Letters to the Editor - The Lakeville Journal - 12-9-21

Permit should not be approved

We represent a large group of concerned Lakeville residents who want to alert the greater Salisbury Community to a pending permit before the Salisbury Planning and Zoning Commission that would allow for commercialization of our rural residential area.

Park B. Smith, who resides at 119/121 Long Pond Road, is seeking a Special Permit under the category of “Philanthropic Use” to allow him to utilize his residentially zoned property “as destination and retreat area.” He envisions events such as cooking classes, choral events, goat yoga, conferences, retreats for 30-60 attendees or more, and Sunday dinners among other activities. These commercial events, which are not allowable under current RR-1 zoning regulations without a special permit, will bring traffic, noise, odors, lights, among other disruptions and safety considerations to our otherwise quiet, residential area. Those living near Lion Rock Farm, in Sharon, know all too well of the deleterious impact of an event venue on a wide swath of surrounding neighbors who must contend with noise late into the evening.

Our concern is that Mr. Smith’s application will not only have a significant negative impact on our neighborhood but will also set a precedent for our larger community by opening the door to other Special Permit applications that would allow activities that are otherwise prohibited under current zoning rules. If his application is approved, how could anyone predict the ways in which special permits may be used in the future and what might be coming next door to them? If residential land in our quiet section of Lakeville is allowed to morph into a commercial event venue, it can happen in yours too. 

As Don Poland Consulting noted in the 2009 Town of Salisbury Land Use Administrative Procedures Review Findings and Recommendations, “confidence is the currency that real estate values are based on. If residents, property owners, and businesses are not confident, they will not invest their time, money and effort in the community.” 

Because neither the application nor the applicant provided details about the size or scope of proposed activities, the exact nature or frequency of events, a site plan, or the impact on wetlands and endangered species on the applicant’s property, generally leaving a significant number of crucial details and questions unanswered during the October 18th hearing, the Commission granted a continuation on this application until December 13th.

For the above reasons including safety, traffic, noise, disruption of wetlands and endangered species, we urge the Planning and Zoning Commission to deny the Smith application when it is presented on Monday, and we implore the residents of Salisbury to join with neighbors in opposition to this precedent setting matter.  Let’s keep the charming, picturesque, peaceful, and safe character of Salisbury’s residentially zoned areas intact. We are at a crucial crossroads in the growth of Salisbury. The community’s vocal engagement in the public zoning process will help to ensure the beauty, rural nature and predictability of land usage in our community remains.  See www.salisburyct.us for Zoom access on Monday, December 13th.

Steve Aresty

Barbara Maltby

Beth Simon & Beth Greenberg, MD

Kathy Stratton & The Stratton Family

Carol Vargo & Rob Blanchard

Steve Meersma

David Maltby

Ken Fields & Nikki Noya

Barbara & Lawrence A. Inra, MD

Rob & Barbara Bettigole

Robert Clark

Lee Crawford & David Mallison

Jennie Baird & Christophe Armero

Stephanie & John Reckler

Lauren & Peter Lese

Cameron Marshall & Nicole Metzger

Dennis Mincieli

Trish & John Stimpson

M.E. Freeman

John Willey & Rick Aronstein

Peter & Kelly Tuthill

Cindy & David Edelson

Jeffrey Crampton

Virginia Iles

Veronika & Todd Bromberg

Laura Geer

Emily Elliott, VMD & Peter Houghton

Jack & Joyce Finkelstein

Alicia & Ron Flaum

Veronika & Todd Bromberg

Katie & Dana Syracuse

Bill & Sue Kirber

David Allee

Marcia Dodson

Bill Yarnell

Ellen Zimmer

Lakeville

 

Killing beauty: official reasons must be known

I am writing to express my D.E.E.P. concerns (pun intended) over the recent cutting of trees in Housatonic Meadows Park Picnic Area. I have frequented the park most every day for the past 10 years walking my dog.  A couple of months ago I noticed many trees along the riverside picnic area as well as along the internal roadway had been ‘marked’ with red paint.  Never was any notice to the general public posted in the park about the intended activity that the ‘marking’ of trees signified.

This member of the general public would have been very interested to be ‘officially’ made aware of the assessed conditions of such beautiful trees in such a beautiful location and the reasons behind the judgment to cut them. I would have appreciated the professional respect due the general public when a radical alteration of such a well regarded and beautiful public resource is contemplated and planned by a Conn. State agency. The cutting of these beautiful trees without any prior public outreach has caused a shock wave of distrust and resentment locally.

Contrast this abhorrent conduct with that of a fisherman’s ritual I observed just this morning in Housatonic Meadows Park: The steady left hand held the polished wooden handle and slowly lifted the dark green cotton net up from the surface of the river. The medium-sized trout lay underwater just a smidge, almost still, but not quite, its lithe body following the inside curve of the net. The fisherman’s free right hand gently followed the fishline into the mouth of the fish and ever so delicately retrieved the barbed hook. The net was then slowly lowered as the trout regained its mobility and once again its independence.

I have seen this ritual play out hundreds of times in the Housatonic River in Housatonic Meadows Park. It exemplifies such care given by anglers to the source of their pleasure, such consideration given to the beauty they cherish and such respect for a resource they share.

This morning’s ritual, however, took place just across the river from arboreal carnage. Where there used to be, up until a few weeks ago, beautiful towering oaks — there is now a score of naked stumps and rough piles of dead limbs.  The river whispers (and sometimes roars) were bludgeoned into irrelevance by the 100 decibel mechanical monsters of ‘civilization’.  The 3000 years of collective growth rings have been sawed and chipped into oblivion.

No notice was given to the public of this impending slaughter. No justification proffered to the public for this arboreal butchery. ‘Civilization’ becomes an interrogative at such times.

Michael Moschen

Cornwall Bridge

 

What is seen on a cold December night

Once upon a time the cold December night

Was filled throughout the town with lovely Christmas light

But that was long ago. Now it seems there is a blight

An awful faded bluish light.

No doubt someone’s grand insight

Convinced them this would be the height

Of beauty and indeed it might

Fill us with joyful delight

But somehow it does not seem quite

What it takes to do the job … right.

Cheers and good night

Peter Fitting

Salisbury

 

Sad looking trees in Lakeville and Salisbury

In this Christmas season the Board of the Chamber of Commerce decided to go “solar” to light the many Christmas trees bordering Route 44…It was a joyful tradition, gone!

They are now invisible, blue(!), sad like a sinister funeral.

Etienne Delessert

Lakeville

 

Reauthorize the Highlands Conservation Act now

The Highlands Conservation Act is the most significant and reliable source of federal land protection funding in our region.  It represents a model of public / private partnership, saving more than 3,800 acres in Northwest Connecticut to date and leveraging Congress’s investment with more than 2:1 in matching state, municipal and private contributions. The Highlands Conservation Act is revitalizing local economies while also promoting conservation, tourism, wildlife, and recreation.

The vast majority of Highlands transactions in Connecticut have helped our local land trusts protect special places in our communities by matching Open Space Watershed and Land Acquisition (OSWA) grants from the state with Highlands funded easements. These include conservation lands in Canaan/Falls Village, Cornwall, Goshen, Kent, , Norfolk, Salisbury, Sharon, Sherman, Simsbury, Torrington, Warren, Washington and Winchester.

Two bills that will reauthorize and enhance the Highlands Conservation Act are working their way through the House and Senate and enjoy bipartisan support.  Senator Chris Murphy is the sponsor of S753 – The Highlands Conservation Act Reauthorization Bill - which has been reported favorably out of Committee.   It awaits similar action in the House on Representative Sean Patrick Maloney’s companion legislation H.R. 2793 so it can come to a floor vote. It is vital that it move forward, because in addition to reauthorizing the Highlands Conservation Act, these bills will:

• Increase the annual appropriation for the HCA from $10 million to $20 million;

• Provide a mechanism for Highlands states (PA / NJ / NY and CT) to petition the USFWS to change (expand) the Highlands boundary.   In Connecticut, this could mean extending HCA eligibility to the rest of Litchfield County and additional parts of New Haven and Fairfield Counties.  In New York, this could mean adding more Highlands communities in the Ten Mile River Valley, which currently only includes Pawling and Beacon;

• Allows updates to Highlands Study and associated maps using best available data from the Highlands States rather than requiring a new Forest Service updated study.

• Allows states like New Jersey that have laws in conflict with the federal appraisal standards to petition for an alternate appraisal method that would comply with state law.

• Provide the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service its state agency partners with appropriate funding to help efficiently administer grants and get more land protected.

We need Congress to act to bring the Highlands Conservation Act Reauthorization Act to a vote so that this highly effective and valuable program can continue to serve the conservation needs of our region. I am grateful to Senator Murphy for his leadership and Richard Blumenthal for his co-sponsorship of S. 753.  I am likewise inspired by Representative Larson, Courtney, Himes and Hayes of Connecticut’s House delegation, all of whom have cosponsored H.R. 2793. Let’s get this done!

Timothy Abbott

North Canaan

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