Date: Fri 04-Oct-1996
Date: Fri 04-Oct-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-affordable-housing
Full Text:
P&Z Clarifies Rules For Siting Affordable Housing
The Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) has amended its regulations to make
it more clear that affordable housing complexes must be built on major roads.
P&Z members September 26 conducted a public hearing on the inclusion of
wording in the town's affordable housing regulations which makes it explicit
that affordable housing complexes can only be built on parcels of land having
direct access to "and frontage on" an arterial roadway or major collector
roadway as identified in the town's plan of development.
P&Z members unanimously approved the new wording.
Until now, the regulations hadn't specifically included the term "frontage" in
connection with affordable housing sites. Until now, P&Z members had
considered the regulations sufficiently clear to express that frontage is
required on a major road for an affordable housing complex.
Developer Carmine Renzulli of Norwalk told P&Z members that affordable housing
complexes should be allowed on any "suitable" road in Newtown.
He pointed to the Walnut Tree Village condominium complex on Walnut Tree Hill
Road in Sandy Hook as a suitable multifamily development site. Eighty condos
are planned for the property.
But resident Mary Burnham of 27 Walnut Tree Hill Road, who lives next to
Walnut Tree Village, had a different view.
Ms Burnham said Walnut Tree Hill Road is a little country road, which doesn't
lend itself to heavy traffic from developments.
Ms Burnham said the zoning rule amendment is a good idea because the town's
back roads are becoming overcrowded.
Jack McGarvey of Fleetwood Drive, a member of the Newtown Neighborhoods
Coalition, said the amendment is a farsighted addition to the town's zoning
regulations.
P&Z member Heidi Winslow said the zoning amendment became necessary after the
Zoning Board of Appeals differed with the P&Z on the meaning of the wording in
the P&Z's affordable housing regulations.
P&Z Vice Chairman Thomas Paisley explained the amendment to eliminate the
confusion. Many roads in town aren't capable of providing adequate access to
affordable housing complexes, he said.
