Date: Fri 27-Dec-1996
Date: Fri 27-Dec-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-Avalon-withdrawn
Full Text:
`Avalon' Plan Withdrawn By Developers
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Following a lengthy and complex discussion at a December 19 Planning and
Zoning Commission (P&Z) public hearing, the applicants for Avalon, a proposed
16-lot residential development on 54 acres off High Bridge Road, have
withdrawn their application.
A resubmission of the plan in revised form is expected.
Attorney James White, representing the applicants, Avalon Developers LLC,
explained the development project to P&Z members.
More than 19 acres of the 54-acre site would be open space. Studies performed
for the developers indicate there would be minimal impact on the water quality
at nearby Rowledge Pond, Mr White said. The development site holds adequate
underground water supplies for domestic water wells, he added. The Avalon site
is across High Bridge Road from DeVivo Industries.
The Avalon developers spent much time before the Conservation Commission in
obtaining a wetlands construction permit, he said.
Area property owners have raised many environmental questions about the
project, focusing on area water quality.
Bill Carboni, an engineer for Spath-Bjorklund Associates, which represents the
developers, said the applicants have made some changes to their proposed
drainage work for the property based on Conservation Commission review of the
plan, an environmental consultant's recommendations, and town environmental
official David Thompson's advice.
The revised stormwater drainage plan is more elaborate than the one initially
proposed. The new plan focuses on the quality of runoff water as well as its
quantity.
The developers are seeking to improve the water quality of drainage before it
reaches its final discharge point in a nearby bog, according to Mr Carboni.
Robert Jontos, a wetlands scientist from Land-Tech Consultants who represents
the developers, said the control of sediments, as well as nitrogen and
phosphorus levels, are the developers' prime water quality concerns.
The modified drainage system now proposed by the developers improves the
quality of runoff water before the runoff reaches its discharge point from the
site, he said.
Mr White noted that one proposed lot in the subdivision is labelled Lot 16/17.
That lot may be the subject of a resubdivision application for two lots in the
future, he said.
P&Z Chairman John DeFilippe told the applicants they must obtain a road work
agreement from the selectmen before any subdivision plan can be approved. Such
agreements specify what work developers will do to improve nearby town roads
in connection with the development projects.
Questions Raised
Attorney John Fallon, representing Rowledge Pond, Inc, and others, said the
development plans which were posted on an easel by the developers were not the
same plans which P&Z members were holding in their hands. Mr Fallon said the
plans on the easel represent "a major change" in the development application.
Rowledge Pond, Inc, owns more than 60 acres north of the development site
where it operates a fish hatchery.
The town engineer hasn't seen the modified plans and they are the focus of a
public hearing, Mr Fallon said. The lawyer urged the P&Z to require the
developer to publicly file the revised plans and then have another public
hearing.
Mr Fallon said the developer's plans don't indicate a right-of-way for a road
extending to his client's land as is required by the regulations.
The lawyer said the proposed subdivision seeks to obtain a maximum number of
lots in an area with pristine environmental features. "It is unique," he said.
Not only air and water, but trees and wildlife are also natural resources, he
stressed.
"We are running out of environmental treasures," he added.
"Environmental (development) alternatives can generally be found under less
intense development," he said.
Mr Fallon charged the developers are seeking to "railroad" the subdivision
plan through town land use agencies. The applicants can provide the town with
a less intense development alternative, he said.
P&Z members then took a two-minute recess which turned in to a 20-minute
recess to discuss aspects of the development plan with the applicants and the
opponents.
Mr White later withdrew the development application from the P&Z, noting that
neither the town engineer nor the town health department had reviewed the
modified proposal which was posted on the easel.
"We're stymied," he said.
The applicant's representatives then walked out of the Newtown Middle School
auditorium where the session was underway.
The Avalon project proved controversial when it was before the Conservation
Commission, requiring several public meetings to discuss environmental
sticking points.
The Avalon property holds a black spruce bog, an unusual environmental feature
at a latitude this far south.
