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2 named to board of conservancy
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E. Philip Wenger, president and chief operating officer of Fulton
Bank, and Beverly Wise Hill, president of Professional Services
Group, have been elected to the board of directors of the Lancaster
County Conservancy.
"After years of enjoying the conservancy's properties with my
family, I am happy to be able to give some time back to a gre...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Farm Consultant Joins Lancaster County, Pa., Agricultural Preserve Board.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
; By Ryan Robinson, Lancaster New Era, Pa. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Jun. 28--The founder of a well-known farm advisory service will join the county's Agricultural Preserve Board. The Lancaster County ...
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Farm consultant joins preserve board
Lancaster New Era Lancaster, PA
; The founder of a well-known farm advisory service will join the county's Agricultural Preserve Board. The Lancaster County Commissioners appointed Michael W. Brubaker of Lititz on Tuesday to fill the seat of outgoing member Paul Whipple. The preserve board approves the purchase of development
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Lancaster County groups debate growth, rezoning
Central Penn Business Journal
; Talk about growth in Lancaster County these days, and you are likely to stir some emotions - and debates. Those who have proposed significant residential or commercial development have encountered opposition, even when planners and local officials welcomed the plans. For example, there has been
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A limited success; After 10 years, Urban Growth Boundaries are restricting suburban sprawl and saving farmland in Lancaster County, officials say. But 62% of newly developed acres here lies in protected areas, county records show.; Controlling GROWTH; How county is doing
Lancaster New Era Lancaster, PA
; 1ST OF 2 STORIES In the battle to save Lancaster County's farmland, it emerged as a truce between builders and farm preservationists. New houses and businesses would be built only in or beside existing communities, in order to check the advance of suburban sprawl across irreplaceable farmland. The
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Our vanishing farmland; It seems as though every time you turn around, a new neighborhood or business is popping up where a farm once stood. And, that explosion of development is sucking up Lancaster County farmland at an incredible rate, new figures reveal.
Lancaster New Era Lancaster, PA
; ... 1998 through 2002. That's 3,318 acres a year. Rich Doenges, the county's Agricultural Preserve Board director, said the good news is that the preserve board and the Trust permanently preserved 312 farms of 25,765 acres during the same five- year period. Doenges ...
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