HomeMy WebLinkAboutLand Conservation And Stewardship Board - Minutes - 10/08/2008MINUTES
CITY OF FORT COLLINS
LAND CONSERVATION & STEWARDSHIP BOARD
Regular Meeting
200 W. Mountain, Suite A
October 8, 2008
DATE: Wednesday, October 8, 2008
LOCATION: 200 W. Mountain Avenue, Suite A
TIME: 6:00 p.m.
For Reference: Linda Stanley - 491-7377
Mayor Doug Hutchinson - 416-2154
John Stokes, Staff Liaison - 221-6263
Board Members Present
Raymond Boyd, Linsey DeBell, Chris Gaughan, Michelle Grooms, Trudy Haines, Linda
Stanley
Board Members Excused
Karyl Ting, Vicky McLane
Council Liaison
Mayor, Doug Hutchinson
Staff Present
Natural Resources / Natural Areas Department: Daylan Figgs, Geri Kidawski, Erica
Saunders, Mark Sears, John Stokes
Guests
Public Comments
Agenda Review
Sears: Executive session has been canceled for this evening.
Review and Approval of Minutes
Grooms moved to approve the September 10, 2008 meeting minutes as written. Boyd
second. It was unanimously approved.
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October 8, 2008
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Great Outdoors Colorado Trail Grant Award
• Erica: In July 2008 Natural Areas Program staff submitted a joint application
with Larimer County for a special cycle trails grant offered by Great Outdoors
Colorado (GOCO). The grant would provide funding for trails and trailhead
features at Soapstone Prairie Natural Area and Red Mountain Space. Due to the
regional nature of the project, Larimer County was the primary applicant and the
City of Fort Collins was the partner agency.
GOCO staff and the GOCO project committee have recommended funding this
project in its full amount, which will award $210,000 to the City of Fort Collins
and $340,000 to Larimer County for a total award of $550.000. On October 3,
2008 the entire GOCO board formalized this decision.
Anything that we construct with the money needs to be in place for 25 years.
• Gaughan: Are you ok with the plan of the area, that that 25 year period is
comfortable?
• Sears: Our long range financial model takes us through 2021.
• Erica: Daylan Figgs was in charge of the Management Planning Process, and
there was a lot of careful thought. A Technical Advisory Group made up of
resource experts from the Division of Wildlife, CSU, and Jason Label with the
Laboratory of Public Archeology gave a lot of expert input in the plan.
• Figgs: We surveyed all the alignments, and we will continue to do that while
constructing the trails.
Grooms motioned for the Land Conservation and Stewardship Board to recommend that City
Council approve:
1. The intergovernmental agreement (IGA) with Larimer County.
2. The contact with Great Outdoors Colorado (GOCO)
Gaughan second. It was unanimously approved.
Soapstone Grazing
• Figgs: Soapstone Prairie Natural Area is currently leased to the Folsom Grazing
Association for livestock grazing; the existing lease will expire in December
2008. The lease extension will continue grazing on the property through 2010
with modifications to the current lease. The lease modifications were made in
order to manage for the conservation targets identified in the Soapstone prairie
Natural Area management Plan. Modifications include focusing grazing to the
shortgrass prairie system reducing the allowed number of animal unit months
from 3,600 to 2,500 and combining all cattle into a single herd. Grazing
management will utilize high intensity, short duration grazing to more closely
mimic historic grazing patterns of native ungulates.
Folsom will pay an annual sum of $26,700 or $53,400 over the life of the lease.
A ranch manager, employed by Folsom will live on site during the duration of the
lease and will be responsible for site security, maintenance of fences and stock
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October 8, 2008
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tanks, participation in rangeland monitoring programs, gathering information on
weather patterns, and participating in up to six public tours of the ranch annually.
• Gaughan: Do you have a contractor for the sheep?
• Figgs: We are working with a contractor John Bartman, who is a local sheep
producer.
• Boyd: Do goats eat toadflax?
• Figgs: Yes they will. We have talk about incorporating some goats into the sheep
herds.
• Stanley: Do you need to have someone watch over the sheep?
• Figgs: John Bartman hires Chilean/Peruvian sheep herders. They herd the sheep
24/7. We give John maps, and we will meet with him to talk about herding.
• Haines: What will they do with the rest of their cattle?
• Figgs: Some will sell their cattle, and some will find other pasture.
• Gaughan: Along these lines there might be an opportunity for the education team
to explain the working dog vs. the pasture dog. The public should know what
ranchers deal with on day to day bases, which are a part of living in the West.
• Figgs: One of our educations plans is to talk about working landscapes and why
we graze part of the property. We are also working with Folsom, our grazing
tenants, to think about locally produced feed and marketing it that way. It's a way
to connect Soapstone with Fort Collins.
Gaughan motioned for The Land Conservation and Stewardship Board to recommend that
City Council approve a two year extension to the Soapstone Prairie Grazing Lease between
the City of Fort Collins and the Folsom Grazing Association (Ordinance 160, 2005). Grooms
second. It was unanimously approved.
LCSB 2009 Work Plans
• Stanley: We will review the 2008 LCSB work plan and revise it for 2009.
The Board discussed each item of the 2008 work plan; Stanley will make the revisions
for the 2009 LCSB work plan, and send it to the Board members via email for final
comments.
New Business:
Announcements:
• Stanley: Vicky McLane has resigned from this Board. We now have two
openings for this Board.
• Sears:
- At the November LCSB meeting we should have a discussion on how
we manage prairie dogs at Prairie Dog Meadows. Prairie Dog Meadows
has become a vacant dirt lot with the exception of a few weeds. The
only control work we do there is to put buffers near the homes. Would
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October 8, 2008
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any of the Board members like to visit Prairie Dog Meadow before the
November meeting?
- We should also consider having a discussion on cultural/historical
resources at the November LCSB meeting.
- An offer was submitted regarding the Graves acquisition, which is up
the Poudre Canyon between Picnic Rock and Gateway Natural Area.
Hopefully it will be accepted and we will acquire the land over a five
year period of time, in six different parcels, beginning this December.
- The Benson Reservoir Dam Replacement is out to bid. Our bid opening
will be next week.
- Figgs has an outfall pipe out to bid on our gravel mine on the Resource
Recovery Farm/Running Deer area.
• Stanley: Did Hageman Earth Cycle do the requested improvements?
• Figgs: The Stormwater plant is about 95% done. We still have to seed some
areas.
• Sears: At Bobcat Ridge we have been restoring the cabin, which is almost
complete. Crusher fine will be laid to the cabin making it wheelchair accessible
from the parking lot to the cabin. Later this fall a vault toilet will be built in the
vicinity of the cabin.
At Soapstone Prairie Natural Area the shelters are under construction
• Gaughan: Is the road completed?
• Sears: The road was completed in July and both parking lots are completed also.
There is a large and small shelter at the north parking lot. At the south parking lot
there will be a large shelter similar to the one built at Bobcat Ridge Natural Area.
The vault toilets are going in at the end of October.
Adjourn
The meeting adjourned at 7:30 p.m.
Submitted by Geri Kidawski
Administrative Secretary