Date: Fri 09-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 09-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
selectmen-P&Z-growth
Full Text:
Selectmen To P&Z: Tighten Up The Rules
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
In light of continuing residential growth, the selectmen are asking Planning
and Zoning Commission (P&Z) members to consider creating tighter land use
regulations to control growth more strictly.
Following lengthy discussion August 5, the selectmen unanimously approved a
motion stating they are deeply concerned about the local impact of residential
growth. The selectmen request that P&Z members consider what level of growth
is sustainable and practical from a financial and public safety standpoint.
The selectmen further ask P&Z members to review town land use regulations to
determine whether the development rules should be tightened to better control
residential growth.
The selectmen's recommendation to the P&Z comes amid continuing calls for a
residential development moratorium by residents who are concerned that growth
is coming to Newtown too rapidly.
First Selectman Robert Cascella said selectmen have discussed the effects of
residential growth in the past but now feel it is necessary to make a formal
recommendation to the town's land use agencies on the growth question.
Besides the P&Z, members of the Conservation Commission also should consider
revising their regulations concerning development in wetland areas, Mr
Cascella said.
Many developmental questions appear to hinge on the environmental issues that
lie within the Conservation Commission's bailiwick, he said.
But Selectman Gary Fetzer said the Conservation Commission's work isn't truly
environmental in nature. Mr Fetzer asked that the Conservation Commission's
chairman attend a future selectmen's meeting to explain that land use agency's
role in developmental matters.
But Mr Cascella noted the Conservation Commission functions in an
"environmental" role because it rules on the construction work that allows
developers to cross wetland areas with roads and driveways.
Elizabeth Stocker, the town's community development director, said "People
have been concerned about the pace of growth, specifically residential
growth."
The residential growth the town has been experienced is driven by economic
conditions more than any other single factor, she said.
Newtown has been "discovered" as a desirable place to live by people from
southwestern Connecticut and from sections of New York State across the
Connecticut border, she said. Ms Stocker said she receives many requests from
people out of the area interested in relocating to Newtown.
P&Z members are considering rule changes to encourage development that is
harmonious with the environment, Ms Stocker said. These would involve:
reducing the maximum allowable slope of driveways; altering the dimensions of
building lots; and modifying rules on the removal of gravel from building
lots, she said. The town engineer, conservation official, and zoning
enforcement officer are reviewing the rules on gravel removal, she said.
"The bottom line is 'We cannot stop the subdivision of land,'" she said. The
subdivision of land is an administrative function of the P&Z which must be
granted to applicants, provided that they meet applicable regulations, she
said.
"This region is growing faster than any (other) region in the state," she
said.
But, she added, there are no state laws which specifically allow towns to
manage their growth, such as placing a limit on the number of building permits
granted in a given year.
Limits To Growth
Town Attorney David Grogins pointed out the town already has significant
limits on growth built into its land use rules. The town doesn't allow
conventional multi-family housing, except for housing for the elderly, he
said. Also, the town doesn't permit cluster housing, he added. The town limits
the number of houses that can be built on a dead end street to 15, he said.
Selectman Gary Fetzer said the P&Z's August 1 elimination of rear house lots
in one-acre residential areas places a limit on potential growth.
Although state laws don't allow moratoriums to expressly stop growth, local
land use rules could be strengthened through measures such as "upzoning" in
which the minimum lot sizes in an area are increased due to environmental
factors, according to the first selectman.
Mr Fetzer posed a philosophical question about residential growth. How much is
too much, he asked, pondering whether P&Z members have in mind an ideal growth
rate for the town.
But Mr Grogins responded that any ideal growth rate the town could pose would
require the town to show strong justifications for why that rate shouldn't be
exceeded. Proposing such an ideal growth rate would amount to flirting with
"exclusionary zoning" in which zoning rules are illegally created to expressly
limit growth through such devices as five-acre minimum lot sizes, according to
the attorney.
Regulations concerning the maximum slope of driveways can effectively limit
potential growth, he said. Cutting the maximum slope of new driveways from a
15 percent to a 12 percent grade would limit growth, he said.
The town doesn't have the legal authority to directly limit growth or to
directly raise the money to pay for the municipal costs of growth, Mr Grogins
said. P&Z members apparently are seeking limits to growth based on public
safety questions and good planning practices, he said.
"There's also the issue of private property rights which we have to be very
mindful of," he said.
Mr Grogins cited legal cases in which municipalities, in effect, have been
fined hundreds of thousands of dollars after the courts ruled that
municipalities illegally denied individuals building permits.
"It has to be balanced," Mr Grogins said of individuals' rights to build and
municipalities' rights to regulate construction.
Mr Cascella said he believes a majority of the public wants the town to
tighten its land use rules to better control growth.
Tightened rules would mean better-built houses, better-designed neighborhoods
and better-quality streets, he said.
People who feel that tightened regulations aren't sufficient to deal with the
residential growth question can pursue moratoriums by having the state
legislature pass a law allowing such moratoriums, Mr Grogins said.
State law now allows moratoriums in certain specific circumstances and for
limited periods of time, he said. State law doesn't allow blanket moratoriums
which prohibit the subdivision of land, he said.
If the town were to enact a subdivision moratorium, it would result in
expensive legal challenges to the action, Mr Grogins said.
Land use regulations can be tightened, he said. If people aren't happy with
the rules, new people can be elected to the P&Z, Mr Grogins said.
