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 Upon review and overall familiarity of the proposed phase 2 sewer plan, agent believes <br />this application has sufficiently addressed concerns regarding impacts to wetlands and <br />remediation of disturbances to wetland buffer zones <br /> Staff defers to the commission for deliberation <br /> <br /> <br /> Board of Health: No comment <br /> <br />Motion <br /> Mr. Cook made a motion to close and issue with the following conditions: <br />o Planting plans be submitted and to work with staff <br />o ‘beefing up’ the biorention for South Sandwich pump station project to meet the <br />50-year storm <br /> Ms. Godrey seconded <br /> Vote: Mr. Cook (Yes), Ms. Clapprood (Yes), Ms. Godfrey (Yes), Mr. Sahl (Yes), Mr. <br />Colombo (Yes) <br /> Motion passed unanimously <br /> <br />Documents provided: GHD; Notice of Intent application and project narrative; 04/24/2025 Plans “Town of <br />Mashpee - Phase 2 Sewer System Improvements” <br /> <br />NOI <br />117 Timberlane Drive, Town of Mashpee, Conservation Department (43-3335) <br /> <br /> Representative: Conservation Agent <br /> <br />Project Overview & Location <br /> 117 Timberlane Drive serves as access point for invasive species treatment at Santuit <br />Pond, not the actual treatment location <br /> Proposes treatment and eradication of invasive aquatic species at Santuit Pond <br /> NOI filed under ecological restoration project for invasive species treatment <br /> <br />Invasive Species Identification <br /> Eurasian milfoil (variable leafed milfoil) and fanwort identified as primary invasive <br />species requiring treatment <br /> Elodia identified as native species that hasreached nuisandce levels, interfering with solar <br />bee filtration units <br /> Mashpee Department of Natural Resources provided initial species identification report <br /> <br />Previous Experience & Contractor <br /> Same contractor Water and Wetlands LLC used successfully for similar milfoil <br />eradication project on John’s Pond – project ongoing with mostly successful eradication <br /> John’s Pond project still requires spot treatment follow-up, demonstrating need for long- <br />term treatment approach <br /> <br />Treatment Details & Methodology <br />18 <br /> <br /> <br />