2006-06-21
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
FIRST REGULAR MEETING
JUNE 21, 2006
INDEX
Area Variance No. 8-2006 David R. Kelly, M.D. & Sally N. Kelly 1.
Tax Map No. 239.15-1-3
Area Variance No. 46-2005 Jean M. Hoffman 2.
RE-HEARING 227.17-1-9.11
Area Variance No. 34-2006 Bruce Lant 40.
Tax Map No. 295.19-3-68
Area Variance No. 35-2006 LeRoy & Katharine Cormie 45.
Tax Map No. 301.18-1-71
Area Variance No. 66-2005 Clute Enterprises 50.
Tax Map No.295.14-1-21
THESE ARE NOT OFFICIALLY ADOPTED MINUTES AND ARE SUBJECT TO BOARD
AND STAFF REVISIONS. REVISIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING
MONTHS MINUTES (IF ANY) AND WILL STATE SUCH APPROVAL OF SAID
MINUTES.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
FIRST REGULAR MEETING
JUNE 21, 2006
7:00 P.M.
MEMBERS PRESENT
CHARLES ABBATE, CHAIRMAN
JAMES UNDERWOOD, SECRETARY
JOYCE HUNT
LEWIS STONE
ALLAN BRYANT
CHARLES MC NULTY
ROY URRICO
ZONING ADMINISTRATOR-CRAIG BROWN
TOWN COUNSEL-MILLER, MANNIX, SCHACHNER, & HAFNER-CATHI RADNER
STENOGRAPHER-SUE HEMINGWAY
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Secretary, do we have any correspondence, and if so, would you
please read it into the record?
MR. UNDERWOOD-We had a request received late this afternoon, and that was for the
first item on the agenda this evening, and that was Clute Enterprises. “Due to a conflict
with other Board meetings tonight, I will not be able to be at the Queensbury Zoning
Board at seven. Could you please move the Clute application to last on the agenda, so
that I may be able to fulfill my obligation to this client, and so that I may attend my other
Board meetings tonight. Thank you, Matt Steves”
MR. ABBATE-Okay. So those folks who are here to hear, under Old Business, Clute
Enterprises, Area Variance No. 66-2005, I’ll bring it to your attention, the Secretary
brought it to your attention, the fact that we are going to be moving that to last this
evening. It will be heard this evening, but it will be last. We will honor his request.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 8-2006 SEQRA TYPE: II DAVID R. KELLY, MD & SALLY N.
KELLY AGENT(S): JONATHAN C. LAPPER, ESQ. OWNER(S): DAVID R. KELLY &
SALLY N. KELLY ZONING: WR-3A LOCATION: 8 ROCKY SHORE DRIVE
APPLICANTS PROPOSE DEMOLITION OF THE EXISTING 1,892 SQ. FT. TWO-
STORY SINGLE-FAMILY DWELLING ANDTO REBUILD A 2,662 TWO AND ONE-HALF
STORY SINGLE-FAMILY DWELLING. RELIEF REQUESTED FROM SHORELINE
SETBACK REQUIREMENTS. CROSS REF. BP 2002-854 DEMOLITION; BP 2002-855
DOCK; BP 2004-094 BOATHOUSE; SPR 57-2002; AV 8-2003; SPR 9-2003 WARREN
COUNTY PLANNING: FEBRUARY 8, 2006 ADIRONDACK PARK AGENCY: YES
LOT SIZE: 0.89 ACRES TAX MAP NO. 239.15-1-3 SECTION: 179-4-030
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MR. UNDERWOOD-The second letter was one received on the 15 of June, and that
was from Jon Lapper. This is for a future Area Variance, 8-2006. “Dear Chairman
Abbate: As you are aware, my clients are in the process of revising their applications
pursuant to the Board’s comments and suggestions which was communicated at the
February Zoning Board of Appeals meeting. Pursuant to my April 11, 2006 request, the
Board was kind enough to extend the tabling motion to provide for a June 15, 2006
submission deadline. Due to the additional information that is required in order to
redesign the project, I am requesting on behalf of the applicants a further extension of
the tabling motion to allow them until the September 15, 2006 to make a revised
submission. Jon Lapper”
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Board members, Counsel for Area Variance No. 8-2006, in a fax
letter dated June 14, 2006, has requested tabling, and the Secretary has read that
communication into the record. I will open the public hearing for Area Variance No. 8-
2006, if we have anyone who wishes to address that particular Area Variance.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MR. ABBATE-I see no one in the public wanting to be acknowledged. Do any members
of the public wish to be heard? Apparently not. Hearing none, I move that we table Area
Variance No. 8-2006.
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MOTION TO TABLE AREA VARIANCE NO. 8-2006 DAVID R. KELLY, M.D. & SALLY
N. KELLY, Introduced by Charles Abbate who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Joyce Hunt:
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8 Rocky Shore Drive. To the 15 of September 2006 hearing date.
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Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Underwood, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Urrico, Mr. Stone, Mr. McNulty, Mrs. Hunt,
Mr. Abbate
NOES: NONE
MR. ABBATE-The vote is seven yes, zero no to table Area Variance No. 8-2006. Area
Variance No. 8-2006 is tabled to the 15 September 2006 hearing date. We have one
other bit of administrative function to do this evening, gentlemen, ladies and gentlemen
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of the Board, and effective this year, the 16 of March, this Board, in its wisdom, moved
a motion for Use, Area, and Sign Variance applications for the Town of Queensbury to
include a survey map, which was a good thing. At our last Staff meeting, which I was
present at, and the Chairman of the Planning Board was present at, as well as a number
of Staff were present, it was decided that perhaps it might be good to add a sentence
immediately after the first sentence, to include as follows “The survey map must contain
a stamp and signature of the licensed professional engineer or licensed professional
land surveyor preparing the survey map and the date prepared”. So I offer a motion to
amend the Area, Use, and Sign Variance applications for the Town of Queensbury
Zoning Board of Appeals.
MOTION TO AMEND THE AREA, USE, AND SIGN VARIANCE APPLICATIONS FOR
THE TOWN OF QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS WHICH WE
APPROVED ON FEBRUARY 15, 2006 AS FOLLOWS: ADD TO PARAGRAPH ONE,
IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE FIRST SENTENCE, “THE SURVEY MAP MUST CONTAIN
A STAMP AND SIGNATURE OF THE LICENSED PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER OR
LICENSED PROFESSIONAL LAND SURVEYOR PREPARING A SURVEY MAP, AND
THE DATE PREPARED”., Introduced by Charles Abbate who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Joyce Hunt:
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Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Underwood, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Urrico, Mr. McNulty, Mrs. Hunt, Mr. Abbate
NOES: NONE
ABSTAINED: Mr. Stone
MR. ABBATE-The vote is six yes, with one abstention. The motion is passed. This
change is effective 10 July 2006, all other provisions remain in effect. Thank you, ladies
and gentlemen of the Zoning Board of Appeals. Mr. Secretary, would you be kind
enough to read into the record Area Variance No. 46-2005.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 46-2005 REHEARING SEQRA TYPE: II JEAN M. HOFFMAN
AGENT(S): WILLIAM J. KENIRY, ESQ. OWNER(S): JEAN M. HOFFMAN ZONING
WR-1A LOCATION 159 CLEVERDALE ROAD APPLICANT HAS CONSTRUCTED
AN 1,170 SQ. FT. BOATHOUSE WITH 978 SQ. FT. SUNDECK AND SEEKS 3.5 FT. OF
RELIEF FROM THE MAXIMUM HEIGHT REQUIREMENTS FOR SUCH
STRUCTURES. CROSS REF. AV 46-2005; SPR 38-2005; AV 90-2004; SPR 50-2001;
SUB. NO. 15-2003; AV 91-2001; SPR 15-2001; AV 30-2001; SUB. NO. 14-1999; AV 60-
1999 WARREN COUNTY PLANNING MAY 10, 2006 ADIRONDACK PARK AGENCY
YES LOT SIZE 3.43 ACRES TAX MAP NO. 227.17-1-9.11 SECTION 179-5-050
WILLIAM J. KENIRY, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
MR. ABBATE-Would the petitioner of Area Variance No. 46-2005 please approach the
table, speak into the microphone, and for the record identify yourself, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-I guess I could read back some of the history on this, if people want
me to, again. Otherwise, I’ll just read the Staff notes regarding this project. In the
interim, we have received a couple of significant submissions, and I’m sure you’re going
to cover those this evening, also, but again, the project was commenced in 2001, and at
the time that the project was completed, it was determined that the building was over
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
height, and that height variance is what being sought here this evening. The original
Code specifies a 14 foot height maximum, and this Board had granted one foot of relief.
So it should have come in at 15 feet. So we’re still talking a discrepancy, and the
building itself is compliant, as we said. It’s the railings up on top that are non-compliant.
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 46-2005, Jean M. Hoffman, Meeting Date: May 17,
2006, “Project Location: 159 Cleverdale Road Description of Proposed Project: The
applicant has constructed an 1170 sq. ft. boathouse, with a 978 sq. ft. sundeck, at 17.5-
feet high. The applicant proposes to reduce the size of the sundeck to 700 sq. ft.
Relief Required:
The applicant requests 3.5 feet of relief from the 14-foot maximum height requirement,
per §179-5-050(A10).
Parcel History (construction/site plan/variance, etc.):
SP 50-2001 Mod: 11/23/04, approved with conditions, for boathouse with 978 sq. ft. roof
(remove land bridge).
AV 90-2004: 11/17/04, approved with conditions, 1-foot of height relief for boathouse no
sundeck (remove railings).
BP 2002-142: 04/08/02, 1,170 sq. ft. boathouse with 700 sq. ft. sundeck.
SP 50-2001: 11/27/01, 1,170 sq. ft. boathouse with 700 sq. ft. sundeck.
AV 91-2001: 11/15/01, size relief for a 1,170 sq. ft. boathouse.
Staff comments:
The applicant has submitted previous application materials for AV 46-2005 and AV 90-
2004, elevation drawings illustrating the existing condition and the proposed, and an
investigative report by Leonard Fiore, a NYS Certified Appraiser, who researched the
surrounding areas and examined the suitability of the boathouse as it pertains to the
issue of height.
On April 19, 2006, the Board approved the applicant’s request to rehear AV 46-2005;
“With the Counsel’s statement that the contractor would testify if this was reheard, and
this was, an issue of contractor error” (see resolution to rehear).
AV 46-2005 was denied on July 20, 2005, for a 700 sq. ft. sundeck, 17.5-feet high (see
resolution). The same amount of relief as sought in AV 90-2004, with the offer to reduce
the size of the sundeck from 928 sq. ft. to 700 sq. ft.
AV 90-2004 application was for a 928 sq. ft. sundeck, 17.5-feet high. The Board granted
approval (11/17/04) for a 15-foot high structure (1-foot of height relief)”
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Counselor, would you identify yourself
and your client, please.
MR. KENIRY-Yes, Mr. Chairman, William J. Keniry, Tabner, Ryan & Keniry, LLP.,
attorneys on behalf of Mrs. Hoffman, who’s here with me in person tonight.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Before we start, Counselor, you certainly are entitled to
have at your own request deposition services, and I see that there is, this evening Martin
Deposition Services, Inc. and that you’re requesting your own transcript, but I must say,
for the record, and I want it clearly understood, that, and I want to enforce the fact, that
only the minutes of the Zoning Board of Appeals are the official record of this hearing,
not the transcript that you’re doing. Do we agree?
MR. KENIRY-That is understood, Mr. Chairman.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much. Please proceed.
MR. KENIRY-Okay. Mr. Chairman, members of the Board, respectfully, I look at the
result from the last meeting, in the nature of a commitment that we made to all of you in
connection with that vote, and that is that the contractor, Mr. Creede, is required to be
here. So I am calling him as the first witness and asking to proceed with him at this time.
MR. ABBATE-Question, Counselor, do you represent Mr. Creede?
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MR. KENIRY-I do not.
MR. ABBATE-Does he have retained counsel?
MR. KENIRY-You certainly could ask him. That I don’t know.
MR. ABBATE-Well, before we proceed I really would like him to come up to the table and
ask him that question. Would you mind calling your witness please?
MR. KENIRY-I do not. Mr. John Creede, please.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Creede, would you be kind enough to tell us your name and your place
of residence, and your profession, please.
JOHN CREEDE
MR. CREEDE-Good evening. John Creede, Pro Built Docks. I build docks and
boathouses.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Now, Mr. Creede, do you have a retained attorney?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. ABBATE-You have not. Well, I raise this issue, in view of the fact that it’s my
intention to swear you under oath this evening, and I’m going to offer you an opportunity,
if you wish, to consult with an attorney who is sitting next to you concerning the
ramifications of providing sworn testimony in this proceedings, and I will offer you the
opportunity to take a ten minute recess, if you wish, and I would strongly urge you to take
that option and speak to counselor concerning the ramifications of being sworn under
oath. Would you like a ten minute recess?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. ABBATE-You would not? Okay. Let the record show that Mr. Creede was offered a
10 minute recess to communicate with counsel and he felt that it was not necessary. Mr.
Creede, would you do me a favor, please. I’m going to swear you under oath, and here’s
what I would like you to do. I would like you to stand. Then I’m going to ask you to raise
your right hand and repeat after me. Fair enough?
MR. CREEDE-Okay. I do have a question.
MR. ABBATE-By all means.
MR. CREEDE-Bible?
MR. ABBATE-We don’t need a bible.
MR. CREEDE-Okay. Is this a court of law?
MR. ABBATE-This is a quasi-judicial board. That’s why I suggested, sir, you consult with
counsel before you’re sworn under oath.
MR. CREEDE-Just a question, sir.
MR. ABBATE-Are you prepared?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Please stand. Please raise your right hand. I, state your full
name.
MR. CREEDE-I, John M. Creede.
MR. ABBATE-Do solemnly swear to tell the truth.
MR. CREEDE-Do solemnly swear to tell the truth.
MR. ABBATE-The whole truth.
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MR. CREEDE-The whole truth.
MR. ABBATE-And nothing but the truth.
MR. CREEDE-And nothing but the truth.
MR. ABBATE-So help me God.
MR. CREEDE-So help me God.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Creede, consider yourself under oath. Now, I’m going to ask the first
question concerning your witness, counsel. Mr. Creede, for the record, have you
received or been offered or promised any type of compensation for your testimony?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No. Thank you very much. Members of the Board, would you prefer to
proceed, Counsel?
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Chairman, respectfully, I certainly am prepared to proceed, and I mean
the pleasure certainly is yours. I had anticipated that in all likelihood what you would be
inclined toward would be a direct examination style question and answer, affording the
witness, obviously, with an opportunity to answer the questions, and then to some
extent, I’m open to whatever procedure you’d prefer. If you wish to each individually ask
of the witness, you could ask him if he has any objection, but I don’t have any objection
to that format. That seems to be the most efficient.
MR. ABBATE-Sure, and you know what, Counselor, I’m going to honor that. So I’m
going to proceed to the next step and I’m going to ask members of this Board if they
have any questions for either Counsel or Mr. Creede.
MR. KENIRY-But aren’t we going to do the, the format is to ask him the questions and
have him make the answers and then you can ask all of your questions, right?
MR. UNDERWOOD-Sure.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, by all means.
MR. KENIRY-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Bryant, please.
MR. BRYANT-Thank you, Mr. Chairman. During the process, I guess you’re here
primarily to testify that you made an error, and the dock was higher than you anticipated.
Is that correct?
MR. CREEDE-I did not make an error, sir.
MR. KENIRY-Can I do my direct examination so that his testimony is out there, and then
you can ask him the questions?
MR. ABBATE-Well, one thing, Counselor, you’re not going to coach your witness.
MR. KENIRY-No.
MR. ABBATE-I’m telling you right now you’re not going to coach your witness because
it’s my opinion that he is an adult. He is mature. Unless you have some medical
evidence or other evidence to provide to this Board, I consider him to be competent.
MR. KENIRY-I don’t know that he’s anything other than fully competent, and I think we’re
prepared, at this point, to proceed with our direct examination with respect to the proof of
our case. My respectful suggestion, format wise, just to some extent for efficiency, and
I’m looking for some direction, if this is your pleasure, but my sense was that there would
be a direct examination of him, a formal question and answer, so that you could elicit the
proof, and then you would each and all then be able to ask him any questions that you
wish.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MS. RADNER-Mr. Chairman, if I may clarify. When an attorney says direct examination,
what they’re normally talking about isn’t leading questions, but asking questions as they
would of their own witness, so they’re going to ask general questions and give Mr.
Creede an opportunity to explain what happened, but by asking him open-ended
questions lead him to that extent, but in a direct examination setting one isn’t permitted
to ask the, when did you start beating your wife sort of leading questions. This is a
quasi-judicial proceeding. It is not a formal court of law. So the rules are relaxed. You,
as the Chairman, do direct the format that’s taken tonight. I believe, and Mr. Keniry can
correct me if I’m wrong, I believe what Mr. Keniry is suggesting, though, is that typical to
what normally occurs, he’ll help Mr. Creede make the initial presentation, and then allow
the Board to cross examine, in a general sense, and ask additional questions to fill out
the record.
MR. ABBATE-What is the Board’s pleasure?
MR. BRYANT-I have a number of questions that I’ve outlined that I’d like to ask the
contractor. If it would go a little bit quicker and be a little bit more complete for the
Counsel to ask the contractor the questions and make his presentation and then allow us
the opportunity to ask questions as a result of the information, I’ve got no problem with
that.
MR. ABBATE-Gentlemen on this end?
MR. STONE-It’s fine with me.
MR. MC NULTY-It makes sense to me. I think probably the attorney has got some
questions lined up in the logical order, which we might not follow if we were to shotgun
questions from the Board.
MR. ABBATE-Fair enough. Folks at this end.
MR. URRICO-I have no problem with it, if we were to find out as much information as we
can.
MR. ABBATE-Then we will follow your format as suggested, Counselor.
MR. KENIRY-Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Proceed. Go ahead.
MR. KENIRY-Thank you. Would you please state your name, your residence, address,
for the record.
MR. CREEDE-John Creede, Kattskill Bay.
MR. KENIRY-And, Mr. Creede, are you currently employed?
MR. CREEDE-Self-employed.
MR. KENIRY-And who is your employer?
MR. CREEDE-Self.
MR. KENIRY-And what do you do?
MR. CREEDE-I take great pride in building quality docks and boathouses.
MR. KENIRY-All right. Can you describe for us what the nature of your work is?
MR. CREEDE-I like to try to create something original. I like to make each and every job
different from the previous job that I had been at. That involves work, a lot of work,
working with wood.
MR. KENIRY-What do you build?
MR. CREEDE-Crib docks and custom boathouses.
MR. KENIRY-All right, and for how long have you been so employed?
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MR. CREEDE-Since 1987.
MR. KENIRY-And since 1987, can you give us some general estimate of the number of
docks that you’ve constructed?
MR. CREEDE-I would say in the neighborhood, between 75 and 85.
MR. KENIRY-And can you describe for the members of the Board, for their benefit,
generally where have you undertaken your professional work over the course of the
years since 1987?
MR. CREEDE-Mostly in Kattskill Bay, some in Pilot Knob, some in Cleverdale, a few in
Northwest Point, some in Assembly Point, some near the Village of Lake George, and
we are currently working on one up in Hague.
MR. KENIRY-Now did there come a point in time, in connection with the performance of
your professional duties, when you first became acquainted with the applicant in this
case, Mrs. Hoffman?
MR. CREEDE-I believe we met through word of mouth, through neighbors and previous
customers.
MR. KENIRY-And in connection with your becoming acquainted with Mrs. Hoffman, did
there come a point in time when you had occasion to discuss with her a possible project?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-And when was that?
MR. CREEDE-I’m going to say in the neighborhood of Winter of 2001.
MR. KENIRY-And can you describe, for the benefit of the members of the Board, maybe
not word for word, but the sum and substance of what was discussed with her at that
time?
MR. CREEDE-She wanted me to use my imagination. She wanted me to come up with
something unlike anything else that’s existing on the Lake. She wanted me to make it
look like it’s always been part of the Lake.
MR. KENIRY-And did there come a point in time in your conversations with Mrs.
Hoffman when you obtained certain plans and specifications?
MR. CREEDE-I received plans through the Queensbury Building and Codes.
MR. KENIRY-How did that come about and when?
MR. CREEDE-Spring of 2002. I went and picked them up through the Building and
Codes Department at Queensbury.
MR. KENIRY-All right. Now when you picked up the plans, was it here at the Town Hall?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-Okay. When you picked up the plans, what, if anything, did you do?
MR. CREEDE-I studied them in great detail.
MR. KENIRY-Can you describe, for the benefit of the members of the Board, what did
your study consist of?
MR. CREEDE-I had to visit the site. It wasn’t the first time. It was an existing crib dock of
solid construction that I had to remove. I had to orientate the structure to meet setbacks.
Then I wanted to orientate it in such a way that it would meet with the existing white
cedar trees which ultimately the boathouse is constructed with, and still meet setback,
which we did. Scaled out the drawings and just proceeded forward from there.
MR. KENIRY-Let me ask you this, in connection with the plans that you received from
the Town, and the study that you undertook. Did you understand the plans and
specifications at the time that you had received them?
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MR. CREEDE-Not entirely.
MR. KENIRY-All right. When you say not entirely, why do you say that?
MR. CREEDE-Because the plans that I received from the Building and Codes were
unlike any scale that I was familiar with.
MR. KENIRY-All right, can you tell, to some extent in layman’s terms, describe for us
what you mean when you say that, to the best of your ability.
MR. CREEDE-Usually, I go by one eighth of an inch equals one foot. The plans that I
was provided with had no illustrated scale on any of the schematics. So, I knew that the
cribs were going to be six feet in width. So I used that as a benchmark or a baseline,
and re-scaled it out to an eighth of an inch equals six feet. The plans that I was provided
with, if you scaled that out, it came out to be seven eights of an inch wide, as opposed to
an inch equals six feet.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Creede, for purposes of certainty amongst the members of the Board
and their record, are the plans that you’re referring to and that you have in your
possession today and that you received from the Town plans and specifications that are
stamped by Ivan Zhdrahal, licensed professional engineer, State of New York with the
title, Lands of Hoffman, Cleverdale, NY, March 6, 2002 and consisting of three numbered
sheets?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-And those are the plans that you received?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-All right. After you received the plans, after you studied the plans, what did
you then next do?
MR. CREEDE-Well, proceeded to remove the existing dock and build the crib dock,
which took six months alone to do.
MR. KENIRY-For the removal portion?
MR. CREEDE-No. For the removal, we kind of did two things at once. We removed the
existing and used the existing stone to re-fill the cribs, or to fill the new cribs that will
ultimately support the boathouse.
MR. KENIRY-Can you describe for the members of the Board the total length of this
project, in terms of how long it took you to do it, and perhaps give them some
understanding, in terms of time, of how long each stage took you to accomplish each
stage of your work?
MR. CREEDE-I can give you the, roughly one year, two months, two weeks from start to
finish. It wasn’t until September or October of 2003, I believe, that we were actually
starting the boathouse, and from there, that’s, from that point, we concentrated on
working on the boathouse.
MR. KENIRY-Okay. Could you generally describe for the members of the Board how the
construction progressed? But I am directing you to focus on the issue with respect to the
height of the improvement.
MR. CREEDE-I don’t quite understand your question.
MR. KENIRY-Can you describe for the members of the Board the progress of the
construction, specifically with respect to building the improvement up from the water?
Tell them what you did.
MR. CREEDE-Well, considering that I had to work with non-dimensional material.
MR. KENIRY-Is that significant?
MR. CREEDE-It’s even more significant that I had to work with whole trees with bark on
it, as opposed to logs, where there is some consistency. With these, there is variations
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and deviations, and many other factors, and it was very challenging to get everything to
blend, to work right, to become level, straight, to become level, straight.
MR. KENIRY-Can you describe, in layman’s terms, the significance of the distinction on
a project of this nature, when you build the improvement using non-dimensional material
as opposed to dimensional lumber?
MR. CREEDE-Well, dimensional number is two by two, six by six, eight by eight, etc.
Very straightforward to work with. With non-dimensional, logs or trees as we work with,
there is a great deal of compensation that has to take place. For instance, each upright
had to be culped, in other words, soddle-notched on the top to support the bearing
beams which will hold trees. We tried to blend all these trees together, bearing beam
wise, uprights, angle braces, to all make it look like it’s growing together, but there’s a lot
of compensations, deviations to overcome. There’s hips and height differences.
Everything has to be notched to try to get to the ultimate height of the boathouse.
Dimensional lumber, like I said, it’s pretty straightforward what has to be done. You
determine your height, cut it to length, etc., etc. That’s the best way I can explain it to
you.
MR. BRYANT-Mr. Chairman, may I ask a question?
MR. ABBATE-You can ask me a question.
MR. BRYANT-I want to ask you a question. I don’t understand whether or not this
portion of the testimony is even germane to what, you know, this is not the first building
that was ever built with trees.
MR. CREEDE-Yes, it is.
MR. ABBATE-Excuse me. Counsel, caution your witness. We have procedures here.
MR. BRYANT-I’m asking you a serious question. The issue in my mind, and according
to the motions that were made in the previous hearings, were relative to the contractor’s
error in the project, okay. The fact that it took a year to build and the fact that they used
non-dimensional lumber doesn’t address that issue.
MR. ABBATE-Let me respond this way. Counsel has every right to introduce whatever
evidence he thinks might be relevant to his case, and he has that right and we have the
obligation to hear it.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Can I make a comment?
MR. ABBATE-Yes, by all means, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-All right. I think what he’s trying to do is to differentiate between
conventional building and log building, as I have previously tried to do with the Board
members, too, and I think in this instance here, our reason for having Mr. Creede show
up this evening was so that he could explain the process, as I had previously tried to do
to the Board members, and I think that it’s pertinent to the case and I think that we
should allow them to continue. You’re going to have a question and answer period
afterwards.
MR. ABBATE-And we will allow you to continue. So please proceed.
MR. KENIRY-And maybe I can try to ask the question in a better manner. I’m trying to
focus on height. Mr. Creede, can you explain for the members of the Board how the use
of the natural material is different, as compared to the use of dimensional lumber,
specifically with respect to the issue of the height of the improvement.
MR. CREEDE-Well, again, there are variations that have to be overcome to get to the
ultimate height. The best way I can answer it for you is I took this drawing.
MR. KENIRY-Indicating Sheet Number One of Three.
MR. CREEDE-Scaled it out, to a familiar scale that I was used to working with,
determined the height of what the ultimate height of this drawing would be scaled out to,
and built it accordingly. That’s the best way I can explain it.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-What does it scale out to be? We don’t have the drawing, Mr. Chairman.
It’s not fair to address something that I can’t see.
MR. ABBATE-I know. Listen to me for a second, please.
MR. BRYANT-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-If you have questions, please write them down. I want Counsel to finish
the presentation and then, ladies and gentlemen of this Board, you may do and ask
whatever questions you wish. I think it will cause this to go a little faster, please.
MR. BRYANT-I apologize.
MR. ABBATE-That’s okay.
MR. KENIRY-Did there come a point in time when you identified some deficiencies with
respect to the scaling?
MR. CREEDE-Deficiencies as there was never an illustrated scale. So I did the best way
I know how to scale this out properly to duplicate exactly what was approved.
MR. KENIRY-What is the result of that lack of a scale on the plans? Can you describe
the result for the Board?
MR. CREEDE-Well, I could describe to you the ultimate result is it’s built within inches of
exactly what’s depicted in the drawing. I’m puzzled why the Building and Codes have
come up with such a gross height difference.
MS. RADNER-I’m going to object, because I know this isn’t a typical judicial setting, but
for the record, the Building Department doesn’t plan and design the project, and the fact
that the records came from them, I don’t want the record to appear to reflect the fact that
these are plans designed by the Town of Queensbury. They’re certainly not. I’m sorry, I
can’t help being a lawyer sometimes.
MR. ABBATE-To go one step further, later on, when you’re done with your presentation,
I certainly have some questions, I’d like our code enforcement officer to address some of
his complaints, if you will. So proceed.
MR. KENIRY-Can you describe for the members of the Board the significance of that
which is depicted on the plan, as far as the height is concerned, and the difference in the
height of the improvement and how that came about?
MR. CREEDE-Again, the best way I can explain it to you is that I built this thing to the
best of my ability to depict exactly what is on this drawing. As for the height difference, I
don’t understand exactly what it’s such a difference in what the Code Enforcements have
come up with.
MR. KENIRY-Let me ask you this. From time to time, in the course of constructing the
improvement, did you take certain measurements?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-With what frequency did you measure the height of the improvement?
MR. CREEDE-I established roughly the mean low water mark, which I derived from the
mean high water mark, which is roughly 30 inches in a higher elevation, and then I
calculated the height of each upright, as with respect to the thicknesses of the bearing
beams, and how the roof was going to end up, and ultimately the deck and railing
thicknesses. So, to answer your question, it was right from the beginning of the first
upright. Each upright had to be compensated for, the thicknesses in the bearing beam.
In other words, the bearing beams may end up as 18 inches on one end, and 8 or 10
inches on the other, and then they will go back from eight inches, where I tried to blend
them together, to maybe as much as twenty-four inches on the other end.
MR. KENIRY-What is the result of each of those instances where you must compensate?
MR. CREEDE-The result is, again, exactly what is depicted in the approved drawings.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. KENIRY-Well, let me ask you this. What significance, if any, is there with respect to
the plans and specifications, Sheet Number Two, where it depicts a 14 foot height from
the mean high water level?
MR. CREEDE-The way I scaled that number out, it is incorrectly illustrated. It’s closer to
16 foot 6.
MR. KENIRY-Why do you say that?
MR. CREEDE-Because the scale is an unfamiliar, it’s unfamiliar to what I’m used to
working with. In other words, the scale, it does not scale out correctly?
MR. KENIRY-And why is that?
MR. CREEDE-I do not know.
MR. KENIRY-All right. As a result of your finding that the plan did not scale correctly,
what, if anything, did you do?
MR. CREEDE-First of, I didn’t see it as a problem.
MR. KENIRY-Why?
MR. CREEDE-Because, again, ultimately, I was building exactly what was approved in
the drawing. It still worked out to be the same.
MR. KENIRY-Why do you say that?
MR. CREEDE-Again, I didn’t see it being a problem the way I was proceeding.
MR. KENIRY-Was that a determination that you, individually, made in the field as you
constructed the improvement?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-What consultation, if any, did you have with the owner, the applicant in this
hearing, in connection with the determination that you made?
MR. CREEDE-None.
MR. KENIRY-At any time, did Mrs. Hoffman or anyone on her behalf direct you to
construct anything other than that which is depicted on Sheets Number One, Two, and
Three?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. KENIRY-At any time, did Mrs. Hoffman or anyone on her behalf direct you to exceed
the limitations with regard to height as shown on the plans and specifications that we’ve
discussed tonight?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. KENIRY-Let me ask you this. With what frequency was the improvement inspected
by third parties, say, for instance, the Town? To your knowledge.
MR. CREEDE-To my knowledge, no one from the Town, except the two elderly women
from the Town Assessor’s Office, visited us on, I believe, two occasions.
MR. KENIRY-Did there come a point in time when the project was completed, when you
were later told that there was a problem with respect to the height?
MR. CREEDE-If my memory serves correct, it was over a year after we had finished.
MR. KENIRY-And, at that time, what, if anything, did you do when the problem was
brought to your attention?
MR. CREEDE-Well, initially I did nothing because I thought it was a joke or something
just wasn’t right, and later when I found that there was something going on, I had met
11
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
Mrs. Hoffman out in the Lake and offered my help in trying to clarify what I did and how I
built it.
MR. KENIRY-As you sit here today, do you believe that the reason for the height
differential is because of the judgment that you’ve exercised with respect to the scaling
of the 14 feet from the mean high water level?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-Did there come a point in time when you were asked to consider what
remedies, if any, may exist for the condition that was created?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-And when was that?
MR. CREEDE-Roughly speaking, I’m remembering somewhere in 2004, late.
MR. KENIRY-And at that time when you were asked to consider remedies, what, if
anything, did you do.
MR. CREEDE-Well, I did try to come up with a solution. I consider myself a good
problem solver with any type of building construction, and I really couldn’t come up with
anything without disturbing the integrity of everything as a whole. In other words, cutting
down the uprights wasn’t an option. Your roof pitch would have remained the same.
However, you would not have had any head room on the ends of the dock. Trying to
lower the deck inside the roof, that was really impossible to consider because of
drainage, and of course removing the railing, then that only serves half of what this
whole project was all about was to cover the boats and offer a sundeck over that.
MR. KENIRY-Could you describe for the members of the Board what involvement, if any,
Mrs. Hoffman had in connection with your exercise of judgment with respect to the
depicted 14 feet on Sheet Number Two of Three dated March 6, 2002?
MR. CREEDE-It was never discussed.
MR. KENIRY-At any time, ever, did you intend to build anything other than that which
was depicted on the plans that were presented to you?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. KENIRY-I don’t have anything further of this witness. The only thing, Mr. Chairman,
respectfully, that I would ask is I might want to reserve a minute, depending on what
questions the Board members have. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-Sure, by all means. I just have a question I have to ask, because it’s been
bothering me. You indicated that you’ve been in the business since 1987 and you
indicated, under oath, that the plans that you were looking at were unlike anything that
you’ve seen before and you were unfamiliar with them. Now, you also indicated that you
worked on this project for approximately a year and two months. During that period of
time, have you ever had an opportunity, or did you ever make an effort to contact Staff
from the Town of Queensbury to ask them about these things, and/or avail yourself of an
opportunity to check the Codes, the Building Codes in the Town of Queensbury?
MR. CREEDE-I was familiar with the Codes, sir. As for contacting them, no, I did not
contact them.
MR. ABBATE-You were familiar with the Codes?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. ABBATE-Wonderful. Well, when you built this, were you aware of the fact that you
were over-sizing this boathouse?
MR. CREEDE-No. I didn’t think it was a problem because the Code existing at that time
was based on water height, not mean high water, and another thing, I was surprised that
Codes accepted a schematic with no scale or dimensions. So, I used my best judgment,
really, to scale this out, again, to create exactly what was here. I really did not
maliciously try to deviate and make this thing too big.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Having said that, now I think we have an obligation to ask the
Zoning Administrator to perhaps comment on a couple of statements that were made.
Would you be willing to do that, Mr. Zoning Administrator? Particularly the fact that an
individual working since 1987 in this field was unlike and unfamiliar with the scales,
please, just to clear it up.
MR. BROWN-Do you have a specific question?
MR. ABBATE-In your opinion, the scales on, what’s that exhibit you refer to? Are they
unusual?
MR. BROWN-Well, there’s a variety, you know, a countless number of scales you can
develop any drawing to, depending on the detail you want to show, the lack of detail you
don’t want to show, if it’s conceptual. It depends on what you want to show as to the
scale that you pick. Regardless of what the scale is, I think the Number One rule that
any contractor of any audience will tell you is, you never, never, never scale the drawing.
You use the dimensions that are on the drawing as your design limits. The numbers are
on there for a reason. You don’t put a scale to the drawing. You rely on the numbers that
have been applied to it by the designer. So, if there’s a question with the height, and
they don’t scale out, I think you’ve violated Rule One and Rule Two is, these are my
rules, by the way, Rule Two is if you don’t understand the drawing, you contact the
person who made the drawing and have them clarify whatever questions you may have.
So I don’t know if that answers your question or not.
MR. ABBATE-That answers, did you contact the individual that made the drawing?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. ABBATE-You did not. Okay.
MR. URRICO-Can I just jump in. Question. The drawing we’re talking about did not
originate with the?
MR. BROWN-The drawing we’re talking about was submitted on behalf of the applicant,
through our normal building permit process. Mr. Creede obtained the drawings as he
picked up the approved building permit plans.
MR. URRICO-So those are the drawings he’s talking about, those that were approved?
MR. BROWN-Those are the plans that were approved with the building permit for the
structure, that’s correct, but they were submitted by the applicant, on behalf of the
applicant.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Let’s try it this way. Jim nudged me a little while ago.
He asked me if he could speak first, and I forgot about that, but then I’ll honor Mr. Bryant.
MR. BRYANT-I’ll allow Mr. Underwood to go first.
MR. ABBATE-Would you, please.
MR. BRYANT-But I would like to see the drawings with the notes on them.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, by all means. While he’s examining that, Mr. Underwood, you had
something you wanted to say?
MR. UNDERWOOD-Sure. Craig’s going to put a picture up.
MR. ABBATE-Go ahead, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-All right. I tried to make this explanation to the Board before, and I’ll
try and do that again with Mr. Creede’s help this evening, here. I did go out to the site
again on Monday this week early in the morning. So I didn’t get to see anybody. I just
got to wander around and admire what a work of art’s been created out there. At the
same time, I speak with a little bit of knowledge about how the process works out there,
because I am a graduate of a log building school and I built my own conventional log
home in much the same manner as has been done here, but just to explain the process.
As Mr. Creede alluded to, there is a problem because when you build with conventional
docks, you’re dealing with dimensional lumber. You pick up an eight foot piece of eight
13
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
by eight for a post, and it’s exactly, when you measure it out, it’s exactly eight feet tall,
and when you determine what you’re going to use for your carry beam, in the case of
logs, we call those purlins, all right. Purlins are the beams that run horizontally on top of
the posts and the beams that are coming up at an angle there are just support beams.
They’re more nominal as far as actually strengthening the building, but when you build
with logs, you have to make sure that things are engineered properly, and as Mr. Creede
has done here, you can see that both the posts, the vertical elements of the building, and
the horizontal ones, which you see the log ends up on top of those posts, kind of
compliment each other. They have to be substantial, and as everyone knows a tree,
when it grows, tapers as it goes towards its tip. Those posts, in other words, those carry
beams up on top, have to be set in as they’re set in. The top of the posts might be eight
inches in diameter. The but of that post might be 20 inches in diameter. So you have a
huge discrepancy there. Now when I went out to the site to look at it, I had talked to
Chairman Abbate about it and I said to him, you know, I’m going to go out there because
I want to go out with eyes wide open and determine, could he have actually built this
thing nominally, within the guidelines as proposed by the Town? And the thing that really
would determine it in this instance here, that makes this so different than most of the
boathouses that we see up on Lake George is that a conventional boathouse on Lake
George is basically a box. It’s square. It’s got a horizontal element to it, and it’s basically
like the center portion of what you see there, and when you guys came in and approved
for this oversized boathouse with the three bays instead of having a single bay in the
middle, you ended up with those wings off to the sides of it. So, in order to determine
what you’re going to do, that does have a pitched roof that runs off to the side, and I’m
not sure, I mean, it’s at about a 3/12 pitch, Mr. Creede, is that what you would say?
MR. CREEDE-Actually, exactly, it’s 2.78/12.
MR. UNDERWOOD-I figured it had to be about three when I looked at it, and in looking
at the dimensions of it, as he had mentioned before, the actual height of the building that
you’re going to end up with in the center, and there is a central part of that building that
has a horizontal element. That’s the part where the actual deck is up on top there. That’s
flat. All right. If you go out to the edges of the buildings and you look to where the
overhangs come down off onto those side docks, that would determine what the ultimate
height was going to be way up high there, and if you walked out to the edge and
measured, what I came up with on the right hand side was six foot eight in height, and
that was where the rafters came down to the drip edge of the roof, and secondly, over on
the other side, on the north side of the building there, it was six foot four. I don’t think
you could build anything any shorter than that. That six foot eight right there, the
standard opening that you have on the door, so six foot four you’d have to subtract some
off of there, and if you stood in their doorway, and you stood out there underneath the log
rafter, I think you would say, I don’t think it could have been built any other way possible
than that, and as you go towards the center of that building, the pitch of that roof that
allows the water to run off of the roof there, you know, comes up at a nominal angle. A
3/12 pitch is about as low a pitch as you want to build on a roof. I don’t know of too many
people that have built at a 2/12 pitch, which would have lowered the building down, but a
2/12 pitch would have brought that building down probably four to six inches maybe in
height, I’m guessing, ultimately over that distance from the sideline over to the center,
and so I really don’t see that building with log construction, as has been done here, could
have been done any more compliantly than what was done. I think he kept a good eye
on what he ended up with, and in an instance, if you measure from the actual top of
those docks, in other words, the decking that you would walk on on the docks
themselves, up to the decking up on top, where the deck is up there is 13 feet high, and I
would think that if you probably went out to most sites on the lake and measured
boathouses, you would come up with, you know, something in that neighborhood,
probably within a foot or two of that. That’s what really made the thing as high as it is,
and as far as I’m concerned, I really don’t see that it could have been done, any change,
unless you would have had a completely flat roof across the whole structure, which
wouldn’t have achieved what the plans advised him to build there on site. How many log
structures like this have been built up on the lake?
MR. CREEDE-Nothing with trees with bark on. There have been several structures but
they’re peeled logs. There of different design, but nothing with whole trees. We used
the whole tree, right from the root right up to eight inches in diameter, and then we
further used that, the smaller sections, incorporated into the rail system.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Okay. I’ll stop for now.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Bryant, please.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-At one point you state that you picked these up from the zoning.
MR. CREEDE-Building and Code.
MR. BRYANT-Building and Code place, whatever. At one point you entered into a
contract with Mrs. Hoffman to build this dock. Was it prior to seeing those drawings or
after receiving those drawings?
MR. CREEDE-First off, sir, I had no contract with Mrs. Hoffman. She asked me to build
the boathouse.
MR. BRYANT-So you (lost word) the time and material?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. Because my primary question was, how could you even begin to
estimate a project when you don’t understand the drawings, or you can’t scale the
drawings?
MR. CREEDE-No, it wasn’t, that’s not, what was the most difficult is I had no idea how
long this was going to take. That’s the reason for time and materials. It was fair to her
and fair to me.
MR. BRYANT-So if it was time and materials, regardless of the configuration of the dock,
Mrs. Hoffman actually paid for a 16 foot 6, whatever it is height?
MR. CREEDE-I don’t understand your question.
MR. BRYANT-Isn’t that correct? It’s time and materials. So whatever it cost in materials,
it makes no difference. If I’m a contractor and I’ve got a drawing that says 14 foot high,
and I estimate a dock as 14 foot high, and I build 16 and a half foot, I look for a change
order, but you built it time and materials. So ultimately the owner paid to build it 16 foot
high.
MR. CREEDE-I still don’t understand your question.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. I’ll go to the next question. If this second drawing which you didn’t
show me, Drawing Number Two, clearly shows a 14 foot height, why did we deviate from
that?
MR. CREEDE-Again, if it’s scaled out to the scale that’s depicted in there.
MR. BRYANT-Well there is no scale. It doesn’t say scaled anything here. So the
question is, there is no scale, it’s a sketch. It’s not scaled. It doesn’t say scaled to
quarter inch, eighth inch, 10, 20, engineered scale, it doesn’t say that.
MR. CREEDE-Correct.
MR. BRYANT-It’s a sketch. So let’s forget about the scaling. The question is Sheet
Number Two obviously, on the original drawing, says 14 feet height?
MR. KENIRY-Would you like me to answer? I can tell you exactly what it has. It has two
distinct hash marks, if you will, one at the top, one at the bottom. The bottom is labeled
MHWL-320.2, and then it shows 14 feet between the two hash marks. That’s on Sheet
Number Two, March 6, 2002.
MR. BRYANT-I want to go back to my questions later. All right.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you, Mr. Bryant. Gentlemen, ladies, do we have any other
questions?
MR. URRICO-I have a question.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, please.
MR. URRICO-Mr. Underwood makes a very compelling case. However, what I’m trying
to understand is, Mr. Creede, I don’t hear you saying that, given the type of materials you
were working with, regardless of the scale or the depiction in the drawing, you would not
15
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
be able to achieve that height, given the type of materials you were working with. You
were at their mercy. Is that the case?
MR. CREEDE-Again, the best way I can answer the question for you, sir, is the drawing
that I was provided with, and it was approved by your Building and Codes Department, I
created exactly to the best of my ability non-maliciously like what is depicted in the
drawing. Maybe I’m not understanding your question entirely.
MR. KENIRY-Yes. I don’t think that’s his question. He’s asking you about the distinction
between dimensional or non-dimensional lumber.
MR. URRICO-Did you not understand the drawing and that’s the reason we got to the
height we were at, or did you get to that height because the materials you were working
with make it impossible to really come up to a certain height?
MR. CREEDE-Well, the architectural theme of the whole thing, Mr. Underwood
described the roof pitches, the ultimate height at the very ends of the meeting,
dimensional or non-dimensional still would have to be built to the height that it would
come up with. It was just a level of difficulty having to work with whole trees to get to that
ultimate height. As well as variations in log thicknesses, the uprights, the purlins. That’s
the best way I can answer it for you.
MR. URRICO-There’s a three foot discrepancy, two and a half foot discrepancy. Would
that be accounted for in the type of materials, the type of trees, or is that because the
drawing was mis-read? Because I’m hearing two different arguments.
MR. CREEDE-Okay. Yes, to answer that. Dealing with the logs, the way this whole
thing is designed, okay, that has a little bit of both. Let me answer it to you that way.
MR. ABBATE-Gentlemen, ladies? Please, Mr. McNulty.
MR. MC NULTY-Specific for Mr. Creede, you’ve stated and obviously were aware the
need to meet setbacks when you were building this because you mentioned that you
were siting it to make sure you met the side setbacks.
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. MC NULTY-Were you aware at that time that there was a height limit in the Code
that you also had to meet?
MR. CREEDE-The way I interpret the Code it was ambiguous, 18 feet for a peaked roof
and 14 foot, and it was based on water level. The water level can vary a great deal.
MR. MC NULTY-Okay. So there was some confusion there, then. Second question,
which may be appropriate for you or maybe the attorney will want to approach it later, but
I’m wondering, have we established what the actual height of the roof or the deck of the
sundeck is at now?
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Underwood, did you, if I remember you hearing correctly, 13 feet?
MR. UNDERWOOD-I took it from grade where the shoreline meets the dock, all right,
and here’s my thinking on that one. When we measure any other conventional building
in the Town of Queensbury, we take the measurement to the highest point of the building
from the lowest point at grade, on boathouses we take it from the mean low water mark.
So as far as I’m concerned, this is just my personal opinion, of course, it doesn’t jive with
the Code, but you’re actually measuring below grade when you go down to the height of
the water from the decking on that dock. The shoreline is, the dock is an extension of
the shoreline coming out where land curves, all right. So when I measured up, I
measured 13 feet from the top of that dock, where the crib dock walkway would be
anywhere on that dock, up to decking up on top of the dock where you would walk on the
conventional sundeck up there, and it was 13 feet 3 or something like that. That’s what I
came up with.
MR. STONE-May I ask Mr. Brown a question, and Counsel. That’s an interpretation, but
the Code says 14 feet from mean high water, does it not?
MR. UNDERWOOD-That’s what it says.
MR. BROWN-As do the plans, yes.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. STONE-Thank you.
MR. MC NULTY-Okay. Well, let’s leave that question out there for now. Where I’m
going with it is what we’re being asked to approve, should we approve this. The Staff
notes indicate that, the application, I think, is asking for three and a half feet of relief,
which suggests you’re looking for a total height to the top of the rail of 17 and a half feet,
and somewhere also in the application package, in the Staff notes, it indicated that the
rail, by Code, must be three and a half feet high. So what I want to make sure is that we
shouldn’t be asked to approve something that’s 18 or 18 and a half feet rather than 17
and a half. We certainly don’t want to approve 17 and a half and then have you come
back later and say, oops.
MR. KENIRY-Right. I think we can give you the specific measurements, and I think
we’re prepared to do it. The difficulty has been the prior grant of relief that we received
indicated that when we were successful in the grant for prior variance, it was within the
realm of 15 feet, and so as a result of that, we treated that grant of variance literally and
never zeroed in on exactly 15 feet, but I think we would be prepared to provide the exact
dimensions. The other thing, Mr. McNulty, what we had done, for purposes of certainty
of the record, we wanted to avoid a dispute with the Town about how or what
measurements were being taken. That was not our object. So to some extent, if we are
successful, and if we are able to get to that point, then it would be my intention to simply
agree, rather than have a dispute about what is the actual height, and for purposes of the
discussion, we would accept the measurements that the Town has, so that there would
be no issue about who’s measurements are right.
MR. MC NULTY-Okay. I guess the other question I’ve got probably is more appropriate
to wait until later.
MR. ABBATE-Gentlemen, ladies?
MRS. HUNT-I have a question about the plans. There were no dimensions on the plans
and no scale of any kind?
MR. CREEDE-No scale, ma’am. Page Number Two indicates 14 feet from the mean
high water mark, and 40 feet for the crib locations as 317.74 located at the bottom of the
lake, 40 feet from that mark. That’s the only dimensions that I had to go on.
MR. ABBATE-Town Counsel would like to have a copy of Number Two, please, now.
MR. KENIRY-Would you like me to hand it up?
MR. ABBATE-Would you please?
MR. KENIRY-Sure.
MRS. HUNT-Is this usual? This was unusual, these plans?
MR. CREEDE-In my opinion, yes.
MRS. HUNT-So as I see it, it was a combination of the plans being unusual, and difficult
to follow, and the fact that the materials were different?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MRS. HUNT-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-Do we have any other questions from members of the Board?
MR. STONE-Mr. Chairman, let me express some confusion. We’ve heard arguments,
both by the applicant, the builder and Mr. Underwood that building a dock in this manner
is, I don’t want to say haphazard, I don’t mean that, but there’s a lot of variation in it, and
we’re being asked to understand this. It’s my understanding that we considered that
when we granted the extra foot of relief and asked that the railing come down. I mean,
we heard these arguments before, not quite as well spoken as Mr. Creede, but we did
hear arguments that it was a unique design and therefore very hard to pin down the
measurements, and we said, okay, we’ll grant one foot of relief so that the top of the
dock, the roof of the dock, if you will, will be at 15 feet. That’s what we agreed to. That’s
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the variance that we granted, and quite frankly, anything else I hear, to me, doesn’t help
me at all.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Do we have any other comments or questions? Yes,
Mr. Bryant, please.
MR. BRYANT-I have a question for Staff. In the motion that Mr. Stone made back in
November ’04, relative to that foot, there were three conditions. Unfortunately, I don’t
have the, they’re not spelled out. Can you clarify those conditions?
MR. BROWN-If you can just give me a second, I’ll try and find it here.
MR. BRYANT-Take your time.
MR. BROWN-I’m sure that it’s going to be in the record, the file.
MR. BRYANT-I looked and I couldn’t find it.
MR. BROWN-Okay.
MR. BRYANT-I see he makes a comment to the original three conditions to another
hearing, and I just don’t see it anywhere. I’m getting old.
MR. BROWN-I could read you the November 17, 2004 motion to approve, which was
Introduced by Mr. Underwood and Seconded by Mr. Abbate. Is that the resolution?
There’s no conditions in it. It ultimately says bring it down within the realm of 15 feet.
MR. BRYANT-During the period, July 20, 2005, Mr. Stone introduced a motion to deny,
and he said that, back in 2004, on a site plan, they outlined three conditions, and those
conditions weren’t met.
MR. BROWN-Okay. The site plan resolution. I thought you said variance resolution.
MR. BRYANT-Okay.
MR. BROWN-We can find that one. That’s a different resolution by the Planning Board.
MR. BRYANT-I’m looking at Page Two, just while we’re waiting to locate those
conditions. The dimensions are clearly spelled out, 14 feet by 40 feet, and so forth and
so on. I don’t understand the confusion. I don’t understand how we could assume it’s 16
foot 6 and not 14 feet.
MR. CREEDE-The best way I can explain it to you, as I said over and over again, when I
scaled it out to the best.
MR. BRYANT-There is no scale, sir.
MR. CREEDE-I realize that.
MR. BRYANT-It doesn’t say to scale anywhere. Okay. You’ve been in the business 20
years. If there’s no scale, it’s a sketch. Okay, and you have to go by the dimensions. If
it’s scaled, that’s another question, but there is no scale. It doesn’t say the scale, the key
for the scale anywhere on the drawing. So I know you’ve said it 1,000 times, but I’m
asking the question specifically, the dimensions are clear. There’s no way that you could
think anything else, regardless of the picture, configuration, or whether you’re building
with logs or toothpicks. The scale, the drawing clearly says 14 foot high, 40 feet long.
MR. CREEDE-If I were to have tried to accomplish that, that boathouse would only have
been made useful for ompa loompas.
MR. BRYANT-You mean the two feet make the difference?
MR. CREEDE-Made a huge difference.
MR. BRYANT-What is the inside ceiling level?
MR. CREEDE-Not the ceiling level, the roof pitch.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-I’m not saying the pitch, but obviously the guy who did this is an engineer.
He knows what the pitch has got to be, and he says it’s going to be 14 foot high.
MR. CREEDE-Sir, I hold a degree in engineering, too. Okay. The roof pitch, at 3/12, is
the lowest that I could go with, and I actually exaggerated that to two and seven eighths
inches, and twelve inches. Okay.
MR. BRYANT-But you’re telling me you built exactly this picture, what your picture
indicates, it’s exactly, except for the height and the width and the dimension.
MR. CREEDE-The dimension is incorrect. It’s incorrectly illustrated.
MR. BRYANT-So you’re saying this 14 foot would be impossible to accomplish?
MR. CREEDE-Exactly.
MR. BRYANT-Is that what you’re saying?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. BRYANT-Based on your engineering degree?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. BRYANT-That’s a better explanation than trying to scale.
MR. ABBATE-Gentlemen, ladies on the Board?
MS. RADNER-We found the conditions, if you want them read.
MR. ABBATE-Please, are we prepared to read it into the record?
MS. RADNER-This was the resolution introduced by Craig MacEwan and seconded by
Richard Sanford for Site Plan No. 51-2001, for Jean Hoffman. We find the following:
The application is hereby approved in accordance with the resolution prepared by Staff,
and subject to the following conditions which shall be listed on the final plan submitted to
the Zoning Administrator: Number One, the land bridge be removed, and, two, no
railings will be reinstalled on the top portion of the boathouse roof, and three, revised
plans to be submitted to Town Planning Office no later than December 31, 2004 which
correctly illustrate the removal of the railings, the land bridges, and show the corrected
height given by the ZBA variance to the top of the roof line. That was Duly adopted the
rd
23 day of November 2004.
MR. BRYANT-Is the land bridge removed?
MR. KENIRY-At this time, the status quo has been maintained as we’re aware and we
had discussed at a prior meeting, this is a subject of review by the court.
MR. BRYANT-Did they re-submit the drawings?
MS. RADNER-Nothing further happened. They filed a petition under Article 78 for review
by the courts, and that’s where it’s been ever since.
MR. ABBATE-Ladies, gentlemen, do we have any other questions, questions or
comments? Okay. Good. I’m going to open up the public hearing for Number 46-2005,
and would those wishing to be heard please be kind enough to approach the table,
speak into the microphone, and for the record identify yourself and place of residence.
Do we have any individuals in the audience who would like to address Area Variance No.
46-2005? Would you raise your hands, please.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Chairman, may I retain my seat, because I have a feeling I’m going to
end up back here.
MR. ABBATE-Counsel, you can retain your seat, but under no condition will you attempt
to interrogate these individuals.
MR. KENIRY-No, I intend to ask any of these individuals any questions.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Okay. As long as we understand that. Your name, madam, and where do
you reside, please.
LEIGH BEEMAN
MRS. BEEMAN-I’m Leigh Beeman. I’m Mrs. Hoffman’s neighbor to the north. She
purchased the property from me, in 2001, and the property belonged to my parents. She
has treated the property with great respect since that time, and everything that she has
done, the changes she has made, have been beautiful. The dock is one of them. I
watched it being built. I know that the materials were difficult to deal with, particularly the
tree type materials and several were sent back because they weren’t right. That was the
biggest problem that I recall, and my issue is that it’s a beautiful dock. I would hate to
see that railing removed. It’s going to look like an airplane hanger without it, and there
are some docks in my neighborhood there that are so ugly that it’s just hard to believe
that they’re allowed to exist. One of them has a little shack on top with white aluminum
siding. You can see it all over the lake. Mrs. Hoffman’s dock is absolutely a work of art,
and I’d like to see it remain just as it is. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much. Would you be kind enough to approach the table,
speak into the microphone, and for the record identify yourself and place of residence,
please.
JOHN SALVADOR
MR. SALVADOR-My name is John Salvador and I’ve asked the Zoning Administrator to
put this photograph on the screen. I have a set of these plans. I got them through FOIL
requests from the Building and Codes Department. These plans have been certified,
and let’s look at what’s been certified. The only thing that’s been certified are some
section members, no lengths have been specified. Somebody has got to take these
drawings and make a cutting schedule, what we might call a shop drawing. I think the
problems have come about.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Salvador, would you do me a favor. The gentleman in the back of the
room can’t hear you. Would you speak into the microphone, please.
MR. SALVADOR-Okay. I think the problems with the height have been derived from the
fact that the pier decks are inordinately high above the water level, if you look at that, and
then when you start to set the structure on top of that, of course you’re throwing
everything up higher, but there is no way that anyone could construct that building from
these drawings without some kind of intermediate, what I would call a shop drawing, a
cutting schedule, and the envelope within which those cuttings fit is defined here, the
height of the building, of the boathouse. The other thing, you’ll see on the drawing that
there’s a note. The designer’s note here is all calculations have been taken from log
span tables, and then he refers to that. All these drawings tell a builder is what section
log he’s going to use in what place, whether it’s a column, a roof beam, a purlin,
whatever it is, that’s what’s on here. That’s what’s been designed. Just the section.
This Code that’s referred to here gives a lot of detail and requirements for these
materials, and particularly the connections. That hasn’t been shown here. Connection
details haven’t been shown, and that’s very, very important in this kind of construction.
So a lot had to be done between receiving these drawings and starting to cut members in
the field. A lot of work had to be done. The other thing that, the only other point I would
like to make, because I don’t think I’ll be able to come to the microphone again, whatever
is decided here tonight, whatever is decided, the finished product, in whatever form you
approve it, must be recertified. If it hasn’t been built as these drawings, they’ve got to be
re-certified before a CO can be issued.
MR. ABBATE-I think we have a gentleman who had his hand up. Yes, sir. Would you
be kind enough to come to the table, speak into the microphone, and state your name
and place of residence, sir.
TED HANSON, III
MR. HANSON-Thank you very much. My name is Ted Hanson, III. I live on Gunn Lane
in Cleverdale. First I just had a couple of questions, just really briefly, to help me better
understand the proceedings. As I understand it, within reason, this Board has discretion
to approve or deny this relief request, this variance, within reason.
MR. ABBATE-Is that your question?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. HANSON-Yes.
MR. ABBATE-The answer is yes.
MR. HANSON-Yes, they do, and they are allowed to take in any factors that they deem
relevant to do so?
MR. ABBATE-Well, we take only the evidence that’s contained in the record. Period.
MR. HANSON-Okay. Then just really briefly, I’d just like to voice my opinion. I don’t
really have a dog in the fight or anything like that, but I’ve spent the better portion of my
life on Lake George, and I’m from a younger generation. So take my opinion with a grain
of salt, but I’ve spent a lot of time on the lake, and I would just like to voice that I think it
would be extremely unfortunate if anything were to happen to that dock to alter it from
the condition that it’s currently in. Because it’s my personal opinion, in riding around in
my boat on a good portion of the 33 miles in Lake George, that it’s the prettiest dock, it’s
the prettiest boathouse on the lake. That’s pretty much all I wanted to say.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much. We appreciate that.
MR. HANSON-Thank you for having me.
MR. ABBATE-Do we have anyone else in the audience who would like to? Yes, ma’am.
Would you be kind enough to come to the table, speak into the microphone and state
your name and place of residence, please.
MAGGIE STEWART
MS. STEWART-Maggie Stewart from Assembly Point, and my objection to the dock
basically is, first of all the original plans met both your Codes and the Park Commission
Codes, but the finished project is not conforming, and therefore I feel it’s illegal. Now it
doesn’t matter who’s at fault here, whether it’s Mr. Creede or Mrs. Hoffman or the man
on the moon, but I think what matters is that a precedent not be set for someone else to
do the same thing around the lake. I think her dock must be brought into compliance, as
best as possible, and at the very least the railing needs to be taken down from the deck
and the bridge has to be removed, and I think there should be a definite time for this to
be accomplished, and I also know that this is an enforcement case with the Park
Commission because they don’t grant after the fact variances, but that’s their problem.
However, I think that’s a good policy to follow, and those are my comments.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much. Do we have anybody else in the audience who
would like to address Area Variance No. 46-2005? If so, would you raise your hand.
MS. RADNER-Mr. Abbate, before you ask, you might want to specifically ask if there’s
anybody who had acted on reliance on the original approval or denial granted by this
Board, as a re-hearing part of your obligation is to assure yourself that there’s nobody
who has a vested right, based on their good faith reliance upon the original order.
MR. ABBATE-That was a question Town Counsel, and I will state that for the record, that
as a question. Is there anyone here who falls into that category?
MS. RADNER-Under Town Law, part of your obligation, when you’re re-hearing a prior
order, is to make a determination that there’s no one who has relied in good faith upon
your original order, who’s rights are vested, and who’s going to be prejudiced if you find
differently today. So you want to give anybody an opportunity to say that they do fall in
that category and to explain how they’ve been prejudiced.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Is there anyone in attendance this evening who falls into the
specific category as stated by Town Counsel? Would you please raise your hand so you
can be recognized. Then there is an assumption, since no one has raised their hand,
that no one falls into that category, Counsel. Thank you very much. Is there anyone
else, last call, anyone else in the audience who’d like to be heard concerning Area
Variance No. 46-2005? Mr. Secretary, if we have some correspondence concerning this
case, would you be kind enough, please, to read those into the record.
MR. UNDERWOOD-This letter was received on May 4, 2006. It’s addressed to
Chairman Abbate. “This letter is to offer our support to Jean Hoffman during her
boathouse and dock hearing. Her boat house is, without question, one of the most
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
beautiful boat houses ever built on Lake George. It blends beautifully into the natural
Adirondack Lake George setting. It is nicely proportioned and certainly compliments the
neighborhood and shoreline. Any building project that Ms. Hoffman has embarked on
has complimented our neighborhood and the surrounding Cleverdale properties. This
boathouse offers the neighborhood a very positive appeal. We hope that more home
owners will emulate Ms. Hoffman and place as much sensitivity and consideration into
the aesthetic qualities and the setting as she has done with the design and function of
her boathouse. We would like to request that you take into consideration all the plus
features of this boathouse and rule in favor of Ms. Hoffman’s zoning request. Thank you
for your interest in this request. Sincerely, Fred and Linda McKinney” This one was
received on May 10, 2006 “Gentlemen: I understand that the Board is requiring Ms.
Jean Hoffman to remove the upper railings on her new boathouse. I respectfully request
that you reconsider on this matter. I watched this beautiful dock being built from my own
residence as her neighbor on Cleverdale. Practically every motor boat that cruises by
our shore slows or stops for a moment to admire the detailed woodwork involved in its
construction. Reminds us of the old Adirondack Great Camps. This boathouse does not
detract from the beauty of Harris Bay, but, in fact, it adds to the beauty of the bay. If
Jean Hoffman does remove the rails from her boathouse, it will destroy the design
completely. The roof is wide to cover the three boat slips, and if the rails are removed, it
will look ugly, like a large airplane hanger….and I doubt that those boats passing by will
slow down to look at that! I hope the Board will reconsider. Respectfully, Ted Hans 5
Duncan Cove Cleverdale, NY 12820” I have another one. “I’m writing this letter on
behalf of Jean Hoffman of Cleverdale in reference to your decision to have her alter her
dock. I am a real estate agent and property owner as a family on Pilot Knob for 75 years.
When I tour people on the lake, Ms. Hoffman’s boathouse is one of my stops with clients.
I believe that this boathouse is very beautiful and artistic, and in keeping with the
character of the lake. I have seen many boathouses that should come down but do not.
This boathouse does not obstruct anyone’s view, is good for others to imitate and I see
no reason whatsoever to force her to alter it in any way. Respectfully, John Skinner, III”.
And the last one, “To Whom It May Concern: I am a resident of Cleverdale (year-round)
and on occasion ride by the Hoffman property by boat. I watched as the above project
progressed over the past few years and could observe how labor intensive it was. I have
to admit that I was very impressed by the end result. In my mind, it fits the category of a
“True Adirondack Boat House”. I recently heard that alterations might have to be made
to the finished structure so that it complies with new regulations. I don’t know if these
were in effect when the original permit was granted. It would be unfortunate if alterations
were now required not only for the expense involved but the negative effect it would have
for the aesthetics of the structure. I hope the Board will allow the boathouse to remain as
is for I feel the existing structure is a definite asset to our lakefront. Yours truly, Thomas
A. Burke” That’s it.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you. Counsel, I have a question for you. I just want to make sure
that I’m correct. I went through all the masses of paper that we have, and I could be
wrong on this thing, but does this particular project come under any kind of Lake George
Park Commission or the APA? In other words, is this a part of it? If it is, what’s the
status.
MR. KENIRY-I believe that it does, Mr. Chairman, and I think your agenda, in fact,
accurately reflects that the application is subject to review and approval by the Warren
County Planning Board, which I believe has, in fact, occurred. I also believe that, as your
agenda correctly indicates, that it is subject to the Adirondack Park Agency. There was
reference made, by one of the speakers in the public hearing, concerning the subject of, I
believe the Lake George Park Commission, and it’s my understanding, I think I would
know if there were an enforcement proceeding that had been commenced. To my
knowledge, no such enforcement proceeding exists, nor has it been commenced. I
believe that there have been, I state very candidly, some frank discussions concerning
the subject, and I believe that it’s the applicant’s sincere intention to file an application for
a variance.
MR. ABBATE-To?
MR. KENIRY-To the Lake George Park Commission.
MR. ABBATE-That hasn’t been done until the present time?
MR. KENIRY-No.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. KENIRY-But there is an existing dialogue. It’s not that this exists in some vacuum.
They’re very well aware and, in fact, they also know, specifically, that we were here, what
was it, not last month but the month before.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you very much.
MR. KENIRY-Yes, sir.
MR. URRICO-Mr. Chairman, I have a couple of questions, just for clarification.
MR. ABBATE-By all means.
MR. URRICO-I’m still trying to assimilate all of this. The three and a half feet of relief
that we’re speaking of is represented by the railing?
MR. ABBATE-Yes.
MR. URRICO-Is that the entire railing, the horizontal portion of the railing, the vertical
portion of the railing? Where are we measuring the railing from?
MR. BROWN-The overall height measurement was performed by Bruce Frank and I, on
a date that’s in the file. I apologize for not having it in front of me, but we measured to
the horizontal portion of the top rail right in that center section you see in that photo. We
did not count the rails. Nor did we take into account the light fixtures. So we used the
horizontal portion.
MR. URRICO-And just so I understand the sequence, the first variance that came before
us, they asked for, was in 2001, and height was not an issue with that, if I recall, from the
notes.
MR. ABBATE-At that time, that is correct.
MR. URRICO-They came back after the fact, and then requested the height variance.
That’s when the problem appeared. So between 2001 and 2004, that’s when the
problem developed, and they came before us and we granted them one foot of relief,
with no railings.
MR. ABBATE-That is correct.
MR. URRICO-As the condition.
MR. ABBATE-That is accurate.
MR. URRICO-Okay.
MR. KENIRY-And for clarification in that regard.
MR. ABBATE-Sure, by all means.
MR. KENIRY-The sequence was that there was not an enforcement proceeding here,
but, in fact, and I think you have prior testimony specifically on it, that when the condition
was brought to Mrs. Hoffman’s attention, we did, in fact, immediately file the application
for the variance at that time.
MR. STONE-Mr. Chairman, I’m becoming more and more troubled with my position on
this Board at this particular time, because of some of the arguments I’ve heard from the
public about the beauty and the consequences of taking down the railing. Since I’m
currently trying to sell my property on Lake George, I feel I must, at this time, recuse
myself from further discussion.
MR. ABBATE-All right, Mr. Stone. Thank you very much.
MR. BRYANT-A question for Staff. Just correct me if I’m wrong. The railing is three and
a half feet. We’ve already granted them a foot without the railing. So, are we saying that
they need a total relief of four and a half feet?
MR. BROWN-No. I think the overall height here was 17 6, and Attorney Keniry can
come up with that number.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. KENIRY-I believe that’s correct.
MR. ABBATE-Excuse me a second. Mr. Stone, you are under no obligation to leave the
room.
MR. STONE-I know.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Sorry about that. Go ahead.
MR. BRYANT-So why did we have the one foot of relief if, theoretically?
MR. BROWN-I think the one foot of relief was granted to allow for some sort of aesthetic
maintenance of a portion of the rail and the top of the boathouse.
MR. BRYANT-Okay.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Bryant, though, can I just address, I mean, that really zeros right in on
the heart of it, because the result of the one foot of relief is that it doesn’t accomplish the
ultimate project that was originally proposed, I think as you know.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. I have two remaining questions, one for Counsel and one for the
contractor, if he wouldn’t mind coming back up to the microphone.
MR. ABBATE-Go right ahead.
MR. BRYANT-The land bridge, if we were to approve the height variance, what’s going
to happen to the land bridge? Is that going away?
MR. KENIRY-No, and we don’t go away, but we won’t be back here. We’ll go to the
Planning Board. As it stands now, and it’s been some time, and I, to some extent, differ
to Cathi on the procedure, but we, I believe, have a current application pending before
the Planning Board that was agreed as being held in abeyance, and that is the best of
my recollection. However, the practical point is that we’re still subject to finalization with
respect to site plan review at the Planning Board.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
MS. RADNER-My memory, just so we’re clear, here, is that there was a visit to the
Planning Board. They gave the approval with the three conditions that we discussed
earlier. Article 78 petition followed. Nothing further has been filed with the Planning
Board, to my knowledge. They couldn’t return to the Planning Board to seek additional
approvals without first getting approvals from this Board.
MR. KENIRY-That’s absolutely correct. You are a prerequisite to us getting there.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. The question I have for you, Mr. Creede, one of the speakers had
mentioned the necessity, and I totally agree with him, of going from the engineered
sketch, at some point, you would have had to, you ordered the material?
MR. CREEDE-Yes.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. You would have had to have had some kind of list of material, the
sizes, configuration, so forth and so on. Where is that list? I mean, did you make a
sketch?
MR. CREEDE-Right here.
MR. BRYANT-You had to write it down at one point. You don’t have it all in your head.
MR. CREEDE-No, I did write it down at one point, but that is, you know, gone.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. Now you stated before that you have an engineering degree, and
you made the determination that there was no way in the world that the roof could be 14
feet or the overall height could be 14 feet, and you could live with it. At one point you
made that determination, whenever that was. Did you bring it to anybody’s attention that
this doesn’t work as approved?
MR. CREEDE-Yes, my father and I, no one else.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-You didn’t bring it to Mrs. Otte’s attention? You didn’t bring it to the
Zoning Administrator’s attention?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. BRYANT-You didn’t bring it to anybody’s attention. You took it upon yourself to
violate the Code and build this 17 and a half feet high?
MR. CREEDE-I don’t consider it a violation of Code.
MR. BRYANT-Well, it obviously is a violation if it doesn’t meet the regulations. So, the
question is, you didn’t talk to anybody about it?
MR. CREEDE-No.
MR. BRYANT-No, okay.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Garrand, I want to ensure that Counsel has the benefit of a full Board.
Are you prepared to sit on this Board and address Area Variance No. 46-2005? That is,
have you done sufficient research that you will feel comfortable?
MR. GARRAND-I feel comfortable addressing this.
MR. ABBATE-And you’ve heard the testimony this evening?
MR. GARRAND-Yes, I have.
MR. ABBATE-And would you feel comfortable sitting on the chair?
MR. GARRAND-I feel comfortable.
MR. ABBATE-Would you be kind enough, please, to sit in the chair.
MR. GARRAND-Certainly.
MR. ABBATE-And this provides, makes it quite clear, Counsel, that we’re providing you
a fair and unbiased hearing with a full Board.
MR. KENIRY-Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-You’re welcome.
MR. ABBATE-Chuck, did you have something that you wanted to say? Please, do.
MR. MC NULTY-I’ve got one other question that I’d like to put out. Not knowing where
we’re going with this, but obviously we previously had approved a 15 foot height variance
with the assumption of removing the rail, and leaving the boathouse intact.
Nevertheless, in a lot of the material that was supplied, at least prior to that
determination, and I think maybe some of it that’s been supplied since, speaks to the
only alternative, if this height variance is not approved, is tearing down the entire
structure, and I’d like to know a little more about that. It strikes me that a viable
alternative is, don’t use the sundeck. You’ve still got a boathouse. If that’s not a viable
alternative, I need to know why.
MR. KENIRY-I think that I can address it in this manner. The project, obviously, has a
considerable amount of history. The applicant undertook a very significant undertaking
when we first sought all of the permits and all of the approvals from the various Boards.
As a personal aside, I remember walking out of here one evening, and the person who
appears before you with some frequency said that was amazing, that all of those
prerequisites came together and they had been here with some frequency, so that they
saw the project come together. I don’t think that anyone can fairly say that at any time
the applicant intended to do anything or apply for anything or for that matter build
anything other than that which was depicted, and to some extent, I can speak with some
personal knowledge in that regard, because I was involved in the approval process. Had
we desired to obtain approvals for something other than what we actually obtained
approvals for, we would have sought them. There was some very significant interaction
with the Town in order to achieve the final result. In this instance, the entire project, from
its inception, was premised upon the applicant’s desire to have a flat surface on the top
of the boathouse that their family could utilize, and the practical effect, or the result, if
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you will, of the elimination of the railing, is that that flat surface will no longer exist. As a
result, that guts the essence of the originally intended project.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Okay. Have you concluded your argument, Counsel?
Presentation?
MR. GARRAND-Mr. Chairman, I have a couple of questions for Mr. Creede.
MR. ABBATE-By all means. My apologies for not asking. Please do.
MR. GARRAND-Mrs. Hoffman, in her submittals here, says that she experienced
difficulties with you, and she ultimately terminated you as a contractor on this project?
MR. CREEDE-No, that’s not exactly true. We left in haste, but I was never terminated.
MR. GARRAND-Okay, because she, in her submission here, it says, ultimately, this
resulted in the contractor being terminated. My next question is, looking at the sketches,
from what I can see, it doesn’t exactly match the dock as built. It does readily appear
that the dock and the boathouse, the boathouse in the sketch certainly appears to be at a
different pitch than the drawings here. Was that as a result of the materials that you had
to use?
MR. CREEDE-I view it as nearly exact in the pitch. You have to superimpose the blown
up photograph I have over the drawing, and you’ll see that the deviation, if any exists, is
negligible.
MR. GARRAND-Okay, because according to this sketch, it appears like the sun deck is
considerably wider in the sketch, or that the whole boathouse has been compressed in
some way, shape or form. Also, the walking areas around the pillars are also different in
the sketch.
MR. CREEDE-Well, the drawing depicts the uprights of being more centralized in each
dock pier where I’ve moved them to the edge to tie them in with the fenders or dock
posts, to stabilize the boathouse, as well as for ease of navigability around, walking
around the dock. In other words, the upright was right in the center of the dock, you’d
have to walk around each upright. Where if it were placed on the sides of the dock, it’s a
lot easier to walk around and enter and exit a boat.
MR. GARRAND-Okay. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-Counsel, do you have anything else before I proceed?
MR. KENIRY-I do not with respect to this witness. However, I have the other witnesses
here for you.
MR. ABBATE-You have other witnesses?
MR. KENIRY-I do.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Would you ask your witnesses to come to the table and identify
themselves.
MR. KENIRY-Certainly, Mr. Chairman.
MR. ABBATE-And then explain to me who they are.
MR. KENIRY-Sure. The first witness, Mr. Chairman, is a woman who prepared a report
that I believe you have in your possession and her name is Linda Stancliffe, and she is
employed, I believe, or she’ll tell us, by the firm of Erdman, Anthony, and Associates, on
Brick Church Road in Troy, New York.
MR. ABBATE-Do me a favor, would you please, and present this to the secretary down
there. She’ll enter it into the record. Thank you very much, and when you approach the
table, please identify yourself, your place of employment.
MR. BROWN-Mr. Chairman, did you close the public hearing after, is it still open?
MR. ABBATE-I don’t believe I did. No, I did not.
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MR. BROWN-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-Let me double check and make sure, make sure our proceedings are
correct. No, I am correct, sir, the public hearing is still open. Thank you for your
question. Madame, please.
LINDA STANCLIFFE
MS. STANCLIFFE-Good evening. My name is Linda Stancliffe. I’m a licensed
landscape architect with Erdman, Anthony and Associates. I reside at 317 Lockwell
Road in Troy, New York.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Chairman, with your permission, I’m going to meld a series of
questions, if it’s okay, together. I’m going to ask Ms. Stancliffe to state for us her
educational background, her employment background, and her professional experience,
if that’s the pleasure of the Board, in one question and one answer.
MR. ABBATE-I’m so delighted that you’re finally learning our procedures. Thank you
very much, and you may proceed.
MR. KENIRY-Thank you.
MS. STANCLIFFE-I am a licensed landscape architect in the State of New York, Maine
and Pennsylvania. I’ve been employed in the industry for 14 years. I have a bachelors
degree in landscape architecture, 1992, from Syracuse University School of Forestry.
MR. KENIRY-Ms. Stancliffe, did there come a point in time where you were contacted by
me in connection with this matter?
MS. STANCLIFFE-Yes.
MR. KENIRY-And do you know when that was?
MS. STANCLIFFE-It was about May of this year.
MR. KENIRY-And in connection with my contacting you, were you given a specific
assignment?
MS. STANCLIFFE-Yes. I was asked to prepare a visual analysis of a boat dock in Lake
George.
MR. KENIRY-Could you describe for the members of the Board what you did and how
you did it?
MS. STANCLIFFE-I used a professional process by which we analyze elements within
the landscape. Typically I use this visual analysis to analyze telecommunications
towers. That’s probably the most that this is used, analyzed. We also use it in highway
reconstruction of bridge reconstruction. In this case, we used the same ideology
throughout all of the visual analysis. It deals with context, intensity and visibility. We
assess the item that we are analyzing with respect to its surrounding, with respect to how
much it is visible, and that is a factor of topography and vegetation, and the intensity to
which it is visible, and that is determined based on the perspective of the viewer, in
relation to the object. You have a copy of my report. If you’d like me to explain it further,
I can.
MR. ABBATE-Ladies and gentlemen of the Board, we all have received copies of the
report. It is at your pleasure that she review it, or are you satisfied with your results?
What is the Board’s pleasure? I suspect that we’ll accept the documents that were of
evidence that were submitted by Counsel, that is relevant.
MR. KENIRY-Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I will ask her then, what is it, in fact, that she
did, and then I’ll ask her what conclusions and opinions she arrived at in connection with
her engagement.
MR. ABBATE-Please do.
MR. KENIRY-Thank you.
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MS. STANCLIFFE-In order to provide the visual analysis, I first gathered mapping of the
project site, based on an address. I collected tax maps and U.S.G.S. maps. Then I
visited the site, driving through the area on Assembly Point and on Cleverdale point, to
locate the object in from different view sheds. I took photographs from various locations
throughout that area and I brought that information back to my office. In the meantime I
created a view shed analysis, which is in the report. That view shed map is what we
used to talk about visibility of the project site. The view shed map is based on industry
recognized standards for view shed map analysis.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Now, do you wish to introduce this into evidence, is that correct?
MR. KENIRY-It’s attached to your report, Mr. Chairman.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Great. Thank you very much.
MS. STANCLIFFE-This is a copy of that, which is in your report. In this view map, we
show the subject parcel at the center of the circle, and then this shaded area is that
which has potential views of the potential dock, of the dock. That area is then computed,
and it comprises five percent of the total area, approximately 670 acres of the 12,567
acres of the 2.5 mile view shed. We also used this map to talk about the intensity, that
is the foreground which is within one quarter mile of the proposed visual intrusion is
identified as having the most significant impact. From the foreground to the middle
ground, which is one mile, we have less of an impact, and in the background, objects
fade into the landscape. Then we also look at the project in relation to its surrounding
environment. I’ve provided you with a number of photographs in your report, and they
show the similar docks within the landscape. They also show the height relationship of
other adjacent structures. There’s a structure to the south of the Hoffman property, and
we have drawn lines across this photograph, which was taken from Assembly Point, to
show the relationship of the top of different structures on adjacent docks in relationship
to the Hoffman dock, and we used two of the most visually intrusive docks from our view
and that was a dock to the south, which includes a flagpole, any moving object draws
your eye and draws the viewer to that object, and also it’s painted white, reflecting the
most amount of light, and then another structure to the north of the Hoffman dock, which
is also painted white, a large solid structure, which also attracts the view from Assembly
Point, and we showed that relationship to the existing Hoffman dock and labeled that
information for your review. We also talked about the reflective quality of materials.
Again, aluminums and painted structures reflecting more light than natural wooded
structures like the Hoffman dock, and then a perception of a potential viewer, and areas
of visual interest in the view when you’re looking at the Hoffman dock. Again, there are
movable object on a dock to the south and existing lighting on that dock which extends
above the dock sundeck, which draws your eye to that, rather than to the Hoffman dock,
which fades into the landscape. Those are all factors that we look at in addressing the
context of the Hoffman dock in relation to other docks, and from that information, the
view shed map, the analysis, we form opinions based on our professional experience
regarding the visual intrusion of this object into the landscaping, and from that conclusion
is drawn that there is a minimal visual impact of this dock in relation to other docks in the
landscape along the shore of Cleverdale point.
MR. KENIRY-To some extent, Mr. Chairman, I can ask a specific question with respect
to every opinion that’s enumerated in the witness’s report, but in the interest of your
agenda and time, if you wish, I can ask her, do your firm attest to the fact that all of the
opinions that are set forth in your report are true, accurate and correct to the best of your
ability?
MR. ABBATE-Unless there’s an objection from members of the Board, we’re going to
assume that that’s correct, that the information submitted, documentary evidence is
accurate and relevant. Do we have any objections from any members of the Board?
There are none, so we will assume.
MR. KENIRY-And then I just have one other question for the witness, and that is whether
or not she has an opinion, to a reasonable degree of landscape architectural certainty,
as to whether or not the height differential as built, as compared to strict compliance with
the Code, is significant?
MS. STANCLIFFE-No, I don’t feel that it is significant.
MR. KENIRY-And why is that?
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MS. STANCLIFFE-Well, the structure is, it creates an element that is in relationship to
itself, i.e. it has essentially three units, side wings and a central unit. Those side wings
come up and then the central unit has a finisher or fenestration to the top of it. That
fenestration is the railing, and that fenestration is translucent because it has no solid, it is
not a solid fixture on the top of the dock. The roof, if you’re looking at it from the south or
the north, the roof is a solid fixture. It visually is a solid piece, and the handrail you can
see through, and so visually, take it away or leave it, you can still see through it.
MR. KENIRY-I have nothing further, Mr. Chairman, thank you.
MR. ABBATE-You’re welcome. Ladies and gentlemen of the Board, do you have any
questions for this young lady? Hearing no questions, I’m assuming that she’s concluded
her testimony, Counselor?
MR. KENIRY-Yes, sir. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-And you have another witness, did you indicate?
MR. KENIRY-I do.
MR. ABBATE-Please present him.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Leonard Fiore, please. With the permission of the Chair, I’ll meld all of
the first series of questions together, and to some extent ask Mr. Fiore to.
MR. URRICO-When we agreed to hear a witness earlier, and have Counsel interview
each one, I thought we were talking about one. Are we going to parade a bunch of?
MR. ABBATE-There’s a difference. The initial witness that was presented by Counsel,
Counsel was optimistic that he would be presenting relevant information in terms of how
it was constructed, and as a result of that, because it was relevant information, which
may or may not influence how this Board will go, I felt it was appropriate at that time to
swear that witness under oath. These other witnesses that are coming before us, I really
see no reason to swear them under oath, but to answer your question, Counsel has
every right to submit to this Board witnesses and evidence that he feels may be relevant,
and we have an obligation to allow him to do this. We can certainly accept or reject
whatever he feels is relevant or irrelevant, whatever the case might be.
MR. URRICO-But does this come before the public hearing? Will the public have a
chance to re-address these issues, then?
MS. RADNER-The public will have to be given a chance to address these issues. You
opened the public hearing, you weren’t aware that there were more witnesses to be
presented.
MR. ABBATE-Yes. Sure. Yes, the public hearing is still open, to answer your question.
We haven’t closed it, and the public will certainly have an opportunity, Mr. Urrico, to ask
whatever questions that they wish. Okay? All right. Proceed.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Fiore, would you please state your name, your address, if you would,
your professional experience, your educational background, and any relevant licensure,
in this instance.
LEONARD FIORE
MR. FIORE-My name is Leonard Fiore. My address is 1522 Main Street in
Pattersonville, New York. I am a general certified appraiser. I am a licensed real estate
broker. I am a New York State certified instructor. I write continuing education classes
for both the real estate and the appraisal community, and I teach those classes in
Albany. I have been an appraiser since 1985, before licensing came into effect, and
have been appraising on a full time basis since then.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Fiore, do you have some particular experience or familiarity with the
Queensbury, New York area?
MR. FIORE-Yes. Our company does many residential appraisals in Warren County,
several hundred, to be exact, and we do quite a few high end properties in the Town of
Queensbury, in Lake George, as well as off water properties town homes, that type of
thing.
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MR. KENIRY-Other than the assignment that you have in connection with this
application, when was the most recent work that you performed of an appraisal nature in
the Town of Queensbury, other than his assignment?
MR. FIORE-The earlier part of this month a sale of a high end home in the Town.
MR. KENIRY-Did there come a point in time when I contacted you concerning the
application that’s presently before this Board?
MR. FIORE-Yes, it was some time in April of this year.
MR. KENIRY-And did I give you an assignment?
MR. FIORE-Yes, you did.
MR. KENIRY-And what was that assignment?
MR. FIORE-The specific assignment was to determine what impact a difference in height
between the Building Code of the Town of Queensbury and the constructed height of the
dock at 159 Cleverdale Road.
MR. KENIRY-And did you consider, in connection with that assignment, the impact, if
any, on value with respect to the subject property, as well as generally the surrounding
properties?
MR. FIORE-Yes, I did.
MR. KENIRY-All right. Could you describe for the Board what you did and how you did
it?
MR. FIORE-It was quite an extensive project, from the standpoint, first of all, learning the
history, and apparently this project has been before this Board since 2001, 2002. So
reading all of the documentation, getting all of the notes, visiting the property, visiting the
site, looking at the issue, walking the dock, looking at the surrounding properties, pulling
tax maps, not only of the subject property, but of the surrounding homes, and then
researching sales, especially those that were specific to this type of property to try and
determine or get a handle on what impact value, because of an item that may be an
amenity, such as this, or perhaps the absence of that amenity, and what impact it has on
the market.
MR. KENIRY-In connection with your assignment, can you describe for the Board what
exactly you did, and then did you at some point come to certain conclusions or formulate
some particular opinions?
MR. FIORE-I made a careful study of the boathouse, and compared it and looked at the
surrounding boathouses in the immediate area. One of the observations that I made of
the 18 parcels that adjoin this particular property that the Hoffman parcel has one of the
few parcels in the immediate area that has the largest front footage on Lake George.
The second observation that I made about the parcel, and I believe one of the
photographs of the dock illustrates that, her parcel is unusual from the standpoint of
elevation. It happens to be one of the higher elevated parcels in the immediate area. It
slopes gently to the left and to the right. When I view this, and I’ve looked at the natural
landscape around this dock, and I viewed the dock itself. It had been made of natural
substance, manmade materials, and it had, one of the observations that I noticed was
what I call the principal of conformant. That in order to determine whether something
creates value or there is a loss of value, how does it conform to the surrounding
properties, and the dock itself conforms very well to the environment, and as a result it
was one of the conclusions that I came to that because of the beach frontage, or the
front foot, that this dock was in proportion to the site, and it’s probably one of the few
sites where you can build this type of structure.
MR. KENIRY-Did you make any other findings, and did you make any findings in
connection with the surrounding properties or the improvements on surrounding
properties?
MR. FIORE-The surrounding properties, many of them date back to the 40’s, 50’s, 60’s,
70’s, a period of architecture that we were building geometric shapes, if you will. We
were building rectangles. We were building squares. Some of them look like they were
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additions. Some of them having living quarters above them. Some of them looking,
standing out against the landscape simply because of the type of structure that it was
and of the materials that were typical and common 50, 60, 70 years ago, aluminum
siding, vinyl siding. The use of railings in the 50’s and 60’s was also very geometric. So,
by comparison to the Hoffman dock, which, quite frankly, has all the ear markings of a
boathouse that is from a William West Durant Great Adirondack Camp, and it’s
something that is not seen quite frequently, but something that conforms very well to the
landscape, something that does not take away from the existing parcel or the
surrounding homes.
MR. KENIRY-In connection with the assignment, did you come to a point where you
formulated certain conclusions or opinions with respect to the consideration of value or
benefit or detriment with respect to the subject improvement?
MR. FIORE-Yes. The conclusion I came to is there would be a diminishment of value if
Mrs. Hoffman was asked to remove the deck, the railing. Removing the railing would
render the deck obsolete, and quite honestly, that is living space for most people who
have summer homes, and you don’t necessarily have to have a home on the water to
have a deck, but certainly most of us do live on decks during that period of time. The
deck itself, if the railing were removed and the deck was rendered obsolete, then 50% of
this structure would be rendered useless. Then the only value to it is the boathouse
without any living space.
MR. KENIRY-What is the significance, if any, with respect to value as it pertains to the
living space that you’ve described?
MR. FIORE-That deck adds significant value to the project.
MR. KENIRY-When you consider the value that you described, can you describe for the
Board, what, if any, detriment arises to surrounding properties as a result of the benefit
that this property has obtained as a result of this improvement?
MR. FIORE-There I was hard pressed, to be very honest, to find any detriment to any of
the surrounding properties. I found quite the opposite. I found that this structure, which
sits almost center of these 18 parcels, and serves as a focal point for that shoreline, does
not detract from any of the surrounding homes and if anything sets an example to future
owners of using materials that are natural, materials that allow the structure to conform
to the surrounding area and the environment is in good keeping.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Chairman, I do not believe that I have anything more for this witness at
this time.
MR. ABBATE-I have a question for your witness. Did I hear you correctly when you said
that you researched out the Building Codes for the Town of Queensbury?
MR. FIORE-I don’t believe, did I say that?
MR. ABBATE-What did you say?
MR. FIORE-I researched the tax maps.
MR. ABBATE-Researched the tax maps, okay, not the Building Codes.
MR. FIORE-I did read the Building Code.
MR. ABBATE-You did research the Building Code?
MR. FIORE-Yes, I did.
MR. ABBATE-Did you find this task to be insurmountable, researching out the Building
Codes of the Town of Queensbury?
MR. FIORE-No. In fact, I’d like to compliment the Town of Queensbury because your
website is wonderful. It’s user friendly, and I was able to extract a lot of information.
MR. ABBATE-So are you suggesting, sir, that using a little initiative, anyone, basically,
could research out the Building Codes of the Town of Queensbury? Is that what you
were suggesting?
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MR. FIORE-If you are computer literate.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much, sir. Thank you, Counselor.
MR. BRYANT-I have a question.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, please.
MR. BRYANT-You made a statement about removing the railing and rendering 50% of
the building useless. So, I want to understand that statement. Are you saying that a
boathouse without a deck is totally worthless?
MR. FIORE-I’m saying that if they didn’t want a deck, they probably would have
designed a boathouse that was a lot different than what we see today, that the original
intent was dual, as are many boathouses today. Some of the sales that go down within
the Town of Queensbury that pre-exist, that are nonconforming, it is not uncommon that
one of the reasons for the increase in value is because of that living space that that
either deck or the finished space allows the homeowner to enjoy.
MR. BRYANT-What did you determine the actual, I mean, you said it would substantially
reduce the value, what is that dollar figure?
MR. FIORE-The dollar figure is going to range. It’s going to range depending upon the
buyer. It’s going to range depending upon the view amenity, and this certainly has, and
that sometimes the most difficult thing to quantify is the view amenity in the sale of a
home, but the view amenity from this dock, it’s superior, and not having that dock or
living space would also deny them that view amenity from the top of that area.
MR. BRYANT-You mentioned that in your conclusion. However, you also failed to
mention that the neighbors, who have that benefit, their docks are conforming heights.
So, you know, I understand what you’re saying.
MR. FIORE-I didn’t want to address that because I am not sure, I’m not an expert in
heights of some of the docks that I view, and there was personal property on some of
these docks that make it appear higher than they should be.
MR. BRYANT-I just found that interesting that it was omitted. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-At this time, I probably owe the public an explanation. This particular
appeal so far has been running a little over two hours, and we are very tolerant, and let
me explain to the public why. Every appeal that comes before us may result in what we
refer to as a judicial review, and as such, quite frankly, as Chairman, I would prefer to err
on the side of fairness and allow every opportunity for Counsel to present his case so
that in the event of a judicial review, we will not be found in error. Thank you very much.
Does anyone else have anything they wish to say at this time. Counselor, please?
MR. KENIRY-I have nothing further at this time, Mr. Chairman. I’m prepared to proceed
pursuant to your direction.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Fine. Now at this point, do we have any individuals in the public
who have any questions for any of the last two witnesses that were presented by
Counsel? Yes, sir. Would you be kind enough, please, to come to the table, speak into
the microphone, state your name and place of residence, please, and I would prefer that
you ask your questions to the Board so that there’s no confrontation, please.
JOHN SALVADOR
MR. SALVADOR-Thank you. My name is John Salvador, again. I have one question for
the Zoning Administrator, and that is, roughly how many of these sort of variances, that is
height variances, dealing with boathouses, has the Town been entertaining in recent
years?
MS. RADNER-Do you want us to answer that question, Mr. Chairman?
MR. ABBATE-What is the relevancy of the question?
MR. SALVADOR-Well, to frame the subject, I mean, is this a once in a lifetime issue, or
is it happening every day? That’s my interest. Is it a repetitive problem in the Town?
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MR. ABBATE-Is it a repetitive problem in the Town? I think that’s a fair question.
MR. BROWN-Well, I think anyone, probably, on this Board could answer the question as
well. It doesn’t have to come from me. You guys see all the variances. You’re charged
with reviewing them. Maybe one or two a year. I don’t think it’s a high frequency issue.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you very much.
MR. SALVADOR-Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you, sir.
MR. SALVADOR-I have a question for the landscape architect. Do you think our height
limitation on boathouses, that is 14 feet above mean high water level is reasonable?
MS. RADNER-Again, the question should be presented to the Board. Then the Board
will ask the question.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, that’s what I asked you to do initially.
MR. SALVADOR-Okay. My question to the landscape architect is, our Code limits the
height of a boathouse to 14 feet above the mean high water mark. Is that considered in
the arena of architectural design a reasonable number?
MR. MC NULTY-Mr. Chairman, I’m not sure that that’s germane to this issue.
MR. SALVADOR-Okay.
MR. MC NULTY-It might be germane to the PORC Committee, but we’re confined by
what the height limit exists, and we don’t get to change it.
MR. ABBATE-I would probably agree, but I’m going to defer to Counsel and ask for her
opinion, please.
MS. RADNER-I would have to agree with Mr. McNulty that this Board doesn’t have the
power to change what the Town Board has adopted as its Code.
MR. ABBATE-This is true, that’s a fact.
MR. SALVADOR-I’m not asking you to change it. I’m asking for the reasonableness of
the Code, that’s all, someone’s opinion, a professional person’s opinion as to the
reasonableness of our Code.
MR. ABBATE-And I think a professional person has already addressed that issue.
MR. SALVADOR-Okay. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-You’re welcome, and I see a gentlemen in the back of the room, please.
Yes, you have a question. Do you have a question for the witnesses? If you have no
questions, you’re not going to be acknowledged.
MR. CREEDE-I wanted to follow up on some.
MR. ABBATE-I understand.
MR. CREEDE-Mr. Salvador brought up an interesting point.
MS. RADNER-State who you are for the record.
MR. CREEDE-John Creede. Why is it that Queensbury has the only height restrict, 14
feet, when all the other municipalities on the entire Lake George go to 16 feet or beyond?
MR. ABBATE-That’s a good question. I would suggest that you reduce that to writing and
submit it in writing to the Executive Director of Community Development in the Town of
Queensbury. It’s not an issue for this Board.
MR. CREEDE-Okay.
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MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much. Do we have anyone else in the audience who
would like to have any questions? Yes, ma’am. Come up to the table.
MS. RADNER-She wants to make a statement. She can.
MR. ABBATE-A statement. I didn’t hear that. Yes. Please. I’m sorry, please identify
yourself.
MS. STEWART-Yes. Maggie Stewart, Assembly Point, and this will be short, but it
seems to me when you allow one person to exceed the height limit on a house or
boathouse or whatever, then that becomes the new height limit, and I think that’s pretty
hard to deal with.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Your comments are noted for the record. Thank you.
TED HANS, III
MR. HANS-A very brief statement.
MR. ABBATE-What is the subject of your brief statement? I want to determine the
relevancy of it.
MR. HANS-As I understand this Board for an individual property.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Come up to the table. Identify yourself and speak into the
microphone, please.
MR. HANS-Ted Hans, III, Gunn Lane, Cleverdale. As I understand it, this Board reviews
a variance for the individual property, so if the variance is granted for this, for Mrs.
Hoffman’s dock, that in no way sets a precedent for any other property anywhere else in
the Town of Queensbury. A variance is granted, pursuant to the individual property, and
any other variance requested, anyone else that wants to build their dock above, will have
to go through a hearing like this. I mean, I’m sure there’s a ton of other permit
applications and things like that, but (lost word) generous, this Board looks at every
variance application individually. Isn’t that correct?
MR. ABBATE-That is correct.
MR. BRYANT-Mr. Chairman, in response to your question, sir, you’re absolutely correct
that every single property is treated differently, and that there’s no such thing as
precedent, but the reality is that there are attorneys that’ll sit at the table and say, you
have to view every single property, and they’ll come back the next week and they’ll say,
but the property next door has a height of 16 feet, and so therein lies the difficulty.
MR. ABBATE-No, I’m sorry. There will be no more. I’m closing this portion. There will
be no more. We’ve gone on long enough. I think we’ve heard everything that’s been
relevant so far. I’m going to continue on, unless, Counselor, you have anything you want
to say.
MR. KENIRY-One item that’s germane. If you recall at the last meeting, we talked about
precedent, and actually we had a section from I think the practice commentaries that
dealt with that, in terms of the tremendous deference to your discretion, and I think to
some extent, as Mr. Bryant correctly states, every single piece of property is different.
That’s all. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Thank you very much. Before I ask members to offer their
comments, and that’s exactly what I’m going to do at this portion of the hearing, I would
like to inform the public that the comments that are going to be offered by members are
directed to the Chairman only, and comments expressed by Board members to the
Chairman are not open to debate. Having said that, I’m going to ask members now to
please offer comments on Area Variance No. 46-2005, but before I do, I want to make it
clear and respectfully remind the members that precedence mandates we concern
ourselves with the evidence which appears on the record to support our conclusions.
And the evidence relied upon should be specifically stated. This is necessary for an
intelligent Judicial review, and any position you may take must be based on the
regulatory review criteria of our laws and not simply on subjective preferences or not
liking a project, and due process guarantees that government ensures a fair and open
process, and Board members make decisions on reliable evidence contained in the
record of Board deliberations. Now, having said that, I would like to ask.
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MS. RADNER-Mr. Chairman, before you go on, may I remind you, too, that your
determination, because you’re doing a re-hearing tonight, any determination you make,
and you’re not required to make it tonight, you can reverse, modify, or annul the original
decision. It has to be a unanimous vote of all members present, and the Board has to
find that the rights of any persons who relied in good faith upon your previous order will
not be prejudiced. You also have to apply the usual criteria for an Area Variance, and I
want to remind you that the Area Variance that’s under discussion is Area Variance No.
46-2005, which called for the 700 square foot deck.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you, Counselor. I appreciate that.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Chairman, may I just confer with your Counsel for one minute?
MR. ABBATE-You certainly may. Then what I am going to do is this. I’m going to recess
for five minutes. That will give everybody an opportunity to do whatever they have to do.
This Board is recessed for five minutes. Okay, ladies and gentlemen, this Board is back
in session again, and I ended with respectfully reminding the Board members of our
procedures, and I was in the process of asking individuals for their comments. I’d like to
start, if I may, perhaps, with a volunteer, rather than arbitrarily selecting one. Do we
have a volunteer who would like to start first? If not, okay, Mr. Garrand, since you are a
junior, you just volunteered.
MR. GARRAND-Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
MR. ABBATE-You’re welcome.
MR. GARRAND-Basically I have no other case to reference this on. I have to, the only
thing I can do is refer to the balancing test. When I look at this, whether benefit can be
achieved by any other means feasible to the applicant. I don’t see, basically, how any
other means can be achieved to the applicant. The next thing I have to look at is will
approving this cause an undesirable change in the neighborhood, and I don’t believe so.
I think it actually enhances the neighborhood. Next I go down to whether the request is
substantial, and, yes, I do believe the request is substantial. I do not believe it will have
any physical or adverse environmental effects on the neighborhood. I look at whether
the difficulty is self-created. I don’t believe it’s self-created. I look at a drawing of what
was submitted to the Town of Queensbury, and I looked at that deck, and I’ve looked at
that deck over nine separate occasions, including yesterday. It doesn’t appear as
though the builder built it as per that drawing that was submitted to the Town. I don’t
believe that Mrs. Hoffman asked this builder to modify this deck to be a nonconforming
structure. So I’d be in favor.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you very much. Mr. McNulty, please.
MR. MC NULTY-Well, several thoughts that are going through my head, and frankly I’m
not exactly sure how I’m going to come down on this, but several notes that I made.
One, we’ve heard testimony about how it probably was not possible to build this deck to
Code, and my response to that is, okay, then it probably should not have been. Building
material difficulty is not a license to proceed and violate the Code. I think the same thing
applies to who made the mistake. I don’t think it’s fair to blame the builder, at least not
entirely. I think it’s the responsibility originally, ultimately of the applicant to build or see
that something is build to what was agreed upon, and because the builder made a
mistake, I don’t think, again, that’s an excuse for violating the Code, and likewise, even
though we heard testimony about the extra value that would be gained by the applicant
because of the way the building was, or the structure was built, and I’m not suggesting
that it was done deliberately, but again, added value is not necessarily a reason or a
license to violate Code. Looking at the criteria that we’re asked to look at, I guess I have
to agree that there probably won’t be an undesirable change produced in the character of
the neighborhood as long as we remember when the next application comes in that
that’s a separate application and we evaluate it based on its merits. However, whether
the benefit sought by the applicant can be achieved by some other method, I guess it
depends on what you look at as the benefit sought. The entire structure benefit, no, can’t
be achieved any other way. The benefit of having an Adirondack style boathouse, yes,
that can be achieved, it’s just that the sundeck wouldn’t be available. Whether the
requested Area Variance is substantial. Yes, I’ll agree that it is substantial. Impact on
the neighborhood, probably not great. Difficulty self-created. There I have to argue that
maybe it is, because there was a failure in not adhering to the Code, and again, I think
that’s a responsibility of the applicant and the owner. It doesn’t matter how difficult it is
35
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
for somebody to accomplish that, it’s still the responsibility. I don’t know where I’m going
to come down.
MR. ABBATE-Fine. Thank you, Mr. McNulty. Mr. Bryant, please.
MR. BRYANT-Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I’m not going to go through the five criteria. I’m
just going to touch on two of them. One of them was the self-created issue, and I think
that’s where I fell down early on in this project, and primarily it was Mrs. Hoffman’s
statement that it was contractor error and therefore she wasn’t totally responsible, and
my view, at that time, was that it’s really a civil matter, and not for this Board to decide, in
that regard, that it will still ultimately the owner’s responsibility, and therefore it was self-
created. After hearing the contractor, and now understanding the terms of the
relationship there, I don’t understand, you know, even with Mr. Underwood’s explanation
and the contractor’s explanation, how in the world the construction has any bearing on
the overall height and how they couldn’t figure that out from the get go and how an
engineer would lay out a building and cut and size the material and make a self-
determination that he could not meet Code, he couldn’t build it as it was approved by an
engineer, certified engineer, and then to top it off, of course, it’s a time and material
situation. There’s no real civil recourse there. So I really have empathy for Mrs.
Hoffman, and when we get back to the self-created issue, I’d have to say that Mrs.
Hoffman is probably not responsible for this error, and that it was contractor’s error, as
originally stated. The second issue is relative to the environmental impact, and I’ve got
to compliment you on your landscape artist’s presentation. It was indeed all the
photographs and the detail, it really changed my mind on the project. So, in this
particular circumstance, I’m going to be in favor of the application.
MR. ABBATE-All right. Thank you very much. Mr. Underwood, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-I think what we have to remain focused on is what we’re talking
about tonight, and that’s the three and a half feet of relief that is being requested for the
height of this building, and as has been mentioned, that’s particularly just the sundeck up
on top and the railings as they protrude up. I think that a reasonable explanation has
been given by Mr. Creede as we had requested, as to the, how the whole process came
into being here tonight, and I think that one of the things that we need to remember when
we do the test here is was there any intent on his part to build an over height building,
and I don’t think, in any way, shape or form you could say, and anyone would back up
that comment, that anyone had tried to build something bigger than what they had. The
materials at hand, the materials that were provided to him work with are very variable, as
he suggested, and that’s part, I would say part and parcel to the end result of what we
ended up with on this building here. The jury of peers of the neighbors, I don’t see
people with protestor signs up on Lake George saying tear this thing down. No one
seems to feel that way, and as was mentioned before, our Board is, when people come
before us is to ask for relief. They’re not asking for anything more than a reasonable
decision on our part, and I think in this instance here we can be reasonable, too. This is
an asset to the community. One hundred years from now, people are going to say, wow,
that guy really knew what he was doing when he built that place. It looks great. It’s still
standing, and, you know, if this was the turn of the century, and as mentioned, if he were
William West Durant and you were designing a building, there was a lot of leeway
involved because of the materials that were used. Nothing happens. It’s not an easy
process, and the end result is what we should focus on. There’s no detriment to the
community. It does violate the Code by a little bit, but as mentioned, too, the shoreline,
the vegetation on the shoreline, mitigates the process because we have that green
vegetation behind it. It’s not a clear cut lot like most of the, I want everybody to see what
I built, people up on Lake George. So in this instance I think that we can go with the
applicant’s request here. I think it is reasonable, and I don’t think there’s going to be any
detriment or hurt to the community. It’s an asset.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you. Mrs. Hunt, please.
MRS. HUNT-Thank you. Well, I’m going to look at it from a different perspective. If they
had come to us and asked for three and a half feet of relief, in the first place, I would
have said no, and I find the elevation, Page Two, where it distinctly says 14 feet from the
mean high water mark, to be rather damning. So I really don’t know. I kind of agree with
Mr. McNulty. I’m really not sure how I’m going to vote at this point.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Mr. Urrico, please.
MR. URRICO-The scariest thing for me is to realize that this is almost six years ago, and
I was on the Board for each of these hearings. So that means I’ve been here six years.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
Going back, I think it’s important to remember how we got to this point. The original
request granted 400 square feet of relief on the dock. So we did understand the
enormity of the project at the time. It was not something that was lost on us. What we
didn’t have at the time was the opportunity that we have now is to look back at it and see
what the project would actually look like. We had sketches. We had an idea, but we
didn’t know what would be brought about. When you came to us with the height
variance, three years later, there was a problem. We offered you a solution, and that
solution wasn’t accepted. So now we’re here, six years later, almost six years later, with
a problem. We basically have a project we either accept on the way it is, or not, because
of the three and a half feet. So we didn’t get to this point because the Board is trying to
make a point of something. We got to this point because the original plans that were
submitted to us, with the original specifications, isn’t what the project is today. As Mrs.
Hunt said, many times in projects like this, we look at it and try to think, what would we
do if this was being presented to us right now? Frankly if we were presented with
something like this, which looks wonderful, everybody agrees, the railings are going to
be three and a half feet too high, but we gave them one foot of relief. So we’re really
giving, it’s two and a half feet beyond what we approved. Would we accept that? It’s
kind of hard to say no to that, but we did get to this point for very specific reasons that
weren’t due to this Board’s decision making but basically due to the way things unfolded.
We have five criteria to balance this with. The benefit, as it is now, can it be achieved by
other means feasible to the applicant? Well, the only feasible means would be to lower
the deck or to cut it down, and obviously that’s not a feasible alternative. The
undesirable change in the neighborhood, and I want to address somebody that brought
up precedent earlier. If this dock is allowed to stand, and the neighbor next door decides
to build a dock that’s three and a half feet high, or the neighbor next to him decides to get
a variance as well, it doesn’t create precedent, but it changes the character of the
neighborhood, and in doing so, it does make a change, perhaps, in the way we view
things, because one of the criteria is whether it’s an undesirable change. Well, if enough
change is created, then it’s no longer undesirable. Now it becomes the rule rather than
the exception. The request is not substantial in my estimation, and I don’t see any
adverse physical or environmental effects, but I do think this is self-created, but the
Number One rule of the balancing test is balance the benefit to the applicant against the
detriment to the health, safety and welfare of the community, and to me that’s the telling
statement, and I think the benefit to the applicant outweighs any detriment to the health,
safety, and welfare of the community, and I would be in favor of it.
MR. ABBATE-You would be in favor of it. Okay. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. My
position is going to be approached from a slightly different angle. My position is based
on the fact that the ZBA may act only after the basis for action has been established by
evidence obtained at a public hearing, and actions of this Board are subject to review by
the courts, as we all know, to determine whether this Board acted within the limits of its
jurisdiction, and whether the standards imposed by Statute, Ordinance were respected,
whether the procedural rights of litigants were observed, and whether this Board was
chargeable with any abuse of its discretion. Further, since judicial review or the conduct
of this Board is not a trial de nova of the matter which was decided by this Board but a
review primarily on the record made before this Board, the task of the court will vary in its
complexity with the completeness of the record made. A decision is not ready for
intelligent judicial review where the reasons for the decision have not been set forth by
the Board, and findings are adequate where they are sufficient to show the grounds for
the decision and provide a basis for judicial review. This Board must make a decision on
a rationale basis with specific reasonable grounds supported by evidence, and findings
which are merely conclusiory in form are insufficient, and my decision, my position is
based on discretionary authority granted through the judiciary in quasi-judiciary boards,
and I listened very carefully to the witness’ testimony, which I believe were relevant, and
read with care the two pieces of documentary evidence submitted by the appellant,
which I also believe was relevant, and finally it should be noted that the number of
persons who are for or against the granting of this variance is neither a relevant nor a
proper consideration in determining the merits of any appeal. The courts have stated,
and I quote, a denial on the grounds that neighbors disapprove of a use or where public
opposition is strong will not be sustained. The judgment I have taken is based on a
review of our laws and not simply on subjective preferences or not liking a project, and
when I take all this into consideration, as well as the task of balancing the benefit of the
variance against the impact on the area, as well as the fact that State statutes spell out
five statutory criteria that must be carefully considered in deciding whether to grant an
Area Variance, and based on the standard of fairness, I support the applicant’s request
for a variance. However, with a condition, a viable alternative, and that condition and
viable alternative is the removal of the railings. Now, having stated that, the public
hearing for Area Variance No. 46-2005 is closed.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. ABBATE-I respectfully remind the members, at this point, that we have the task of
balancing the benefit of the variance against the impact on the area as well as the fact
that State statutes spell out five statutory criteria that must be carefully considered in
deciding whether to grant an Area Variance, and if you have and wish to introduce a
motion, introduce it, please, with clarity, and in the event a member does not understand
the motion as stated, please advise me and I will request that the motion be repeated a
second time. The motion itself will not be subjected to debate, and any member not
favoring the motion may exercise their right to vote no, or introduce a motion to deny. At
this point, I wish to caution the members of this Board that the approval requires a
unanimous vote. Having said that, is there a motion for Area Variance No. 46-2005?
MR. BROWN-Mr. Chairman, if I could ask a quick question.
MR. ABBATE-By all means.
MR. BROWN-So I’m clear, it’s going to fall upon my office to do the enforcement of
whatever decision is rendered here tonight. If I understand your condition that you would
support the application with the removal of the railings, are you saying with the offered
removal of the railings, the front portion as shown in this photo to bring the deck, the
sundeck portion back to the 700 square feet, the removal of the front portion you’d
support, or are you talking about the entire railing?
MR. ABBATE-That was my recommendation, not the Board’s. It was my position that all
the railings be removed, and why do I say that? I say that because then it would come
into basically compliance, and to me that is a feasible alternative.
MR. BROWN-Again, I just wanted to be clear.
MR. ABBATE-Sure.
MR. BROWN-It wasn’t discussed at great length tonight. The offer that’s on the table
from the applicant, and don’t take this for an argument on either side, only because it
wasn’t discussed, like I said, in any detail tonight, is a portion of the application offered a
removal of a section of the railing of the sundeck to bring the enclosed deck portion down
to the previously approved by the Planning Board 700 square feet area, and my
understanding is, and Mr. Keniry can correct me if I’m wrong, here, the goal there is to
lessen the height impact from the lake by removing that rail to whatever that distance is
back to get it down to 700 square feet. So I just wanted to be clear that in addition of the
offer of removing a portion of the rail, I just wanted to understand what your removal of
the rails condition was.
MR. ABBATE-And my instance, of course, is not binding, it was only my personal
opinion.
MR. BROWN-I understand.
MR. ABBATE-And I would be willing to yield to any members of the Board if they wish to
modify it a little bit, but my initial intent was this. All the railings be removed and I would
be in favor of it.
MR. BROWN-I understand.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
MR. KENIRY-Mr. Chairman, if I’m out of order, tell me, but I think what Mr. Brown stated
is correct, and I just want to make sure that that is clear, as far as the applicant’s request,
if you will, of you. Certainly we are asking that it remain as built, and as I answered, I
think Mr. McNulty’s question with respect to the measurements, we would accept the
measurements that the Town has established to date, so that there doesn’t become
some gotcha or big question about, well, what exactly is the height. So we would accept
those measurements as it is built. That is the applicant’s preferred relief, and that is what
we respectfully ask for.
MR. ABBATE-A feasible alternative.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. KENIRY-As it has been correctly stated, we have tried to provide some measure to
ameliorate what we perceive to have been the harm that offended the Board, and that’s
how that arose.
MR. ABBATE-Let’s get it cleared up, gentlemen, ladies.
MR. BRYANT-I just want to understand this. Are you saying that that’s your feasible
alternative, that you would just move the railing back away from the lake so it’s not quite
so visible? You’d still need the same height variance. It wouldn’t change that.
MR. KENIRY-That is 100% percent correct, Mr. Bryant, and, Mr. Bryant, you should
know that that proposal was the product of discussions that we had with representatives
of the Town. It wasn’t as if that was our idea or that we just came up with that out of thin
air.
MR. ABBATE-And let me make it quite clear, Counsel, I think you haven’t really been
before us that often. At that point in the meeting, that is only a temporary position. It
was by no means a vote. Because, quite frankly, there are instances in which other
Board members hear what other folks have to say, they change their point of view. So
that was merely a position, if you will, not in stone. My position.
MR. KENIRY-I respect that, and I understand that.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
MR. BRYANT-Could I ask you a question, Mr. Chairman?
MR. ABBATE-You can ask me anything you wish.
MR. BRYANT-Relative to your statement, you said you wouldn’t accept it as it was. With
this alternative solution, is that favorable to you?
MR. ABBATE-Yes. I would agree to a reasonable, feasible alternative.
MR. BRYANT-Reducing the size of the deck to 700 feet?
MR. ABBATE-Yes.
MR. BRYANT-Okay. So you would then be in favor of it, if they reduced the size of, I just
want it clear in my mind what you’re saying.
MR. ABBATE-Yes. I am looking for, in other words, both parties, I think the Supreme
Court made it quite clear. When he asked that it be brought back to us, he is suggesting,
I would think, and correct me if I’m wrong, that the both parties try to work out something
that is feasible, that is fair, that is not biased. Would you agree with me, Counselor?
MR. KENIRY-I do.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. There you go, and before we start, Chuck, I’d like to give you
another opportunity, because you weren’t sure, and I’d like you to perhaps make a
comment, if you will.
MR. MC NULTY-Well, I’m still not sure what I’m going to do.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. All right.
MR. MC NULTY-It strikes me that the removal of the sundeck is a feasible alternative.
It’s not the alternative the applicant wants, but I’m not sure that I’m convinced that the
sundeck has to be there.
MR. ABBATE-Well, let me say this, Ladies and Gentlemen of the Zoning Board of
Appeals of the Town of Queensbury, we do not have to make a decision this evening.
We have up to 62 days to make a decision. If the Board is not quite comfortable, I am
willing to yield to whatever position they wish to take. We can postpone our decision,
and we can take the timeframe that’s authorized by law, and then make our decision.
MR. URRICO-Can we try a motion?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-All right. Yes, let’s try a motion. I’d be happy to do that. I’m looking for a
motion. Is there a motion for Area Variance No. 46-2005?
A MOTION WAS MADE TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 46-2005 JEAN M.
HOFFMAN, Introduced by James Underwood who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Allan Bryant:
159 Cleverdale Road, Sunnyfields Lane. The applicant has constructed a 1,170 square
foot boathouse with a 978 square foot sundeck at 17.5 feet high. In reviewing this this
evening, our Board in general seems to feel that while they could remove the sundeck
completely, that the applicant seems to be satisfied if the edge of the boathouse is
moved back from the 978 square foot into the conforming 700 square foot, which was
approved by the Planning Board. It does seem to be felt in general that removing the
deck entirely would negate their use of that deck up there, which would be a detriment to
them, as property owners. I think a reasonable explanation was made this evening, also,
as to why this height was exceeded, and that was, again, based upon the materials as
used and the best judgments of the builder in building the project to completion. While
the request does seem substantial at three and a half feet of relief, we have to keep in
mind that it’s a railing up there. It’s not a solid structure that would be visually intrusive.
The studies provided by the applicant seem to point us in the direction that this was not
going to have a detrimental effect on the neighborhood. No neighborhood criticism was
given, other than I think one person criticized the project, but the direct neighbors did not
seem to be effected, and in general, the adverse effects on the physical or environment
do not appear to be a consideration for us. Whether the alleged difficulty is self-created,
it was felt, in general, that it was due to the materials at hand. It’s not a conventional
structure. It was built to the best ability, using those construction materials, and it seems
to be a reasonable structure. If you go out and walk underneath it, it’s not over height, in
a sense of walking through the alleyways alongside the dock space inside. In general,
then, I would move for its approval. That the boathouse would remain as is, with the
exception that the boathouse as depicted up there now for us on the screen would be
shrunk back to the 700 square feet as originally proposed and approved by the Planning
Board. It would still be three and a half feet over height. The boathouse itself is in
conformity. It’s the railing above that we’re speaking of specifically.
st
Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
MR. BROWN-I just wanted to be clear that it’s the railing. You said boathouse.
MR. UNDERWOOD-The railing.
MR. BROWN-Just the railing.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, make it clear for the record, the railing.
AYES: Mr. Urrico, Mr. Garrand, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Underwood
NOES: Mr. McNulty, Mr. Abbate
ABSTAINED: Mrs. Hunt
MR. ABBATE-The vote to approve Area Variance No. 46-2005 is four yes, two no, and
one abstention. In view of this, Area Variance No. 46-2005 is disapproved.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 34-2006 SEQRA TYPE: II BRUCE LANT OWNER(S):
BRUCE LANT ZONING: SFR-1A LOCATION: 14 FOX FARM ROAD APPLICANT
PROPOSES CONSTRUCTION OF A 248 SQ. FT. RESIDENTIAL ADDITION. RELIEF
REQUESTED FROM SIDE SETBACK REQUIREMENTS OF THE SFR ZONE.
CROSS REF: BP 2006-209 WARREN COUNTY PLANNING: N/A LOT SIZE: 0.46
ACRES TAX MAP NO. 295.19-3-68 SECTION: 179-4-030
BRUCE LANT, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 34-2006, Bruce Lant, Meeting Date: June 21, 2006
“Project Location: 14 Fox Farm Road Description of Proposed Project: The applicant
proposes a 248 sq. ft. (footprint) residential addition to the eastside of the existing 1,925
sq. ft. single-family dwelling. Addition is 2-story and approximately 400 sq. ft. total.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
Relief Required:
The applicant requests 8-feet of side setback relief (eastside), where 20-feet is the
minimum, per § 179-4-030, for the SFR-1A zone.
Parcel History (construction/site plan/variance, etc.):
2006-252: Issued 5/26/06, for a 540 sq. ft. residential addition and 495 sq. ft. 2-car
attached garage.
2006-209: Pending AV approval, for a 400 sq. ft. addition (modify permit).
1995-690: Issued 12/15/96, for a single-family dwelling with 2-car attached garage.
Staff comments:
This proposal is for a residential addition including bedroom on the first floor and living
space on the ground level. The addition is proposed on the eastside of the existing
single-family dwelling. A building permit has been issued for the addition on the
Westside of the house.
It appears that feasible alternatives to siting the addition are limited, possible siting at the
back of the house could be discussed. The request for 8-feet of relief from the 20-foot
setback requirement could be considered substantial. Consideration could be given to
reducing the proposed width of the addition, thus reducing the variance request.”
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Would the petitioner of Area Variance No. 34-2006 approach the
table, which you have, I see, speak into the microphone, and for the record identify
yourself, please.
MR. LANT-My name is Bruce Lant, and I live at 14 Fox Farm Road.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Now you’re not represented by counsel?
MR. LANT-No, sir.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. So then what I’m going to do is explain to you, tell us why you feel
we should approve your variance and if you have any questions or don’t understand any
of our procedures, stop us and we’d be more than happy to explain them to you.
MR. LANT-Sure.
MR. ABBATE-So go ahead, tell us why.
MR. LANT-The side setback currently is at 20 feet. There’s some other residences.
There’s a building development that’s directly behind me that has a side setback of five
feet with a sum of 15. So I didn’t really think that it was substantial in my request to
begin with. The second thing was that we had looked at other alternatives to expand the
home, being that there’s five of us in the home. It’s a fairly cramped house with no
storage space. We had explored adding up under the home and discovered that it was
just cost prohibitive to do that. We are going to add on to the west side of the house, as
the permit, 252, outlines. That’s inclusive of this, actually, variance, you’ll see in the
plans, that the plans include that addition as well. So I reapplied, and the east side abuts
a vacant lot that’s owned by my next door neighbor as well, that they can’t actually build
on. They could sell the lot, but they can’t build a home on it because of the front feet, I
guess the road frontage is minimum.
MR. STONE-Frontage on a Town road.
MR. LANT-Yes. So it’s always going to be a wooded lot. Even if you clear cut it, you’re
still looking at a couple of hundred yards between my home and the next door neighbor’s
home, and none of the neighbors are in opposition of the proposed addition.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. That’s fine. If there’s anything else that you think you’d like to let
us know, bring to our attention, we’ll address it.
MR. LANT-Sure.
MR. ABBATE-Do any members of the Board have any questions for Mr. Lant?
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MR. BRYANT-Staff notes addresses the issue of possibly putting the addition behind the
house. Why isn’t that possible?
MR. LANT-We explored that alternative. Unfortunately the septic tank and the septic
leach field is directly behind that portion of the home, and if we moved it any further west
on the back side of the home, then you’re actually looking at going off where the kitchen
currently is, which defeats the purpose of what we’re trying to do, is accomplish a larger
bedroom area and modify a current bathroom that’s on the upper level, for future plans of
modifying the kitchen, to make it a little bit larger.
MR. BRYANT-Where exactly is the septic tank?
MR. LANT-The septic tank should be on the site plan. There should be two site plans.
One shows the septic and one does not show the septic. It’s only approximately
probably eight feet from the corner going west, and we had also explored the viability of
making it slightly narrower to even just look for a smaller variance and elongate it, but
unfortunately there’s an egress window and also the service entrance is located on that
front portion of the home, and more importantly really the egress window was there, and
that’s a full basement, that’s a full casement window that’s there, and I didn’t really want
to remove that window and put a window on the front of the house which would have
created a smaller house which wouldn’t have provided any exit from the basement area.
MR. STONE-You said that the neighbor to the east, northeast, whatever it is, that’s not a
buildable lot as it currently stands.
MR. LANT-Correct.
MR. STONE-Have you ever approached him about buying part of the lot so you don’t
need a variance?
MR. LANT-He’s not interested in selling the lot.
MR. STONE-He’s not at all?
MR. LANT-No.
MR. STONE-You’ve explored it, though?
MR. LANT-Yes.
MR. STONE-Okay. Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-I think Mrs. Hunt had a question.
MRS. HUNT-Yes, the width is, what, 14 feet?
MR. LANT-Fourteen feet, that’s correct.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Do we have any other members that have any questions for Mr.
Lant for Area Variance No. 34-2006?
MR. BRYANT-The two story addition, what is it going to be, bedrooms?
MR. LANT-It’s noted as a two story addition because of the lay of the land, actually
because it slopes back. We’re actually pouring a full basement level on the lower level. I
wanted to list it and also build it as living space because if I wanted to put a shop down
there, you know, or whatever, but currently we’re actually just going to be doing it as
storage, because there is no storage in that home right now at all, other than closet
space. So that lower level is going to be for storage or possibly to put tools in and things,
and then the upper level will be the master bedroom and the current bedroom is off that
corner, I’m going to modify that into a larger bathroom, and there’s a smaller bathroom
that’s not depicted in the plans because it’s, we’re not changing it currently, but I wanted
to be able to leave it where it is because the kitchen, if we modify the kitchen, I’m actually
going to go into that bathroom area and make it into a smaller like powder room, actually.
MR. STONE-Mr. Secretary, do we have anything from the neighbor?
MR. UNDERWOOD-I have nothing on file.
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MR. STONE-Nothing. Okay. Thank you.
MR. MC NULTY-Going back to the question of the septic or moving that addition to the
back of the house, or partially on the back, I’m not sure whether I was listening clearly at
the time. The septic is there. Any other reason? If the septic were not there?
MR. LANT-There’s also another egress window downstairs as well, which is where
there’s a bedroom down there as well. So if I were to move that around the corner, then I
would also have take into consideration making that bedroom that’s down there even
larger or modifying that lower level even more than it already is.
MR. MC NULTY-Okay. So it would be an additional cost? It could be an alternative, but
not a desirable one, because you could move the septic tank without moving the
drainage field.
MR. LANT-Correct.
MR. MC NULTY-And swing that around part way, but it would mean other modifications
in the basement.
MR. LANT-Yes, we had explored moving the septic for, when we were going to actually
add up, because if we had added up, I would have added, I think, two more bedrooms
than the existing plan called for. So I would have had to increase the septic.
Unfortunately, when we purchased the home, we also had landscaped. So now there’s
five feet of fill over the top of where, not the septic tank, but the leach field. So I can’t
even tie into the existing leach field anymore. I would have to actually move my leach
field to the left as well.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Do any Board members have any other questions for Mr. Lant? All
right. If not then what I’m going to do is open up the public hearing for Area Variance 34-
2006, and do we have anyone in the audience who would like to address Area Variance
No. 34-2006?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MR. ABBATE-I see no hands raised, so I will then continue on. Again, I ask the
members for their comments, and I went through before, I’d like to inform the public that
the comments are to the Chairman and are not subject to debate, and I respectfully
reminded the Board members earlier about precedent mandating our concern with
evidence and what have you, and having stated that, do we have a volunteer who would
like to address Area Variance No. 34-2006? Okay. Mr. Stone.
MR. STONE-Obviously this is a relatively simple variance. I mean, I would prefer, like all
variances, that we don’t really have to have one. I would like, as the question I asked,
you know, buy 10 feet, and then you’re in conformity. I would question your statement
it’s not buildable, because that’s why we sit here and we’ve had people come in many,
many times and say, well, I’ve only got 20 feet on a Town road. Can you give me a
variance, and it’s a debatable issue. That’s all I’m really saying. We have to be very
careful. Having said all that, I think your request is minimal. I think you’re still going to
be 12 feet from the property line. It certainly is not going to be a detriment to the
community, as it exists right now. It’s self-created, and I’ve listened to some of the
discussions before. When somebody builds something, it can be very easily determined
self-created. When you have a property that you bought and all of a sudden you realize
that it’s undersize, that becomes one of those difficult things, but I don’t think it’s a
detriment to the community. I don’t think it’s going to affect the health, welfare,
environment or anything else. So I would be in favor.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you. Mr. McNulty, please.
MR. MC NULTY-I guess I’d be reluctantly in favor, too. There’s several things to argue
against this. Just because it’s going to cost a little more to put that on the back side
instead of the side of the house is one factor. As Mr. Stone indicated, there’s no
absolute guarantee that somebody some day won’t want to build a house on that lot next
door if conditions change, zoning changes or whatever, but at the same time, we’re
balancing, again, the benefit to the applicant versus detriment, and certainly it’s going to
be much more difficult, from what’s been explained, to put that addition on the back of
the house or tie it to the back rather than the side, and the applicant’s indicated that he’s
investigated the possibility of buying a strip of the adjacent lot and has been turned
down. So, that’s one alternative that’s been explored and apparently is not available. So
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
given the current conditions and doing the balancing act, I think it comes out slightly in
favor of the applicant, so I’d be in favor.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Mr. Bryant, please.
MR. BRYANT-Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I somewhat agree with Mr. McNulty. However,
I think that the feasible alternative issue should be explored further. I think that there’s
got to be a way that that can be put on the back of the house, and as Mr. McNulty states,
or Mr. Stone stated, there are a number of houses that are close to the line in the area,
and maybe this is not really that much of a detriment to the community. The reality is, it
is a substantial variance. I’d like the feasible alternative issue explored further. So as it
stands, I’d be opposed.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Mr. Underwood, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Part of the difficulty we have is in these well established
neighborhoods that the, you know, the builders at that time decided that they were
always going to place these houses directly center on the lot, and that always creates
problems because then you don’t have room on either side. In this instance, you do
have room on the one side for your addition, and it’s understandable, with five people in
the house, why you would want to add on that other side there. As far as the detriment
to the neighborhood, most of the structures in that neighborhood, and the newer ones
that have been created, too, have maintained the wooded buffers between the lots. So
there is a little bit of a change in between as far as things not running into each other as
a solid wall of buildings surrounding the block there, but in this instance here, although
you’re asking for eight feet of relief, I don’t think it’s out of character of the neighborhood
and it’s not a great request. I don’t think it’s going to alter the neighborhood to any great
degree, and it’s going to allow you to achieve what you’re trying to do here, which is
more space for your family. So I’d be in favor of it.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Mrs. Hunt, please.
MRS. HUNT-Thank you. I have to agree with Mr. Underwood and Mr. McNulty and Mr.
Stone. I don’t think this is too great a request. It’s a modest addition, and I would be in
favor.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you. Mr. Urrico, please.
MR. URRICO-Yes. I would be in favor of the project for the previous reasons given
before me.
MR. ABBATE-And I would agree with the majority of the Board that it’s a reasonable
project. I don’t think it’s something that’s going to be a detriment to the community. So,
having said that, I’m going to, at this time close the public hearing for Area Variance
No.34-2006.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. ABBATE-And again, the members are well aware of the fact of balancing the benefit
that we require, and I’m going to ask for a motion. Is there a motion for Area Variance
No. 34-2006?
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 34-2006 BRUCE LANT, Introduced by
Joyce Hunt who moved for its adoption, seconded by Roy Urrico:
14 Fox Farm Road. The applicant proposes a 248 square foot residential addition to the
east side of the existing 1,925 square foot single family dwelling. Addition is two story
and approximately 400 square feet total. The applicant requests eight feet of side
setback relief, east side, where 20 feet is the minimum per Section 179-4-030 for the
SFR-1A zone. I think the benefit could not be really achieved by any other means
feasible to the applicant. It will not cause an undesirable change in the neighborhood
character or to nearby properties. While it might be considered substantial, the fact that
the property next to it is buffered with trees ameliorates that. The request will not have
adverse physical or environmental effects on the neighborhood, and it’s self-created only
in the fact that he wants to add to the size of his home. So I would request that we
approve Area Variance No. 34-2006.
st
Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
AYES: Mr. McNulty, Mr. Stone, Mr. Underwood, Mrs. Hunt, Mr. Urrico, Mr. Abbate
NOES: Mr. Bryant
MR. ABBATE-Area Variance No. 34-2006, in a vote six yes, one no, is approved.
MR. LANT-Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, you’re welcome.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 35-2006 SEQRA TYPE: II LE ROY & KATHARINE CORMIE
OWNER(S): LE ROY & KATHARINE CORMIE ZONING: SR-20 LOCATION: 25
FAWN LANE APPLICANT PROPOSES CONSTRUCTION OF A 312 SQ. FT. DECK
ADDITION. RELIEF REQUESTED FROM REAR YARD SETBACK REQUIREMENTS
AND REQUIREMENTS OF THE SR ZONE. CROSS REF.: BP 2006-180 WARREN
COUNTY PLANNING: N/A LOT SIZE: 0.24 ACRES TAX MAP NO. 301.18-1-71
SECTION: 179-4-030
LE ROY & KATHARINE CORMIE, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 35-2006, LeRoy & Katharine Cormie, Meeting Date:
June 21, 2006 “Project Location: 25 Fawn Lane Description of Proposed Project: The
applicant proposes a 312 sq. ft. deck on the back of the existing single-family residence.
Relief Required:
The applicant requests 10-feet of rear setback relief, where 20-feet is the minimum, per §
179-4-030, for the SR-20 zone (Sherman Pines subdivision).
Parcel History (construction/site plan/variance, etc.):
2006-180: Pending AV, for a 364 sq. ft. deck.
2006-020: Issued 2/3/06, for a 360 sq. ft. residential addition with septic alteration.
2001-407: Issued, for a 252 sq. ft. deck.
1999-395: Issued 7/13/00, for a 1,536 sq. ft. single-family dwelling with attached 2-car
garage.
Staff comments:
The Building permit associated with this variance request (BP 2006-180) is for a 364 sq.
ft. deck, 8-feet from the rear property line. If the plan has changed to a 312 sq. ft. deck,
10-feet from the rear property line, then the building permit will have to be revised.
A previous deck was removed and replaced with 360 sq. ft. of additional living space.
This proposal is to reassemble the deck that was removed around the back and the side
of the addition.
The property abuts in the rear a common area for the subdivision (Sherman Pines),
where the community septic system is located. Therefore, it does not appear that a
negative impact to that property would result.
A feasible alternative may be to locate the entire deck on the side of the addition, not on
the back and side as proposed. A 22-foot setback presently exists from the addition to
the rear property line. It may also be possible to reduce the area of the proposed deck,
and thus, reduce the size of the variance request.”
MR. ABBATE-Would you speak into the microphone and for the record identify yourself,
please.
MRS. CORMIE-I’m Katherine Cormie.
MR. CORMIE-LeRoy Cormie, 25 Fawn Lane.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Fine, and again, I’m assuming that you haven’t retained an
attorney?
MR. CORMIE-No.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Okay. So basically you heard what I said earlier. Since you have not
retained an attorney, you just present your case to us. Tell us why you feel we should
approve it, and then if you folk have any questions that we can answer, clear up for you,
we’d be more than happy to do it. Fair enough?
MR. CORMIE-Sure.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Tell us why you feel we should approve this.
MR. CORMIE-Because we want a deck. I’m listening to everything that’s going on here.
No, no. It’s kind of a unique piece of property in that the common leach field is behind
the property. We’re 20 feet, or 22 feet, the new addition, the one I’m working on now, is
22 feet from the rear line, but there’s another 50 or 60 feet back to the wooded area, and
then beyond that there’s another 100, 120 feet to Sherman Avenue, which we were told,
we bought the house a year ago, we were told it was unbuildable. There was a buffer
zone granted to the original developer, and I don’t think the original developer was
Schermerhorn, but our particular house was built by Schermerhorn. One of the things
they did do on such small lots is by centering them, I think they’re aesthetically more
pleasing. When we looked at the house, we liked the fact that we could see West
Mountain from the deck that was attached to the house at the time of our purchase. We
did, because we lived in our last house and learned the amenities of a family room, it
was something we hoped to do, and we knew, at least for that, we would not need a
variance. So we went ahead and purchased the home, and I have not been unhappy
about doing so. The deck being where we propose it to go would give us a couple of
advantages. One would be it wouldn’t be sunlight of it, the house itself facing, sunlight to
the deck wouldn’t be blocked by the two story house, because it would be adjacent to the
one story addition and quite a ways away, would get sunshine in the summertime. The
septic system, as you can see on the drawings I gave you runs, it’s one of the reasons
why the small portion of the deck would really be just an expanded landing area, and a
way to walk around to the larger portion of the deck because right next to it is where the
line runs and for the permit that you granted us earlier to build this family room that we’re
currently working on, we did move the septic out so it was in compliance at the time
Kruger Excavating moved it out away from both where the hoped the deck might go and
certainly to be in compliance with the building permit for the additional living space. In
looking around the neighborhood, too, we tried to compare and we talked to neighbors
even before we did any of this, how our house would appear afterwards, if this were,
indeed, granted to us to build a deck back there, and we decided that a lot of fences in
our neighborhood, we don’t have a fence around our property, but most of the fences are
set I guess by Code, right on the back, or are allowed to be set right on the back line. So
our deck which we consider, I don’t know if anybody else would agree with us on this, a
fence is less attractive than landscaping, which we prefer. Our deck wouldn’t go back to,
it would still be 10 feet off the back line, and would be aesthetically pleasing. Let’s put it
that way, and we also knew that our next door neighborhood had a variance for a pool,
which visually go back, because of the fence required around everything, actually makes
hers look much deeper than ours, where our deck would end, if, indeed, we were to get
this variance. I looked at your alternatives when you sent them to me. The one
suggestion being that we build it right behind the house. As I said, the septic line runs
out there. If the deck were small enough, it wouldn’t get out far enough to the septic tank
to affect the septic tank. We did break up the old tank and remove it, as I say, with the
other permit, and again, it would be a dark deck that would be not as usable, in our
opinion, aesthetically less appealing, and I’m trying to use the materials that I, the house
is seven years old, and I’m trying to use materials that I took off. So the house looks
basically the way it is, because as promised in the other thing, everything would match.
As a matter of fact, the deck I intend to look exactly like the deck we took off, just be 18
feet further from the main house than the original deck was.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Any members of the Board have any questions?
MR. STONE-I’ve got several.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, please.
MR. STONE-One, that area that’s covered with that tarp, that’s going to be the living
addition, right?
MR. CORMIE-That is the other building permit you granted which didn’t (lost word).
MR. STONE-Right.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. CORMIE-Yes.
MR. STONE-Because it says built.
MR. CORMIE-I’m working on it. I retire tomorrow. So I’ll have more time.
MR. STONE-All right. So you want to build back. Now it seems to me that you have
landscaped the common land behind you?
MR. CORMIE-I haven’t. The previous owners did, yes.
MR. STONE-The previous owners.
MR. CORMIE-And actually one piece of that landscaping is not on our, it’s shared by two
adjacent lots.
MR. STONE-Okay. Now the pile of wood, is that in the common area?
MR. CORMIE-The pile of wood, fire wood or building wood?
MR. STONE-Building wood.
MR. CORMIE-That’s the deck.
MR. STONE-Okay, that’s the deck.
MR. CORMIE-I put it back. It is on the common area, yes.
MR. STONE-Okay. I was just trying to get a lay of where the 10 feet goes to, that’s all.
MR. CORMIE-Well, there was a birch tree that was taken down before we moved in, too,
stacked back there. That’s why when you said wood I didn’t know if you meant the birch
tree. No, the pressure treated lumber is the old deck that I moved to the back.
MR. STONE-Okay. So then most of your back lawn isn’t yours.
MR. CORMIE-Half of our back lawn probably isn’t ours.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MR. CORMIE-Well, they didn’t tell us that when we bought it, but we didn’t know. As a
matter of fact, the Town of Queensbury didn’t know that we had a shared leach field,
which I found fascinating because there are 83 homes in there. No one in Building and
Codes knew, as a matter of fact, they told me I was crazy. There’s no such thing.
MR. ABBATE-Let me ask a question, are you an engineer?
MR. CORMIE-No.
MR. ABBATE-Good. The reason I ask you that, I’ll tell you why it’s good. It seems to me
that you had enough initiative to ask questions.
MR. CORMIE-Yes, I tried to.
MR. ABBATE-I have to congratulate you.
MR. CORMIE-Thank you.
MR. ABBATE-Did it take much of an effort to ask questions of the Town?
MR. CORMIE-No?
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much.
MR. CORMIE-Yes, it’s been very good.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
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MRS. HUNT-I have a question.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, please.
MRS. HUNT-Your house faces what direction?
MR. CORMIE-Directly south.
MRS. HUNT-Directly south. So I can see, then, you wouldn’t want one.
MR. CORMIE-Well, it would be nice if we didn’t have to.
MRS. HUNT-Wouldn’t get much sun.
MR. CORMIE-It’s just better, definitely better, yes. We would get the morning sun,
afternoon sun, and too close to the two story would block it, right.
MRS. HUNT-Yes.
MR. STONE-The common area, is that Association land?
MR. CORMIE-Sherman Pines Association owns all that, including the leach field.
MRS. CORMIE-All in the back.
MR. CORMIE-As a matter of fact, I have to, it is in our agreement or our deed that we
have to allow access to that common leach field, although I think it can be made also off
Sherman Avenue, but they’re right of way’s down through there.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-The public hearing will be open for Area Variance No. 35-2006. If we have
anyone in the audience who wishes to address Area Variance No. 35-2006, raise your
hands.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MR. ABBATE-I don’t see any hands raised, so I’m going to move on, and again, you
know the members, I’m going to ask for your comments, and you know that I respectfully
reminded you earlier about precedent mandating we concern ourselves with the
evidence. So, having said that, do we have a volunteer to address Area Variance No.35-
2006? Anyone?
MR. STONE-I’ll address it.
MR. ABBATE-I was going to break a precedent and go first. Do you want me to do it?
MR. STONE-Sure.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. I don’t normally do this. Quite frankly, if I were in your position, I
would do the same thing. I would make the same request. I feel that your request is
reasonable. I don’t see any disastrous results that will happen if we go ahead and
approve your application. Mr. Stone, please.
MR. STONE-I was going to say basically the same thing. The fact that, and the reason I
asked the question about the lawn, it’s very nice back there, and whoever put it in, and
whoever’s maintaining it, the two of you are doing very well, and I also ask the question,
do we have any correspondence from the Homeowners Association or any neighbor,
and having none, I think that the detriment to the community is minimal. I think that the
advantage for you is obviously very clear. It’s self-created. You’ve got a very small lot
and you want to put an addition on you want to restore a deck that was there. You just
want to move it back a little bit. I just don’t have any problem with the whole thing.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. That’s fine. Mrs. Hunt, you’re next, please. We’ll change it.
MRS. HUNT- Okay. Thank you. Well, I have to agree with Mr. Abbate and Mr. Stone. I
think it’s a modest request and I would be in favor of it.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. Mr. Bryant, please.
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MR. BRYANT-I agree with Mr. Stone, Mrs. Hunt, I’d be in favor of it.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. McNulty, please.
MR. MC NULTY-Okay. I guess I would agree. My first reaction’s I would have preferred
to see it in the “L” shape, but you made a good case for why you’d like to have it on the
back side. It bothers me a little bit that we keep granting variances for the back side of
these lots in this development, mostly with good reason, mostly for pools which can’t be
crammed anywhere else, but at the same time, when possible, I would prefer not to grant
variances consistently across the line, but I think in this case, the benefit to the applicant
clearly outweighs any detriment. So I’d be in favor.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you. Mr. Urrico, please.
MR. URRICO-Yes. I agree with Mr. Bryant.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Mr. Underwood, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-If I lived there, I would not want my deck on the dark side of the
forest. So I would agree with you. It’s the best place for it.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Having heard all the comments of the Board, the public hearing is
now closed for Area Variance No.35-2006.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. ABBATE-And again, ladies and gentlemen of the Board, I respectfully reminded you
the task of balancing the benefit of the variance against the impact on the area. Having
said that, do we have a motion for Area Variance No. 35-2006?
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 35-2006 LE ROY & KATHARINE
CORMIE, Introduced by James Underwood who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Joyce Hunt:
25 Fawn Lane. They’re proposing a 312 square foot deck on the back of an existing
single family residence and they’re going to need 10 feet of relief where 20 feet is the
minimum per Section 179-4-030 for the SR-20 zone in the Sherman Pines subdivision.
This request is that they be able to re-erect their deck, as submitted on this plot plan to
us this evening. This will be on the back of an addition currently under construction and
just about done. They’re request for this, even though it’s going to intrude into the
setback, it’s recognized that this is a common area and that, you know, it appears to be
part of their lawn, even though it’s part of the common area in the back there, too. There
really is no detriment to the neighborhood, as far as, if we grant this request here this
evening. Although it will be quite close to the property line, that’s a forever wild area in
the back there where that area is and it’s not going to be built on or disturbed in the
future. So it’s not seen that there’s any great detriment to the neighborhood if we grant
this request. So I would move for its approval.
st
Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. McNulty, Mr. Stone, Mr. Urrico, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Underwood, Mrs. Hunt,
Mr. Abbate
NOES: NONE
MR. ABBATE-The vote for Area Variance No. 35-2006 is seven yes. Area Variance No.
35-2006 is approved.
MR. CORMIE-I didn’t want to say this before we had begun because I didn’t want to look
like I was kissing up, but we lived in Glens Falls for 28 years, and once or twice had the
occasion to sit in on both Zoning Board of Appeals, Planning Board meetings. You guys
do a good job, and I know how much you get paid for it, and we appreciate it, as
taxpayers. I’ve sat in on a lot of meetings, and you’re doing what you should be doing.
MR. ABBATE-For the record, did I understand you correctly that you stated that we do a
fine job?
MR. CORMIE-You do a fine job.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Thank you so much.
MRS. CORMIE-And your website is great.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you so much.
MR. ABBATE-You’ll have to compliment the Town for that, not us. It’s wonderful to hear
that. I appreciate that.
MR. CORMIE-And I wasn’t kissing up, just for the record. Thank you.
OLD BUSINESS:
AREA VARIANCE NO. 66-2005 SEQRA TYPE: UNLISTED CLUTE ENTERPRISES
AGENT(S): VAN DUSEN & STEVES OWNER(S): H. HOEGER ZONING: SFR-1A
LOCATION: BENNETT & ELDRIDGE ROADS APPLICANT PROPOSES A 2-LOT
SUBDIVISION IN LOTS OF (LOT 1); 0.72 ACRES AND (LOT 2); 0.31 ACRES
RESPECTIVELY. RELIEF REQUESTED FROM MINIMUM LOT SIZE
REQUIREMENTS FOR BOTH LOTS AND FROM MINIMUM LOT WIDTH
REGULATIONS FOR LOT 2, BOTH FOR THE SFR ZONE. CROSS REF.: SUB. NO.
17-2005 WARREN CO. PLANNING: N/A LOT SIZE: 1.03 ACRES TAX MAP NO.
295.14-1-21 SECTION: 179-4-030
MATT STEVES, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT; LARRY CLUTE, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 66-2005, Clute Enterprises, Meeting Date: June 21,
2006 “Project Location: Bennett & Eldridge Roads Description of Proposed Project:
Applicant proposes to subdivide a 1.03-acre land-hooked parcel into two lots of .72 (lot
1) and .31 (lot 2), acres respectively.
Relief Required:
Lot 1: .28-acres of relief from the minimum lot size requirement of 1-acre.
Lot 2: .69-acres of relief from the minimum lot size requirement of 1-acre and 81.36-feet
of relief from the minimum lot width requirement of 150-feet.
All relief per §179-4-030 for the SFR-1A zone.
Parcel History (construction/site plan/variance, etc.):
None
Staff Comments:
As you will recall, a similar application was heard and tabled by the Board on October
19, 2005 (see resolution). That proposal was for a 3-lot subdivision, and with that, more
relief was requested (see previous staff notes).
Lots on Eldridge Road range from .18-acres to .56-acres, with the average lot size being
.37-acres. Similarly, lots on Bennett Road range from .32-acres to 2-acres, with the
average lot size at .50-acres. Few lots in this neighborhood have the required 1-acre
minimum.
While the granting of these variances may be consistent with the character of the
neighborhood, substantial relief is required relative to the ordinance.
Feasible alternatives to this proposal are limited because of the existing lot configuration
with the land-hook across Eldridge Road.
This is a SEQR Unlisted Action and a short EAF has been submitted. The Board should
either request that the applicant revise Part I or the Board make corrections before
proceeding to Part II. The project description has changed from a 3-lot to a 2-lot
subdivision (Question no. 6) and Town Planning Board approval for the subdivision is
needed (Question 10).”
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you. I see the petitioners are at the table. Would you be
kind enough to speak into the microphone and identify yourselves, please.
MR. STEVES-Good evening, Matt Steves representing Larry Clute, Clute Enterprises on
this application, and Larry Clute is here with me.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
MR. STEVES-I’ll make it very brief, Mr. Chairman. Thank you very much for honoring
my request because I had a previous engagement in another town, and I do agree with
you, by the way, on other matters. So, I didn’t want you to feel left out on that.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you, sir.
MR. STEVES-And this was before you before looking to take the westerly lot and break it
into two. We had discussions with this Board and we also had discussions with the
Planning Board, and they liked the idea, as well as some of the Board members when
we were back in October, of not trying to subdivide the lot that is on in the interior
between the two roads. We have come back with a plan that is exactly what exists now,
two lots. Because of the ownership of the Eldridge Road at the Town of Queensbury, it
was left over land that was land-hooked from the original owner of all this property, but
it’s on two sides of a public right of way. So the proposal is to construct two single family
homes, one on each lot. The narrower lot on the east side of the road, the house would
be set as far easterly as possible, to maintain the buffer, as you can see to the north.
There is not many lots that would be affected by that, on the east of that lot, and on the
larger portion to the west on the center of the horseshoe, that is substantially wooded as
well, and placing the house facing the new construction on the east side, again, would
leave a large buffer area, and we’d leave it open to any questions the Board may have.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Thank you very much. Do any members of the Board have any
questions?
MR. URRICO-The term land-hooked, what does that refer to?
MR. STEVES-One tax map number is given to a parcel, even though it is divided by
another ownership.
MR. URRICO-Okay. We’re not talking about actually hooking the property so that they
might get relief for a bigger house on one of them?
MR. STEVES-No.
MR. URRICO-Okay. It’s been used in portions of the Town as well.
MR. STEVES-There have been some conflicting things with that. Last night at the
Planning Board, for example, there was a parcel that was divided on Birdsall Road by
the bike path, and the Planning Board, even though it was one tax parcel, deemed that it
was separate because of the ownership, and that’s what typically has been the standard
is just that there are parcels that are left prior to that stance by the Town and by the
County. Prior to that stance they were land-hooked. You owned property. If you owned
lots on either side of the road, they, for simplicity reasons, for taxation, they made it one
tax parcel, but in reality it’s divided by another ownership, so it’s really two different
parcels.
MR. STONE-Would you anticipate needing a variance to build the house on Lot Two?
MR. STEVES-We showed that setback requirement. The exact house, dimension is
shown. Lot Two being on the back side, 20 foot is required. To maintain the 30 foot,
which we think is more consistent with the neighborhood, and less of an impact in the
neighborhood to ask for the back relief than the front relief. So the house, the exact
house that Mr. Clute would be building, would require 15.5 instead of the 20 foot in the
rear.
MR. STONE-So you will be back when he’s ready to build?
MR. STEVES-Or we could ask for that at this time. That is exactly the house we would
be building.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-You can’t ask for it right now.
MR. STONE-It’s not advertised.
MR. STEVES-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-Very good. Very good. Any other members have any questions?
MR. STEVES-But we can ask for it.
MR. STONE-You can ask.
MR. STEVES-Understood. As long as you know it’s a building lot, and knowing that that
will come back if this is approved. We would just like to know if that is something that
this Board would look favorably on. We understand you cannot make a determination.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, the Board is correct that it really has to be advertised first.
MR. STEVES-No, I understand. I’m not asking you to make.
MR. ABBATE-Understand.
MR. STEVES-Thank you, sir.
MR. ABBATE-Any other questions from members of the Board? No other questions
from members of the Board. Okay. If there are no other questions from the members of
the Board, then I’m going to open up the public hearing for Area Variance No. 66-2006,
and if we have anybody in the audience who wishes to address that, would you raise
your hands, please.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MR. MC NULTY-Mr. Chairman, while we’re at this point, I’ve got a comment. A couple,
one personal though, one factual. There was somebody here from the public that
wanted to comment on this. They were here at seven o’clock. They couldn’t want. I
have no idea what their comment was, but we lost public comment. Second, as we’ve
discussed previously, our agendas are prepared well ahead. I think it’s rude of an
attorney or a surveyor or any other representative to ask us to move their application to
another position because it’s not just the applicant and the Board it’s also the public
that’s involved, and this is a good example. We lost public comment because we moved
this. I think once we set our agenda, unless there’s a death in the family or something,
we shouldn’t be moving agenda positions.
MR. URRICO-It was the first item on the agenda tonight.
MR. UNDERWOOD-It was the first item on the agenda.
MR. MC NULTY-It was first on the agenda.
MR. ABBATE-Do you have a copy of our agenda? Let me look at this for a second. All
right, Mr. McNulty, your comments are noted.
MR. MC NULTY-The agenda may or may not indicate that it can be changed, but the
effect is what bothers me, and whether we legally can change it or not is an entirely
different question.
MR. ABBATE-I understand. Okay.
MR. STEVES-And I understand and respect that opinion. I do have one comment with
that, just as a comment. There was a member here, or an audience, a neighbor, he also
could have left a written comment before he had to leave, and I do sincerely apologize. I
don’t think I’ve ever asked for that request, but I’ve had four Planning Board meetings in
two nights and I had nobody left at the office to cover for me. I asked six different people
whether or not I could get somebody to cover for me, and I could not. I did make a
valiant effort to have somebody cover for me, and I do apologize.
MR. ABBATE-Well, Mr. McNulty’s comments are well stated, but let me bring to the
attention of everybody on the Board that on the agenda it states the agenda is subject to
change.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. URRICO-I’m sure if somebody went to the website, they wouldn’t have found that
information for tonight.
MR. ABBATE-You’re right, they wouldn’t have.
MR. URRICO-But maybe an alternative would have been to open the public hearing at
that point, let people here to speak on it be given the opportunity to speak at that point.
MR. ABBATE-Good point. However, let’s not make ourselves the bad guys here. I
made it quite clear that we were going to be moving it. It would seem to me that if there
were anyone in the public that concerned, they would have raised their hand, and made
it clear that they wished to comment. I saw no hands raised at that time. If I had, I may
not have changed it.
MR. BRYANT-You asked for comment.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, I did. I opened the public hearing.
MR. URRICO-Well, maybe that lady didn’t know that she was going to be sitting here for
three hours.
MR. ABBATE-Well, you know, the burden of responsibility is not always going to be on
our shoulders. The public has to assume responsibility, too.
MR. URRICO-Okay.
MR. MC NULTY-Did we open a public hearing on this application?
MR. ABBATE-Yes, I did.
MR. MC NULTY-I don’t believe so.
MR. ABBATE-I did not?
MR. STONE-No, but you stated.
MR. BRYANT-He asked if there was anybody here that was here for that particular
application.
MR. MC NULTY-No, that was the next item that was re-tabled, I believe.
MR. URRICO-I mean, I don’t want this to be prejudicial against the applicant.
MR. ABBATE-Do you remember what I said? Help me out, Sue.
MS. HEMINGWAY-You did not open a public hearing. You just opened it up now.
MR. ABBATE-Okay, but did I make the announcement that we were going to move it
from the first?
MS. HEMINGWAY-Yes.
MR. ABBATE-I did.
MR. MC NULTY-You made that announcement, but a member of the public isn’t going to
know, unless they’re really aggressive, that they can object to that point or something. I
just wanted to make the statement to make sure we understood we lost public comment.
MR. ABBATE-Let me make this clear. Do members of the Board feel that we shouldn’t
hear this and perhaps table this to another time, so that the public can provide us with
input? I will yield to whatever the majority says.
MR. BRYANT-Can I make a comment?
MR. ABBATE-Sure you can.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-This is the first time in this forum, but it’s not like it’s the first time that
they’ve come before us on this property. I mean, the public has had ample opportunity to
discuss it and one individual, he could have been for it.
MR. MC NULTY-They may have.
MR. BRYANT-We don’t know.
MR. MC NULTY-And I’m not picking on this particular applicant. It’s just generally it’s a
problem for the public, whether we, you know, whether it’s done this way or whether you
move somebody that’s near the end to the first, because if it’s near the end, the public’s
not going to show up at seven. They’re going to show up at 7:30, assuming that they’re
still going to sit for a half hour or an hour, and if you move it to the first, again, you lose
the public comment.
MR. ABBATE-And you’re right. What I did was on the one I tabled until September, I did
open up the public hearing for that one. You’re absolutely right, Sue, but I didn’t do it on
this one. You’re correct. You’re absolutely correct.
MR. STONE-I have no problem.
MR. BRYANT-I have no problem.
MR. MC NULTY-I have no problem with hearing this one.
MR. URRICO-I believe the lady left a note.
MR. UNDERWOOD-No, that was Maggie Stewart. She gave a note.
MR. STONE-She got the note on the dock.
MR. MC NULTY-Yes. It wasn’t Stewart. It was another lady.
MR. ABBATE-Let’s be fair about this, too. Mr. McNulty has a point.
MR. STONE-He does. I just have one further question. This is the exact same thing we
tabled last time?
MR. STEVES-No. We took no action, right?
MR. MC NULTY-We discussed the possibility of some of us being happy if it were a two
lot.
MR. STONE-Right.
MR. STEVES-And actually I believe it was asked to go to the Planning Board and get
their input and we did that.
MR. ABBATE-Right.
MR. STEVES-And they felt the same way, and so now we’ve re-grouped. We’ve come
back. We’ve re-negotiated, and we’re back in front of this Board.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-All right. So we’re all set now? So I opened the public hearing I do
believe, and I didn’t see any hands raised. Since I didn’t see any hands raised, I’m going
to continue on, and again, gentlemen, ladies, I’m going to ask for your comments, and
you know what the procedures are. Do we have any individuals on the Board who’d like
to comment on Area Variance No. 66-2005?
MR. BRYANT-I volunteer.
MR. ABBATE-Please do, Mr. Bryant.
MR. BRYANT-Thank you, Mr. Chairman. During your last visit, we talked about this
whole issue specifically. This is a logical solution to the problem. I was totally opposed
to three, but I said I would accept two, and I’m in favor of the application.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Wonderful. Mr. McNulty, please?
MR. MC NULTY-I’d basically agree with Mr. Bryant. I think I was inclined to accept the
two. It would be nicer not to have to offer any variances, but in this case, there’s nothing
else that I can see can be done here. So I’d be in favor.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Mrs. Hunt, please?
MRS. HUNT-Yes, thank you. I have to agree with the two previous Board members.
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Mr. Urrico, please?
MR. URRICO-There haven’t been many nights where I’ve been able to say twice in the
same night I agree with Mr. Bryant, but I also, this shows that the process works. It’s
really heartening to see the applicant go back, take our suggestions and make it work.
So I’d be in favor of it.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you.
MR. STEVES-Thanks.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Stone, please.
MR. STONE-Well, I’m trying to figure out with whom I agree. I agree with everybody who
has spoken thus far. I think the comment that Roy just made is a worthy comment for us
to keep in mind. The process works.
MR. ABBATE-It does.
MR. STONE-I mean you came in for three, and obviously you raised the ire of a number
of us, and we said we could live with two. You can live with two, let’s move on.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Underwood, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-It’s a reasonable solution to leftovers.
MR. ABBATE-Okay, and you know, folks, the process does work, and let me state this,
not to be dramatic, but, for the record, I’d like everybody to know just how proud I am to
be Chairman of the ZBA because each of our members have not only a great deal of
integrity, but they really believe the position that they’re setting forward, whether we
agree with it or whether we disagree with it, but at least we have sufficient demeanor and
what have you to accept what folks have to say. So, anyway, having said that.
MR. UNDERWOOD-We’ve got to do the Short EAF for this one.
MR. ABBATE-Yes, this is Unlisted, folks.
MR. UNDERWOOD-I’ve taken into consideration the request in the Staff notes and
modified the one that’s in the book here now. So Number Six says it’s a proposed two
lot residential subdivision from one tax parcel divided by a road. I don’t know if divided
by a road is still applicable, and also down below where it says, does the action involve a
permit, approval or funding from any other governmental agency, and that should be yes.
MR. ABBATE-Okay.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Does the action exceed any Type I Threshold? I would say no.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. MC NULTY-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Will the action receive coordinated review? Yes.
MR. STONE-Yes.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Could the action result in adverse effects associated with the
following: Air quality, ground water, noise levels, traffic patterns, solid waste or disposal,
potential for erosion, drainage or flooding problems? No.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. BRYANT-No.
MR. BROWN-Did you answer yes on the coordinated review? If you’re doing your own
SEQRA now, the Planning Board’s going to do theirs, then it’s definitely a no.
MR. UNDERWOOD-That’s what I thought.
MR. MC NULTY-It’s a no.
MR. UNDERWOOD-So it should be a no. Excuse me, I’ll correct that. The aesthetic,
agricultural, archeological, historic or other natural or cultural resources; or community or
neighborhood character? No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Vegetation or fauna, fish, shellfish or wildlife species, significant
habitats, or threatened or endangered species? I would say no.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-A community’s existing plans or goals as officially adopted or a
change in use or intensity of use of land or other natural resources? I would say no.
MR. STONE-No.
MRS. HUNT-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Growth, subsequent development, or related activities likely to be
induced by the proposed action? No.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Long term, short term, cumulative, or other effects not identified in
C1-C5? No.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Other impacts including changes in use of either quantity or type of
energy? No.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Will the project have an impact on the environmental characteristics
that caused the establishment of a Critical Environmental Area? No.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-Is there or is there likely to be controversy related to potential
adverse environmental impacts? No.
MR. STONE-No.
MR. ABBATE-No.
MR. UNDERWOOD-We need to vote on that.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MOTION THAT THE SHORT ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FORM PROVIDED BY
THE APPLICANT INDICATES THAT THERE ARE NO SIGNIFICANT NEGATIVE
IMPACTS CAUSED BY THIS PROJECT, AND UNLESS THERE IS A CHALLENGE
FROM MEMBERS OF THE BOARD, I WOULD MOVE TO ACCEPT THAT BASIS IN
ANTICIPATION OF NO NEGATIVE RESPONSES. AS SUCH I MOVE THAT THE
SHORT ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FORM BE APPROVED, Introduced by
Charles Abbate who moved for its adoption, seconded by Lewis Stone:
st
Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. McNulty, Mr. Urrico, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Underwood, Mr. Stone, Mr. Abbate
NOES: NONE
MR. ABBATE-In a seven yes to zero no vote, the Short Environmental Assessment Form
is approved. The public hearing is now closed for Area Variance No. 66-2005.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. ABBATE-And gentlemen and ladies on the Board, I’m going to respectfully going to
request a motion for Area Variance No. 66-2005. Do I have one?
MR. BRYANT-I’ll do it.
MR. ABBATE-Mr. Bryant, please.
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 66-2005 CLUTE ENTERPRISES,
Introduced by Allan Bryant who moved for its adoption, seconded by Joyce Hunt:
Bennett & Eldridge Roads. The applicant proposes to subdivide a 1.03 acre land-
hooked parcel into two lots of .72, Lot One, and .31, Lot Two, acres respectively. The
relief required, Lot One: .28 acres of relief from the minimum lot size requirement of one
acre. Lot Two: .69 acres of relief from the minimum lot size requirement of one acre,
and 81.36 feet of relief from the minimum lot width requirement of 150 feet as per
Section 179-4-030 for the SFR-1A zone. In reviewing the criteria, how would you benefit
from the granting of this Area Variance, they would be able to subdivide this 1.03 acre
land-hooked parcel into two separate lots. What effect would this variance have on the
character of the neighborhood? Primarily no effect since the majority of the lots in the
neighborhood are in the range of a half acre. Are there feasible alternatives to this
variance? This is a natural division, and actually it’s not going to be noticeably significant
at all. Is the amount of relief substantial? It is by virtue of the Code. However, again, it’s
naturally divided by the road. Will the variance have an adverse effect or impact on the
neighborhood, environmentally, no, again, most of the lots are in that same size range.
For those reasons, I move that we approve this Area Variance.
st
Duly adopted this 21 day of June, 2006, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. McNulty, Mr. Stone, Mr. Urrico, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Underwood, Mrs. Hunt,
Mr. Abbate
NOES: NONE
MR. ABBATE-The vote for Area Variance No. 66-2005 is seven yes, zero no. Area
Variance No. 66-2005 is approved.
MR. STEVES-Thank you. I just wanted to point out one thing, that I wasn’t trying to hide
anything from you in the application, so you understand. The map did show the 15.5 and
the Area Variance worksheet we did ask for the 15 feet. I know it wasn’t advertised that
way, but we did show that.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MR. ABBATE-Thank you very much.
MR. STEVES-I didn’t want you to think, hey, you’re putting in a smaller building. We
were right up front with the fact that we are going to need that on there.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 06/21/06)
MR. ABBATE-Okay. Well, don’t go away, because we’re going to be upfront, too. Mr.
Secretary, would you read something into the record, please. I want you to listen very
carefully to this, please.
MR. UNDERWOOD-It’s addressed to Mr. Charles Abbate, Chairman of the Zoning
Board of Appeals. “Dear Charlie: Thank you for your understanding and time and effort
you and the rest of the Board had at the meeting. It has been a very long and laborious
journey. However yours and the Board’s efforts are truly appreciated. Please pass my
personal thanks to all those there at the meeting. I didn’t write down all the names. On
another note, you did a hell of a job as Chairman. Congrats. Regards, Michael Della
Bella”
MR. ABBATE-The Zoning Board of Appeals hearing for this date is closed.
On motion meeting was adjourned.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Charles Abbate, Chairman
58