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Conservation board asks town to send developer EAFs to advisory board within 10 days

Grand Island Conservation Advisory Board · April 24, 2026

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Summary

The Grand Island Conservation Advisory Board voted to request that the town send any developer Environmental Assessment Form (EAF) submissions to the board within 10 days so the advisory board has time to review wetlands, tree removal, and other environmental triggers before projects advance.

The Grand Island Conservation Advisory Board voted April 23 to request that the town send the board copies of developers' Environmental Assessment Forms within 10 days of receipt, citing missed referrals and the need for earlier oversight.

The board's chair put the motion on the floor after a lengthy discussion about how referrals reach advisory boards and which triggers should force an automatic review. "The CAB request that the town send to CAB all EAFs within 10 days of receipt," the chair said as members debated adding a short, electronic timeline for delivery.

Board members said cases have been missed when EAFs arrived only in planning-board packets and not in the conservation board's packet, leaving CAB without time to review wetlands, streams, tree impacts and other environmental concerns before projects advanced. One member described routine practice in earlier years when referrals were mailed with a cover letter to the CAB; that system, they said, had provided clearer notice.

Members argued for a short checklist to help intake staff route submissions (examples suggested included whether a proposal affects creeks, removes trees, or is within the open-space index). After editing the wording on the floor to read that the town send all EAFs to CAB within 10 days of receipt, the board approved the measure; the chair called the motion, a second was recorded and no vocal opposition was raised during the vote.

Why it matters: The EAF is the document that identifies potential environmental impacts early in project review. CAB members said receiving the EAFs promptly will let the advisory board flag issues to the planning board and other municipal departments before site plans are advanced.

What happens next: The board agreed that the chair will circulate the motion language with minutes and copy the town board and long-range planning. Members also asked that the town deliver the forms electronically if possible and that the board continue refining a short trigger checklist before the next meeting.

Quotes: "We meet once a month," one committee member said during the debate, urging timely delivery so CAB can provide meaningful input. "If you get it at the last second, then when I go to the next meeting they don't have an answer," another member said, urging a 10-day window.

Documentation: The motion and on-floor edits were raised starting in the discussion at SEG 0808 and recorded through the vote at SEG 1019–SEG 1023. The board asked the chair to circulate the finalized language with the minutes.