Date: Fri 26-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 26-Feb-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Stocker-Hawleyville-rezoning
Full Text:
Development Director Urges Hawleyville Rezoning
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
In light of the planned sewering and expected development of a section of
Hawleyville, the community development director is recommending that the
Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) rezone sections of Hawleyville.
(See related story on Hawleyville sewering project on page C1.)
In a February 18 memorandum to the P&Z, Elizabeth Stocker recommends that the
P&Z rezone sections of Hawleyville to conform with an economic development
plan for Hawleyville which the P&Z endorsed last year.
In April 1998, P&Z members backed an economic development study of Hawleyville
which foresees industrial, commercial and residential growth in that lightly
developed section of town near Exit 9 of Interstate 84. In endorsing the
"Interstate 84/Exit 9 Hawleyville Transportation and Development Study" P&Z
members made it an addendum to the 1993 Town Plan of Development and
Conservation.
Ms Stocker wrote in the memo, "The Homesteads at Newtown is proceeding with
their plans for sewer and water service on Route 6. I have been actively
working with town officials on the sewer service. Because of these actions, it
would be timely for the commission to move forward with the...[rezoning]
recommendations before any [new] applications for development are filed."
Last September, the P&Z approved The Homesteads at Newtown, a planned 298-unit
elderly housing complex including units for assisted, congregate and
independent living on 60 acres at 166 Mt Pleasant Road (Route 6). In March
1998, the P&Z had approved zone changes from R-1 (residential) and R-2
(residential) to EH-10 (elderly housing) which had been requested by the
developer so that it could proceed with site planning for the Homesteads
project.
In her memorandum, Ms Stocker recommends that the P&Z act promptly to rezone
land along sections of Route 6/Mt Pleasant Road because those areas will be
the ones most likely to undergo development pressure after water lines and
sewer lines are installed in the area.
To make The Homesteads at Newtown possible, the developer plans to extend
United Water water supply service to the site from central Newtown, as well as
discharge wastewater into a sewer line to be extended to Hawleyville from
Bethel.
The Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) is in the planning stages for
Hawleyville sewer service. Unlike the new sewer system in central Newtown
which is intended to rectify groundwater pollution problems caused by failing
septic systems, the sewer system planned for Hawleyville is intended to foster
economic development.
"If we're going to extend sewers, we've got to make land use [zones] coincide
with the [economic development] plan," Ms Stocker said. "They have to work
together," she said.
"The whole purpose of planning is to implement," she said. Good land use
planning requires that planning be synchronized with the installation of
sewers, she said.
P&Z members are reviewing Ms Stocker's memorandum and are expected to discuss
it an upcoming P&Z session.
Rezoning
The Hawleyville economic development study calls for rezoning land north of Mt
Pleasant Road/Route 6 near the Bethel border from a basic R-2 (residential)
zone to a new proposed zone known as the Route 6 Design District (R6DD).
The Route 6 Design District zone is intended to provide commercial and office
uses, as well as higher density residential uses consistent with the site's
location on a major road. The intent of the proposed Route 6 Design District
zone is to provide support for economic development, which strengthens the
local tax base without an undue burden of municipal services.
The Hawleyville economic development plan also calls for rezoning an area of
land north of Mt Pleasant Road/Route 6, which lies between the Homesteads site
and Hawleyville Road. That land would be rezoned from R-1 (residential) to
lower-density R-2 (residential).
The economic development study also calls for expanding an existing M-2A
(industrial) zone, which lies in the area north of Mt Pleasant Road, west of
Hawleyville Road and south of Interstate-84. That M-2A zone expansion would
extend eastward to the vicinity of Whipporwill Road, converting existing R-1
zoning to M-2A zoning.
Allowable uses of that area with M-2A zoning would be the industrial uses
which are allowed in a M-2A zone, and especially corporate headquarters and
office space, plus retail sales, personal services, banks, restaurants and
nursery schools.
Ms Stocker also calls for rezoning a piece of land lying north of Whipporwill
Road and Susan Lane and south of Interstate-84 from R-1 (residential) to the
lower density R-2 (residential) designation.
Hawleyville Study
The Hawleyville economic development plan expands upon and refines the 1993
Town Plan of Development and Conservation which calls for the
"industrialization" of Hawleyville.
The economic study analyzes Hawleyville's potential for economic development
through the year 2017. The study, which was prepared for the Housatonic Valley
Council of Elected Officials (HVCEO) by Barakos-Landino, Inc, of Hamden, finds
there is an opportunity for significant economic development, without
adversely affecting the basic character of Hawleyville or overburdening its
natural or built environment.
The study centers on a 1,200-acre section of Hawleyville, focusing on Exit 9
of Interstate 84. The planners suggest various development possibilities,
including: age-restricted housing, assisted-living facilities, medical office
space, single-family houses, mixed retail uses, corporate offices, a hotel,
conference center, open space land, a village center and industrial uses.
The proposed land uses would be created by private developers on
privately-owned land. The study describes the many road improvements which
would be needed in Hawleyville to facilitate its economic growth. HVCEO, which
oversaw the study's production, serves as the region's transportation planning
agency.
The planning study is based on the types of development which are logically
expected in Hawleyville due to market conditions and the limitations on the
land due to slopes, wetlands, soil types and floodplains. In suggesting
several development scenarios for Hawleyville, the HVCEO is seeking to balance
the interests of developers, the town, and the region.
The Hawleyville study creates a conceptual framework, establishing a hierarchy
of planning policies to foster the controlled growth of that largely
undeveloped section of town. The study creates a public planning model for
future development, in effect, setting a municipal tone for economic growth.