At the next Conservation Commission meeting on Thursday, March 6, at 7 pm, members are expected to review and discuss the findings from 18 months of hearings for the Notice of Intent (NOI) for Thorndike Place under the Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act (WPA). The NOI proposes work within the FEMA 100-Year Floodplain / Bordering Land Subject to Flooding (BLSF), as well as within the Buffer Zone to Bordering Vegetated Wetlands (BVW). Mitigation measures are proposed to compensate for the impacts to these resources.
At their previous hearing on February 6, Con Com voted to close the public hearing to further input, so now the members will discuss the project amongst themselves in preparation for their final decision to deny a wetlands permit, approve a permit, or approve it with conditions.
Check the Con Com website for the March 6 agenda and click here to register for this Zoom meeting.
Brief Background
The public hearing on the NOI began in September 2023, covering two specific issues. One was a review of the Stormwater Report and Management Plan associated with the Thorndike Place development to determine whether it complies with the Massachusetts Stormwater Standards. The second was a review of the Thorndike Place Planting Plan for compliance with the performance standards for restoration work in designated zones and whether the plan will enhance wildlife habitat conditions. For both aspects of the NOI, the commission needed several months’ time to solicit and hire peer reviewers.
The Planting Plan was accepted relatively easily, but the stormwater plans became quite controversial and complicated. To supplement the proposals from the BSC Group, engineers for Thorndike Place developer Arlington Land Realty LLC, the Con Com sought feedback from several peer reviewers over nearly a year as the plans changed to address various concerns. The Land Trust’s hydrology consultants, Scott Horsley and Dr. Michael Mobile, also provided extensive technical comments based on their respective groundwater monitoring and stormwater mounding analyses and their review of the BSC reports and peer review documents.
For more information, visit the Commission’s Thorndike Place Wetlands Permit web page. It hosts all of the planting and stormwater-related documents dating to September 2023, including peer review and consultants’ reports, public comments, and other correspondence on the NOI hearings.
Arlington Land Trust continues to advocate for the permanent protection of the Mugar parcel as conservation land. The site is subject to regular and significant flooding, and is a critical stormwater buffer for the surrounding and downstream neighborhoods of East Arlington. |