Land Use Education and Training
CLC sponsors education and training programs on land use topics for municipal officials, volunteer boards, and community groups. These sessions are designed to equip communities with the information and skills needed to review, revise, and apply land use regulations and practices. Past topics have ranged from how to incorporate biodiversity in land use planning decisions to presentations on groundwater, stormwater management, and the role of conservation advisory councils.
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November 12, 2011
A workshop to help municipalities create ”agriculture-friendly” communities, based upon the American Farmland Trust (AFT) resource publication, Planning for Agriculture: A Toolkit for Towns and Counties.
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October 13, 2011
The roundtable is a way to bring together both existing municipal Conservation Advisory Councils (CAC), as well as residents who may want to form a CAC in their town or have a general interest in conservation as it relates to local land use planning. We look forward to hearing what all of you are doing and discussing ways in which a format like this can help your work.
Highlights as well as notes from the meeting have been posted.
More on our Conservation Advisory Council Program
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August 23, 2011
We are holding a public forum to discuss policies around dogs at our public conservation areas. All are invited – people who love to walk their dogs at our public conservation areas and those who use the areas without their pet.
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April 2, 2011
Did you know that there are more than 25 miles of trails on CLC’s Public Conservation Areas alone? That’s in addition to the other community trails and major trail networks that are underway in the county, including the northern extension of the Harlem Valley Rail Trail and Kinderhook-Stuyvesant-Stockport Intermunicipal Trail. Our county has an abundance of abandoned railroad corridors, utility rights-of-way, equestrian trails, and other linkages that could add up to a world-class countywide trail network. Trails are important not only for recreation, education, and personal health, they are also increasingly recognized as an important component in community economic development. On April 2nd, 2011 we convened the first Columbia County Trails Conference on planning for community traills, and we’re enthusiastic about continuing to collaborate to improve trails in the County.
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January 31, 2011
How to form and work with a conservation advisory council (CAC) to protect important natural areas in your town.
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November 30, 2010
What planning and zoning boards need to know about stormwater management, green infrastructure practices and the revised 2010 New York State Stormwater Management Design Manual.
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May 2, 2010
Tools and procedures that can be used to conserve natural resources through local planning reviews.
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April 28, 2010
Information on groundwater quality and quantity that should be considered during development project reviews.