Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
land-use-Robert-Hall-P&Z
Full Text:
Many Of Newtown's Land Use Cases Bear One Attorney's Hallmark
(with cut)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
The rapid pace of development in Newtown has repeatedly brought land owners
and developers into contention with local land use agencies and citizens
groups, and as often as not, one man stands at the center of the controversy,
framing the questions for debate.
Attorney Robert Hall's success in this role has put him in great demand by
those trying to pass development projects through the crucible of local land
use regulation. He says he is drawn to the challenge naturally.
"I wanted to be a lawyer ever since I listened to the political conventions
for both parties in 1952." It seemed that virtually everyone who was running
for office that year except Dwight Eisenhower was a lawyer, Mr Hall mused in
an interview at his offices at 43 Main Street, the red wooden building which
also houses the historic Newtown General Store.
"I never had doubts about being a Republican," Mr Hall explained, noting he
was brought up in a Republican family in a Republican town -- Newtown.
The lifelong Newtown resident graduated from Newtown High School in 1957, from
Yale University in 1961, and from Harvard Law School in 1964.
He took undergraduate courses in political science at Yale but found he liked
history even more, focusing his studies on American and European history, as
well as how Western literature illustrates the lessons of history.
After graduating from Harvard Law School and becoming a member of the bar, Mr
Hall went to Manchester, N.H., where he did legal investigations for the state
of New Hampshire. He later worked as a legal clerk for Federal Judge Louis
Blumenfeld in Hartford.
In 1965, he began work with Carmody and Torrence, a major law firm in
Waterbury, where he was a litigator for 12 years and a partner for eight of
those years.
Mr Hall opened his own law office in Newtown in 1977, practicing general law
with specialities in litigation, planning, zoning, and estate planning. His
partnership with attorney Stephen L. Savarese is known as Hall & Savarese, PC.
Mr Hall is a fixture at local land use agency meetings, representing many
clients on a variety of zoning and planning applications.
If you attend meetings of the town's Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z),
Zoning Board of Appeals, Conservation Commission, Borough Zoning Commission or
Borough Zoning Board of Appeals, you will probably see Mr Hall adroitly
representing a client.
Detail Oriented
Stephen Adams is an attorney who was a P&Z member for almost three years. Mr
Adams concluded his P&Z stint as the panel's chairman in 1996. During that
time he had a front row seat for Mr Hall's presentations.
"I always found Bob...to be very thorough, knowledgeable. He'd give a good
presentation," Mr Adams said of Mr Hall's work at P&Z meetings.
"He's absolutely detail-oriented and very thorough. I've always found Bob to
be pleasant," Mr Adams said.
Mr Hall has a deep knowledge of Newtown's real estate history, Mr Adams said,
and although some of his presentations were lengthy and complex, everyone
understood the local attorney was creating a "legal record" as the basis for
future court appeals.
Current P&Z Chairman Stephen Koch also noted Mr Hall's impeccable approach to
his land use cases. "I think he's very knowledgeable about the planning and
zoning regulations and he uses it to his advantage. (He's) very competent,
very knowledgeable, and very precise, almost to a fault," Mr Koch said.
"I compliment him for his skills," Mr Koch said. "But that's not to say I'm in
his corner," Mr Koch added.
Longtime P&Z member Heidi Winslow said of Mr Hall, "He always brings an
historical perspective to his presentations. He's always very well prepared."
Ms Winslow, an attorney, said, "It's a good thing to give the full story and
be well-prepared." Mr Hall knows Newtown and is well-versed in its land use
regulations, Ms Winslow said.
Economy Driven Work
Mr Hall explained that the volume of land use work he handles varies based
upon economic conditions. "As economic activity has picked up, there's been a
greater need for counsel," he said.
The lawyer's view of the P&Z dates back to at least 1967, when he began an
eight-year stint as the town attorney. While town attorney, Mr Hall reworked
the town's zoning regulations, subdivision regulations, and the regulations on
sand-and-gravel mining.
He attended P&Z meetings as the town attorney. It was to the P&Z's advantage
to have legal counsel attend their sessions, Mr Hall said, adding that it
would be helpful if the P&Z now had a lawyer represent it at all its meetings.
"They (P&Z) could have `early' counsel instead of waiting for the lawsuit to
come in," he observed. As a lawyer representing clients in controversial
applications, Mr Hall has filed many lawsuits against the P&Z in the past
several years.
The late Art Spector, a former P&Z chairman, was followed in that role by Ted
Whippie. Before becoming P&Z chairman, Mr Whippie had served as the
Conservation Commission chairman. In their leadership of the P&Z, both Mr
Spector and Mr Whippie functioned as if they were town planners, Mr Hall said.
Maybe it's time for the town to hire a formal town planner to improve the
lines of communication between applicants and the P&Z, he observed.
Controversial Cases
The development applications of several of Mr Hall's clients have proven
controversial. The attorney suggested that better communication might have
staved off the lawsuits which were filed against the P&Z following its
rejections of those plans.
Among those proposals were PSD Partnership's application for Whispering Pines
at Pine Street, Cherry Street and Narragansett Trail in Sandy Hook; M&E Land
Group's application for Tamarack Woods at Tamarack Road, Sanford Road and Echo
Valley Road; and M&E Land Group's application for Wedgewood on Taunton Hill
Road. The lawsuits resulted in P&Z approvals of less dense versions of
Whispering Pines and Wedgewood.
M&E Land Group is headed back to the P&Z for a public hearing on its fourth
version of Tamarack Woods. That project has drawn three lawsuits filed by
various parties. The fourth version of Tamarack Woods is less dense than
earlier versions.
"I have been mystified by why PSD and M&E projects... drew such opposition.
Why those three (subdivisions) became such lightning rods, I couldn't
understand," Mr Hall said.
Protests about those projects were framed by a group of residents that became
known as the Newtown Neighborhoods Coalition. Members of that ad hoc group
objected to the construction densities of the projects, increased traffic in
their neighborhoods, the possibility of depleted water supplies in existing
wells, the alteration of their neighborhoods' character, and the loss of local
undeveloped land, among other complaints.
The issue of water wells becoming depleted due to the construction of new
subdivisions is a "red herring," Mr Hall asserted. The charge that domestic
water wells will be depleted is an emotional claim that puts great fear in
people, he said.
People living in areas near development sites become accustomed to the
presence of open land nearby. When that open land is going to be developed,
those people become upset, Mr Hall said. Some people act as if they have a
right to leave that land undeveloped, although they don't own that land, he
said.
To illustrate the level of anti-development sentiment which existed among the
public last year, Mr Hall pointed to the intense controversy that was
generated by a local builder's application to resubdivide one building lot on
Fawnwood Road into two building lots. The P&Z rejected the resubdivision. The
developer then sued. The P&Z later approved the resubdivision in a modified
form.
Neighborhood coalition members have viewed various residential development
proposals in terms of their desires, not in terms of the legal merits of the
development applications, Mr Hall said. Emotional responses to development
proposals are not valid from a legal perspective, he stressed.
In some cases, P&Z members overtly sought to stop development by changing land
use regulations, Mr Hall said.
In one case, the P&Z sought to revise its rules on the "minimum square," a
planning device used to gauge whether it is practical to position a house on a
given lot in terms of septic system, water supply and building setback
requirements.
After heavy criticism from builders, subdividers, engineers and lawyers, who
charged that the proposed change would result in oversized building lots with
odd shapes, the P&Z relented, ending its consideration of the proposed minimum
square changes.
Avoiding Lawsuits
The developer of The Estates on Taunton Hill encountered a stumbling block due
to "dual frontages" on some proposed lots, Mr Hall said. That stumbling block
could have been prevented if the P&Z had had a lawyer representing it at a P&Z
meeting when the issue surfaced, he added.
That controversy led to the 19-lot subdivision's rejection by the P&Z, which
was followed by a lawsuit against the P&Z by the developer. In settling that
lawsuit, the P&Z recently approved a reconfigured version of the subdivision.
P&Z members have been very dedicated, but their workload has increased and the
complexity of issues they consider has grown, Mr Hall said. "By and large, the
commission makes the right decisions," he added.
The P&Z's use of attorney Timothy Bates to represent it in the controversial
Newtown Village 96-house condominium complex application was evident in the
P&Z motion rejecting the project, according to Mr Hall. The motion will be the
basis for the P&Z's defense of itself in a lawsuit filed by the applicant who
is now seeking to have a judge approve the project.
Riverview Condominiums, a 49-unit condominium complex recently approved by the
P&Z, wasn't very controversial, Mr Hall observed. Riverview will be built in a
relatively isolated area, however.
The very dense Newtown Village would be built at a site with nice homes in the
immediate vicinity, Mr Hall noted. The problem with Newtown Village is that
"affordable housing" is being used as a excuse to build a very high density
residential complex, Mr Hall said.
Community
Involvement
Mr Hall has been a member of the Republican Town Committee since 1968, plus a
member of the GOP State Central Committee for more than ten years.
He said he has helped campaign in every Republican first selectman's race
since 1968.
In alternate election years, Mr Hall works on campaigns for state and federal
office.
Mr Hall is married to Margot Hall, who has been Newtown's judge of probate for
seven years and was the probate clerk for 12 years before that. They have
three grown children, Stuart, Elinor and Marianne.
A former member of the Legislative Council, Mr Hall served on two past charter
revision commissions. Mr Hall was chairman of the charter revision commission
which proposed that the town create a legislative council.
Mr Hall, 58, has served on many ad hoc committees. He is a member of the
Newtown Congregational Church Board of Trustees. He is associated with Booth
Library and The Charles Ives Center for The Arts in Danbury.
An avid downhill skier, Mr Hall is a member of the Winterset Ski Club. He has
been a Rotarian since 1968.
Mr Hall enjoys working with machinery, making home improvements and repairing
automobiles, such as his blue 1987 Lincoln Town Car.
Mr Hall has run in six marathons, including the Boston and New York City
marathons.
