News Flash - SHARE Submits
Revised Language to the Planning Commission:
In order to keep all SHARE
members as informed as possible, we wanted to update you on some recent events.
Following the December 28,
2006 Planning Commission meeting that we informed you of in our last SHARE News
Flash, we met with Greg Piecuch, Planning Commissioner, to listen to his concerns about the former POCD
language and to discuss with him our issues and what we felt the POCD needed to
accomplish in articulating a vision for the Southern Gateway. Mr. Piecuch was interested in SHARE's input
after the December 28, 2006 meeting.
After these constructive dialogues, SHARE sent a document of suggested
POCD revisions to John Loomis, the Chairman of the Simsbury Planning
Commission. A copy of the document is posted just below this
message or you can <<click here>>
for a printable version of the document.
We expect that these
suggestions will be discussed in the January 9th Planning Commission meeting.
Please note that the
attached file only lists the language for those sections impacted by the recent
Planning Commission discussions. The
changes that SHARE is suggesting are in red font in the document.
Sincerely,
Your SHARE Steering
Committee
How
We Want To Grow - Special Areas
December 29,
2006
Page 94
SOUTHERN
GATEWAY DESIRABLE PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES (continued)
Design
Context (continued)
- Create
a compact, physical settlement/workplace village center surrounded by a
protected greenbelt used for recreational and environmental purposes as
well as for the protection of the pre-existing adjacent residential
neighborhood
- Establish a deep, wide continuous roadside greenbelt
along Hopmeadow Street
as open space resource protection meeting the following objectives:
- be a central design element that creates a park or
green space with a variable depth from the street equivalent to the width of a regulation soccer
field where residents will have the opportunities for significant and
varied active recreation;
- maintain a substantive transition area between the
mixed-use development and residences to the west; and
- project the sense to those driving along Hopmeadow Street
that the roadside greenbelt and a continuous view of the ridgeline
vista—and not the mixed-use development—is the defining feature
- Restrict the roadside greenbelt with a conservation
easement
- Define the Village
Center edges with
open space to secure site identity.
Land
Use
- To
encourage a mixed-use development, recommend that the Zoning Commission
consider granting a density bonus to a development proposal meeting these
criteria (perhaps by increasing the maximum coverage limit from 40% to
50%).
- Recommend
to the Zoning Commission that the mix of uses contain a minimum amount of
public, core commercial and residential uses (perhaps including the
following guidelines for concentrated uses) as a percent of the Village Center area:
- Civic: 10%
- Mixed-use: 12-30%
- Office: 10-20%
- Non-Office Commercial: 0-10%
- Residential: 40-50%
How We
Want To Grow - Special Areas
December
29, 2006
Page
95
SOUTHERN GATEWAY DESIRABLE
PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES (continued)
Land Use (continued)
- Use
areas:
- Conservancy Areas - Protected open space, including,
e.g., greens, commons, and private noncommons
on parcels used for agriculture, public recreation, and gardens.
- Residential Area - Variety of housing options with a
broad range of housing types such as apartments, townhouses, duplexes,
and small lot single family
- Mixed-Use Area - The primary intention is to provide
uses that meet the retail and service needs of a traditional community
center and its vicinity and may contain other compatible uses such as
civic and institutional uses of community-wide importance and
second-floor office and/or residential uses. The following are intended
to establish guidance for overall form and scale:
- Locate commercial activities within a consolidated
core area for walkability and convenience with
the following objectives:
- Create a strong sense of streetscape between building
setbacks and streets (including internal travel ways that function like
streets).
- Emphasize an internal network of two-lane streets
that are as narrow as possible.
- Move building frontages toward the street and
generally next to the sidewalk in order to reinforce the human scale and
walkability of the mixed-use core.
- Create attractive streetscapes with combinations of
wide sidewalks and street trees;
- For buildings that oppose each other across the
street, encourage a 2:1 ratio where the separation between the front
facades is twice the building height.
- Provide
for a complementary mix of building sizes between one-and-a-half and two
and- a-half stories above grade for variety, visual interest, and human
scale proportions:
- Avoid the monolithic and repetitive types of
structures
- For guidance purposes in representing
human scale, maintain
a ratio of maximum building dimension of width or depth to height, such
that the maximum dimension of either the width or the depth varies from
1.5 times to 4.5 times the building height.
- For human scale reference, the main building footprint
of Simsbury Town Shops is about 26,000 square feet, the adjacent
Starbucks is 2,000 square feet, and the Prudential Realty building is
2,400 square feet.
- For guidance purposes in representing human scale,
building height should be about 25 feet for a one-and-a-half story building and about 35 feet
for a two-and-a-half story building.
Sunday December 31,
2006
Three Planning Commissioners derail the printing and distribution of the
recently approved Plan of Conservation and Development...
The following is a
summary of the full story which is contained below.
Summary:
On
December 28th three Planning Commissioners (Greg Piecuch, Chip Houlihan, and
Ferg Jansen) used a seldom exercised Planning Commission procedural
rule to call a special meeting to rescind the release of the previously
approved Plan of Conservation and Development just one day before it was
scheduled to be printed and distributed to state and local government
officials as well as to Simsbury citizens. These commissioners
specifically targeted the Southern Gateway (CL&P) property where Konover
Development wants to build their project called River Oaks. These three commissioners called for the
elimination of any reference to retail size limits and standards in the
Plan. The Planning Commission
reluctantly accepted the motion to rescind the plan and return to refining the
Plan’s language, thereby delaying a plan that is already nearly three years
late in delivery.
SHARE
is very disappointed in the Planning Commission’s decision and specifically the
actions of these three commissioners (Messrs. Piecuch, Houlihan, Jansen) who are supporting Big Box development directly and
indirectly. During this meeting, two commissioners suggested that size
limitations should be put to public referendum (Commissioners Mead and
Bednarcyk) while Chairman Loomis and Commission Alternates Mead and Drake
argued strongly to maintain metrics in the Plan. Commissioner Gardow relented to the
dissenting trio.
As
we have consistently stated, SHARE supports the direction of including metrics in
the Plan and would like to see a town wide vote of some form as we believe it
is the best way to finalize an already late plan and ensure that the citizens
of Simsbury have a say concerning Big Box development and how metrics should be
articulated in the Plan of Conservation and Development. However, the Planning Commission and the Town
does not seem interested in soliciting information from a public referendum or
a town wide comprehensive information gathering process.
So
please voice your opinion to our town officials, the newspapers, and some state
officials detailed below. It is the only way we can defeat the
forces promoting Big Box development in Simsbury.
For the full story, please get some water and antacid and take the time
to read the details below.
*********************
Dear SHARE Members:
Please read this all the way
through - you have some work to do!
There were some unfavorable events that happened at the Special Meeting
of the Planning Commission on December 28th. All of us as citizens need to do something
about this.
*********************
But first we’ll set some
background with an attempt at humor and with apologies to Clement Clarke Moore:
Twas the middle of vacation week when all through the
town
Not a resident was stirring as the Planning Commission
began to frown
Families were gathered enjoying the toys on their
floors
In our wonderful town free of Big Box stores
The Draft Plan of Conservation and Development was all
done and approved
With completion stamped on it and all ready to move
The State and the Board of Selectman and the Public
were ready to read it
To be sure that it said what the residents wanted in
it
When out in the town there arose such a clatter
The Planning Commission sprang from its holiday to see
what was the matter
To Town Hall they flew like a flash
Turned on the lights, gathered together and began to
clash
For while we were resting, three Planning
Commissioners were scheming
To remove all metrics, size limits, and greenbelts was
what they were dreaming
When what to our wondering eyes and ears should appear
But Messrs Greg Piecuch, Chip Houlihan, and Ferg
Jansen disgruntled – oh dear!
With this unlikely trio having unity and a lot of
audacity
We knew in a minute it must be politics and
non-representative tenacity
More rapid than in previous meetings their strategy
expressed
And in the end, previous decisions were rescinded and
the metrics amiss
******************
OK… we’ll stop the attempt at humor but after
Thursday’s Planning Commission meeting we thought that we and you might
appreciate a little. Because what we
witnessed Thursday night was anything but humorous. What we observed was the last thing we expect
to see in a representative government in action. So here’s what happened. We’ll try to be brief and precise but please
bear with us because the story is a bit long and complex.
- On
December 19th there was a Planning Commission meeting where
five of the voting members (Loomis, Piecuch, Bednarcyk, Gardow, Jansen) and two alternates were present (Drake,
Cole). For the meeting, Chairman
Loomis appointed Mark Drake (alternate) as a voting member because Chip
Houlihan, a voting member, was absent from the meeting. At that meeting the Draft Plan of
Conservation and Development (POCD) was being finalized prior to having it
distributed for final comment to the public and various State and Town
commissions and agencies.
Significant changes were made to the document. Most of the very specific metrics and
size limitations had been removed at a Dec 12th PC meeting much
to SHARE’s chagrin. Once again,
politics and the voices of special interest groups like the Chamber of
Commerce (who two of the Planning Commission voting members are very active
with (Jansen and Houlihan)) and commissions like the Economic Development
Commission and the Zoning Commission had gotten their way at the expense
of the overwhelming desire of the residents of Simsbury who made their
point of view known. The 2210 signatures
that SHARE had obtained during a five week period expressing a desire for
such metrics and size limitations seemed to have fallen on deaf ears. But did they?
- But
first, one brief digression from the main story because this one is of
special note. The Dec 19th
meeting was originally to be held in a small room in Town Hall. Early that day it became clear to
Chairman Loomis that the room was going to be too small to accommodate the
meeting so the room was changed to the large meeting room in the Library. Chairman Loomis had signs and notices
prominently placed all over Town Hall and the meeting began in the Library
15 minutes later than scheduled to allow people to make their way to the
Library. Over 40 people attended
the meeting after seeing the signs in Town Hall. Keep this all in mind for explanation
later in this email.
- Late
in the Dec 19th meeting (which went on until after midnight)
the Planning Commission began to discuss some changes to the section of
the POCD that dealt with the Southern Gateway (CL&P property) where
Konover Development wants to build River Oaks. There was a very heated discussion about
adding in specific language that would provide guidelines for suggested
sizes of buildings and a greenbelt along Route 10. The opposing opinions to this revision
were led by Greg Piecuch who argued vigorously against the Plan including
any specific numbers. Commissioners
Loomis, Bednarcyk, Gardow, Drake and Cole as well as the Chairman of the
Design Review Board, Emil Dahlquist, all agreed that the specific numbers
should be included in the Plan in order to accurately articulate a vision
for the future development of the Southern Gateway. SHARE thought the additions were
favorable as they returned some metrics, albeit less rigid ones, to the
POCD as it pertained to the CL&P property. In a complete reversal of his past
statements and endorsements of including specific numbers in the Southern
Gateway sections throughout PC meetings over the last year, Mr. Piecuch
suddenly changed his mind and now is vehemently opposed to including any
such metrics in the POCD. We leave
it up to you to figure out how and why he has completely reversed his
position as we are completely perplexed about this. SHARE believes that metrics do a good
job of providing parameters to a vision as numbers help to put boundaries
on abstract terms and concepts. We
believe, and have heard from thousands of you, that we all like numbers in
such documents. Absent numbers,
limits and constraints are left to the ‘eye of the beholder’.
- After
this heated debate there was a vote of 4 to 2 to return to the POCD some
expression of suggested sizes for buildings (2000-25,000) square feet per
floor (2 floor maximum), variable greenbelt sizes of 200-300 feet to
prevent development too close to the road, encourage a 50-70 foot
separation between buildings to discourage dense strip mall type
development and encourage village style development. The document also provided visionary
guidance on the height of buildings and the desire to have different
building heights and styles to prevent homogeneity and enhance visual
appeal. In the end, your SHARE
Steering Committee thought this was all good stuff and was worded in a way
that were clearly recommendations and advisory but clearly painted a
picture of what the town would like to see rather than some huge
monolithic ugly Big Box. The 4 to 2
vote went as follows: Voting in favor of adding the metrics language to
the Southern Gateway (CL&P parcel) section of the Plan were Loomis,
Bednarcyk, Gardow, and Drake (alternate voting in the absence of
Houlihan). Voting to oppose adding
the metrics language were Piecuch and Jansen.
- Despite
the heated debate, the vote stood and everyone went home tired after
midnight.
- But apparently
some members of the PC and other involved parties had other ideas and the
phone calls must have begun almost immediately. Within a day or two a Freedom of
Information complaint letter was sent to the PC by a resident (and town
political ‘insider’). Alleged in
the complaint was that the meeting was illegal and all business conducted
at the meeting should be nullified because the PC moved rooms without 24
hours notice. In addition, Messrs.
Houlihan, Jansen, and Piecuch used a seldom used rule in the PC’s rules to
call a Special Meeting of the PC to discuss the FOI complaint and to
discuss rescinding the results of the December 19th
meeting. These three commissioners
wanted to have the meeting immediately so it was held on Thursday December
28th – in the middle of vacation week when many citizens are
not available or paying attention to such issues.
- At the
outset of the Dec 28th meeting the town attorney conveyed his
analysis of the FOI complaint. He reminded
the PC that the complaint was not an actual complaint because no official
complaint had been filed with the State’s Freedom of Information (FOI)
Commission. He said that he
consulted the Connecticut General Statutes and consulted with the FOI Commission
and it was his opinion that the complaint would not result in voiding the
meeting results because prior FOI Commission rulings favored moving
meetings to larger rooms to accommodate the size of an audience as long as
a room change had adequate signage.
The town attorney felt that the PC was in a favorable place with
regards to the FOI complaint and that if there was a hearing with the FOI
Commission, the complaint would not prevail.
- Throughout
this explanation from the Town Attorney, Chip Houlihan asked numerous
questions about the FOI laws and rules and seemed to be the most
interested PC member on the issues being discussed.
- The
meeting then continued, absent the FOI issue, with an extremely lengthy
discussion about rescinding the results from the previous meeting. At issue was the desire of Messrs.
Houlihan, Jansen, and Piecuch to go back to the ‘drawing board’ with the
POCD to remove all metrics from the Special Areas section of the Plan and
specifically from the section on the Southern Gateway (CL&P)
parcel. Numerous points of view
were articulated. Several members
of the PC spoke eloquently (Loomis, Bednarcyk, Mead) that they had heard
from numerous residents and the consensus is that people want metrics and
specific numbers in the plan to put boundaries on the size of
development. But these proponents
of numbers were speaking to an unwavering group of three (Houlihan,
Jansen, and Piecuch). These three
PC commissioners, for reasons which your SHARE Steering Committee cannot
comprehend, seem determined to not have any such metrics in the POCD. And please remember that the argument at
this meeting was about metrics only in the part of the POCD for the
Southern Gateway (CL&P) parcel.
Why are these three commissioners so adamant to not limit the size
and scale of development with numbers in the POCD for just this parcel?
- Because
the PC meeting was so spontaneous and held during vacation week, SCTV was
not able to video tape the meeting.
Your SHARE Steering Committee brought our own video equipment to
film the meeting. We will try to
get this tape submitted to SCTV for broadcast. There were some extraordinary statements
made at the meeting that everyone should watch if possible. A favorite of one SHARE member in
attendance was Chip Houlihan’s comment about how what Simsbury needs is a store like Orvis
where you could step out of the store and test a fishing pole in the
river. That SHARE member went up to
Mr. Houlihan after the meeting to remind him that Avon already had an
Orvis and that the river is at least a quarter mile away from the CL&P
property since there is a state park in between the property and the
river. He also reminded Mr.
Houlihan that it was illegal to fish in the river except during fishing
season. Mr. Houlihan seemed interested
in this information. But we
digress.
- To
make a ‘short story long’, unfortunately after much debate the three
dissenting PC members (Houlihan, Jansen, Piecuch) prevailed because the PC
was concerned that they were in a deadlock situation. Commissioner Gardow made a hasty
decision to vote on this issue with the dissenting three because he was
concerned that if they voted to continue with the POCD as it was currently
drafted then changes might need to be made after the draft was distributed
to the public. Commissioners Loomis
and Bednarcyk did not support this position because they believe that the
plan needs to go to the public for review and comment first as it is ‘the
people’s document’ and they wanted people to have the opportunity to read
it before the PC continued to tweak it.
They believed the tweaks could be made later while the public
reviewed the document and then presented to the public later. Commissioners Loomis and Bednarcyk
argued strongly to keep the metrics in the document because they believe
such boundaries and limits are important for the town to publicly
express. Incidentally, all of the
other issues voted on at the Dec 19th meeting were not disputed
and remained intact in the POCD.
Your SHARE Steering Committee finds it odd that Messrs. Houlihan,
Jansen, and Piecuch have such unified and strong opinions against metrics
in the POCD and why no other issues discussed and modified in the POCD
were of interest to them for further discussion.
- So the
Planning Commission now goes back to the drawing board to hash out their
differences. The POCD was close to
being done but now its completion date is unclear. Also unclear is the status of having
metrics in the POCD.
To conclude we are giving you all some very important
‘homework’:
- Please,
please, please get noisy. Let your
thoughts and desires be known to the Planning Commission, the Zoning
Commission and the Board of Selectman. Write
letters and emails both directly to our elected officials as well as to
the Hartford Courant and the Simsbury Post. Use names of the commissioners you are
disappointed in within your letters to the newspapers. Politicians don’t like public criticism
but we believe that some of them deserve it. The email addresses and mailing
addresses of all commissioners are on the www.ShareSimsbury.com website in the Contact Town Officials section.
- Let
all the planning commissioners know your points of view. But in
particular let Planning Commissioners Houlihan, Piecuch, Jansen and Gardow
hear your points of view. Let them
know how important you think it is to have metrics in the POCD. Let them know that you expect them to
represent you and do what you, as the citizens who elected them, want them
to do. When you send emails or
letters, carbon copy the other commissioners so everyone sees what you
have to say.
- Write
letters to CRCOG (Capitol
Region Council of Governments) about this issue. CRCOG, a Connecticut regional planning
organization, will be reviewing the POCD when it is completed and it is
important for CRCOG to hear from citizens with their point of view about
this issue. Address your emails to
Lyle Wray, Executive Director (lwray@crcog.org) and Mary Ellen Kowalewski, Director of
Community Development (mkowalewski@crcog.org) or send letters to them at CRCOG, 241 Main Street, Hartford, CT 06106.
- Attend
meetings. We need more people to regularly attend
all town meetings. We believe
strongly that one of the reasons why some of our town officials are
successful in doing things that are contrary to the wishes of the citizens
is that they don’t feel accountable enough. And a big reason for this is that there
isn’t enough diverse attendance at various town meetings – the commissions
see the same citizens in attendance all the time. We need more people to attend and if
lots of people attend and speak to them about their views, the commissions
will better hear the people and feel the pressure to represent the people
they were elected by. Go to www.TownofSimsbury.com to see the meeting schedules (http://simsburyct.virtualtownhall.net/Public_Documents/SimsburyCT_MeetingCal/?FormID=158 ).
Please get involved more with SHARE. Reply to
this email and let us know if you are able to volunteer to help with this
struggle. We need more people to get
directly involved because we are an all volunteer organization. At the very least, as the effort grows, we
need your monetary contributions. We
hate to ask, but SHARE has bills to pay and legal expenses for the advice we
continue to need. Please send us a check
for whatever you can afford to SHARE, PO
Box 594, Simsbury, CT 06070.
We are planning to have some form of ‘No Big Box’
lawn signs made up. Please reply to this
email if you would be willing to put such a sign on your lawn. We believe it would be an effective tool to
communicate how many of us are opposed to Big Box development in Simsbury beyond Route 44
if everywhere you drove in town you saw such signs. So please let us know if you want a sign
(there will be a nominal charge for this to recover the cost of the sign).
Lastly, again, please
speak out. Please let your town officials know your point of view. Please write
letters to the newspapers.
As always, thanks for your help and support. And Happy
New Year! We hope the new year brings a more open town government that is willing
to listen and act on the resident’s overwhelming desire to not have Big Box
retail built and then spread up and down Route 10.
Sincerely,
Your Loyal SHARE Steering Committee
Letter
to the Editor (published in the Simsbury News 1/3/2007):
December 29, 2006
There were so many
problems with the December 28 Simsbury Special Planning Commission meeting that
I don't know where to begin. It was called
by three commission members: Greg Piecuch, Ferg Jansen, and Chip
Houlihan. These boys were not happy with an action taken at the previous
meeting which would prohibit the development of Big Box stores on Route
10. Going against the town attorney's advice, Greg Piecuch moved to
rescind the action. During the lengthy debate over the motion, Commission
members repeatedly treated Sue Bednarcyk, the only female member, in a
dismissive fashion when she tried to state her opposition. The fact that
the meeting was called quickly, during Christmas week, and not adequately
publicized, was discussed and dismissed. The suggestion that, if brought
to referendum, the citizens of Simsbury would overwhelmingly vote to leave in
the Plan numerical guidelines for building size for development of the CL&P
property was also ignored. The boys beat their opinion to the ground
until finally, Ernie Gardow, not looking forward to another 6 hour meeting,
broke down and capitulated, essentially removing those immportant
numerical guidelines. This drama is all on tape, and I urge all Simsbury residents to view
it on SCTV and read the minutes of December 19th and 28th when they become
available. It will leave you disheartened, disillusioned, and disgusted.
Janet Miller
A Letter to
Planning Commission Chairman John Loomis
Mr. John Loomis
500 Firetown Rd
Simsbury, CT
06070
Monday, December 18, 2006
Dear Mr. Loomis:
I am writing in regard to the newest
revisions to the draft POCD that were distributed at last week’s PC meeting on
12/12 and which I picked up at Town Hall this past Friday. I am specifically
referring to the changes made to the Future By Design section of the plan that
include the removal of the square footage restrictions for retail development
in the transect sections (pg 60 & 61) the removal of the use areas
restricting retail to 20,000 sq ft/floor (pg 102), as well as the removal of
the language that suggests a 300 foot greenbelt along Hopmeadow Street for the
Southern Gateway desirable performance objectives (pg. 101).
Having attended one of the public
hearings for the draft POCD and having watched the other two on SCTV, it was
obvious that the majority of the residents who spoke regarding the above issues
were overwhelmingly in favor of the original language. It was also true that
the people who spoke opposing them were either with the EDC, the Zoning
Commission or the Simsbury Chamber of Commerce, representing a select minority.
Additionally, the inclusion of the over 2200 signatures collected by SHARE in
support of retail square footage caps, reinforces the premise that the majority
of town residents want to keep the language specific in the POCD in order to
ensure that the other town boards and elected officials, potential developers,
landowners and residents all have a clear vision and definitive expectations of
how we want to see our town developed over the next ten years.
I am extremely disappointed and
frustrated that the Planning Commission, under your chairmanship and under Greg
Piecuch’s, stewardship of the Future by Design chapter, has apparently given in
to political pressure rather than stand firm in your convictions and do what is
best for the majority, the residents of Simsbury,
and for the future of the Town of Simsbury.
I was absolutely astounded when I saw the revisions as I could not understand
how the Planning Commission could so completely ignore the voices of the
residents that you were elected to represent.
I strongly urge you to reconsider these changes to the Plan and
reinstate the original language in the Future By
Design sections. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Kirsten Griebel
cc:
Sue Bednarcyk, Carol Cole, Mark Drake, Ernest Gardow, Charles Houlihan, Ferg Jansen, Brad
Mead, Greg Piecuch
URGENT – Planning Commission draft POCD
revision news
Monday, December 18, 2006
SHARE NEWSFLASH: URGENT -
ALTHOUGH OVER 2200 SIMSBURY CITIZENS SIGNED A PETITION SEEKING SQUARE FOOTAGE
LIMITATIONS ON SINGLE-USE RETAILERS, ABSENT A DIRECT CURB CUT TO ROUTE 44, THE
SIMSBURY PLANNING COMMISSION’S PROPOSED PLAN OF CONSERVATION AND DEVELOPMENT
(WHICH ORIGINALLY INCLUDED THESE LIMITATIONS) HAS REMOVED
THESE SPECIFIC NUMERIC PROTECTIONS FOR OUR COMMUNITY. APPARENTLY THE PLANNING COMMISSION DECIDED
THAT THE VOICES OF THE VERY FEW SHOULD OVERRIDE THE VOICES OF THE MAJORITY.
This past Tuesday, December 12th, at
the Planning Commission's (PC) meeting, the PC board had discussions regarding
the feedback they had received from the public hearings on the town Plan of
Conservation and Development. They handed out copies of suggested revisions to
the POCD many of which affect Route 10 parcels including parcels at the North
End of town (Northern Gateway) and also the CL&P parcel (or as it is
referred to in the Plan, the Southern Gateway). Despite hearing from a very
large number of residents during the public hearings that the Plan should
remain as written with retail size limits intact, the newest revisions remove
those important details from the Plan.
During these meetings, the PC was also made aware of the over 2200
signatures obtained from town residents calling for a size limit on new retail
development in Simsbury beyond Route 44.
Also removed from the Plan are a variety of other metrics including
those governing greenbelts that set development back from roadways to prevent
construction from being too close to roads and obstructing scenic vistas. We have attached the pertinent pages for your
information and review.
The Planning Commission will be meeting this Tuesday,
December 19th at 7 pm at Simsbury Town Hall to continue their discussions about these revisions.
While there is no opportunity for public comment at their next meeting, we
would urge you to try to attend the meeting in order to listen to their
discussions and to show, by your presence, your support for the original plan
and the vision that it had defined for our town for the next ten years. We continue to believe that having specific
metrics in the Plan helps to better articulate boundaries between what is
responsible development versus what is development for development’s sake.
Thank you for your ongoing support.
Your SHARE Steering Committee
Links to the POCD revision Documents: Part-1 and Part-2
Public Hearing Broadcast on SCTV
throughout December
What The recent Public Hearings
before the Planning Commission regarding the draft 2007 Plan of Conservation
and Development will be broadcast throughout the month of December on SCTV
(Cable Channel 21), Each Wednesday at 12 noon and 7PM. All three meetings will
be broadcast back-to-back.
- The Meeting held on Monday November 27th at Simsbury High School is 1 ½ hours long (90
minutes)
- The Meeting held on Wednesday November 29th at Henry James
Middle School is 1 hour
(60 minutes)
- The Meeting held on Thursday November 30th at Henry James
Middle School is 1 ½
hours long (90 minutes) – note: This length
is tentative, as this video is still in post production.
What: The
Public Hearings before the Planning Commission regarding the draft 2007 Plan of
Conservation and Development broadcast on SCTV
When: Each
Wednesday in December at 12 noon and 7pm
Where: SCTV
Cable Channel 21
SIMSBURY: Big Box Stores Are Menace To Rural Character
December 4 2006
What a sense of town spirit I witnessed recently when the Simsbury High School
men's soccer team won the state championship! Hundreds of Simsbury residents loudly cheered for their
team. Similarly, I would like to see more of my fellow citizens become just as
vocal about their opposition to the impending River Oaks application to be
submitted by Konover Development.
At issue is the potential development of big-box stores on Route 10 at the
southern entrance to Simsbury.
As a member of SHARE (Simsbury Homeowners Advocating Responsible Expansion), I
don't want to see big-box development in our beautiful town beyond the
immediate boundaries of Route 44. I don't want Route 10 to become a four-lane
highway housing big-box stores and strip malls. We don't need Simsbury to become like the Berlin Turnpike,
Buckland Hills or for that matter, like Route 44! I don't want all that traffic
in our town!
I attended, along with hundreds of other Simsbury
residents, the past two public forums held by the Simsbury zoning commission where the topic of
limiting the size of retail development was discussed. I can't tell you how
disappointed I was at the lack of respect that some of the commission members
showed toward several citizens as they took turns speaking. The commissioners'
disrespectful and condescending conduct to the people who elected them left me
feeling embarrassed that this is how some of our town officials carry out
"the people's business."
Mr. Dunny Barney, chairman of the zoning commission, seems to not believe that
there are many residents who feel the same way I do, not to mention that SHARE
has over 2,300 members so far.
I urge you all to become vocal and show the Simsbury spirit and pride that you have for
our town. I urge you to please tell our town officials that you expect to be
treated with respect and that your voices should be listened to and taken
seriously with regard to your opposition to Big Box development in Simsbury.
Meghan Lucker, Simsbury
Draft 2007 Plan of Conservation and
Development (POCD) – Now available
After years of work, the draft of
the 2007 Plan of Conservation and Development has been completed by our Town Planning
Commission. It is available on the Town of Simsbury website, or by <<Clicking
here>>. Please feel free to read it and share your thoughts with us, as well
as the town Planning Commissioners.
We’re continuing to collect petition
signatures
We are continuing to collect signatures for our new petition prohibiting
the Town Zoning Commission to amend the current zoning regulations to include
language which would allow Konvover to build their big box development on
either the CL&P land or the land near the skating center. If you have
already signed the petition, we thank you for your support. Please make sure
that all members of your family who are registered voters have also signed the
petition.
Even if you have signed our first petition (prior to
August 1, 2006), or signed up for our mailing list we still need your signature
for this petition, as all signatures will be presented to our Elected
Officials.
To sign the petition, please <<click here>>
Thank you for your support.

Follow up – Re:
The Zoning Commission Public Hearing
Dear Simsbury Resident and
SHARE Supporter:
Here is a long email…
please stick with us and read it through.
We’d like to follow
up on last Monday night’s public hearing regarding the Zoning Commission’s
amendments to the Town Zoning Regulations. <<Click here to read more>>
Zoning Proposal Stirs Heated Debate
By Diane Struzzi, Hartford Courant - October 17 2006
SIMSBURY --
Residents sent a strong message to the zoning commission Monday night: Do more research
before moving forward on a proposal to change the zoning regulations.
The public hearing at Eno Memorial Hall drew more than 100 and became
contentious at times, as residents tried to speak over the three-minute limit
set by the zoning commission. They voiced their opposition to big-box retailers
and said they feared losing the bucolic character of Simsbury. <<Click here to read more>>
River Oaks: Big Change Or Big Box?
Rick Green, Hartford
Courant - September 26 2006
If somebody mentions "new urbanism" or "smart growth"
again, I'm going to spit up my double cap decaf latte.
What about developers who just do the right thing - who think about traffic and
congestion and the values of a community at the same time they think about
lining their pockets?
<<Click here to read more>>
Proposed Zoning Revision Prompts
Big-Box Fears
Diane Struzzi, Hartford Courant - September 20 2006
SIMSBURY -- A proposed change to the town's zoning regulations that supports
mixed-use development has spurred concern among a homeowners' organization
opposed to big-box retail developments. <<Click here to read more>>
Reality Of Big
Boxes
Hartford Courant Editorial – July 30, 2006
In “A Kinder, Gentler
Big Box?” [July 23, Place Section], columnist Tom Condon asks, “Can a big box
be part of an appealing mixed-use development?” There are two answers: a
theoretical “maybe”, but a realistic “no.” <<Click here to read more>>
Highway to the
Danger Zone
The battle over River Oaks, a
big-box development in Simsbury,
will be fought before the Zoning Commission
Nathan Conz, The Hartford
Advocate – July
27, 2006
Monday night, there was an elephant in the room at a special
meeting of the Simsbury Zoning Commission.
That elephant was the pending creation of River Oaks, a
mixed-use, big-box development planned by Konover Development Corporation on
land off Hopmeadow Street
near the Avon border.
A large, vocal citizens group,
Simsbury Homeowners Advocating Responsible Expansion (SHARE), opposes the
development and, on Monday, they joined Zoning Commission members, a handful of
other town officials and one devilishly handsome reporter to fill a conference
room. <<Click here to read more>>
The Myth Of Big Bucks And Big Box
Developments
Tom Sevigny,
Hartford Courant - July 23 2006
I recently had the pleasure
of attending a SHARE (Simsbury Homeowners Advocating Responsible Expansion)
sponsored forum on River Oaks, the proposed big box development - or should I
say lifestyle center - on Route 10. <<Click here to read more>>