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- Article 97
- Non Applicability of Adverse Possession
- Factors Contributing to the Problem
- Types of Encroachments
- Resolution Strategies
- The Encroachment Resolution Process
- Case Studies
- Available Resources
- Questions and Answers
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- The people shall have the right to clean air and water, freedom from
excessive and unnecessary noise, and the natural, scenic, historic, and
esthetic qualities of their environment; and the protection of the
people in their right to the conservation, development and utilization
of the agricultural, mineral, forest, water, air and other natural
resources is hereby declared to be a public purpose.
- Lands and easements taken or acquired for such purposes shall not be
used for other purposes or otherwise disposed of except by laws enacted
by a two thirds vote, taken by yeas and nays, of each branch of the
general court.
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- Chapter 92, Section 96
- DCR-DUPR has explicit protection
- Chapter 7, Section 40E
- All Commonwealth lands have similar explicit protection
- More complicated with regard to municipalities
- 20 limit does not apply to lands held for conservation, open space or
other public purposes
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- Extensiveness of holdings
- Lengthy and irregular boundaries
- Fragmented/dispersed location of holdings
- Development pressure
- Staff and landowner ignorance
- Lack of constituent interest
- Inadequate monumentation
- Staff reductions
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- Ignorance of boundary location
- The land holding agency is unable to provide adequate stewardship
- Abutter perceives encroachment as an enhancement
- They have permission from years ago
- No one will notice . . . and even if they do they won’t have the resolve
to kick me off
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- Water and Soil Impairment
- Dumping or storage of debris and hazardous materials
- Grazing of animals and manure storage
- Forest and Land Destruction
- Cutting, removal, and damage to trees and plants
- Disturbing soil & ground cover, grading or filling land, and
removal of gravel or loam
- Paving or covering of soil and ground cover
- Construction
- Fences, sheds, cabins, walls, signs, docks, and buildings
- Boundary Destruction
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- Develop a plan
- Be consistent throughout
- Work with a spirit of informed cooperation
- Put good maps in the hands of on-site managers
- Properly mark property lines
- Educate abutters and constituents
- Actively manage boundaries
- Create partnerships
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- Develop a list of abutting owners
- Notify all abutters and neighbors of the “reclamation program”
- Gather public records, especially maps and plans
- Locate property lines in the field
- Photo-document likely encroachments
- Provide written notice to likely encroachers
- Hold a site visit to share information, mutually observe field
conditions and explain resolution process
- Execute agreement
- Resolve encroachment
- Follow-up with acknowledgement and thanks
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- Locate property lines in the field
- Photo-document likely encroachments
- Bring along a witness
- Meet with possible encroacher to:
- establish relationship
- Share relevant facts
- Seek to reach verbal agreement to quit
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- Review public records findings
- Summarize results of site visit
- Provide written agreements
- Include copies of relevant public records
- Send it Certified Mail with a Return Receipt
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- The encroacher voluntarily:
- executes documents
- removes encroachment
- restores adverse impacts
- becomes a good neighbor and maybe acts as a “reference” for the next
time you address an encroachment with another abutter
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- An example can be found in the supporting material I’ve brought along
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- “What do you mean my shed isn’t on my land”
- This is what you should expect the other 10% of the time
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- Locate property lines in the field
- Photo-document likely encroachment
- Bring along a witness
- Meet with possible encroacher to:
- establish relationship
- Share relevant facts
- Seek to reach verbal agreement to quit
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- Review public records findings
- Summarize results of site visit
- Provide written agreements
- Include copies of relevant public records
- Send it Certified Mail with a Return Receipt
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- Can you call upon other resources?
- Does your organization have the resolve to follow through with all its
legal means?
- Document and preserve records of all your efforts . . . Be ready to hand
them of to your legal team
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- After all this effort, the encroacher still refused to move the shed . .
.so we constructed a fence on our property line, then
- We offered to move the shed
- We obtained court approval to move it
- He wouldn’t accept any feasible location
- We went back to court, obtaining approval to do whatever we needed to
remove the shed
- We will soon move it or demolish it at our convenience
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- Apply a common sense cost-benefit analysis . . . What is the tort
exposure associated with ripping the shed down after fair notice? Would this approach have been less of
a total cost than the time and expense of going through the encroachment
process with an uncooperative abutter?
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- One stop shopping for most everything you’ll need
- Provides details of a successful and comprehensive approach
- Step-by-step information for encroachment resolution
- Helpful historical and background information
- Many well documented interviews
- Specifications helpful to contract for survey services
- Details on the expendable trust
- Time tested prototypes of official correspondence to encroacher, from
first contact to successful resolution
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- Assessor records
- Registry of Deeds records
- Municipal Engineering Office records
- Town Counsel
- MassGIS
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- Establish clearly marked boundaries
- Link-up with natural allies
- Assessors
- Conservation Agents
- Neighbors
- Be consistent and persistent
- Build on successes
- Don’t stop with the low hanging fruit
- Innovate
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- Dan Driscoll, DCR-DUPR Planner
- Jennifer Yelin, MDC Planning Intern
- Ken Collette, DCR AGC
- Pete Church, DCR-DWSP
- David McGowan, DCR-DSPR
- Joel Lerner, DCS
- Bernie McHugh, MLTC
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- Develop a plan
- Be consistent throughout
- Work with a spirit of informed cooperation
- Put good maps in the hands of on-site managers
- Properly mark property lines
- Educate abutters and constituents
- Actively manage boundaries
- Create partnerships
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