Date: Fri 07-Jun-1996
Date: Fri 07-Jun-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
homeowner-coalition-growth
Full Text:
Homeowner Coalition Maps Strategy Against Development
A neighborhood homeowners group organizer is predicting that a coalition of
homeowner associations will grow rapidly in the face of continuing local
residential development.
"The coalition believes that most residents of Newtown share its concern over
an eroding tax base, overcrowded schools, the destruction of the rural
character of the town, and the threat to water, and groundwater pollution,"
Jack McGarvey, head of the Rocky Glen Area Association, said in a press
release issued this week.
The Newtown Neighborhoods Coalition has agreed to explore the concept of
placing a moratorium on new residential subdivisions, he said. A group of
homeowners met Tuesday at Edmond Town Hall to discuss their developmental
concerns.
Eric Roundy, Rocky Glen Area Association vice president, said "We'd like to
avoid pursuing a moratorium on new subdivisions... We have sensed a more
pro-active stance from some of our elected officials and believe that some of
them are as concerned as we are over Newtown's exploding residential growth.
But it is clear that houses are being built at a rate the town cannot afford."
Mr Roundy called for a moratorium at a May town forum on residential growth.
Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) members later rejected placing a
moratorium on residential development, according to P&Z Chairman Stephen
Adams.
According to the coalition, the group will use the town's 1993 plan of
development as a basis for proposing new zoning regulations. These proposals
will include: increasing minimum residential lot sizes; reducing the maximum
allowable slope of driveways; prohibiting rear-lot residential zoning by
requiring each building lot to have a certain minimum amount of town road
frontage; and setting aside 20 percent of residential developments as open
space land, instead of the customary 10 percent, according to the prepared
statement.
The coalition also plans to propose to the town's Charter Revision Commission
that the P&Z be divided into a separate planning commission and zoning
commission.
Mae Schmidle of the Tamarack Woods Association said a coalition subcommittee
will seek to have the Legislative Council enact a developmental moratorium. If
the council rejects such a move, the coalition will seek a referendum on the
matter, according to Mrs Schmidle.
"Although undesirable development in our backyards may motivate us, we will
present a clear vision of both a present and future Newtown," according to
Kurt Gillis, a coalition member.
