Date: Fri 31-May-1996
Date: Fri 31-May-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-adult-books-curb-cuts
Full Text:
P&Z Faces A Full Menu Of Issues
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
It's a busy time for the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z).
The agency that regulates land use for the town has a host of zoning issues
facing it as it enters the summer season, according to P&Z Chairman Stephen
Adams.
These include: a proposal to prohibit adult book and video shops; a proposal
to repeal the regulation which allows rear house lots in one-acre residential
zones; consideration of "upzoning" or increasing the minimum sizes for
residential lots based on site conditions, such as limited underground water
supplies; a proposal for cluster zoning in which dwelling units would be
clustered on a parcel so that more open space land would be available for
public use; a proposal to prohibit new stores larger than 40,000 square feet;
and the adoption of regulations on "curb cuts" along Route 25 between the
Monroe town line and the Main Street flagpole.
Although the town has no adult book and video shops now, it wouldn't want to
be in position to allow them, according to Mr Adams. Regulatory language which
would be used to prohibit such specialty stores is in the formative stages, he
said. Mr Adams said the P&Z's interest in banning such establishments stems
from a resident's concerns that such a business has opened on Route 25 in
nearby Monroe.
P&Z members will be holding a public hearing in the coming weeks on a proposal
to ban rear lots in one-acre residential zones, Mr Adams said. Last summer,
the P&Z amended its regulations to allow rear lots in subdivisions in one-acre
zones at the request of Attorney Stephen Wippermann on behalf of a client. The
P&Z was allowing rear lots in two-acre and three-acre residential zones, so it
would make sense to allow such development in one-acre zones, the lawyer told
the zoners last summer.
Recent subdivision requests, however, have shown that rear lots in one-acre
zones pose developmental problems, Mr Adams said. "It now appears it's really
causing a problem" in light of construction densities, he said. The
controversial Whispering Pines subdivision proposal in Sandy Hook includes
one-acre, rear-lot zoning, he said. In such rear-lot zones, lengthy driveways
lead from the street to houses which are built behind the houses which face
the street.
P&Z members are consulting with well water experts to learn the developmental
limits of certain residential properties served by domestic water wells. If
it's found that underground water supplies are limited or unpredictable, P&Z
members say they may increase minimum residential lot sizes through an
"upzoning" approach.
Under such a plan, the minimum allowable size of building lots in various
residential zones would be increased to make it more likely that residents
could obtain reliable water supplies from individual wells. The upzoning
approach also would have the effect of reducing an area's potential population
density.
P&Z members are considering creating cluster zones in which dwelling units
would be clustered on a given parcel to allow more open space on that land for
public use. Although cluster zoning would provide for additional open space
land, it wouldn't necessarily reduce the number of dwelling units built on a
given parcel compared to conventional subdivision development.
The commission also is considering amending its zoning regulations to ban
so-called "big box" stores which are larger than 40,000 square feet in area,
according to Mr Adams. The rationale behind such a size limit involves
limiting the traffic flow to and from stores, he said.
Although it's bigger than 40,000 square feet, the Super Stop and Shop
supermarket at Sand Hill Plaza would be exempt from such a regulation because
it was built before any size-limiting regulations went into effect. The
Borough Zoning Commission in February approved construction of an
approximately 55,000-square-foot Big Y supermarket on Queen Street at Newtown
Shopping Center. The borough's zoning regulations are separate from the P&Z's
regulations.
At their June 6 session, P&Z members plan to act on proposed zoning
regulations on the use of "curb cuts" on Route 25 to facilitate traffic flow
between the Monroe town line and the Main Street flagpole. Curb cuts allow
traffic to pass over curbs to enter and leave businesses. The proposed
regulations would create mechanisms to regulate future curb cutting. The
matter had been slated for action May 16, but action was postponed by
commission members. The June 6 meeting is slated for 8 pm in the Alexandria
Room at Edmond Town Hall, 45 Main Street.