Fairfield Hills Review Committee Seeks Public Comment
Fairfield Hills Review Committee Seeks Public Comment
By Kendra Bobowick
Focus groups, discussion sessions, and online social networking are among the Fairfield Hills Master Plan Review Committeeâs considerations for reaching residents.
âOne of the key components to our missions is direct feedback,â said member Paul Lundquist.
Venues can both educate and interact with the public, organize input and âall be followed by a quantitative survey with as many residents as can participate.â He believes in âcircling back to the publicâ regarding how development âshould or should not happenâ on the former state hospital campus.
As the review committeeâs subgroups complete their work in coming months, Mr Lundquist said the group can also use that information in a survey, which extends the groupâs time-line. While First Selectman Pat Llodra had initially asked for members to report to the selectmen in December, their current plans reach into April. They will work with the April target, pending the first selectmanâs input.
Briefly, members considering moving ahead prior to conclusions from subcommittees.
Mr Lundquist noted that âthe world is turning,â and as they do their work, the Fairfield Hills Authority is also doing its work, executing the initial master plan.
Eventually the group argued against an earlier and more aggressive time-line. Members, including Chair Michael Floros, weighed the amount of activity happening on the campus â Kevinâs Community Center is considering building reuse, the Newtown Ambulance Association recently inquired about a possible land lease, and the townâs Capital Improvement Plan includes funding for several yearsâ worth of demolition and infrastructure work.
âApril seems more palatable,â Mr Floros said. Member Deborra Zukowski also stated, âMoving ahead without subcommittees is not a good idea.â
Also moving on their own schedules are plans for a Parks and Recreation Department Community Center, while sole property realtor Michael Struna is at work garnering potential developers for the site.
Mr Lundquist returned the conversation to methods. Focus group discussions could reveal desires for development, both commercial and residential, he said. He asked, âWhat are the interests? Restaurants, retail? Corporate?â
Recreation, and what forms are preferred, is another question before the group.
Committee members spoke about costs associated with generating paper and online surveys, and running group discussions and sending out flyers to the public.
While the group is coordinating its own outreach and information distribution, it also asks that the public attend its meetings, which are posted with full agendas on the town website at www.newtown-ct.gov. Last meetingsâ minutes are also available.
âFor the last four months we have been collecting information about history, opportunities and now weâre looking for feedback â please participate,â Mr Floros said.
All ideas will go before the full board and first selectman.