Lackawaxen Community Building is proposed to provide a central
location as our township administrative hub, a center where our
vehicles
that keep our roads safe and clean are serviced and protected from
the elements, where our community meeting hall where our laws are
made, where our citizens can share ideas, voice opinions, and
discuss our future. See the brief summary of the visioning and
planning
process edited from an article published in the Pike County
Dispatch.
If you have ideas
on how to improve and protect our quality of life,
please let us know by clicking this link .
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Lackawaxen Updates
Comprehensive Plan - Prepares for Future
By Ken Baumel
Lackawaxen supervisors approved executing a planning consultant contract to
complete a joint Lackawaxen-Shohola Township Multi-Municipal Comprehensive Plan
in spring 2007. That plan, adopted in fall 2009, helps define what the townships
each would look like 15 to
20 years from now. The plan seeks to articulate that vision. Citizen input
helped planners define that future vision.
Lackawaxen Supervisors approved
appointing Johnson, Miriam, and Thompson (JTM) of York, Pennsylvania, at a township
regular township meeting held at the municipal building on Township Road, off
Route 590. JTM has relevant expertise in comprehensive planning and open
space planning for rural communities facing extraordinary growth.
Lackawaxen and Shohola
Township by agreement designated the LSCAC to develop and implement the plan
over the two years. LSCAC and each township held public meetings to gather
public input. LSCAC and JMT held workshops to inform stakeholder groups to make
everybody aware of the planning initiatives. After
interviews with major stakeholders, JMT and LSCAC could then survey the public
and conduct focus groups to get a full range of public input on the plan.
Lackawaxen is collaborated
with Shohola Township to access close to $100,000 in state and county funds to develop
the Comprehensive Plan.
The outcome of the partnership is that each township will have their individual
Comprehensive Plan paid for by state funds. Shohola approved hiring the same consultant in spring 2007.
Both townships
formed a joint Lackawaxen-Shohola Citizens Advisory Committee (LSCAC), a volunteer
board, consisting of four representatives from each township, to oversee the
development of each plan. A two-page agreement between
the townships outlined the scope and mission of the LSCAC.
LSCAC President Peter Wulfhorst,
a former Pike County
Planner and Vice President Tom Zetterberg, who heads the Pike County Open Space
and Rural Character Preservation Advisory Board, attended the Lackawaxen
Township regular meeting. Wulfhorst explained that the
LSCAC consists of one township supervisor from each municipality, one planning
commission member from each town, and two at-large-members from each township.
Each township member has an alternate from that township.
Wulfhorst is a former Pike
County Planner, with expertise in land use, groundwater preservation, developing
visioning plans, and comprehensive plan. He co-authored the County Comprehensive
Plan mandated by Pennsylvania and began a Pike County visioning process that led
to the county adopting a Pike County Visioning Plan.
Wulfhorst and Zetterberg bring previous Pike planning, open space,
comprehensive plan, knowledge and technical skills on rural communities
facing growth to the advisory board.
Wulfhorst also worked with planning expert Roy Borgfeld from Lehman Township
to develop the county Vioning initiative. They also collaborated in
Lehman Township on a long-term visioning process that led to Lehman developing a
model comprehensive plan that has influenced many other communities in
Northeastern Pennsylvania.
The input of so many planning
experts helped guide JTM to develop a solid plan for our future, according
to Lackawaxen supervisors. Wulfhorst said that the
LSCAC worked with the Pike County Office of Community Planning to develop a
Request for Proposal (RFP) for this project. Shohola and Lackawaxen reviewed
credentials, past accomplishments, and proposed approach to the project and
chose the vendor that most closely meets the two community’s needs the best.
The Lackawaxen/Shohola Open Space,
Recreation and Greenways Plan, one part of the Comprehensive Plan, is identical
for both townships. Part of
Pike
County’s open space bond fund covers a portion of the joint municipal plan. A
Pennsylvania Dept. of Community and Economic Development (DCED) grant program
will cover the balance of the overall Comprehensive Plan cost.
Wulfhorst said, "The
Lackawaxen and Shohola Township boards of supervisors desire to preserve and
enhance the quality of life, encourage beneficial growth and development,
effectively establish public infrastructure integral to achieving the prior and
future objectives, and enhance local land use and development regulations.
"Recognizing that such
objectives are best pursued by cooperative involvement and planning, Lackawaxen
and Shohola have adopted resolutions and a Multi-Municipal Cooperation
Agreement, according to the standards of the Pennsylvania Municipalities
Planning Code (MPC), the state law that enables municipalities in Pennsylvania
to conduct land use planning and adopt land-use ordinances."
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