county, and Clarion
Associates, the Comp Plan consultant, to help provide
pertinent information during the Comp Plan update
process. The maps are also posted at www.jhalliance.org/maps.htm.
For more about the project, visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/Alerts/NROmapproject.2-08.pdf.
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4) County
commissioners to weigh Wilson Commercial Zoning
District April 22
The Teton Board of County Commissioners will
hear county planners’ proposal to create
a commercial zoning district for Wilson on April
22, 9 a.m., County commissioners’ chambers,
200 S. Willow. (Although it’s possible
this could be affected by what comes of the moratorium
discussion, described in #1 above. We'll keep
you posted.) Planners say some of the development
allowed in Wilson’s
commercial core under current zoning could drastically
change the town’s character, while some
types of development desired by residents is
prohibited. Planning staff “believes it
is important that a zoning district specific
to the Wilson commercial core be adopted even
while the Comprehensive Plan update is in process.” Basically,
the new zone would set a boundary for commercial
development in Wilson, and allow affordable housing
and some market housing on second floors. For
details, visit www.tetonwyo.org/plan and
click on “Link to Wilson Planning Page” in
the Announcements box.
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5) 151,000-square-foot
hotel proposed for site near 5-Way
On May 7, the Jackson Planning Commission plans
to revisit a planned mixed-use development proposal
for a hotel complex at the current Painted Buffalo
site at 400 W. Broadway. Continued from March
19, the hearing is set for 5:30 p.m. at the Town
Council chambers, 150 E. Pearl.
The applicant, Mills Wyoming Hotel LLC, wants
to build a four-story, 46-foot-high, 155-room
luxury hotel (including a spa and fitness center,
meeting space, restaurant, bar and some retail)
using Jackson’s planned mixed-use development
standard. Under the PMUD, larger buildings and
more dense development are permitted if parking
and employee housing requirements are met on
site.
Adopted in 2001, the PMUD was intended to encourage
redevelopment that would allow people to live,
work and shop in Jackson, but a rash of PMUD applications
and approvals has raised concerns. The Conservation
Alliance questions the bulk and scale of this proposed
151,000-square-foot hotel, particularly given its
prominence at the main gateway to downtown. The
application for a 70,000-square-foot-plus Marriott
Hotel proposed at Pearl and Broadway, adjacent
to the Mills project, is currently on hold. Either
development would affect Jackson’s character.
Also, consideration of such projects detracts from
the current Comp Plan update process, which is
supposed to take into account the community’s
input about the kinds of development preferred
in the downtown area.
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6) Decision
to keep supervisor’s office in Jackson
leads Bridger-Teton news
Here’s a roundup of current issues regarding
the national forest that surrounds Jackson Hole:
FOREST HEADQUARTERS TO STAY IN JACKSON -- On
March 20, forest officials pledged to keep the
Bridger-Teton supervisor’s office somewhere
in Jackson. They also said they’d continue
to try to sell some or all of the headquarter’s
current 15-acre site on North Cache to pay for
new facilities. Intermountain regional forester
Harv Forsgren said the community’s strong
objections to a plan to move the supervisor’s
office to Pinedale or Star Valley played a key
role in his decision to keep the office in Jackson.
At public meetings and in written comments, the
Conservation Alliance and others voiced concerns
about the possible detriment to cooperation with
other land and wildlife managers in the valley,
disruption to employees’ lives and our
community, and the dubious precedent of selling
off public lands to continue basic forest functions.
No decision has been made so far on how much
land at the current site will be sold, and how
office, storage and employee housing issues will
be resolved. We’ll keep you posted.
SCOPING COMMENT PERIOD ON CONTESTED WYOMING
RANGE LEASES EXTENDED TO APRIL 28 -- In January,
Bridger-Teton officials announced plans for a
new environmental analysis of oil and gas leases
on 44,720 acres of the Wyoming Range west of
Merna around Horse and Beaver creeks. These leases
have been suspended since 2006, when the federal
Interior Board of Land Appeals ruled that an
earlier National Environmental Policy Act analysis
didn’t adequately consider impacts to wildlife
and the environment. Some have questioned the
timing of this new analysis, given pending federal
legislation that would prohibit future oil and
gas leasing on the Wyoming Range, and the ongoing
Bridger-Teton management plan revision. Regardless,
the Forest Service can now either authorize or
cancel the leases, and you have until April 28
to mail your comments to: Attn. Stephen Haydon,
Forest Minerals Staff, Bridger-Teton National
Forest, P.O. Box 1888, Jackson, WY 83001-1888.
Or email your thoughts to comments-intermtn-bridger-teton@fs.fed.us,
with “Leasing SEIS” in the subject
line. Visit www.wyomingrange.org for more information
on efforts to protect the Wyoming Range.
BRIDGER-TETON NATIONAL FOREST MANAGEMENT PLAN
REVISION -- Following a year-long hiatus, Bridger-Teton
officials hosted a public meeting on the forest
plan revision in Jackson on March 27. The last
public meetings were in April 2007 and focused
on identifying some of the forest’s management
issues. Last week’s meeting was intended
to generate ideas for how to deal with possibly
conflicting multiple uses in certain areas. Many
people attended, a large proportion of them snowmobilers
and other motorized recreationists, which led
to discussions mainly about motorized travel
in the forest. The next set of meetings, to be
held later this month in Kemmerer (April 23,
4:30 to 8:30 p.m, Ambulance Barn, 611 Onyx St.),
Rock Springs (April 24, 4:30 to 8:30 p.m, BLM
Field Office, 280 Hwy. 191 North) and Pinedale
(April 28, 4:30 to 8:30 p.m, Rendezvous Pointe
Community Center, 425 E. Magnolia St.), will
look at the southern part of the Bridger-Teton.
Follow-up meetings for all areas are planned
for May. A final environmental impact statement
by the National Forest Service had been expected
in March that would have given Bridger-Teton
officials the direction they need to formally
resume the forest plan revision. Until this EIS
is out, officials say they’ll
continue with activities that aren’t dependent
on it. Please watch our website and next month’s
Alliance Action for updates.
NORTH ZONE MOTORIZED TRAVEL / OFF-HIGHWAY VEHICLE
PLAN UPDATE -- Unrestricted motorized use is
currently allowed on more than 250,000 acres
of the northern part of the Bridger-Teton National
Forest during the summer and fall. That use has
resulted in miles of user-created trails, disturbed
wildlife, habitat degradation, the spread of
noxious weeds and increased soil sedimentation
in trout streams. After several delays, forest
officials now say they’ll release a draft
environmental impact statement on a travel plan
to address these issues at the end of this month.
The draft will likely include five alternatives,
ranging from decreased motorized recreational
opportunities to greater access. The preferred
alternative is a trail system “somewhere
in the middle,” according to Bridger-Teton
staff. It would close some trails, move others
and provide for environmentally friendly trails
in some places. The public will have a chance
to view and comment on the alternatives at an
open house scheduled for May 6, 4:30 to 8:30
p.m. at Teton County Library.
ELK WINTER MANAGEMENT EIS -- On March 11, Bridger-Teton
officials released a draft environmental impact
statement on authorizing the Wyoming Game and Fish
Commission to use Forest Service land for their
winter elk management program. This EIS, available
at www.fs.fed.us/r4/btnf/projects,
looks at the land and facilities on seven feedgrounds:
Alkali Creek, Dog Creek, Fall Creek, Fish Creek,
Muddy Creek, Patrol Cabin and Upper Green River.
All but Patrol Cabin are on Forest Service land.
Although the EIS identifies degraded vegetation,
streams and fisheries as problems, the proposed
action would renew Game and Fish’s requests
for use with six mitigation actions. The Conservation
Alliance has long advocated for a gradual phase-out
of elk feedgrounds due to their role in spreading
disease. The draft EIS acknowledges this problem,
but defers to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department
for wildlife management. Comments on the draft
EIS are due by May 5, and can be mailed to Bridger-Teton
National Forest, Winter Elk Management SUP, P.O.
Box 1888, Jackson, WY 83001; faxed to (307)
739-5010; or emailed to comments-intermtn-bridger-teton@fs.fed.us,
with “Winter Elk Management Programs” in
the subject line.
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7) Rocky
Mountain gray wolves lose Endangered Species
Act protection
On March 28, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
turned management of Wyoming’s gray wolf
population over to the Wyoming Game and Fish
Department -- the final step in taking the wolf
off the list of species protected by the Endangered
Species Act. Several organizations, including
the Conservation Alliance, filed a notice of
intent to sue over this delisting on Feb. 27,
but legal action can’t be taken until April
28, the end of the 60-day notice period. On that
day, we anticipate filing the suit in an attempt
to stop this transfer of management authority.
Wyoming’s plan will not provide adequate
protection to the 360 or so wolves that currently
inhabit the state and Yellowstone and Grand Teton
national parks. Numbers of wolves outside the
parks will likely be seriously reduced through
aggressive control by the state, a liberal hunting
and trapping season in the Trophy Game Area,
and classification of the wolves as predators
in the remaining vast majority of Wyoming. (Regulations
guiding wolf hunting and trapping seasons and “bag” limits
will be determined through public process later
this spring, and will probably take effect next
fall and winter.)
Wyoming’s wolf management plan designates
about 12 percent of the state as a Trophy Game
Area where the Game and Fish Department will
manage wolves. In the rest of the state, wolves
are classified as predators along with coyotes,
jackrabbits, raccoons, red foxes, skunks, porcupines
and stray cats -- subject to killing by anyone
at any time by any means. No significant or viable
population of wolves is likely to exist in the
predator zone.
In the Trophy Game Area, complete protection will
only exist for wolves that stay within Yellowstone
and Grand Teton national parks, the John D. Memorial
Parkway and the National Elk Refuge, which make
up only about 31 percent of the area. In the remainder
of the Trophy Game Area, wolves are now subject
to: hunting and trapping seasons; aggressive control
by the state and private individuals who claim
wolves are harming livestock and other domesticated
animals; and “control actions” whenever
the Game and Fish Department determines that wolves
are causing “unacceptable” impacts
to big game herds. The National Parks and the National
Elk Refuge -- only about 3.8 percent of Wyoming
-- are now the only safe havens for wolves in the
state. See www.jhalliance.org/issueswolves.htm for
more on Wyoming’s wolves.
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8) County
adopts bear conflict amendment
After months of consideration and changes, the
Teton Board of County Commissioners voted to
adopt a bear conflict mitigation and prevention
amendment at its April 1 meeting. Although the
Conservation Alliance would have preferred a
stronger amendment, this was a step in the right
direction. The amendment divides private lands
in Teton County into different management areas,
with varying requirements for bear-proof garbage
containers and bird feeders. Maps and the text
of the amendment are available at www.tetonwyo.org/plan (under “Topics
of Interest,” click on “Proposed
Amendments,” then select the Bear Conflict
amendment).
The Conservation Alliance had asked that bear-proof
garbage containers be required throughout the
county. We also asked for regulations to prohibit
new landscaping near homes from including trees
and shrubs that might attract bears.
We’ll continue to monitor this issue and
make recommendations as situations warrant. Thank
you to everyone who worked on this amendment, which
is not just to protect humans from bears, but bears
from humans, too.
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9) Please
Don’t Poach the Powder
Don’t forget -- many places are still
closed to human traffic well into spring to protect
wildlife. Please visit www.jhalliance.org/dontpoach.pdf for
closure maps and information.
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10) Give
a gift to Mom, and to Mother Earth!
In honor of mothers everywhere,
the Conservation Alliance is offering gift cards
for your loved ones in celebration of Mother’s
Day. Please visit www.jhalliance.org/Library/Alerts/MothersDay.3-08.htm for
details.
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11) Coming
Events
Info Lunch -- Open Discussion
Wednesday, April 16, Noon to 1 p.m., Conservation
Alliance conference room, 685 S. Cache
Please stop by, tell us what’s on your
mind, and bring a brown-bag lunch and questions
about Jackson Hole’s conservation topics
of the day. We'll provide drinks and snacks.
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12) Valley
Echoes
“No matter how long the
winter, spring is sure to follow.””
-- Proverb
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Alliance Action is a publication of the Jackson
Hole Conservation Alliance. The Jackson Hole
Conservation Alliance is dedicated to responsible
land stewardship in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to
ensure that human activities are in harmony with
the area’s irreplaceable wildlife, scenic,
and other natural resources. The Alliance is
a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) organization.
(If you no longer wish to receive this e-newsletter,
please send a note saying you’d like us to
remove your email address from our list to: allianceaction@jhalliance.org.)
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