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Community Forum Set On Development In Newtown

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Community Forum Set On Development In Newtown

Date: Fri 29-Mar-1996

Publication: Bee

Author: ANDYG

Quick Words:

development-Cascella

Full Text:

Community Forum Set On Development In Newtown

To address the issues posed by the continuing construction of new houses in

Newtown, the town will hold a "Community Forum on Residential Development in

Newtown" in May.

The session is slated for 8 to 11 pm on May 14 at Newtown High School

auditorium, according to First Selectman Robert Cascella.

The forum will bring together a range of town officials, as well as a realtor

and a developer, to publicly discuss the issues posed by the residential

construction boom. Newtown has experienced some of the fastest residential

growth in the state in recent years.

Opening remarks at the forum will be presented by Mr Cascella. Steve Adams,

the Planning and Commission (P&Z) chairman, and Elizabeth Stocker, the

Director of Community Development, also will make presentations.

Besides Mr Cascella, Mr Adams, and Ms Stocker, five other panelists will

address questions on residential development posed by the public. They are:

Town Attorney David Grogins; Health Director Mark Cooper; Conservation

Commission Chairman Donald Lawrenson; Newtown Board of Realtors President

Joanne Maurer; and developer Kim Danziger.

Mr Cascella said if residents have questions they want answered at the

community forum, they should submit those questions to him now, either by

telephone or in writing. The first selectman's telephone number in Edmond Town

Hall is 270-4201 or, if busy, 270-4200. The mailing address is: First

Selectman's Office, Edmond Town Hall, 45 Main Street, Newtown, CT, 06470.

Mr Cascella said the forum will address what steps the town can take to

legally control residential growth.

Residents have expressed their concerns to him about the town losing its rural

character in light of continuing home building, the first selectman said.

Whether a residential construction moratorium is possible will be addressed at

the session, he said.

The residential construction boom poses questions such as how many students

will be added to the public schools' enrollment, he said. An increased public

school enrollment could create the need for school expansion projects and/or

new schools, he said. New home construction also foreshadows the need for

added municipal services, such as police protection, snow removal, road

construction, and others, according to the first selectman.

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