Date: Fri 19-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 19-Feb-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
aquifer-protection-regs
Full Text:
Hearing To Continue On Aquifer Protection Regs
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Residents will have a second opportunity to comment on revised aquifer
protection regulations proposed by the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) at
a public hearing scheduled for Thursday, February 25.
The hearing is slated for 8 pm at Newtown Middle School auditorium, 11 Queen
Street.
The P&Z held the first installment of the hearing February 4 at which the
proposed regulations drew both criticism and support from the public.
Some local businesses affected by the proposed regulations criticized them as
being too restrictive, with complaints focused on a provision prohibiting sand
and gravel mining in the Aquifer Protection District (APD).
Some local residents lauded the P&Z for taking steps to protect groundwater
resources from contamination.
Strengthened aquifer protection regulations are being proposed to better
safeguard the quality of existing and potential underground drinking water
supplies. The proposed regulations would greatly expand and more explicitly
state the rules the P&Z uses to protect groundwater quality in the APD, a zone
which was created by the P&Z in 1981.
The proposal calls for a cooperative relationship between the Conservation
Commission and P&Z under which both agencies would review proposed development
in the aquifer district.
The APD, which varies in width depending upon soil conditions, generally
follows the course of the Pootatuck River from its headwaters in the vicinity
of the Monroe border northward to Sandy Hook Center. The aquifer district
contains the Pootatuck Aquifer, the town's designated sole source aquifer.
The proposed regulations would foster a clean water supply by prohibiting land
uses that can contaminate groundwater, and by regulating other land uses that
can potentially contaminate or downgrade existing and potential groundwater
supplies.
The proposed rules apply to "stratified drift" aquifers, or those such as the
Pootatuck Aquifer, in which subterranean water supplies are contained within
layered bands of sand, gravel and boulders.
Permits & Prohibitions
Land uses permitted in an aquifer protection district would include
single-family houses on lots with a minimum two-acre lot size; open space and
passive recreation areas; managed forest land; and land owned and/or managed
by a public water utility company.
Prohibited land uses in the aquifer protection zone would include: landfills;
septage lagoons; wastewater treatment plants; printeries; public garages and
filling stations; car washes; road salt storage facilities; kennels;
facilities which manufacture, use, store, transport, process or dispose of
hazardous materials or hazardous wastes; the excavation, storage and removal
of sand and gravel; the underground storage of hazardous materials; dry
cleaners with on-site cleaning operations; hotels and motels without public
sewer and water supplies; garages for sheltering and maintaining commercial
vehicles and construction equipment; the maintenance and outdoor storage of
public utility service vehicles; the handling and smelting of nonferrous
metals; and medical or dental offices, veterinary hospitals, beauty and nail
salons, funeral parlors and research or medical laboratories, except where
public sewers and water supplies are available for such facilities.
The proposed rules specify minimum standards for aquifer protection concerning
stormwater management, floor drains, pesticide and fertilizer use, and the
storage and handling of hazardous materials.