Date: Fri 10-May-1996
Date: Fri 10-May-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
historic-district-Main-St
Full Text:
w/photo: Historic District Finally Approved
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Elated by last week's successful referendum, the Borough Board of Burgess took
steps this week to find residents who are interested in serving on a Historic
District Commission.
Warden Joan Crick urged any borough resident who is interested to contact her
at 426-9497. The board must appoint a five-member commission and three
alternates to oversee the Borough of Newtown Historic District. Only one
appointee must live in the historic district, but all must be borough
residents.
Twenty-nine years after resident Ben Blanchard went to a borough meeting and
suggested that a historic district be formed on Main Street, the concept
became a reality last week. On the sixth try, residents voted 29.5 to 1 to
form the historic district.
This time, however, only those property owners who had expressed an interest
in being in the district were polled. There were 89 properties in the original
proposal, 52 in the scaled-down version which extends along Main Street from
Route 302 to Johnnycake Lane and along parts of West Street, Currituck and
Church Hill Road. Main Street was designated as a historic roadway which links
the properties in the district together.
The Board of Burgesses last month mailed ballots to the 63 owners of these 52
properties (co-owners each were entitled to one-half vote). Forty-eight
ballots were returned: 35 half-votes and 13 whole votes, totalling 30.5. The
proposal needed 20.33 "yes" votes to pass.
When the votes were counted, there was only one negative vote, apparently cast
by someone who had changed his, or her, mind. But during the process, an air
of anxiousness filled the room.
"You can't ever predict what people are going to do," explained Kathy Jamison,
chairman of the Historic District Study Committee.
The vote was "a ringing endorsement of hours of preservation efforts and a
resounding NO to those who would soil or despoil our pristine early American
elegance of the Main Street area," said Burgess James Gaston.
The burgesses then approved motions to accept the report of the Historic
District Study Committee and to create the historic district as required under
section 7-147A-K of the Connecticut General Statutes.
The ordinance must be published twice as a legal notice in The Bee . It will
become effective 30 days after the last publication, which would be June 17.
The study committee will be dissolved at the next Board of Burgesses meeting.
Its members included Mrs Jamison, Betsy Kenyon, James and Stephanie Gaston,
Patrick Hill, Sherry Bermingham, Renee McManus and Christopher Luongo.
"This committee has done a wonderful job and worked very hard," Mrs Crick
said.
When the Historic District Commission is appointed, its five-year terms of
office will be staggered so that the term of at least one member will expire
each year. All members and alternates will serve without compensation.
It will be up to the commission to adopt guidelines for the new historic
district, but these regulations must not be contradict or be inconsistent with
the state statutes.
"I'd like to make them as simple as possible," Mrs Crick said. "The idea isn't
to bog people down with more rules and regulations."
According to state statute, unless the borough decides otherwise, the historic
district commission may:
Provide information to property owners and others involving the preservation
of properties in the district
Suggest pertinent legislation
Initiate planning and zoning proposals
Comment on all applications for zoning variances and special exceptions
Cooperate with other regulatory agencies and civic organizations and groups
interested in historic preservation
Render advice on sidewalk construction and repair, tree planting, street
improvements and the erection or alteration of public buildings not otherwise
under its control where they affect historic districts
Furnish information and assistance in connection with any capital improvement
program involving historic districts, and
Consult with groups of experts.
The commission also may accept grants and gifts, employ clerical and technical
assistance or consultants and incur other expenses if approved by the Board of
Burgesses.
If a property owner wishes to make significant structural changes to parts of
buildings that are visible from the street, the property owner must get a
certificate of appropriateness first. It was this provision, which some
property owners believed would constrict their rights, that caused some
residents to oppose the creation of a historic district.
Ben Blanchard's proposal in 1969 led to the formation of the first study
committee. Commercial property owners objected, however, and the proposal was
defeated in a mail ballot conducted in February 1970.
After last week's votes were counted, Burgess Gretchen Hyde could hardly
believe the long-awaited victory had finally happened. She and Alice
Winchester were co-chairmen of the 1983 study commission. That year, and the
following year, the proposal failed by just a few votes to garner the
three-fourths majority required at that time.
In 1987 the state law was changed to require only a two-thirds majority. Had
that been the case earlier, the proposal would have passed on the first try.
