Margaret A. (Crispo) Larivee, 94, of Sandy Hook, formerly Arlington, Mass., passed away peacefully in her home on December 3, surrounded by her loving family.
Patricia “Pat” Thompson was a caring mother, grandmother, sister, and friend. She passed away peacefully December 7, after a brief stay at Danbury Hospital.
A funeral mass for Paul Pollock, who passed away in April, will be celebrated on Monday, December 20, at 10:30 am at St Rose of Lima Church, 46 Church Hill Road.
Thankful for our time together and our cherished memories, with profound heartbreak we announce the unexpected death of our beloved wife and mother Christine Reardon.
Eugenia Pidala, 88, of Sandy Hook, passed away on Tuesday, November 23. Born in Norwalk, Conn., on July 6,1933, she was the daughter of the late Oliver and Flora Smith.
Some facts to consider.
A total of 40,00 trips a day take place on Rt 25, The Castle Hill project will add less than 1%.
Cluster homes are already an approved concept for the Borough, because it preserves open land and builds homes with sewer and public water. I'm Suggesting the Zoning Board should approve this because its a proposal that meets conservation goals and "checks" all the boxes.
How do you propose tapping the brakes, Dave? 8-30g already trumps any local regulations- you don't have a brake pedal to push. Brookfield, Trumbull and now Ridgefield have a clear case for a moratorium based on the development (thanks to 8-30g) that has already occurred. I don't see a clear case for Newtown to request a moratorium... yet.
Nobody is suggesting shutting the doors on new neighbors. What neighboring towns are doing, and what we should be doing too, is to tap the brakes on all of the multi-family residential development proposals so that we can spend 6 months updating our regulations such that if you want to build dense residential housing here, XX percent of it needs to be affordable (we will never make any headway on increasing our percentage of affordable housing otherwise, short of 8-30g), and the rest needs to be done in as low an impact manner as possible. Low impact on traffic, health & safety, the environment and on the cost of town services.
Hey, there you go! Richard solved it. Thanks, that seems so easy- we'll just get rid of the 2nd amendment and the Supreme Court. Seriously, the 2nd amendment doesn't create violent criminals or mental illness. The Supreme Court doesn't create violent criminals or mental illness. The problem is not the tools, but the criminals & the mental illness. The state of Connecticut seems to be focused on the tools, like Richard, while ignoring the users of those tools.