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Date: Fri 12-Sep-1997

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Date: Fri 12-Sep-1997

Publication: Bee

Author: ANDYG

Quick Words:

P&Z-Whispering-Pines

Full Text:

Commission Rejects Whispering Pines Resubdivision

B Y A NDREW G OROSKO

Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) members have rejected a request for a

two-lot resubdivision in Whispering Pines in Sandy Hook.

P&Z members September 4 turned down PSD Partnership's request to resubdivide

the 3.1-acre Lot 10 on Miya Lane into two house lots.

Reasons stated for turning down the application included that the land has

severe slopes and the proposal is inconsistent with provisions of the town's

1993 plan of development.

In August, P&Z members approved creating two new building lots at Whispering

Pines, bringing the number of lots there to 15. The subdivision is at a

26-acre site at Pine Street, Cherry Street, Narragansett Trail and Miya Lane.

In August, P&Z members voted 2-to-1 to reject resubdividing Lot 10 into two

lots, but held that action in abeyance for further discussion on the matter.

In the vote held September 4, P&Z members stated their regulatory rationale

for rejecting for proposal.

Initially, the developers proposed Whispering Pines as a 19-lot development.

The P&Z rejected the 19-lot version in the spring of 1996.

The developers returned with a 16-lot proposal which the P&Z whittled down to

13 lots due to environmental concerns.

The developers then sued the P&Z over the reduction in lots.

When that suit was settled, the 13-lot approval was put in force, but the

developers stressed they would reapply for three more lots.

When it was first proposed in the spring of 1996, Whispering Pines became

among the most controversial development projects submitted to the P&Z during

recent years, attracting scores of people who complained about it at P&Z

public hearings.

It was the initial submission of the Whispering Pines project that led

citizens to start forming neighborhood associations to protest various

residential development projects in their areas.

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