Library will resubmit plans later this year

SHARON — Khurshed Bhumgara, head of the Hotchkiss Library’s building committee and a member of its board, is not giving up. Despite the decision the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) made in June to reject plans to renovate and expand the Hotchkiss Library, Bhumgara said the library will not change its plans and will go back to the ZBA some time in the winter.

According to ZBA regulations, a rejected application can be resubmitted after six months.

“We’re taking it one step at a time,� Bhumgara said. “In the meantime, we’re planning to have an informal meeting with the Planning and Zoning Commission to go over the plans and design. We have not heard back from them yet, so nothing has been scheduled.�

The Historic District Commission has already given the library preliminary approval for its plan to expand the historic building on the Green.

Before the plan can be submitted to the Planning and Zoning Commission, the library first needs permission from the  ZBA to expand its lot coverage.

The library currently covers 12 percent of its lot; if the new plans are approved, the library would cover about 29 percent of its lot, which is more than is allowed in the historic district.

“This project is not for the board of the library or the ZBA, this project is for the benefit of Sharon and its residents,� Bhumgara said. “What we are going to do is not about changing minds, it’s about trying to make people understand what we are presenting. I think there was a lot of misunderstanding on [the ZBA’s] part.�

As for any ideas for relocating the library, Bhumgara said there are no immediate plans.

“One of our board members came up with the idea of moving the library over to where Trotta’s Market [in Sharon Plaza] was, but I don’t think it’s going to happen,� he said. “There’s always a possibility that the library could be moved, but you would need ZBA approval, court approval, et cetera.�

In November 2008, the Connecticut State Library Board gave the library a grant of $1,000,000 for the expansion project.

“Even though we didn’t get approval for the project, the state gives us 18 months from November to get it approved,� Bhumgara said. “The state has been helpful and all of the departments have been supportive. The library board feels happy with our plan and there is unity on the board about that.�

The library building was built more than a century ago and was donated by Maria Bissell Hotchkiss to the town, for use as a library, in 1893.

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