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Conservation Panel Sued Over Wetlands Action
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
A residential developer, whose application for a wetlands construction permit
was denied by the Conservation Commission, is suing the commission in a move
to get an approval for the wetlands construction work.
In a lawsuit filed May 1 in Danbury Superior Court, Daniels Hill Development
LLC, of 62 Saxony Drive, Trumbull, sues the Conservation Commission.
The development firm needs both Conservation Commission and Planning and
Zoning Commission (P&Z) approvals to build Daniels Hill Estates, 15-lot
development on 42 acres, off Parmalee Hill Road, adjacent to the Housatonic
Railroad tracks.
The Conservation Commission, serves as the town's inland wetlands and
watercourses commission, when reviewing developers' requests for wetlands
construction permits.
In December 1997, Daniels applied to the commission to conduct regulated
activities in wetland and watercourse areas. The commission conducted a public
hearing on the application on February 25 and March 11. In April, the
commission denied the developer's application, providing reasons for the
denial.
In rejecting the developer's application for a wetlands permit, Conservation
Commission members stated:
The stormwater runoff from the site flows into a wetlands system and an
existing pond which has no drainage outlet. Thus, the added water which the
pond and the wetlands would receive due to increased development will affect
the wetlands system, as well as a home site now being developed. The proposed
drainage design also may affect the proposed Lots 11, 13 and 14 in Daniels
Hill Estates, and such drainage problems must be resolved, according to the
commission.
The commission's recommended elimination of Lot 12 hasn't been adequately
addressed in the developer's revised plans. Reconfiguring Lot 11 and Lot 12
into a new Lot 11 would place a house and septic system fairly close to a
wetland. The commission recommended repositioning a home site.
Also, commission members expressed concerns about the presence of a proposed
new road and the effect that a fire protection system would have on wetlands.
Response
According to the developer's lawsuit, the commission's denial of the
application was based on considerations which weren't part of the public
hearing record, exceeded the commission's powers, and was speculative and
vague in nature.
The developer alleges the Conservation Commission acted illegally,
arbitrarily, and in abuse of the discretion vested in it by law in that: it
considered factors that weren't part of the public hearing record in deciding
that the pond has no drainage outlet; it exceeded its statutory authority in
concerning itself with septic systems and "minimum squares" not located within
areas that it regulates; it gave as a reason for denial a general concern
regarding a new road and fire protection system without any specific finding
of an adverse impact; and it denied the applicant a reasonable use of its
property.
Attorney Sutherland W.G. Denlinger represents the applicant in the lawsuit.
The town has a June 9 appearance date in Danbury Superior Court to address the
charges raised in the civil suit.
