Date: Fri 30-May-1997
Date: Fri 30-May-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-lawsuit-Watch-Hill
Full Text:
Developers Sue Over Watch Hill P&Z Rejection
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The developers of Watch Hill, a proposed 15-lot residential subdivision on 32
acres in the Riverside section, have sued the Planning and Zoning Commission
(P&Z) over its May 8 rejection of the home construction project.
In a lawsuit filed May 21 in Danbury Superior Court, developers Robert
Mathison and Emory Palmer seek to have a judge force the P&Z to approve the
controversial development project.
The P&Z's rejection of Watch Hill hinged on Town Attorney David Grogins' legal
opinion that, as proposed, the development would result in more than 15 houses
on the town-owned, dead-end street, Alpine Drive. The town allows a maximum of
15 houses on its dead end streets.
The number of houses on dead ends is limited to keep down the number of
families who would be isolated from the town road network, and emergency
services, if access is blocked.
According to the developers' lawsuit, the site is "accessed" from an existing
town road named Alpine Drive. Alpine Drive was accepted as a town road by the
selectmen in 1994, the suit adds.
"The 15 proposed subdivision lots have frontage on two proposed streets...
each of the proposed streets is a dead-end street. The proposed streets
intersect with each other, and, one proposed street (Watch Hill Road)
intersects with Alpine Drive, providing access to the town road system," the
lawsuit states.
The legal papers state that in denying the development application, the P&Z
acted illegally, arbitrarily and in abuse of the discretion vested in it, in
that: the P&Z improperly concluded the application doesn't comply with
applicable land use regulations; the P&Z interpreted its regulations
inconsistently with their plain meaning and intent; and the P&Z exceeded its
authority and jurisdiction by counting existing houses outside the proposed
subdivision in determining the maximum number of building lots to be served by
the streets proposed in the application.
The lawsuit requires the town to appear in court June 17 to answer the
allegations.
At a recent public hearing on Watch Hill, Attorney David Harting of
Middlebury, representing the developers, told P&Z members the 15-lot limit on
dead-end subdivision roads applies only to new lengths of roadway, and doesn't
apply to the specific development plan proposed by the developers.
"I think we have a unique situation with the Watch Hill subdivision," he then
said.
"The plans submitted meet the intent and conditions of the zoning regulations
and the subdivision regulations," engineer Larry Edwards said at that hearing.
Mr Edwards represents the developers.
But, in his review of the development plans, Town Engineer Ronald Bolmer found
that subdividing the land as proposed would create more than 15 lots on the
dead-end Alpine Drive.
At the recent hearing, people living near the site expressed fears that new
development would intensify existing drainage problems in the area, pose
pollution problems from new septic systems, endanger domestic water supplies,
and create an unacceptably high construction density in the area.
The proposal which P&Z members rejected is similar to an initial 16-lot
version of Watch Hill submitted by the developers in 1995.
In 1995, nearby residents had raised questions about the practicality of
building 16 houses on the site, noting that the area already has a high
population density. Many area residents then said they feared that building a
subdivision there would cause drainage problems on their properties.
