LANCASTER - The town has inched a little closer to accepting the Shirley Sewer Municipal Agreement for development in north Lancaster, as of the selectmen’s meeting on Tuesday night.
The pact will allow both water and sewer access from Shirley for the development to be built off Fort Pond Road at the old sand pit that makes up the Chisholm parcel, as well as the existing adjacent Rand-Whitney facility, which would expand as a result.
Steven Goodman, principle at GFI Partners that is developing the site, said they plan to build an approximately 894,000-square-foot industrial park. He said the uses will be industrial distribution, warehousing, light manufacturing and similar. There will also be open space that is not developable.
Raising alpacas - and creating fiber art - goes on despite COVID-19 challenges
Sara Arnold
BERLIN - Laura Busky loves alpacas - farming them, making fiber art out of their fleece, and operating a successful business at North Brook Farm, 96 South St.
She won’t let a pandemic stop her, even if she has to do some things differently, like her Holiday Shoppe.
In 1983, Busky’s husband Mike bought the turn-of-the-century farmhouse that was once home to a chicken farm with some horses. The couple met in the early 1990s, and married in 1994. Mike had always wanted to return the property to an operating farm and, as a lifelong knitter, Laura liked the idea of having fiber animals.
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