Date: Fri 03-Jan-1997
Date: Fri 03-Jan-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-Wedgewood-M&E-lawsuit
Full Text:
Developers Sue P&Z Over Wedgewood Rejection
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
M&E Land Group has sued the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) in seeking to
gain approval for its recently rejected 15-lot Wedgewood residential
subdivision.
In the lawsuit filed in Danbury Superior Court, Attorney Robert Hall,
representing M&E, claims that the P&Z acted illegally, arbitrarily and in
abuse of the discretion vested in it in that it misapplied a law concerning
the development of an uphill property causing water runoff onto the property
of a downhill property owner. The plaintiffs add that the P&Z gave no other
reasons for the development application's denial, or at least no other reasons
that were supported by the public record before the P&Z.
Through the lawsuit, M&E seeks to have a judge sustain its appeal of the P&Z's
development denial; order the P&Z to approve the Wedgewood plan as it was
submitted; and grant other relief in law or equity. The site is off Taunton
Hill Road.
Thomas Maguire of Golden Pond Road and Larry Edwards of Easton are general
partners in the M&E firm which acquires raw land, subdivides it, and then
sells the building lots to home builders.
In January 1996, M&E bought 27 acres off Taunton Hill Road. The developers
want 11 building lots in an R-1 Acre zone and four building lots in a R-2 Acre
zone. The land already contains one dwelling. An 1,800-foot-long dead-end road
was proposed for the site to provide access to the lots.
"The southwesterly border of the Wedgewood property consists of a wetland
area, which area extends onto and is part of a much larger wetland area on the
land of the adjacent property owner, shown on the subdivision plan as Ferris.
There is a clearly defined watercourse on the Wedgewood property which flows
into the wetland area, but there does not appear to be a defined channel
through the wetland area. There is a clearly defined watercourse leaving the
wetland area from the property of Ferris onto lands of others," according to
the lawsuit.
A primary issue at a P&Z public hearing on Wedgewood was whether M&E had the
right to discharge water from a proposed detention basin directly into the
wetlands area near the boundary of its property, according to the suit.
"The basis of the commission's rejection of the subdivision application was
the question of water drainage onto the adjacent property owners' land,"
according to the legal papers.
On December 5, P&Z Chairman John DeFilippe and members Thomas Paisley and
Heidi Winslow turned down the Wedgewood project.
Before that vote, P&Z members suggested to the developers that an independent
environmental expert be hired to analyze the potential effects of Wedgewood.
But the developers didn't agree, instead preferring that the P&Z make a
decision on the development application at that time.
Mr Hall had told P&Z members there had been much public discussion about
Wedgewood during recent months, adding that it's unclear if hiring an expert
would prove helpful. Mr Hall then asked that P&Z members to vote on the
proposal.
Both the applicants and opponents of the project had presented expert
scientific witnesses on Wedgewood in public sessions dating back to August.
Ms Winslow said the development as planned would cause drainage, sedimentation
and siltation problems on an adjacent property. She said that a hydrogeologist
hired by opponents of the project made some helpful environmental points at a
past session on Wedgewood.
"There is a misuse of the land as far as the drainage (plans) on this
application," she said when P&Z members turned down the application December
5.
A main concern expressed by nearby residents at past P&Z sessions is that
creating Wedgewood would deplete their domestic well water supplies. The
developers refuted the points which were raised about water supplies.
Taunton Hill Road residents living near the site have told P&Z members they
strongly oppose the development because it also would overcrowd the area,
cause drainage problems, and create added traffic hazards.
The site which was eyed for development is on the east side of Taunton Hill
Road, just west of Cannon Drive. Cannon Drive is a dead end street that
extends westward from Birch Hill Road toward Taunton Hill Road.
