Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-Hawleyville-Nicolosi
Full Text:
Zone Change Request For Hawleyville Is Rebuffed By P&Z
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) members have decided not to consider a
requested zone change in Hawleyville that is similar to a zone change proposal
they rejected last June.
In an application which had been scheduled for a public hearing January 22,
Steve Nicolosi, and others, were seeking a change of zone from R-1 Residential
to M-4 Industrial for about eight acres on the western end of Barnabas Road.
The area sought for a zone change is composed of six land parcels, one of
which is on the south side of Barnabas Road and five of which are on the north
side.
The single parcel is located between Barnabas Road and the Exit 9 off-ramp of
westbound Interstate 84. The five parcels are north of Barnabas Road and east
of the state's commuter parking lot on Hawleyville Road. Two of those five
parcels contain houses.
If the zoning for the land were changed to M-4 Industrial, it is unclear
exactly what would be built there, but any land use permitted in an M-4 zone
would be allowed, provided that site plans meet applicable zoning regulations.
Permitted uses in M-4 zones include laboratories, public utility complexes,
offices, printing plants, publishers, light industrial uses, wholesale
businesses and warehouses, among other uses.
Last June, when Mr Nicolosi had his initial zone change request pending before
the P&Z, he indicated he wanted to build a pre-fabricated building for various
industrial uses, including space for businesses in radon reduction, plumbing,
heating, ventilation and air conditioning. That rezoning request drew fire at
a public hearing from some nearby residents who questioned the wisdom of
allowing industrial uses on that land.
In a letter to the P&Z read at the January 22 session, a lawyer representing
the Housatonic Railroad endorsed rezoning the eight acres for industrial uses.
The railroad runs along the northern edge of the land.
In a letter to the P&Z, Mrs Thomas Cherry of Old Hawleyville Road objects to
the proposed zone change. Such a change would decrease her property's value
and change the character of the place to which she and her late husband moved
for its peace and quiet, she writes. Since moving to Old Hawleyville Road, the
Cherrys improved their property, she notes.
Report
Land use consultant Joseph Heyman, representing Mr Nicolosi, presented P&Z
members with copies of a report he prepared on the zone change request.
P&Z Chairman Stephen Koch reminded Mr Heyman that he had been asked to
postpone the zone change request. Mr Koch said the P&Z is legally within
bounds in deciding not to consider a new version of a rejected application
within 12 months of the rejection.
When P&Z members rejected the earlier version, they said an ongoing study on
the economic development potential of Hawleyville had not been completed and
it would be premature to make a decision on increasing industrial zoning
there.
Mr Heyman said the proposal slated for a public hearing January 22 involved
rezoning eight acres from Residential to Industrial, a much larger amount than
the five acres under consideration for rezoning last June, thus making the
second proposal a new application entirely, not a revision of a previous
application.
Mr Heyman noted that in rejecting the rezoning request last June, P&Z members
based their decision on waiting for the final version of the Hawleyville
economic development plan. That plan has been approved by the Housatonic
Valley Council of Elected Officials, he noted.
But the Hawleyville development study is not final, P&Z member James Boylan
said, noting P&Z members have not yet acted on that development plan.
Approving the "spot zoning" requested by Mr Nicolosi before the P&Z acts on
the development plan does not make much sense, Mr Boylan said.
P&Z member Michael Osborne agreed.
P&Z member Heidi Winslow, who is a lawyer, said she would not participate in
deciding whether to conduct a public hearing because Mr Heyman has been a
client of hers.
P&Z member Daniel Fogliano said it would not be prudent for P&Z members to
have a public hearing on the proposal before it is clear what action the P&Z
will take on the Hawleyville development plan.
"We don't take zone changes very lightly," he said.
Mr Koch pointed out that P&Z members will soon receive a formal presentation
from the planners who produced the study. Following discussion of the study by
P&Z members, a public hearing might be held, after which members would decide
whether to include the study, or some part of it, as part of the town's 1993
Plan of Development.
Based on a poll of P&Z members' views on the second version of the zone change
request, Mr Koch told Mr Heyman there would be no public hearing on it January
22.
But Mr Heyman objected, saying the P&Z was increasing delays Mr Nicolosi has
encountered in seeking to rezone the land.
"This is substantially the same application" which was rejected last June, Mr
Koch told Mr Heyman.
On that note, Mr Heyman took back the reports on the application he had
submitted to P&Z members.
Expressing frustration, Mr Heyman asked if there would be more delays if
another zone change request is submitted in the future.
