Date: Fri 28-Mar-1997
Date: Fri 28-Mar-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
greenways-Fetzer-Rosenthal
Full Text:
Piecing Together Newtown's Greenway Will Be A Daunting Task
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
From the outset, Newtown's Greenways Committee knew it needed accommodation
from almost everybody if it was to achieve its goals.
The panel is working to develop a trail system that it hopes will someday
connect Huntington State Park with the upper and lower Paugussett State
Forests. To do so, the Greenways Committee will have to splice together
various town open spaces bit by bit by approaching property owners along the
trail for easements across their land and developers for help in preserving
open space in key locations.
The task is daunting, but Greenways Committee Chairman Gary Fetzer believes it
can be done. He said his panel needs credibility to show people that the idea
of a continuous trail system in Newtown can move beyond the planning stages.
For starters, Mr Fetzer believes the Greenways Committee has to get more
involved in the application process of the Planning & Zoning Commission. "We
need to be able to jump into an application process so that we can ask the
developer if he'd be willing to accommodate his subdivision to tie it in with
the Greenways plan."
Planning & Zoning Commission member Dan Rosenthal, the liaison between the two
boards, agrees, saying the committee needs to meet with builders in the
planning stages, before that subdivision application ever even reaches P&Z.
He said history has shown that developers are often willing to do their part
in working with an organization once it is understood what that group wants to
do.
"Some developers have been known to sit down with property owners, like
Newtown Bridle Lanes, to agree on a plan long before we ever see the
application," said Mr Rosenthal. "They know Bridle Lanes exists. Now, once
Greenways is established, hopefully it will have the same results."
Under its regulations, the P&Z Commission could not require a developer to
adjust building plans in order to accommodate the request of a third party.
"It would have to be a friendly agreement," Mr Rosenthal said.
Mr Rosenthal said the P&Z Commission needs to determine where it feels the
Greenways Commission needs to become involved in the application process.
