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Date: Fri 25-Apr-1997

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Date: Fri 25-Apr-1997

Publication: Bee

Author: ANDYG

Quick Words:

P&Z-Meadow-Acres-Mathison

Full Text:

P&Z Considers Meadow Acres Resubdivision Request

B Y A NDREW G OROSKO

Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) members are considering a request to

resubdivide an existing building lot into two building lots in the Meadow

Acres residential subdivision.

P&Z members took no action on the request following an April 17 public

hearing.

Applicants Robert and Kathryn Mathison want permission to resubdivide the

3.4-acre Lot 25/26 into Lot 25 and Lot 26 on Jo-Mar Drive in Meadow Acres.

Jo-Mar Drive is a loop road which extends off Riverside Road in Sandy Hook. A

section of Jo-Mar Drive runs parallel to Interstate 84, adjacent to its

westbound lanes.

Engineer Stuart Somers represented the Mathisons before the P&Z.

The proposed resubdivision will require the installation of a pump-powered

system for septic waste disposal, Mr Somers said. Such pumped systems are

allowed under town and state health codes, he noted.

Two three-bedroom houses are planned for the lot eyed for resubdivision, Mr

Somers said.

Mr Somers told P&Z members that the requested resubdivision would mark the end

of residential development for Jo-Mar Drive.

P&Z Vice Chairman Thomas Paisley, seated as the P&Z's chairman, sought public

comment on the Meadow Acres resubdivision, but no comments were made.

P&Z action on the resubdivision proposal is expected at an upcoming session.

In November, in a 2-to-1 vote, the P&Z approved the controversial Meadow

Acres, a 10-lot development on 20 acres on Jo-Mar Drive and Philo Curtis Road.

That approval requires the developers to avoid disturbing any archaeological

artifacts present on building lots by positioning houses, driveways, and

septic systems away from such artifacts. The approval also requires that lots

that contain any archaeological artifacts have specific deed restrictions

placed on them to avoid disturbing the artifacts.

The November approval granted by the P&Z amounts to a reconfiguration of a

previously-approved subdivision for the land.

At a September public hearing, residents living near Meadow Acres voiced many

environmental objections to the development project. The concerns included

that the construction of new houses would hurt area residents' quality of

life, pollute the air, damage the land, increase property taxes, hurt

archaeological sites, overcrowd local schools, impair public safety, and

generally damage the environment.

The original Meadow Acres subdivision gained town approval in the 1960s when

nearby Interstate 84 and the Iroquois natural gas transmission pipeline hadn't

yet been built.

The town and the developers plan to share the costs of some drainage

improvements for Philo Curtis Road in connection with the project. Those

improvements will be made on the deteriorated section of Philo Curtis Road

between Treadwell Park and I-84.

Eight of the lots in Meadow Acres are along Philo Curtis Road. Approving the

pending resubdivision request would make Meadow Acres an 11-lot development.

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