Date: Fri 29-Jan-1999
Date: Fri 29-Jan-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-upzoning
Full Text:
ED INK: Upzoning Newtown
The Planning and Zoning Commission has begun work on a plan to upzone 2,330
properties in Newtown, hoping to protect groundwater resources in areas that
are at risk of septic contamination through over-development. Upzoning, which
increases the minimum building lot sizes, is a zoning tool that has been
viewed over the years in some towns as a means of keeping homesites large,
expensive, and exclusive -- beyond the reach of the poor, or even people of
modest means, including young couples just starting out and the elderly.
The use of upzoning as a tool for social engineering, however, has been struck
down repeatedly by the courts, and fortunately it is not the intent of
Newtown's zoners to exclude anyone from the opportunities and benefits of
living in Newtown. Their upzoning proposals have evolved from the increasingly
apparent need to protect the town's groundwater resources for future
generations.
The Planning and Zoning Commission's plan will completely eliminate half-acre
zoning in non-sewered areas. For the most part, half-acre zones will be
increased to one-acre zones, except in areas within the town's aquifer
protection district, which would have a new two-acre minimum under the
proposed regulations.
Many of the affected properties lie in the lakeside communities, including
Shady Rest, Pootatuck Park, Riverside, and Cedarhurst, where some of Newtown's
most affordable housing is currently located. If adopted, the new regulations
would increase the cost of new housing in those areas and complicate the lives
of homeowners who want to build additions or make other improvements to their
properties by requiring zoning variances from the Zoning Board of Appeals.
In making these changes, we hope the Planning and Zoning Commission remembers
that in addition to clean drinking water and an environment free of toxic
threats, Newtown also needs to maintain a range of housing opportunities. In
the future, Newtown will need safe, clean, friendly and affordable
neighborhoods like Shady Rest just as much as it will need the new
neighborhoods of mega-mansions that are now taking shape throughout town. For
each new restriction brought on by environmental concerns, we should be
thinking of new incentives to encourage developers to include one or two
smaller, more affordable homes in every new neighborhood in town.