Thrall & GreenCounsel
I hear the wind speak of a new decree aimed at protecting our sacred groves. Perhaps we can find a way to honor nature’s balance while meeting the laws that guide our people.
Ah, the new grove protection law—sounds promising, but remember, Section 12.3 of the Forest Conservation Act requires a 200‑foot buffer zone, and we need to file a mitigation plan by the end of the month. And don’t forget the public comment period ends soon.
Section 12.3 does give us a clear line. We’ll draft the buffer plan, get it reviewed, and then file before the deadline. I’ll make sure the community has a chance to speak up during the comment period so their voices are heard. Let's keep our focus on protecting the land while staying within the law.
Sounds good, but just double‑check that the buffer uses the 200‑foot rule from the Act, not the 150‑foot figure in the draft. Also, the mitigation plan must include a water‑quality monitoring schedule—EPA says that’s a must if the grove borders a watershed. And remember, we need the community’s written comments to have legal weight; a quick email round‑up with signatures does the trick. Let's keep everything on the books and the soil.
I’ll double‑check that the buffer follows the 200‑foot rule, not the 150‑foot draft. I’ll add a water‑quality monitoring schedule for the watershed, and we’ll gather written community comments with signatures to give them legal weight. All will be on the books before the deadline.
Great, just remember to cite the exact statute line—Section 12.3, paragraph b—when you file the buffer map. And keep the water‑quality log in the spreadsheet format you shared last week; the EPA reviewer will appreciate that consistency. All set!
Got it—will cite Section 12.3 paragraph b on the buffer map and keep the water‑quality log in the spreadsheet format we used last week. All set.
Excellent, just double‑check the sign‑off sheet for the community comments before you file. That way, the court will see no gaps. All good to go.
I’ll double‑check the sign‑off sheet before filing, so the court sees everything is in order. All good.
Just a quick heads‑up: keep an eye on the buffer map’s scale—mis‑scaled maps can trip the review board. Once the sign‑offs are in, file and let’s keep the timeline tight. All set.