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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLand Conservation And Stewardship Board - Minutes - 05/11/2022 Land Conservation & Stewardship Board Regular Meeting\May 11, 2022 05/11/2022 – MINUTES Page 1 1. CALL TO ORDER: 5:40 pm 2. ROLL CALL: Joseph Piesman, Cole Kramer, Ross Cunniff, Mike Weber, Denise Culver, Andrea Elson, Elena Lopez, Alycia Crall joined shortly after role call. Excused: Vicky McLane NAD Staff/Other: Kelly Ohlson, City Council Liaison, Alynn Karnes, Julia Feder, Katie Donahue 3. AGENDA REVIEW: Chair Elson reviewed the agenda with no changes 4. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION: None Kelly Ohlson, City Council Liaison spoke to the Board and provided an update on City Council items and work for the remaining year. Kelly feels very fortunate to be on City Council and asked Board members to feel free to ask any questions or inquiries related to City Council. Some of those items included timeline for the upcoming ballot initiatives, any items that LCSB might need to be aware of, changing trash hauling process in the city, transit, climate action, affordable housing, parks refresh and maintenance as some of City Council priorities. Safety and health are also being discussed. Chair Elson asked about the 1041 and if Kelly had any updates on that. Kelly reported it’s on his list for the following week to ensure it’s moving forward. Kelly shared his concerns about the discussion of last month’s meeting minutes regarding NAD hiring a recreation planner. He wanted to ensure that we are not turning natural areas into a park system and expressed he would not support it in any budget requests. Katie explained that this is an industry standard term; however, the intent of this position would be to protect ecological values by better understanding the pressures in this area. NAD staff heard the feedback from LCSB and made adjustments to the offer. 5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES: Member Piesman made a motion to approve the April LCSB meeting minutes. Member Weber seconded the motion. The motion was unanimously approved 8 -0 6. ACTION ITEMS Zoe Shark, Public Engagement Manager is requesting support for a resolution that is scheduled to be considered by City Council on June 21, 2022. The resolution would help bird species recover by supporting the celebration of World Migratory Bird Day and applying to be certified as a Bird City. Zoe described the application as a lengthy process that includes four City departments (Natural Areas, Environmental Services, Gardens on Spring Creek, and Parks) and several community organizations (Bird DocuSign Envelope ID: 45C8AEBC-8F46-493A-80B2-F062761B5B8D Land Conservation & Stewardship Board Regular Meeting/ May 11, 2022 05/11/2020 MINUTES Page 2 Conservancy of the Rockies, Audubon Rockies, and Fort Collins Audubon). Required application elements are celebrating World Migratory Bird Day and a resolution by City Council. The Bird City application is on track to be submitted by the July 1 deadline. Member Cunniff made a motion that the LCSB support City Council in approving a resolution and related actions to help bird species recover by supporting the celebration of World Migratory Bird Day and applying to be certified as a Bird City. Member Lopez seconded the motion. The motion was unanimously approved 8-0 Bobcat Ridge Natural Area Dump Clean-Up Aaron Reed, Senior Supervisor presented the Bobcat Ridge Natural Area Dump Clean-Up which included and summarized a remediation history, the two-management options NAD were offered to address the issue, final steps of remediation and the clean-up costs. Discussion: Julia Feder shared that any future acquisitions would include remediation projects of any hazardous material up front and be done immediately versus waiting until notification was sent directing NAD to clean up. Member Coleman applauded NAD’s completion of the clean-up, estimated at $1.3M and done for $510K. Member Cunniff asked if the same would apply if there were diesel contamination at Hughes Stadium. Aaron confirmed NAD would have to mitigate it. Typically, a Phase I Assessment is done on any new acquisitions to ensure that NAD knows what the property holds. Apparently, a Phase I was done when Bobcat Ridge was originally purchased over 15 years ago, however the owner alluded to a dump but couldn’t remember when it was done, but the owner claimed it only contained a lower level of materials. Over many years the materials went undisturbed and there was no need for mitigation. The Cameron Peak Fire was considered a disturbance so after the fire, we had to deal with the materials and overall mitigation steps. Information Sharing/NAD Metrics Katie Donahue, NAD Manager reviewed how natural areas measures success. She shared a sample of metrics tracked by the city for each of the seven community outcomes, with specific details referring to Natural Areas Department. Katie reviewed how Natural Areas tracks accountability in numerous ways to include education DocuSign Envelope ID: 45C8AEBC-8F46-493A-80B2-F062761B5B8D Land Conservation & Stewardship Board Regular Meeting/ May 11, 2022 05/11/2020 MINUTES Page 3 program participation, volunteer hours, conditions of trails as well as other indicators. Total land conserved in 2021 was 207 acres with .13 acres per capita. Natural Areas Department also measured improved habitat, Poudre River health and instream flows. Kestrel Fields Field Trip June 8th Julia Feder, Environmental Planning Manager opened discussion with Board members about a field trip to Kestrel Fields Natural Area to observe the conservation agricultural project. Julia described the parking and distance to walk to Board members. She offered to open the barn area for the Board meeting. A presentation could also be available to be hosted at the Nix Farm. Board members agreed to hold the meeting in the barn, at Kestrel Fields Natural Area if possible. Julia will send out parking instructions and work with staff to make the meeting available to the public, Land Conservation Updates Alynn Karnes, Natural Areas Specialist reported on the property acquired 414-acre Buckhorn addition to Bobcat Ridge Natural Area. Onboarding of the property will start May 23, 2022. Senior staff will take a visit there to identify the next step s. NAD has also made a purchase offer to another landowner for a potential land acquisition. 7. BOARD MEMBER REPORTS Bicycle Advisory Committee (BAC) Update Member Weber reported on the last BAC meeting he attended the committee lightly discussed funding North Metropolitan Planning Organization update on trails, connectivity, new bike lane on Pitkin. SPIN is doing a new public dashboard so you can visually see metrics on scooters and e-bikes. Member Weber discussed whether the Stop as Yield on and whether that affects the bike only infrastructure. Anything that is signed a “bike only” infrastructure is not affected by this. The Active Modes Plan will be open for public comment from mid-June to mid-July. Courtney would like to come back to the Board in August with those results. DocuSign Envelope ID: 45C8AEBC-8F46-493A-80B2-F062761B5B8D Land Conservation & Stewardship Board Regular Meeting/ May 11, 2022 05/11/2020 MINUTES Page 4 1041 Update No meetings but will got to City Council Work Session in June. Meeting adjourned: 7:36 pm ___________________________ ____________________ Andrea Elson, Chair Date DocuSign Envelope ID: 45C8AEBC-8F46-493A-80B2-F062761B5B8D 7/14/2022