CARIBOU — The community-guided planning and zoning endeavor (CGPZ) facilitated by the Northern Maine Development Commission continues as the steering committee reviews the assets of Aroostook County.
Meeting recently at the Caribou Inn and Convention Center, members of the committee were updated on Mobilize Northern Maine, an asset-based economic development initiative.
“The CGPZ process will use an ‘asset-based’ approach, similar to that which has been successfully used in Mobilize Northern Maine, which is spearheaded by the Aroostook Partnership for Progress,” said Jay Kamm, senior planner at NMDC and meeting facilitator. “This approach proceeds by identifying key assets and exploring ways to leverage the assets to create greater benefits for the area.”
APP President Bob Dorsey provided the committee members, who represent landowners, large and small business, environmental groups and others, an abbreviated session on Mobilize Northern Maine.
“I tried to highlight the use of regional subject matter experts and that we collected a lot of information and had representation across the entire spectrum of industry sectors,” said Dorsey. “We have built super networks in our six working groups.”
Dorsey also emphasized the need for new industry, like mining, and the challenges associated with the declining 18- to 44-year-old workforce in the region.
Kamm said the CGPZ steering committee wants to utilize the expertise from the four industry sectors identified by Mobilize Northern Maine as key in growing the region’s economy — agriculture, forestry, manufacturing and renewable energy – and review barriers to those industries in the unorganized territories.
“The committee may determine that there may be some ‘low hanging fruit’ as far as areas that can be rezoned and uses reviewed in the unorganized territories,” he said.
Also at the meeting, the committee reviewed zoning in the unorganized territories and is beginning to examine where both districts and standards can be modified so that economic development can be promoted and expanded while protecting the environment.
The Maine Land Use Planning Commission (LUPC) selected Aroostook County as the initial region to participate in a series of local workshops to help determine overall regional interest and further develop a framework for the community-guided planning and zoning process. Recent efforts to improve the effectiveness of managing land use in the unorganized and deorganized areas of Maine have focused in part on the need for more locally guided and proactive planning for these areas.
The next CGPZ steering committee meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Jan. 8 at 9 a.m. at the NMDC office in Caribou. There will be conference call capabilities available.
For more information, contact Kamm at 498-8736.