P&Z OKs Rules For Farmers' Markets At Fairfield Hills
P&Z OKs Rules For
Farmersâ Markets At Fairfield Hills
By Andrew Gorosko
Following discussion at a July 15 public hearing, Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) members approved zoning regulations that allow a for-profit farmersâ market as a permitted land use at the town-owned Fairfield Hills core campus.
The new regulations will effectively allow the entity known as the Sandy Hook Organic Farmersâ Market to do business at Fairfield Hills. The market has been operating at Fairfield Hills on Tuesday afternoons for the past several weeks under a temporary permit from the P&Z.
The Fairfield Hills core campus is located in the Fairfield Hills Adaptive Reuse (FHAR) zone, a land use zone that was created by the P&Z in the past to allow the central grounds of the former state psychiatric hospital to be put to new uses endorsed by the town government.
In approving a farmersâ market regulations, P&Z members decided that such a land use is consistent with the tenets of the 2004 Town Plan of Conservation and Development.
The regulations approved by the P&Z allow a âcertified farmersâ marketâ as defined by the state Department of Agriculture to do business at Fairfield Hills.
The P&Z defines a farmersâ market as a seasonal outdoor event where items are offered for sale to the general public, including fruits, vegetables, herbs, plants, flowers, eggs, honey, maple syrup, dairy products, jams, jellies, and baked foods, plus seasonal items including Christmas trees, cemetery baskets, and others. âTemporary food establishments,â as defined by the Connecticut public health code, would not allowed at farmersâ markets at Fairfield Hills.
Before P&Z members approved the regulations, they discussed the new rules at length with Mary Fellows, who is the market master for the Sandy Hook Organic Farmersâ Market.
P&Z Chairman Lilla Dean explained that the P&Z finds itself in an âawkward positionâ in terms of allowing for-profit farmersâ markets at Fairfield Hills because the P&Z does not allow for-profit food vendors to do business at sporting events held at Fairfield Hills.
Ms Dean pointed out that farmersâ markets are a different type of business than are food vendors at sporting events.
Ms Fellows that some of the farmers who do business at the market are local and some are from elsewhere. She said that her farmersâ market is strict about whom it allows to do business at the weekly event.
P&Z member Robert Mulholland said that the P&Z opposes the consumption of food at farmersâ markets.
George Benson, town director of planning and land use, said the P&Z does not want an entity that calls itself a farmersâ market to effectively become a fair that is held on public property.
Mr Benson stressed that the farmersâ market formerly had been conducted on private property, but now would be held on publicly owned property.
Ms Dean noted the regulatory complexities of allowing a for-profit farmersâ market on public property such as Fairfield Hills.
P&Z members have grappled with the difficulties of allowing a for-profit farmersâ market at Fairfield Hills, while excluding for-profit food vendors from Fairfield Hills, she noted.
âWeâre going to get caught in a [regulatory] bind because itâs public property,â she predicted.
For the past several weeks, the Sandy Hook Organic Farmersâ Market has been held on Tuesday afternoons in a wooded area near Newtown Hall and Woodbury Hall at Fairfield Hills.
Ms Dean told Ms Fellows that the farmersâ market has a âgreat location.â
In the past, the farmersâ market was held on land behind St Johnâs Episcopal Church on Washington Avenue in Sandy Hook Center. It later briefly was held at Lexington Gardens on Church Hill Road.