Date: Fri 18-Apr-1997
Date: Fri 18-Apr-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills-agriculture
Full Text:
State Seeks Farm Uses For Fairfield Hills Acreage
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The state Department of Agriculture (DOA) is seeking proposals from farmers
and growers who want to rent about 125 acres at Fairfield Hills from the state
for agricultural use.
Joseph Dippel, DOA's director of farmland preservation, said Tuesday the
agricultural land the state wants to rent out for private use is composed of
seven fields. The land lies generally northeast of Queen Street and generally
northwest of Mile Hill Road. The acreage doesn't include the fenced land used
by the Governor's Horse Guard or the agricultural land located near Fairfield
Hills' hilltop reservoir.
The largest of the fields to be leased is 47 acres and the smallest is less
than 8 acres. The land consists of grass hayland on relatively flat and gently
sloping areas.
Proposals will be accepted on using the entire 125-acre parcel, as well as
smaller sections of it, Mr Dippel said.
After the DOA receives proposals, it will closely review them in making a
decision on future agricultural uses at Fairfield Hills, Mr Dippel said. The
deadline for submissions to DOA is May 9.
Applicants will be required to submit a farm resource management plan and a
conservation plan for the land during the period it would be used. The
conservation plan would minimize soil erosion and maintain the land's
agricultural productivity.
In reviewing land use proposals, the DOA will consider allowing the planting
of food- and fiber-producing crops, such as row crops, hay, fruits,
vegetables, and other crops.
In considering the proposals, the DOA will gauge the agricultural activity's
overall impact on the land's productivity and the condition of the land.
Farmers and growers who use the land would be required to provide permanent
cover on the areas they have leased at the end of the lease period.
Leases would be written for a five-year period, with an option for an added
two years, at the discretion of the DOA commissioner.
Fairfield Hills, a former psychiatric hospital which was extensively farmed in
the past, holds prime agricultural soils.
The soils' richness allows various crops to be grown there, Mr Dippel said.
The large low meadow at Fairfield Hills just north of Mile Hill Road, and
lying between Nunnawauk Road and the Pootatuck River, might be best kept as a
hayfield to protect underground water quality, Mr Dippel said. The area is
atop the Pootatuck aquifer, the town's designated sole source underground
water supply.
Fairfield Hills is the largest tract of land in Fairfield County that lies
under single ownership, he said, terming it "a unique piece of land."
In its 1994 Re-use Plan for Fairfield Hills, the ad hoc Fairfield Hills Task
Force placed a high priority on preserving open space at the 650-acre
Fairfield Hills. The state has designated roughly 200 acres at Fairfield Hills
for land preservation, including agricultural uses. Fairfield County has very
few large farms.
