Date: Fri 14-Mar-1997
Date: Fri 14-Mar-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-Lone-Oak-Meadows
Full Text:
Resubdivision In Lone Oak Meadows Is Approved
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) has approved a revised plan for the
resubdivision of Lot 32 in Lone Oak Meadows, resolving conflict which began
eight months ago over the plan to build two houses on land where one house
initially was planned.
P&Z members on March 6 approved M&F, Inc's, request to resubdivide the
5.8-acre Lot 32 into two home building lots on Fawnwood Road near Rose Lane.
The site lies in a rolling section of the sprawling Lone Oak Meadows
development which links Jeremiah Road to Berkshire Road.
P&Z member Heidi Winslow noted that the commission last summer reviewed an
initial version of the resubdivision in which a driveway was built over a rock
ledge outcropping at a property boundary.
"This application is a vast improvement," Ms Winslow said of the modifications
M&F made in its revised resubdivision proposal.
The initial version of the plan included a "precarious driveway," Ms Winslow
said.
In the revised version, the driveway is positioned in a less rugged location.
The initial version had proposed that Lot 32, a frontage lot, be subdivided
into one frontage lot and one rear lot.
The new version provides that Lot 32 be cut into two frontage lots.
When aired at a February public hearing, M&F's revised resubdivision proposal
drew some opposition but not on the scale of the criticism leveled at the
initial proposal last summer.
Last August, P&Z members voted 4-to-1 to reject M&F, Inc's. requested
resubdivision.
When the initial resubdivision proposal was aired at a July public hearing, it
drew strong opposition from neighborhood residents for various reasons,
including objections to rear-lot development in the neighborhood.
Resident Joseph D'Agostino of 14 Fawnwood Road, who lives next to Lot 32, had
especially protested the proposed resubdivision.
Last July, opponents of the resubdivision said the very steep section of rock
ledge on Lot 32, posed vehicular safety, and child safety concerns.
Other complaints voiced by nearby residents included: a loss of privacy;
decreased property values; a higher than expected population density in the
area; and damaged aesthetics.
Following the P&Z's rejection of the initial resubdivision plan, M&F sued the
P&Z, claiming it acted illegally, arbitrarily, and in abuse of the discretion
vested in it because: it failed to assign a proper reason for denial of the
application; it decided on the application based on factors not contained in
the regulations; the addition of a driveway on a rear lot in a relatively new
subdivision cannot of itself be a safety hazard; and the blasting necessary
for such a rear lot wasn't unusual for the area and doesn't constitute a
safety hazard.
