Date: Fri 17-May-1996
Date: Fri 17-May-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills-oversight
Full Text:
with cut: Fairfield Hills Oversight Panel Starts Its Work
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The Fairfield Hills Implementation Oversight Committee (FHIOC), a state ad hoc
panel created to monitor future land uses at the Fairfield Hills grounds,
conducted its first meeting May 10 at the state Office on Policy and
Management (OPM) in Hartford.
Members elected Richard Nuclo as committee chairman. Mr Nuclo is in charge of
physical planning and assets managements for OPM. He served as the state's
liaison to the Fairfield Hills Task Force, another ad hoc panel that reviewed
potential uses for Fairfield Hills in 1993 and 1994.
Task force members decided to form the FHIOC to ensure that the task force's
recommendations for the 650-acre parcel are kept in mind as the state puts the
parcel to new uses in the future. First Selectman Robert Cascella serves on
the oversight panel.
Fairfield Hills closed as a state psychiatric hospital last December. The
hospital was built more than 50 years ago for an anticipated population of
3,500 psychiatric patients. The estimated value of the land and buildings
there is more than $100 million.
The state Department of Mental Health (DMH) no longer has a major presence at
Fairfield Hills, but has a district office located on the grounds.
The state Department of Public Works (DPW) is seeking to enter in a management
contract, starting July 1, for the private management of the Fairfield Hills
property, Mrs Wasserman said.
The state Department of Transportation (DOT) had considered building a
regional highway maintenance garage at Fairfield Hills, but has now dropped
plans to do so, according to the state representative.
More than 200 acres at the sprawling campus have been designated for the state
Department of Agriculture (DOA) for land conservation, Mrs Wasserman said.
The town's use of several athletic fields at Fairfield Hills will continue,
she noted.
"The 650-acre property, once an operating farm, provides an idyllic setting in
an area now adjacent to a major interstate highway. Much of the undeveloped
land must be protected because of the recharge area for the (Pootatuck)
aquifer beneath, and any development of the remaining acreage must be
undertaken with great care. Because of its beauty, size and location, the
demand for the undeveloped land is greater than the protection of the aquifer
will allow," the task force wrote in its report on recommended uses for the
property.
Mrs Wasserman said she hopes the state increases the amount of land it plans
to give the town for industrial development on the Fairfield Hills property
near Commerce Road. The state has committed itself to donating somewhat more
than 20 acres to the town. The planned land grant stems from a legal agreement
between the town and the state which settled a lawsuit the town filed over the
state's plans to build the high-security Garner Correctional Institution on
Nunnawauk Road. Mrs Wasserman said she hopes the state can be persuaded to
grant the town 40 to 50 acres of land.
"It's beginning to come together. It's not going to happen overnight. People
shouldn't expect that," she said of the state's planning for future uses of
the property.
Mrs Wasserman said the governor's office is expected to start promoting the
Fairfield Hills property as a site for private enterprise.
Tunxis Management Company, a New Britain firm which is in the business of
managing properties, has been operating the Fairfield Hills grounds for the
state in recent weeks.
Among the recommendations made by the task force in its report:
Open space land at Fairfield Hills should be preserved.
Several campus buildings should be reused for general administrative office
space.
Businesses should be brought into existing buildings on the campus, and land
on the campus should be given to the town for future economic development.
There should be a regional educational presence on the campus.
Affordable housing and expanded housing for the elderly should be provided on
the campus, beginning with the development of a reuse plans for existing
buildings.
The open space areas of the campus should be separated from developed areas by
buffer zones.
One of the initial reasons the task force was formed was to prevent the state
Department of Correction (DOC) from building another prison at Fairfield
Hills. The DMH transferred approximately 120 acres of what had been Fairfield
Hills property to the DOC for the construction of Garner. Also, the DOC
formerly operated Western Substance Abuse Treatment Unit, a minimum-security
prison in Fairfield House on the Fairfield Hills campus.
The Fairfield Hills oversight panel plans to meet on a monthly basis in the
near future to address various issues.
The DOT has scheduled a public informational meeting on its planned
construction of a bypass road on the Fairfield Hills grounds for Wednesday,
May 22, at 7:30 pm at Newtown High School auditorium.
