CLIFTON PARK: Representatives of three area environmental
organizations and Town residents called on the Clifton Park
Town Board to save the Karner Blue butterfly populations in
the Town’s
northeast corner, during the Town Board’s first regular
meeting of the year, held on Monday evening January 3, 2005.
Eight speakers, including representatives from Save the Pine
Bush, Audubon Society of the Capital Region and the Hudson-Mohawk
Group of the Sierra Club called on the Board to reverse the
trend towards local extinction of this endangered species in
the Town that is being caused by continued degradation and
fragmentation of its habitats. These speakers were joined by
longtime Town residents in urging the Board to protect the
endangered animal and the Town’s
ecology.
Save the Pine Bush Secretary and Albany resident Lynne Jackson
read a statement repeatedly asking the Town of Clifton Park
to specify its policy on extinction of species. She cautioned
the Board that “Extinction of species is a serious matter . . .
Extinction is forever.” Jackson said the Town last year allowed
bulldozing of a site of Karner Blues along Wood Road without requiring
an environmental impact statement first. She said the Karner Blue
has recently gone extinct from the states of New Hampshire and
Ohio and the province of Ontario, Canada, where, she said, “people
would like to be in the same position as . . . Clifton
Park. They would like to still have their native populations of
Karner Blues.” Jackson added, “Now, expensive efforts
are underway to reintroduce the Karner Blue in all three places.”
Three other representatives from Save the Pine Bush - John
Wolcott, Russell Ziemba and Lucy Clark followed Jackson at
the podium. Wolcott advised the Board members not to cater
to the town’s business
interests, calling Clifton Park “one of the most overdeveloped
towns in Saratoga County”, which he in turn identified as
being “one of the most overdeveloped counties in the State.” “Nature
doesn’t know anything about political boundaries,” he
added.
Ziemba noted the importance of protecting the Clifton Park
populations of the butterfly, adding that despite 3,000 acres
being protected in the Albany Pine Bush, the habitat there
is fragmented and the butterflies’ numbers there are dwindling. He said that the
largest population of the Karner Blue in NY State is found at the
Saratoga County airport, and noted there is genetic variation within
the species based on locality. He added that the Clifton Park Karner
Blues, due to their genetic uniqueness “could be of genetic
importance” to the survival and recovery of the species’ populations
in the Albany Pine Bush.
Town resident William Koebbeman of Rexford spoke on behalf
of the Hudson-Mohawk Group of the Sierra Club’s Atlantic Chapter,
stated that with all the efforts that Town government has made
to encourage more development, including Empire Zones, his group
finds the Town’s efforts to protect the endangered butterfly
and its habitats to be “rather weak.” He referred to
a letter that the group wrote to the Town in October 2003 objecting
to the Empire Zone status assigned by the Town and County Boards
on a parcel containing known Karner Blue butterfly habitat along
Wood Road. The letter also asked the Town to fully enforce the
1991 Findings Statement for the Wood Road Final Generic Environmental
Impact Statement (FGEIS), which specified numerous protective measures
that must be taken in order to save the endangered species habitats
located in the Town’s Light Industrial Zone.
David Gibson, Conservation Chairperson and Board member of
the Audubon Society of the Capital Region (a chapter of National
Audubon Society) and Ballston Lake resident said he has been
speaking and writing to the Town Board and Planning Board on
Audubon’s
behalf concerning habitats along Wood Road since the early 1990’s.
He said he was stunned to discover what Town officials allowed
to occur last year along Wood Road, which he frequently travels.
He described the area of extensive grading and cutting there, including
filling of wetlands and wetlands buffers, and called for the site
to be “restored and remediated” as a viable habitat.
Gibson said the Town should “bring all the parties together” to
make good on a 1994 agreement that was signed by several parties
including the landowner, with enforcement powers of Town government
specified therein, pursuant to related Town project approval conditions
from the same time period. The agreement was meant to protect the
habitats of the Karner Blue and other rare wildlife through stewardship
and management, he added, noting also that the Town’s current
3-month moratorium in the Light Industrial zone would be “a
great opportunity” to remove the known Karner Blue habitats
and others special resource areas — including the NYS Forest
Preserve Tract located east of Route 9 along Ushers and English
Road — from the Town’s Light Industrial zoning district.
Mr. Gibson expressed the view that the treatment of the bulldozed
area along Wood Road “conflicts with the Town’s conservation
ethic,” and urged that the Town “work with what nature
has afforded it in abundance, not against it.”
Leland Lakritz, a 31- year town resident, noted that during
the years he’s lived in Town, he has seen many changes in Clifton
Park. He advised the Board that “We are not separate from
the Earth.” He called on the Board to protect those Karner
Blue habitats that are left in Town, and to preserve the remaining
ecology of the Town.
William Engleman, Town resident and member of Save the Pine
Bush, said the Board may soon “preside over the local extinction
of this species from one or more of its remaining habitats” in
Clifton Park. He urged that protective measures including rezoning
be taken for endangered species and their habitats, as well as
for the aquifers and aquifer recharge areas, forest lands and wetlands,
which he said are all located within the Town’s present Light
Industrial zoned areas. Engleman commended the Board on instituting
the 3-month moratorium on gas stations and convenience stores and
for extending it to include all projects in the Light Industrial
zone. He asked that the Board “show a long-term regard for
the ecology, natural heritage and biodiversity of this Town.” Engleman
served on the Town’s Environmental Conservation Commission
1988-1990, cofounded the Saratoga County Land Conservancy in
1988 and is a founding Steering Committee member of Friends of
Clifton Park Open Space.
In June 2004, Save the Pine Bush and Engleman sued the Town’s
Planning Board charging that the NY State Environmental Quality
Review Act (SEQRA) had been violated in the Planning Board’s
April 2004 approval of 9 acres of soil disturbance granted to
DCG Development Company along Wood Road. Saratoga County Supreme
Court refused to grant a temporary restraining order and the
bulldozing proceeded. Upon advise of counsel that this might
render the case moot, the case was withdrawn prior to a scheduled
hearing date in late July, 2004.