Category Archives: News

News from around the lake.

08 August 2014: New Website Permalinks

Some of you might have noticed a change to the link structure in use on our website. The original “?page_id=266” and “?p=2243” links have been replaced with a human readable “post-name.” For the most part this will be transparent and not require any thought or action on your part. If you have links you’ve saved in your browser for favorite pages, they’ll still work, you’ll just be automagically redirected to the new link. For example, if you point your browser at:

https://clarylake.org/?page_id=266″

you’ll be redirected to:

https://clarylake.org/current-water-level-charts/

One of the reason for this change is to make the links more human-readable, the other is to take advantage of page caching which should help with site performance. I’ve done a fair amount of testing and I don’t think anything is broken but if you find something that isn’t working, please let me know. Thanks.

03 August 2014: Yet Another Successful Annual Association Meeting

We had a good meeting of the Clary Lake Association yesterday, reasonably well attended though I had expected a somewhat larger turnout given how much we promoted the meeting. I remain somewhat chagrined that so many Clary Lake shore owners either aren’t interested in joining the Association or just can’t be bothered. I’m also surprised that some folks actually show up for the meetings, but are still unwilling to join! What’s up with that? The Clary Lake Association is dedicated to preserving, protecting, and enhancing the natural beauty, and quality of Clary Lake and its watershed. Everyone who owns land on Clary Lake should be a member, without exception.

The membership unanimously voted to adopt the Proposed Revised Bylaws. After the work the Bylaws committee put in on them over the past year, it would have been disheartening to say the least if they had been rejected! Furthermore, we got some good feed back from the membership to guide the Bylaws committee in revising the Membership and Voting Rights language to be voted on at next year’s meeting. I’ll finalize the newly adopted bylaws and post them on the website as soon as I get a round tuit. Continue reading

01 August 2014: So much for repairing the dam!

IMG_20140801_123916According to the Clary Lake water level order today is the day that Paul Kelley was supposed to have completed repairs to the dam and installed a publicly-visible water level gauge. As you can see from these pictures taken just a little while ago, he hasn’t even bothered to cut the tree down that is growing out of the dam let alone actually effect any repairs to the dam. Of course, I’m not surprised since Kelley has yet to do ANYTHING substantive to comply with any requirement of the water level order. Here is the specific section of the Order that relates to today’s deadline:

6. A permanently mounted lake level gauge shall be installed on the Clary Lake Dam by the owner of the dam. The gauge must be marked in tenths of a foot and placed in a publicly visible area on the upstream face of the dam near its outlet. The gauge shall be placed such that the normal high water line, as determined by the procedures outlined in Condition #3, corresponds to an elevation of 0.0 on the gauge. This measurement will be used as a benchmark for observing water level changes and may be used for measuring the height at which the dam gate must be opened above its invert. Provided that the normal high Water line has been established in accordance with Condition #3, the gauge must be installed immediately following completion of the dam repairs as described in Condition #2 or by no later than August l, 2014, whichever comes first.

IMG_20140801_124030Sounds pretty clear to me, but then what do I know? I haven’t heard anything about mediation that is supposed to have started last Tuesday, July 29th. As soon as I find out anything, I’ll post it here.

23 July 2014: Kelley responds to DEP June 19th Communication

Special Condition #4 of the Clary Lake water level order is a requirement that the dam owner have a Professional Land Surveyor establish the historical normal high water level of Clary Lake and transfer that elevation to the dam. The Order required that the dam owner submit this survey to the Department by June 2nd. Paul Kelley did in deed submit something on that date and not surprisingly, it failed to meet the requirements of the Order. On June 19 the Department responded with a letter detailing the shortcomings of his submission. The letter gave him 30 days, until July 21st, to correct the deficiencies in his submission and resubmit the plan. That was a couple of days ago. I got a copy yesterday afternoon and it is sadly but not surprisingly, more of the same old, same old:

Continue reading

22 July 2014: Enos Property on Clary Lake for sale

Imagine my surprise to find Arthur Enos has put his property up for sale:

$875,000.00 Request More Info
Current
Single Family
5 Br    0 Ba    ±4,000 sqft.
±17.000 Acr.
Clary Lake
MLS#: 1146688
 
Enos Lane is a beautiful year round residence located in Jefferson on Clary Lake. With approximately 17 acres of woods and views of the water, the property offers a secluded, landscaped setting at the end of a private drive with 700 feet of waterfront.

14 July 2014: Anyone missing their dingy?

Your dingy?

This little dingy drifted up to the northwest end of the lake the other day and beached itself on Eleanor Goldberg’s property. She pulled it up on shore. If it’s your boat, come get it or if you know who it belongs to, let them know. Thanks!

Well that didn’t take long. Mystery resolved. It belongs to Rick Gallion 🙂

11 July 2014 Kennebec Journal: Clary Lake dam owner and state still at odds

There was an article in yesterday’s Kennebec Journal by staff writer Paul Koenig providing a welcome update on the current circumstances surrounding the Clary Lake water level order. It is nice to see the KJ keeping this issue before the public, rather than letting it fade into obscurity. Paul Kelley was quoted as saying that mediation is to start at the end of this month and that the process is likely to extend into August: “My hope is that all the parties see that the best solution is no longer to fight this but to try to see if there is some constructive solution.” Nonetheless, the spokeswoman for the department said the DEP still expects the dam owner to begin maintaining the higher water levels by Oct. 1. Here’s a link to the article:

If anyone has trouble getting the article off the newspaper site, I’ve saved a local copy:

I was briefly interviewed by phone but I didn’t have a lot to say. The article does not mention whether the spokesperson for the Clary Lake Petitioners and/or the Clary Lake Association (as intervenors in the petition) will be asked to participate in the mediation. While I was quoted as saying that I don’t expect anything to come from mediation, that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t be willing to join in the process.

FYI, the next deadline for Paul July 27th when he has to resubmit his Water Level Survey (which was also deemed “unsatisfactory”) and then by August 1st he is supposed to have completed repairs to the dam, and installed a water level gauge.

The article also mentions the Branch Pond water level order and the recent letter from the Coombs. It remains to be seen how or if the Department chooses to respond to their “declaration.”

02 July 2014: Kelley’s Water Level Management Plan Disappoints

Paul Kelley responded today to DEP’s June 2nd letter clarifying the requirements of Special Condition #5 of the water level order and giving him till today to submit a revised Water Level Management Plan (see 03 June 2014: DEP responds to Paul Kelley’s Water Level Management Plan). Instead of a revised plan, Kelley responded with 4 separate documents: a letter to Beth Callahan, an email exchange he had with Beth Callahan back in March of this year, a copy of an email from DEP staff person Erle Townsend dated September 20, 2011, and a page of historical rainfall data from the NOAA website.

In short, more of the same. The email from Erle Townsend is the same as Kelley’s “Exhibit L” entered into the record during his testimony at the public hearing back in August 2012. We’ve seen it before. DEP has seen it before. Kelley seems to think it is relevant to the situation. It isn’t. Continue reading

23 June 2014: DEP Responds to Paul Kelley’s Water Level Survey

“Unacceptable at this time” is how the Department of Environmental Protection has characterized Paul Kelley’s Water Level Survey that he submitted to the Department in response to Special Condition #4 of the Clary Lake Water Level Order. If you’re having a sense of deja vu all over again it’s because this this is the exact same phrase the Department used to describe his Water Level Management Plan in a letter sent to him back on June 2nd (see the news article here). Mr. Kelley certainly isn’t scoring very high marks with the Department over his attempts to comply with the Water Level Order… it’s almost like he isn’t even trying:

Special Condition #4, Clary Lake Survey, DEFICIENCY

The letter gives Mr. Kelley until July 21st to submit a survey along with a Condition Compliance Application and a $146 application fee. Mr. Kelley is not considered in violation of the Order at this time, but don’t worry: that will change soon enough.

Continue reading

06 June 2014: DEP issues FINAL Branch Pond Water Level Order

The Department of Environmental Protection has issued the FINAL Branch Pond Water Level Order, effective today June 6, 2014. The Branch Pond water level petition was filed on December 9, 2008 but was put on hold by the Department for 3 years to give the dam owners time to effect repairs to the dam. Repairs to the dam were not made however, and processing of the petition resumed in December 2011. I have been following the proceedings since the summer of 2012, and I attended their Public Hearing in August 2013 and we’ve been hosting a few pages for the Branch Pond Association on our site for some time now. It is interesting to note that this Order was signed by Commissioner Patricia Aho herself:

branch_pondBranch Pond is a beautiful little pond located in the towns of China and Palermo, at the headwaters of the Western Branch of the Sheepscot River. It is well worth a visit. It’s smaller than Clary Lake but it has numerous islands and large relatively shallow water areas. I’ve been up there a couple of times and but I Branch Pond, Midas #5754haven’t been out on the pond. Yet. I plan to head up there with my kayak later this summer. With my fishing pole. Check out these photographs of Branch Pond. Those showing the impact of low water were part of the Branch Pond Water Level Petition.

03 June 2014: DEP responds to Paul Kelley’s Water Level Management Plan

Unacceptable at this time.” That is how the Department of Environmental Protection has characterized Paul Kelley’s Water Level Management Plan in a letter to him dated June 2nd. The plan, one of the requirements in the Clary Lake Water Level Order, was submitted back on May 2nd. The letter goes on to list the plan’s deficiencies and the steps Mr. Kelley needs to take to remedy those deficiencies. It also informed him of the need for a Condition Compliance Application along with a $146 application fee. The letter gives Mr. Kelley exactly 1 month (until July 2nd) to resubmit his corrected/revised Water Level Management Plan along with his application and application fee. Mr. Kelley is not considered in violation of the Order at this time.

Continue reading

27 May 2014: Maine Lakes Society Annual Meeting this July 28th

The Maine Lakes Society (formerly the Congress of Lake Associations or COLA) is holding their annual membership meeting this coming June 28th at Colby College in Waterville. For years Ed Grant attended the Annual COLA meetings on behalf of the Clary Lake Association. I represented the Association at last year’s meeting and I had a blast, I’m planning on attending this year too. If anyone would like to ride along, let me know. The cost is $20 per person. The cutoff for online registration is June 25th. Here’s a link to the Meeting Agenda. Here’s the newsletter/announcement they sent around today:

May 27, 2014

SHAPING THE FUTURE
TOGETHER ON JUNE 28
AT THE CONFERENCE

From hard fought milfoil battles and legislative victories

to a ground-breaking partnership for watershed protection, this day full of Success Stories will inform, inspire, and point us all toward a new Vision for Maine Lakes and Watersheds.  Let’s set the Agenda together.

 

Registration is a snap online!   Visit our website   

MAINE LAKES ARE BIG WINNERS
IN THE DANCE OF LEGISLATION
 
Thanks to your help and that of environmental activists and legislators who understand the fragility of Maine lakes, new legislation to support the removal of invasive aquatic plants, to fund LakeSmart, stormwater management projects, land conservation, and analysis of water quality data is now law. 
 
Getting there was half the fun.  Come hear about ‘The Dance of Legislation’ from those who pulled off the best year, ever, for Maine lakes..  

3RD ANNUAL MAINE LAKES RAFFLE

OFFERS HELP FOR BLACKFLY SEASON 
AND DINNER ON THE DECK – –
and much, much more!
 
They may be the best thing since sliced bread!  Portable, pocket-sized and eco-friendly , the Thermacell Mosquito Repellent will banish bugs from patio, picnic spot, or garden (225 square foot range).  Our Raffle has 12 of these handy gadgets on offer, and they are only one of a host of tantalizing prizes. 
 
Tickets on sale at the Conference or from a Maine Lakes Society Board Member!

16 May 2014: Pleasant Pond Mill LLC contemplating an Army Corps of Engineers NRPA Permit

According to information recently obtained from the Town of Whitefield, Pleasant Pond Mill LLC has requested an inter-agency, pre-application meeting with the Army Corps of Engineers and representatives of other State and Federal Agencies to discuss permitting issues surrounding the repair and/or ​replacement of the Clary Lake dam. A pre-application meeting is standard operating procedure when contemplating a project requiring an NRPA (National Resource Protection Act) permit. Mr. Kelley must be contemplating a major dam reconstruction project involving significant alteration of lots of fresh water wetlands and possible damage to the downstream ecology to require pursuing an NRPA tier 1, 2, or 3 permit, especially considering that back in 2011 he felt (and DEP agreed) that the repairs he contemplated required a simple Permit By Rule approach. What has changed?

I understand that this inter-agency pre-application meeting is tentatively scheduled for the 17th of June. This date incidentally is 2 weeks past the next upcoming Water Level Order deadline of June 2nd when Mr. Kelley is supposed to have submitted a survey of the historical normal high water line of Clary lake, and not quite one and a half months before the August 1st deadline by which time Mr. Kelley is to have completed dam repairs and installed a water level gauge. It’s going to be a busy summer for him!

Continue reading

09 May 2014 Lincoln County News: Owner Submits Water Level Plan for Clary Lake

There is an article by Dominik Lobkowicz in this week’s Lincoln County News on page 8 about the Water Level Management Plan (WLMP) submitted by Paul Kelley last week. The article does a pretty good job of covering the main issues surrounding the WLMP. According to the article, the Department will “work diligently to complete a thorough review in a timely manner” and that “any deficiencies will be identified and an opportunity provided to correct them.” The article does not appear in the public version of the Lincoln County News Online. I recommend those of you who can, buy a copy of this week’s paper. For those of you who can’t, I scanned a copy of the article:

The article goes on to state that “attempts by PPM to court the Clary Lake Association … failed to yield a secondary designee.” Right. Well I was on the receiving end of Mr. Kelley’s attempts to “court” the Association. If Mr. Kelley really wanted us to assume that role, he sure went about it wrong. All he succeeded in doing was to discourage us from taking on that role. I’ve already posted about how he tried to “court” the towns of Whitefield and Jefferson. They wouldn’t take the job either.

08 May 2014: New Clary Lake Association page on Google+

Hi All! I have created a new Clary Lake Association page on Google+ to replace the original “Community” page. There are several reasons for doing this, the primary one being that I can’t automagically add website posts to the Community page, but I can to the new one. Otherwise, the pages look about the same. Currently website posts here are automatically posted to my personal George Fergusson Google+ page as public posts and to get them posted on the Community page requires I do it manually. Sadly, I don’t have the time or inclination to do that so there hasn’t been much happening there. Incidentally, the posting goes both ways, though not automatically: Google+ posts can be easily embedded on this site. How cool is that?

It might take a few tries to get the automatic posting working. We’ll see. Here’s the link to the new page:

https://plus.google.com/106016569430460657201/posts

Just a reminder, the Association has a Facebook page too. The Association’s Community page is going away soon. If you are among those that have posted stuff on the Community page (you know who you are) please feel free to repost it on the new page. Thanks!

07 May 2014: Two photo additions to Chase Family Archive

chase_archive13I’ve added two new photos to the Chase Family Archive that Tim Chase gave me the other day. They were taken by his father Chester Chase, owner of the Clary Lake dam, during a heavy runoff event in June of 1984. We already had one picture in the archive from of that event but it was undated. These new photographs have the date “June 1984” written on the back in Chester’s characteristic hand writing.

chase_archive14These pictures show a significant runoff event. Checking the Weather Underground archives for 1984, it appears about 7.72″ of rain fell between May 26th and June 2nd that spring, which I reckon would be more than enough rain to account for the flow we’re seeing in these photographs. It is interesting to note that even with the water level this high, it is still over a foot below the official FEMA flood elevation for Clary Lake of 153.6′ which corresponds to the top of the concrete pier on top of the dam. This suggests that even this water level, as high as it was, was not considered a “flood” event in a technical sense.

There are a few other pictures in the Chase Family Archive showing extreme high water including an aerial photograph clearly showing water pouring over the dam and I would imagine that these are all taken about the same time.

06 May 2014: PPM’s Proposed Water Level Management Plan

The first milestone of the Clary Lake Water Level Order was the May 1st submission of a Water Level Management Plan (WLMP). I was originally told by a DEP staff person that the WLMP was not going to be released until it had been “reviewed and approved” by the Department. Apparently I was misinformed as according to Project Manager Beth Callahan who I spoke to earlier today, the document is in deed “public” information. According to Beth Callahan, the Department will review the submission and issue a Procedural Order (of the sort we’re used to seeing) to the Service List with the Department findings. She didn’t have any idea when that was likely to happen.

The document is 13 pages and I’ve only had the time to glance over it. However, from what I’ve read so far, I’m guessing DEP won’t be “approving” it anytime soon. I will refrain from further comment at this time until I have had a chance to read it over more carefully.

Proposed Water Level Management Plan

02 May 2014: About that Water Level Management Plan…

If you’re eagerly awaiting the water level management plan now that the deadline for its submission has passed, you’re not alone! Several people have asked “where’s the plan?” Careful reading of the specification for the Water Level Management Plan in the water level order suggests we should not hold our breath waiting for the plan. From the Order (emphasis added):

5. The owner of the dam shall submit a Water Level Management Plan to the Department for review and approval no later than May 1, 2014.”

So the plan needs to be reviewed by DEP and approved before it is accepted and before we get a copy. No telling how long this could take. Further on it says (emphasis added):

The final Water Level Management Plan shall be made available by the owner of the dam to all littoral and riparian landowners for review upon request. A copy of the final plan shall be distributed to the Town of Jefferson and the town of Whitefield.

So the Towns will only get a copy when it’s been approved and no where does it say Kelley has to actually provide a copy to anyone who asks for it, only that it shall be “made available for review upon request” and at that only to littoral and riparian landowners. It remains to be seen how Mr. Kelley will choose to interpret the above language.

So patience is the word of the day. I’m sure it will be a fine plan, and worth waiting for. When the plan has been approved (we’ll let you know) it will be available at your respective Town offices.