1995-02-22
........
ORrGIN/~l
.': .'. ,! ì
QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD ~ff, A~PEAI.¡$ ",'
SECOND REGULAR MEET!NG '
FEBRUARY 22, 1995
INDEX
, ,
. .-,":
¡:.'I
Area Variance No. 71-1994 Jeffrey & Debra Godnick 1.
Use Variance No. 4-1995 William Threw 2.
Use Variance No. 9-1995 Robert E. Orban, Jr. 2.
Notice of Appeal No. 3-95 John P. Cushing 18.
Notice of Appeal No. 4-94 Margaret Bleibtrey 49.
THESE ARE NOT OFFICIALLY ADOPTED MINUTES AN6:~RE SUBJECT TO BOARD
AND STAFF REVISIONS. REVISIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE FQLLOWING
MONTHS MINUTES (IF ANY) AND WILL STATE SUCH APPROVAL OF SAID
MINUTES.
:;'1 '
: ~,'
j ¡"¡¡
, <,
;! <~
,t "
.~ '}
I : r:
~ , j
11",) ,¡
".'1
. 'j!, .
~
.....,i
QUEENSBURY ZONING,ßOARD
SECOND REGULAR MEETING
FEBRUARY 22, 1995
7:30 P.M.
OF APPEALS
MEMBERS PRESENT
FRED CARVIN, CHAIRMAN
CHRIS THOMAS, SECRETARY
ANTHONY MARESCO
DAVID MENTER
MEMBERS ABSENT
ROBERT KARPELES
THOMAS FORD
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR-JAMES MARTIN
PLANNER-SUSAN CIPPERLY
TOWN ATTORNEY-PAUL DUSEK
STENOGRAPHER-MARIA GAGLIARDI
OLD BUSINESS:
AREA VARIANCE NO. 71-1994 TYPE I WR-1A CEA JEFFREY & DEBRA
GODNICK OWNER: SAME SOUTH SIDE OF GLEN LAKE ROAD THIRD HOUSE
EAST OF DOCKSIDER REST. APPLICANT PROPOSES TO REMOVE A PRE-
EXISTING NONCONFORMING TWO-STORY CAMP AND CONSTRUCT A NEW TWO-
STORY HOUSE ON THE PRE-EXISTING, NONCONFORMING LOT. SECTION 179-
60, REQUIRES A SEVENTY-FIVE (75) FOOT SHORELINE SETBACK,
APPLICANT IS PROPOSING FORTY-FIVE (45) FEET. SECTION 179-7
LIMITS GARAGE SIZE TO NINE HUNDRED (900) SQUARE FEET, APPLICANT
IS PROPOSING NINE HUNDRED SIXTY-FOUR (964) SQUARE FEET. (WARREN
COUNTY PLANNING) 12/14/94 TAX MAP NO. 38-4-6 LOT SIZE: 0.44
ACRES SECTION 179-7, 179-60
MR. THOMAS-A letter was sent to Mr. James Martin, dated February
16, 1995 "Dear Jim: Please ask the ZBA to table this matter
until its March meeting in order for the applicants to provide an
elevation drawing showing the proposed house which has been
significantly reduced in size. Very truly yours, Jonathan C.
Lapper"
MR. CARVIN-Okay. What I'd like to do, at this point, is open up
the public hearing. This is in reference to an application that
was tabled at the request of the applicant in the January
meeting, where he requested seeking legal counsel. My
understanding is that the applicant did notify this Board that he
now ~ have legal counsel, and is in the process of submitting
additional information.
MR. MARTIN-We have some of it, but we didn't receive all of it.
MR. CARVIN-Right. It is also my understanding that the
information that is being submitted is still incomplete, and that
we have a letter from the applicant, and I assume, from his
lawyer or legal counsel, requesting the tabling. As I said, what
I'd like to do is open the public hearing, with regard to this
application, to allow any of the public that is going to have
questions with regard to this application to make their comments,
and then it is likely that we will move to table this
application. So, I will now open up the public hearing for
anyone wishing to speak in favor of the application? All right.
Seeing none, I will now ask if there is anyone wishing to speak
in opposition to the application?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
- 1 -
MR.' CARVIN-Seeing or hearing none, I will, I don't know if we
left the public hearing open before?
MR. MARTIN-Yes; we did. It was even opened since December 21st.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. With that information, then, I will leave the
public hearing open, and move to table this application at the
request of the applicant.
MOTION TO TABLE AREA VARIANCE NO.
GODNICK, Introduced by Fred Carvin
seconded by David Menter:
71-1994 JEFFREY & DEBRA
who moved for its adoption,
At the request of the applicant to the March meeting, so that he
might submit additional information to the Board with regard to
this var ianoe.'. .
Duly adopted this 22nd day of February, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Menter, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Carvin
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Ford
USE VARIANCE NO. 4-1995 TYPE I WR-1A/CEA WILLIAM THREW OWNER:
JEFFREY THREW EAGAN ROAD, WEST OF BIG BAY ROAD APPLICANT
PROPOSES TO UTILIZE A PARCEL IN A WATERFRONT RESIDENTIAL ZONE ON
THE HUDSON RIVER FOR A CONSTRUCTION AND DEMOLITION DEBRIS
LANDFILL. LANDFILL IS NOT AN ALLOWED USE IN A WATERFRONT
RESIDENTIAL ZONE, AS STATED IN SECTION 179-16, SO A USE VARIANCE
IS SOUGHT. (WARREN COUNTY PLANNING) 2/8/95 TAX MAP N.O. 137-2-
9.8 LOT SIZE: 7.02 ACRES SECTION 179-16 LEAD AGENCY: ZONING
BOARD OF APPEALS
MR. MARTIN-Fred, just the Threw matter. We need a resolution
from the Board. Just to update the Board, the Town Board, in its
consideration of consent for lead agent status, decided to claim
lead agent status in theSEQRA review, and if it's the Board's
desire, we would need your consent to their intentions.
MR. CARVIN-We did that last week, Jim.
MR. MARTIN-You did that last week? Okay.
MR. CARVIN-We did that.
age nda .
So that's why this should be off the
MR. MARTIN-Okay.
NEW BUSINES~:
USE VARIANCE NO. '9-1995 TYPE: .UNLISTED SFR-10 ROBERT E.
ORBAN, JR. OWNER: ROBERT LEFEBVRE 93, DIXON ROAD APPLICANT
PROPOSES TO UTILIZE A CURRENTLY VACANT BUILDING FOR PRQFESSIONAL
OFFICE USES, AND SEEKS RELIEF FROM SECTION 179-20, SINGLE FAMILY
RESIDENTIAL ZONE, WHICH DOES NOT LIST PROFESSIONAL OFFICE AS AN
ALLOWED USE. (WARREN COUNTY PLANNING) 2/8/95 TAX MAP NO. 101-
1-14, 15 LOT SIZE: 20,550 SO. FT. - LOT 14 11,250 SO. FT. -
LOT 15 SECTION 179-20
ROBERT ORBAN, JR., PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Use Variance No. 9-1995, Robert E. Orban, Jr.,
Meeting Date: February 22, 1995 "APPLICANT: Robert E. Orban,
Jr. ADDRESS: 93 Dixon Road SUMMARY OF PROJECT: Applicant
seeks to utilize an existing structure for a dental office and
- 2 -
J
'---"
--
rent remalnlng space to another professional office use. One
possible use mentioned was a beauty parlor. CONFORMANCE WITH
USE/AREA REGULATIONS: This parcel is curTently in a Single
Family Residential zone. Planning Department records show that
this property was used for a convenience store until September 7,
1977, which was a pre-existing, nonconforming use in a R-4 zone.
The next use was a Date Processing Service Center and related
retail business allowed by Variance No. 602, approved by the
Zoning Board of Appeals on December 27, 1978. While that
application mentioned rental of unused space for office or store,
the primary intent appears to; have been to allow a Data
processing Service Center, rather than a broad permission for
Professional Office use. This was confirmed by Ted Turner,
Zoning Chairman at that time. Staff research regarding this site
indicates that the building has been vacant for more than 18
months, so any previous variance would have lapsed. REVIEW
CRITERIA, BASED ON SECTION 267-b OF TOWN LAW: 2. IS A
REASONABLE RETURN POSSIBLE IF THE LAND IS USED AS ZONED? This
property does not appear suitable for residential use,
considering the nature of the st)-ucture, which was built to serve
a commercial use. 2. IS THE ALLEGED HARDSHIP RELATING TO THIS
PROPERTY UNIQUE, OR DOES IT ALSO APPLY TOA SUBSTANTIAL PORTION
OF THE DISTRICT OR NEIGHBORHOOD? The apparent hardship is due to
the unique character of the structure and the fact that it was in
use as a commercial structure before zoning was instituted. 3.
IS THERE AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTER OF THE
NEIGHBORHOOD? The use of the building for a professional office
would not ~ppeaT to tonstituté an ad~etse effect on the
neighbo)-hood: -The amount of traffic generated by the various
types of' profe~siénal office uses' could be a concern.
Communication from'nei·ghbors to date have expressed concern over
'the amøunt 'and frequencý of traffic stemming from a ;beauty
'patlór~' but not from the dentist off ice. 4. IS THIS THE MINIMUM
VARIAI'4G:E NECESSARY' TO ADDRESS' 'THE UNNECESSA~V HARDSHIP PROVEN BY
THE APPL.ICANT'AND AT THE StlME TIME PROTECT THE CHARACTER OF THE
NEIGHBORHOOD AND THE HEAL,TH, SAFETY, AND 'WELFARE OF' THE
COMMUNITY? Relief from the Ordinance is necessary in order to
use this property. Professional office use would be more
compatible in this residential area than other potential uses of
this site would be, so could possibly be considered to be less
relief. STAFF COMMENTS AND CONCERNS: Staff concern is not with
the use proposed for this site, but with the practical aspects of
its use. Access and egress, parking, and landscaping are issues
which ought to be addressed via site plan review by the Planning
Board, as it is with other non-residential uses. It appears that
the site is usable for the proposed project~ but ought to have
the additional review to address these issues. SEQR: Unlisted
action. Short For-en EAF should be reviewed. II
MR. THOMAS-"At a meeting of the Warren County Planning Board,
held on the 8th day of February 1995, the above application for a
Use Variance to utilize a currently vacant building for
p)-ofessional offices uses. was reviewed and the following action
was taken. Recommendation to: Approve Comments: Approve with
the còndition that it cOme back fo)- Site Plan Review consistent
wi th . a staff recommendation from the Town 'of Oueensbury. II
'Signed by Thomà!S' Ha¡L"t~y ,Chäirperson.
MR. CARVIN-Dr. Orban,is there anything you care to 'add regarding
the application?
DR. ORBAN-No. I think that is accurate as far as I've filled out
for now. I did mention on the (lost word) that 1-87 is close
(lost word).
MR. CARVIN-Are you the owner of the property, Dr. Orban?
DR. ORBAN-No.
MR. CARVIN-Do yOu know whO is the owner?
- 3 -
--..;'
DR. ORBAN-There are three owners, as I understand now. One is
deceased, the other is a Robert, LeFebvre, and ;the other, I don't
know.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. Do you know if they've advertised this as a
residential area, or as a residential property?
DR. ORBAN-You mean through the realtor?
MR. CARVIN-Right.
SANDRA ORBAN
MRS. ORBAN-The realtor's here.
DR. ORBAN-Would you like to take that one?
PATRICIA BOYLE
MS. BOYLE-No.
property.
It has not been advertised as a residential
DR. ORBAN-This is Patricia Boyle, Century 21, Boyle Realty.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So it's never been listed as a residential, in
a residential zone? It's always been marketed as commercial?
Okay. Any other questions from the Boaird?
MR. MARESCO-Yes, I do have one question. In one 'paragraph, it
had stated that, property hasn't currently been used for 18
months, and then over here, there's another paragraph that states
it's an existing business, some computerized billing service?
DR. ORBAN-I don't own the property. I don't know how long it may
have, I know it's vacant now. That's as accurate as I can be, as
far as any use going in there. That information must have come
from within your (lost word).
MR. CARVIN-Okay. ,Well, I guess to answer Tony's question, has
the building beèn vacant for 18 months, okay~ so that any
commercial use, at this point, has ceased. Is that correct, so
it does revert back to the residential zoning? Okay.
MR. MENTER-I have one question. I'd just like to ask
applicant to, looking back at the apþlication, there's
question, Number 13, which wasn't answered, which is,
reasonable return possible if the land is used as zoned.
what would your answer to that be?
the
one
Is a
Just
DR. ORBAN-I don't understand what reasonable return?
understand the nature of the question?
I don't
MR. MENTER-Okay. One of the criteria that we .have to go by, as a
Board, in determining whether to allow a Use Variance, is whether
or not the land, in a sense, has a value, if there is no variance
given. In other words, is it possible to receive a reasonable
financial re.turn within the Ordinance, without granting a
variance, without using it commercially?
DR. ORBAN-If I understand your question, the answer would be no,
because within the Ordinance, as it exists now, you can't have a
commercial enterprise there. Am I correct?
MR. MENTER-That's correct.
DR. ORBAN-So the answer would have to be no.
MR. MENTER-Okay.
DR. ORBAN-No return, because you couldn't have a business in
- 4 -
----'
'-
there in the first place.
MR. MARESCO-But can you sell that property as a residential
property and receive a, you know, a gain on it?
MR. CARVIN-You see, our
here is that this piece
residential unit. It's
in a residential area.
problem, I think, where we're leading
of property has never been presented as a
always been presented as commercial unit
DR. ORBAN-Are you then asking me, is that property viable as a
residence?
MR. MARESCO-Exactly.
MR. CARVIN-That's correct.
DR. ORBAN-As it stands now, absolutely not, because actually the
only value of the structure that's there is the shell, the walls
and the roof. One could not have a residence inside the
bu i 1 ding.
MR. MARESCO-Why?
DR. ORBAN-The walls have holes in them. It's not set up as a
residence. It's got nothing, by my eyes, (lost word).
MR. MARESCO-When was the last time you were in there?
DR. ORBAN-Within a month.
MR. MARESCO-Because I peeked in there today, and as far as I can
see, just from visibly looking through an open window, there's a
gentleman there fixing the glass, it looked like it was finished.
Finished meaning, there were rugs. There was telephone. There
were electrical outlets. There were walls that were painted.
DR. ORBAN-The front tier. The front tier is finished. There is
carpeting on the back and tiled floors in there, but, to my mind,
the way it's set up is non viable as, I guess you could, (lost
word), but it's not set up, in my mind. It could be re-done, but
I still think it would take, my honest opinion is that it would
still take completely refinishing the inside, or a great majority
of the interior of the building, completely redoing it.
MR. CARVIN-I don't know. Maybe I should address this question
to, is it Ms. Boyle. What would be your opinion of that property
as a residential? Do you think it would?
MS. BOYLE-The structure is a single story, 4590 square foot,
single level structure, built on a slab. In order to convert it
to a residence, you're looking at 4500 square feet, if you wanted
to use the existing buildings. The only reasonable thing,
actually, would be to tear that building down, in which case
you're looking simply at the value of the land. To convert that
building into a residence would be cost prohibitive, given the
location. You'd never see a return on it, given the amount of
money you'd have to put into it. Really you'd have to tear the
building down, and then you're looking at the expense of taking a
building down, and then what can you sell those two, you know,
conceivably, you could have two lots there, but what would you be
able to sell those lots for? Nowhere near the value of the
building as it stands, for a commercial use.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So
return would not be
residential lot?
it would be your opinion that
achievable if it were to be
a reasonable
marketed as a
MS. BOYLE-No. To go back to what you were saying about the
building, perhaps one third of it is completed up front. It's
- 5 -
--
----
pretty much a major disaster area behind there, and it has been
abused and vandalized over the last couple of years quite badly.
MR. MARESCO-I know. I pass by it frequently. It is an eyesore.
MS. BOYLE-It is definitely an eyesore.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any other questions?
MS. CIPPERLY-Could I ask, is this currently under contract to Dr.
Orban?
MS. BOYLE-Yes, it is.
MS. CIPPERLY-And I
even a duplex or
because it's.
just wanted to also mention, in this zone,
multifamily would have to get a Use Variance,
MR. CARVIN-Single Family?
MS. CIPPERLY-Yes.
MS. BOYLE-There is a duplex next door.
MR. MARESCO-Right.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, hearing no other questions from the
Board, I'd like to open it up to the public. Anyone wishing to
be heard in favor of the application, please come forward.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MICKEY CHOPPA
MR. CHOPPA-Do you have a third category of just questions? You
said you have for and you have against. I'm not necessarily
either way, but I have questions.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MR. CHOPPA-My name is Mickey Choppa, and I live right next door
to this building, okay, and I've been there for 20 some odd
years, and the building is definitely an eyesore. There's no
question about it. The best it ever was was when Mr. LeFebvre
was actively involved in the computer work"because there was
people there. Things were taken care of. It wasn't bad. When I
first moved there, it was a store, and that was not good at all,
because you had glass, papeT, everything there. My question is,
for the past couple of years, nobody has maintained anything,
including the lot next door. If you went there today, you know
there's a lot and then a building, and my house. We complained,
about three years ago, and màybe they mowed it twice, and for the
past two years, I got tired of complaining. I just mowed it
myself. So I want to know if this is going to be maintained,
what kind of 'landscaping they're going to do, what the plans are.
I'm not against it, because I think it's the only thing that can
be done. As far as the dentist's office goes, it would be
wonderful. A beauty parlor? I'm not so sure about that. I
guess that's my question to Dr. Orban. If you buy it, are you
going to maintain. I don't mean once a month. I'm not saying
you've got to plant grass and fertilize it.
DR. ORBAN-I would keep that as a residence would be kept. There
are no plans for landscaping (lost word) at a minimum (lost
word). There would be something there, some type of minimum
landscaping. The back lot will be kept (lost word), 4nd as far
as the exterior of the building, the change that would occur is
that probably (lost word) some type of a facade would be put up
there (lost word).
- 6 -
, "'--
-'
MR. CHOPPA-As I said, my concern is, I'm sure the building would
be taken care of, but it's easy to forget that lot, the one
that's between the building and where I live, and all I want to
know is what he would do to take care of it, and it's on the
record, and if it doesn't get done, I can complain.
DR. ORBAN-Once again, that would, at a minimum, be kept (lost
wor d).
MR. CARVIN-Any other questions from Mr. Choppa?
MR. CHOPPA-No.
MR. CARVIN-Anyone else wishing to be heard in favor of the
application?
BARBARA BENNETT
MRS. BENNETT-I'm basically backing what he said. Barbara Bennett
of 83 Dixon Road. My interests parallel what he's talking about.
I have one other question. If the businesses you're talking
about don't work out, does changing the zoning allow something
else in that we're not anticipating tonight, that we might not
want in, some more serious form of a business?
MR. CARVIN-Yes. I'm not positive I have a total answer Dn that,
but my understanding would be that it would leave open the
commercial aspect, but I believe it would, any other use other
than a dentist's office, for example, would have to come for
approval, but we cannot turn it down on a commercial aspect, as
long as it happens within an 18 month time frame. Does that
answer your question?
MS. CIPPERLY-It ought to be pointed out that this is not a zoning
change. It's a Use Variance.
MR. CARVIN....Right. This is a Use Variance.
MS. CIPPERLY-Zoning will not change.
MR. CARVIN-So that that is still zoned as a residential. So any
use other than the dentist's office would have to come back for
approval as an approved use in that zone.
MR. CHOPPA-It could never be a store, correct? Like if
it in half, and say, the lease doesn't work, out,
couldn't put a auto parts store in there?
he cuts
somebody
MR. CARVIN-That's what we're going to, we're going to address
that. I think, at least my opinion at this point is that, that
we are only looking at a dentist's office, and that any
additional use in theTe is going to have to come back for review.
That's ~ opinion, and that's the way I think we're going to
probably approach this.
DR. ORBAN-I have a question for the Board, at this point, with
regard to this issue, too. My intent, in any other rented space
in that building will be limited to professional use, as defined
in one of your Codes. Ms. Cipperly showed me. So I have respect
for the neighborhood (lost word) retail business in there. What
I would like to, because (lost word) to professional use, this is
an issue that is of importance to me to define, as soon as
reasonably possible, for financial considerations, obviously,
that I would want to be able to utilize that in any approved
manner.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, I appreciate your concern. ~ concern is
that, and I'm only speaking for myself. I don't know how the
other Board members feel, but I have a very difficult time
putting commercial aspects into residential areas. As I said, I
- 7 -
--
may not have a problem with the dental office, but I do have a
problem in just giving blank checks. So we'll ,:äddress that
issue, maybe, at a little later point. At this point, I'd like
ta try to keep the public hearing moving along. Are there any
other folks wishing to be heard in support of the application?
Okay. Seeing none, I will now open it for any general public in
opposition to the applieation.
JAMES DAVIDSON
MR. DAVIDSON~My name is James Davidson. My wife Rosemary and I
live and owh property at 16 Northup Drive, which is around the
corner from the premises involved. We have lived there for over
30 years. We've lived there before the Zoning Ordinance, at the
time when there was a!1ittle neighborhood store there, back when
you could walk across Dixon Road without threat of being killed.
Since we've been there, we've seen the neighborhood grow up, and
I have three words to say to this Board, and that's traffic,
traffic, traffic. I've heard nothing here said by the applicant
how many people are going to be at this location? How many cars
are we going to have? How many employees are there? How many
patients are going to come and go?' If he rents this space as a
beauty parlor, how many people aTe going to work there? How many
cars are going to come and go? I've tried to cross Dixon Road
the other day about 4:30. I stayed on my side of the street and
counted 25 cars going by. The speed limit is 35 miles per hour.
That's a joke. I think once last year I saw a sheriff's car
there. People speed up and down this road. There are no
sidewalks. There's a school on that road. School children are
on this road. Are you prepared ta see a story in the paper of a
school child being killed because of the excess traffic? This
particular lotation is at the corner of Dixon Courtj which T's
into Dixon Road. Right across the street from it is another
street, Hughes Court, which T's into Dixon Road. It is an area
that you do not need additional traffic. You don't need one more
car on this road. Now, the people who drew up the Zoning
Ordinance, way back when, when this little neighborhood store was
there, sought not to zone this commercial. They saw fit to zone
it as residential. This is the only, or was the only spot used
as a commercial, between the City line and the Northway.
Everything else on that road is residential. Going back to that
time, they decided that this should be zoned for residential.
This area, of course, was a nonconforming use and was allowed to
continue. Now, we're going back, probably, 20, 25 years. I'd
venture to take a guess that traffic has increased five times on
Dixon Road since then. You have numerous housing developments.
You've got Hidden Hills. You've got Dixon Heights. The traffic
on that road is unbelievable. It's a narrow, two lane road. Any
further use to create traffic on that road would be a travesty of
justice. I beseech this Board to what the original planners in
the Town of Queensbury did, to keep this a residential area.
It's the only logical thing to do. If you don't do that, then
why make plans? Why have zoning, if anybody can come and
petition the Board, and the Board keeps saying, yes, yes, why
not, do whatever you want? Now, what I've heard, 'here, from a
broker involved, who I assume, and correct me if I'm wrong, is
going to get a commission on this sale., that opinion expressed
was just as not marketable as a residential area. However, I
also here that it's never been marketed as a residential area.
There's a lot of space there. All around it are residences.
True, there is a building there, but as was said before,
buildings can be torn döwn. This would be a prime residential
area. That's what it's meant for. That's what it's zoned for,
and that's what I ask the BoaTd to leave it alone, as a
residential area, and again, I suggest, traffic, traffic,
traffic. Anybody tried to walk on Dixon Road, anybody tried to
jog on Dixon Road, everybody's seen children going to school,
Kensington Road, on Dixon Road, think about it. Thank you.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Anyone else wishing to be heard in opposition?
- 8 -
',,-,
--./
Any correspondence?
CORRESPONDENCE
MR. THOMAS-Yes. I have two. A record of telephone conversation,
dated 2/21/95, between Nevin Weiner, owner of property at 12
Northup Drive, and Pam Whiting, Planning Office, subject is Use
Variance for Robert Orban, "received public hearing notice. Will
be unable to attend the meeting. Would like to state that he is
opposed to the project. Feels that it is not setting a good
precedent to start changing the use because it will generate more
traffic, etc., in a residential area." And another record of
telephone conversation, dated February 16, 1995, between Sue
Cipperly, Assistant Planner, and Donald Bodack, subject is the
Orban application, "Caller stated that he had received notice of
the public hearing but would not be able to attend. He did not
object to the dentist's office, but had concerns about the amount
of traffic that could be generated by a beauty parlor. Mr.
Bodack also mentioned traffic in relation to commuting and
Kensington School as peak periods of concern." And that's it.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I guess I'd like to ask Mr. Orban exactly how
many dentists, how many receptionists, in other words, how many
people, what type of traffic do you anticipate there?
DR. ORBAN-There is one dentist, myself. We currently have a
compliment of both full and part time staff of five. So there
would be, at a maximum, six cars there, or staff, that would not
be then moving, necessarily, in and out, aside from coming to
work and leaving work, staying in for lunch, aside from
occasional errands that they run, what have you. The current
patient flow, total on a daily basis, is fifteen to twenty. Some
of those are relatively short visits for postoperative
procedures, what have you. Others can be up to an hour or two.
So the traffic pattern would be variable, but fifteen to twenty
patients per day would seem an average day. I had spoken with
the gentleman who may be interested. The reason the beauty
parlor came up is I have a friend and neighbor who might be
interested in this location, and he thought that, possibly, in
the space of that size, eight individual for eight cars (lost
word), with possibly a maximum of five employed people in that
space as a beauty salon. This is not anything that's finalized
either. This is just a business (lost word), but that would be
the projection there, 15 to 20 patients a day, in ~ practice,
staff of six, including myself, and if there were to be a beauty
salon, possibly eight customers an hour, and a staff of five, at
a maximum.
MS. CIPPERLY-We probably ought to clarify, too, that you're an
oral surgeon?
DR. ORBAN-Correct.
MS. CIPPERLY-Rather than just a normal dental practice.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So you don't have any plans of opening up a, I
don't know, I guess a dental center type of thing, where there's
two or three dentists, things like that?
DR. ORBAN-No. I have no plans, at this time, at all. The
potential is there to bring in one partner down the line. If the
practice would permit the size of that space would permit that.
I have no plans, at this time at all, to put a practice that
would support that. The practice is relatively young at this
point. It's not even reached its full capacity, myself as the
single practitioner there.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Now you, on your plan here, indicate, I foresee
no freestanding signs or outdoor lighting fixtures at this time.
Is that a correct statement?
- 9 -
'-
...-'
DR. ORBAN-The outdoor lighting fixtures, as far as something up
on the roof, or something out by the road, absolutely no. I
wouldn't see a need for that. My signs would be of a minimum
size. (lost word) somebody with normal vision could read them
reasonably well driving, maybe, from the road, without having to
try to squint, but not having any freestanding, you know, big
sign right out by the road. The only (lost word) was that maybe
just for visibility, or, to keép people's eyes on the road maybe
I'll have a typical thing somewhere out in the front there, but
that's not even a necessity, and if there would be a large
objection to a small sign, small freestanding sign, in the
community, then I wouldn't have a particular problem not having
that there, as long as I was able to put a reasonable sign on the
outside of the building. The same would be true for any other
business that might going in there. The lighting would be kept,
essentially, for the side of the building you're saying is a
residence. The only lighting I could foresee there, at night,
would be, perhaps, in the foyer, and maybe over, you know, just
around the entrance way. So that I don't plan on having flood
lights on anything particular at all at night. In the winter
time, I would need to, obviously, light the exterior walkways and
the parking lot, to the degree it would be appropriate or
necessary for business hours that might be after dark. Our
normal business hours run until five o'clock. Sometimes we're
there until six o'clock, rarely until six thirty or seven.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and what is your time frame, at this point, in
other words, if you were to get a variance, how soon would you be
looking to move on this?
DR. ORBAN-I'd like to in and working in the beginning of August.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any other questions from anybody on the Board?
MR. MARESCO-I have one more.
anything to the front of
upgrading?
Do you have any intentions of doing
the building at all, as far as
DR. ORBAN-The mansard, where it's (lost word) shake shingles
needs to be replaced. That will be replaced, and at this point,
I have not even reviewed all my options, as far as replacement of
windows. Something that would look appropriate and professional.
That's all I can tell you about that. The steel support (lost
word) need re-finishing, painting. The obvious things need to be
cleaned up. The batten and board that's there, like I said,
you're talking about the front?
MR. MARESCO-Mainly the front, because that is very visible to the
road there.
DR. ORBAN-The batten and board will get restained. We are
probably going to be putting in maybe some different windows in
the front of the building, and then whatever I need to do, at a
relative minimum. Like I said, it's been brought up that there
be no ingress and egress into that lot off of Dixon Road. The
ingress and egress would be off of Dixon Court. So whatever I
need to do there to frame out some type of barrier along Dixon
Road, and have it probably, you know, once again, minimally
landscaped, something landscaped there.
MR. MARESCO-Is there only one entrance into the front of that
building?
DR. ORBAN-As of now, there are, there's one entrance into the
front. There will be two planned in th. front. Essentially one
along the right hand side, if you're 'looking at the building,
like there's one to the left now, and then also one from the west
side, maybe 15 or 20 feet back from the front of the building.
MR. MARESCO-Thank you.
- 10 -
'-
'--./
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Do you have a, on your plan here, it just shows
the total dimensions of the building. It looks like 77 by 61.
Do you have a rough idea of how much of that building you're
going to be utilizing, like 2/3rds, 3/4ths?
DR. ORBAN-My usable inside space works out to about 2850 square
feet. There is a relatively substantial loss of the internal
square footage compared to the outside dimensions of that, only
because of the thickness of the block wall, and there is also a
thick block wall that divides that third tier back. I think I
have indicated.
MR. CARVIN-There's just a line here.
office space on the plan here.
So, you just have other
DR. ORBAN-Between that and where I have the other area
designated, that's also a thick wall. So my 2850, and then 1250
in the back, does not come up to the total that you get by
multiplying 78 by 61~ and that's the difference in the,
essentially, the two foot thick wall. It just about makes up any
inaccuracies there, but the usable space as it's been roughly
proposed is 2850 square feet, inside wall to inside wall.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any other?
MS. CIPPERLY-One other reason the sign was mentioned in this
application was that we've had Use Variances before where people
had to come back to get a Use Variance for the sign, essentially.
That's why we try to include it all in one application.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any questions? I'd like to probably table the
decision on this. I just nèed a procedural, should I leave the
public hearing open or closed?
MR. DUSEK-I think if you feel you've heard everything, you can
close it.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and then we'd have 60 days to make a decision?
MR. DUSEK-Correct.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I'm going to ask the public, one last time, for
any comments, if there's any for or against.
HAROLD KATZ
MR. KATZ-My name is Harold Katz. I live at 10 Dixon Court. I
have lived there probably longer than anyone else, as a matter of
fact, 40 some odd years. So, we built our house when that little
store was there, and then enlarged it, watched it develo~. I
agree with Jim Davidson. The biggest problem is traffic. As I
listen to Dr. Orban here, now I'm becoming concerned with a
number of other issues. One is, there is no way that I think a
beauty parlor, of all things, should go in there. As a matter of
fact, I'm amazed at Mickey Choppa. He owns a beauty parlor. He
didn't say a word about it, but that's his business. Now, Dr.
Orban says, if we're going to do it, divert traffic away from
Dixon Road to Dixon Court. So ingress and egress will be at that
corner, which is a busy corner. There are not a lot of homes in
Dixon Court itself. I think there are probably 15 homes at best,
but that means all of us who live in Dixon Court are going to be
affected by the traffic coming off Dixon Road, to get into Dr.
Orban's practice. Originally, when I listened to this, only part
of the building was going to be used possibly for a beauty parlor
or some other business. Now, as I listen, it looks like about
half of it will be used by the doctor, and the rest of it will be
used by some other business. He also says, and I have no
objection to his going in there. My objection to the manner in
which traffic is going to be handled and routed. Also, the fact
that he anticipates fixing up the outside, but isn't sure how
- 11 -
"-"
'-
he's going to do it. He's going to improve the mansard siding,
but isn't sure how he's going to do that. He's going to do a lot
of things, but he isn't sure how he's going to do them, but he
wants to be in by August. Now it seems to me if you're going to
grant this variance, that you ought to have more information.
Exact 1 y what the docto,-' s going to do, how he's goi ng' to improve
the exterior of that building, the exact size of these signs he's
talked about. He's talking, now, about changing the front of the
building, adding windows, changing the entrance onto Dixon Road
from one entrance two, and All of these are somewhat of a
variance from what was originally indicated in the notice that
was given. So it's the intangibles that concern me. It's the
indefiniteness of what's going on here that concerns me, and as,
again, to re-emphasize Jim Davidson's comment, the traffic
problem that will be created, not necess,arily by the limited
number of patients that the doctor might have, but by the rest of
what goes on there, if you grant a variance now that is going to
include the entir~building. What's going to go in there? I
don't think a beauty parlor's considered a profession, anyway,
under the Code. I could be wrong, but the fact is that all of
these affect those of us who live and must drive by this building
every day. Right now, I agree. It's an eyesore. That's because
the owner has not maintained it. Something should go in'there.
It's impractical for residential purposes, but at least if we're
going to continue a variance here, for the use of it, lets do it
so it is a benefit to the neighborhood, and doesn't continue as
an eyesorè. There's a huge parking lot bounded by the area
between Choppa's house and this property. It's an eyesore, and
the Town ought to be grateful to Mickey Choppa because he does go
out there and he does mow that, and he's maintained it for the
owner for a long time now, but I think, gentlemen, before you
make your determination, here~ there àre a lot of unanswered
questions. I think this information should be given to you, and
to those of us who live in the vicinity, before you make your
final judgment as to whether or not you're going to grant this
variance. Tha~k you very much.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Thank you. Okay. Any other comments?
MS. CIPPERLY-To answer the question about professional
occupation, the definition in the Code is "One who is engaged in
professional services, including but not limited to, all members
of the field of medicine, a lawyer, architect, engineer,
surveyor, licensed beautician or barber, real estate broker, or
accountant". People do tend to be surprised at the beautician,
but it is a licensed, it's licensed by New York State.
DR. ORBAN- I have some ref i ned
like, from Mr. Ray Mallony,
constructing the dental offices.
square footage figures, if you'd
who is the design consultant
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Yes.
DR. ORBAN-Ray, if I read this, correct me if I'm wrong, but the
total inter ior spaoe comes to 4,047 square feet, for the enti ,-e
structure. My office is 2,793 square feet.
MR. CARVIN-Okay,. Now that 'sinter ior measurements, notexter ior?
DR. ORBAN-Thesé are the interior measurements of this dental
office, and the remainder is 1,254 square feet.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I just have one more question of Ms. Boyle.
Have you always represented this property, or were there other
real estate people that had represented this property?
MS. BOYLE-There were others.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and do you know if they were all commercial, or
if this has ever been represented as a residential lot?
- 12 -
',,--/
----
MS. BOYLE-I don't believe it's ever been presented as residential
property.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So, to the best of your knowledge, it's never
been represented as a residential lot? Okay. Thank you.
DR. ORBAN-If I could make just one more response in light of one
of the last gentleman's questions, regarding the egress and
ingress pattern on Dixon Court. That was what was suggested to
me, suggested by a person at the township office, that because of
the traffic pattern that exists right now, that that's probably
what would be advisable from the Town of Queensbury, to limit, or
eliminate access immediately off of Dixon Road. That would be
safer than having traffic, than the have an access right off of
Dixon Road. I'm certainly not bound to that. Obviously, (lost
word) what the Planning Board's suggestion was up to Code.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Again, Jim, a procedural thing.
referred to site plan review, they would look at
issue and traffic flow and patterns?
If this is
the traffic
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
configuration on
issues.
They would look at that, as well as
the site, landscaping, and all those
parking
types of
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MR. MARTIN-That's why it's Staff's recommendation that it go to
that, should the Board see fit.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MR. CHOPPA-One final thing. I do agree with some of the people
that have spoken. The beauty salon does create a lot of traffic.
There's no question about that. I know. I also know that I have
clients that are CPA's and such, that have expressed interest in
that location, but wouldn't do it because of the amount of money
that would have to be spent. I guess my question to Dr. Orban
is, how about looking at another profession, such as a CPA, who
has very little traffic flow, like yourself? I don't think the
neighborhood would object to you, but I think it's pretty
obvious, from what you've heard, they're concerned, as well as ~
am, about the other half, and a beauty parlor just isn't going to
make it. A CPA or something like that, I don't think we'd have a
problem.
DR. ORBAN-Once again, I have no problem with your suggestion in
any way. If it's deemed the neighborhood absolutely opposes one
type of business there, and if that's deemed by the variance from
the Board, I'm not going to say, no, I'm not going to go through
this, because that business would not be permitted in there.
It's like my idea is, on an overview, that I would consider
renting that to any other profession. The only reason the whole
beauty parlor issue came up at all is because I was approached by
someone who said, look, if you're going to (lost word) that, I
might be interested, and that person happened to be a beautician.
MR. CHOPPA-Would you grant him an okay to go in with that, if he
doesn't have the other side rented. Then say six months down the
road, what happens when he wants to rent it? Does he have to ask
you to just start allover again, or does he, then, have carte
blanche to put whatever he wants in there?
MR. CARVIN-Well, again, I can only speak for myself. I would be
opposed to a carte blanche situation, but that would have to be
addressed in the motion. In other words, if a motion is made to
grant the variance, I think that should be spelled out, that this
would be only fo," the dentist and no other situation, at this
point. Okay. I'm going to ask, one last time, for any public
- 13 -
'-
~!
comment.
SANDRA ORBAN
MRS. ORBAN-I'm Mrs. Orban, and just to put your mind at ease,
think about it. Would you go to a surgeon that had a trashy
looking office? We take very good care of our home. The office
will be taken care of. It will be presentable. It has to be.
We don't have a choice. We have an image to' keep Lip, too.
Patients won't go to an office that isn't taken care of, because
they're going to wonder what the surgeons are like if the office
isn't taken care of. So the office would be presentable. As far
as having exact plans for you right now, we really couldn't. We
were initially told there wouldn't be a variance problem, and
then we found out there WðS, and that's why we've taken this
approach first, because we didn't even know if we would get past
he)"e.
DR. ORBAN-That discussion, in regard to the other gentleman's
question about what are the specifics of the exterior of the
building. I can't be sure because I need to know that I'm going
to be able to safely use the property for my purposes, before I
can draw up a final set of plans, and made final decision, find
out what's being done, exactly, with regard to the appearance of
the building (lost word).
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
redundant.
I hate to say, one last time, again, it's
WALT REYNOLDS
MR. REYNOLDS-I'm Walt Reynolds, at 17 Northup Drive. I would go
along with one thing. I think that you really should consider
the other applicant of this building. Looking down the line,
what could happen, in other words, if somebody moved in and
somebody moved out, and you've got people coming and coming out,
being different tenants. I think that's one of the
considerations to go along with the traffic study. If all this
traffic is coming, being deviated down from Aviation Road, you
come down there in the morning, or in the afternoon, you can see
a tremendous amount of traffic.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I will now close the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I'm also going to address the Board here,
first. I think that I'm going to move that we table the vote on
this, until we have a little bit fuller Board, but I will open up
the discussion, if the Board has any discussion that they wish to
make comment on at this point.
MR. MARESCO-I do. I would definitely like to see some, actually,
I'm going to re-phrase that. I would like to see some definite
plans on the up-grading of the building, the landscaping, the
signage, things like that, what exactly is going to be done to
the property. Also, definitely would put some restrictions on
exactly what the back of that property is going to be used for,
definitely no carte blanche to do anything, but I'd like to see
that property upgraded, but I would just like to know exactly how
it's going to be. I have no problem with putting a dental office
in there at all, but I'd just like to see some definite plans on
exactly what's going to be done. That's m.z::.. view.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Dave, any comments?
MR. MENTER-I would, in answer tò some of those issues, 1
like to see it sent for site plan review, regardless, which
take cafe of a lot of those questions, in terms of what was
to be done with the property, access and egress, etc. The
would
would
going
other
- 14 -
'-
-"
thing is, since, and I agree with Fred that what we should be
doing with this is tabling it. I would, personally, like to see
a little more evidence, in terms of the lack of reasonable return
as residential, primarily because it is, if I'm not mistaken,
large enough to be two lots in that zone. Is that correct?
DR. ORBAN-That is two lots.
MR. MENTER-But can it be utilized as two residential lots, or am
I missing something?
MS. CIPPERLY-Well, they're pre-existing lots. The one next to
Mr. Choppa, I believe, is 50 or 75 feet wide, which is difficult,
75.
MR. MENTER-So it's two separate lots now, deeded two separate
lots?
MS. CIPPERLY-Yes. The advantage to that, in terms of this
project, is that, as far as permeability requirements and buffers
between residential zones, that extra lot, that's what that would
be, normally between a, if this were in two separate zones, you'd
require a 50 foot buffer between these sorts of things. So that
has a nice aspect of maintaining a separation between the use,
but the perméability, because the major corner portion is paved,
the permeability is virtually none. So that additional lot helps
satisfy that permeability requirement.
MR. CARVIN-Anything else, Dave?
MR. MENTER-Am I right in that there's two separate lots, one is
75 by 150, approximately. Is that how it's drawn on the scale?
DR. ORBAN-Yes.
MR. MENTER-That's where those numbers come from? Okay.
all i would have to say.
That's
MR. CARVIN-Chris?
MR. THOMAS-Yes. I have no problem putting the dentist office in
there. I do have a problem giving an open ticket for any other
business going in that back lot, and before I'd vote on it, I'd
really want to hear what the Planning Board has to say about
this, mostly about the traffic, the landscaping, what the
building's going to look like, and any other criteria that they
can come up with.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
Planning Board for
plan review?
Are you saying that we should send this to the
an opinion, or just send it to them for site
MR. THOMAS-Send it to site plan review.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I guess my comments are I think that the Board
has to address a couple of issues, here. The first is, this is a
residential zone. This particular use has been discontinued for
18 months. I am extremely concerned about the lack of
marketability as a residence. I still do not have a real grasp
whether that property can be sold as a yesidential lot. I think
one of the neighbors has a very valid point, that this is a
residence, a residential zone, and driving up and using my memory
along Dixon Road, I think he is correct. I think if we were to
allow this to go in, that really would be the only business,
until you get up to the Evergreen Park, which is on the upper
portion there. So I do have, a real concern about putting a
commercial venture in a residential zone, but if the Board moves
in that direction, I think that the other points that you have
brought out really have to be addressed. So I would be totally
in favor of referring this to site plan review. I think that
- 15 -
----
there should be some severe restrictions, as far as signage,
parking, landscaping, and so forth, in other words, some of the
issues that have been addressed by staff. So I think that we
have our homework cut out for us. Is there anything that the
Board wants the applicant to submit between now and then. I
mean, Tony, you indicated you'd like to see some landscaping
plans and things?
MR. MARESCO-Yes, landscaping, and exactly what's going to be done
with the frontal building, signage. I'd like to see something
11 ke that.
MR. CARVIN-Is that a problem to come up with the floor plan, in
other words, exactly what you're floor plan's going to look like,
what your lot ~lan, as far as, you know, some of these issues?
DR. ORBAN-A floor plan is an expense of several thousand dollars.
I can submit a tentative floor plan to you tonight, if you'd like
that would probably not vary significantly from my office, but
might have some minor changes. It wouldn't be the final plan.
To draw actual plot pl~ns up with all the details, like I said,
that's an expense of several thousand dollars.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I think what I.Q..ID:. is referring to is that he
would like to see, you know, at least a rough idea, certainly a
being point, if nothing else.
DR. ORBAN-Then I can give you more of a rough idea.
MR. MARESCO-Were you speaking about the interior?
DR. ORBAN-Yes.
MR. MARESCO-I'm speaking more on thè exterior.
DR. ORBAN-The floor plan, to me, is interior.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. I'd like to know exactly how much of the
interior space you plan on utilizing, and how much space is going
to be allocated to "another type of business".
DR. ORBAN-We have those figures.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. The other thing that I would like, or suggest
that you get, is, from maybe two or three other real estate
agents, and again, I don't know if this can be done, but ~ would
like to see more documentation what the real value would be if
that was as a residential site, as opposed to a commercial. I
thi nk we need to get some ha,"d numbers there. If this, indeed,
is a viable residential lot, I'd like to see some kind of
substantiation of that.
MR. MENTER-And if it's not, you know, we'd like to be shown that,
too.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, and if it's not, you know, just documentation.
DR. ORBAN-Okay. Concerns are?
MR. MARESCO-Landscaping, facade of the building.
DR. ORBAN-Traffic.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, parking, and again, the signage. I don't want to
have a neon sign flashing in a residential area, you know, some
kind of rough idea.
DR. ORBAN-Okay, landscaping, facade.
MS. CIPPERLY-Operating hours.
Do you do evening appointments at
- 16 -
'--'
.--
all, or is this purely day time?
DR. ORBAN-No. Our scheduled hours are until five o'clock, but,
yes, like I said, we get out of there sometimes, on rare
occasions, until seven, that may happen a couple of times a year,
and then sometimes until five thirty. There are no scheduled
eveni ng hours.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and I would also suggest maybe contacting some
of the neighbors, just to, a lot of times they'll make comments
in private that they won't make in public, and I think anything
that you can do to address any of their issues, to alleviate some
of their concerns and fears, and so forth, will go a long ways in
maybe convincing this Board to grant a variance in that site.
DR. ORBAN-I'm not sure how to quite read that, talk to people and
ask them to indicate to you.
MR. CARVIN-Well, not necessarily to us, but, I mean, we've had
some public comment, and I don't know who else is, I'm sure that
there's neighbors out there who mayor may not have an opinion on
this, but if you can come up with a viable plan to alleviate a
lot of their concerns, I think it will go a long ways in
promoting your cause, because as I said, ~ biggest, and this is
only me, I just have a very hard time putting commercial ventures
into residential areas.
DR. ORBAN-The submission of these items go to this Board?
MR. CARVIN-I guess is goes to.
MS. CIPPERLY-To our office.
MR. CARVIN-To their office. We normally table for 60 days. Do
you think that that is an appropriate time?
MS. CIPPERLY-You can come back sooner.
MR. CARVIN-You can come back sooner.
DR. ORBAN-I'd like to come back sooner.
MR. MARTIN-Well, what I'd like to establish is a date for
submission, so we can reasonably get these in and review them,
get them in your packets in time, and that type of thing.
MR. CARVIN-Well, we table for 60 days. I think that that really
depends upon the agenda, right, and how fast?
MR. MARTIN-Well, today was the submission deadline for March, for
example. If you want to give special consideration, we can
accommodate that, but I don't want it to get out of hand, either.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. What's March look like? I'm afraid to ask.
MS. CIPPERLY-There's not much.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, if we can put it on March. I mean, if
the applicant can come back with his plans.
MR. MARTIN-When can you get this information to us by?
DR. ORBAN-I don't know.
MR. MARTIN-Okay. That's an honest answer.
DR. ORBAN-I have no idea, really. I've not been through this, as
far as, you know, getting landscaping plans, stuff like that, and
I really don't know.
- 17 -
--
.~-"
MR. CARVIN-Well, if we can do it for March.
DR. ORBAN-I will certainly know by, I certainly would hope to do
it by next month.
MR. CARVIN-I've closed the public hearing. So, I mean, this is
just submission for additional information. So if we don't make
March, the~ we'll make April.
DR. ORBAN-As far ás the landscaping, that's going to all be tied
in with the traffic patterns, the parking spaces.
MR. CARVIN-A lot of this the planning Board will be looking for
.it anyway, so you'll be ahead of the curve as far as that's
concerned, because I suspect that if this goes through, that it
will be referred'to site plan review. So this is information
that you will have to eventually gather anyway. All right. Then
I will make a motion to table.
MOTION TO TABLE USE VARIANCE ~O. 9-1995 ROBERT E. ORBAN. JR.,
Introduced by Fred CaTvin who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Anthony Maresco:
Pending no later than 60 days. This means that any new
information requested by this Board must be submitted by the
filing deadline for that month. The applicant may appear on the
agenda in the previous month if the filing deadline for that
month can be met.
Duly adopted this 22nd day of February, 1995, by the following
vote:
MR. MARTIN-In this
submission for the
Wednesday in March,
essentially, have a
case, that means you have until the March
April meetin9s. That would be the last
to get all this information together. You,
month.
DR. ORBAN-So you're telling me that submitting and everything
ready for the March meeting here is out of the question?
MR. MARTIN-No, no. I'm not saying that's out. I'm saying that's
the absolute final date.
DR. ORBAN-Okay.
MR. MARTIN-If you can make March, great. If you can't, then
April would be your absolute limit.
MS. CIPPERLY-We've closed the public hearing on this, right?
MR. CARVIN-That's correct. All right. That is my motion.
AYES: Mr. Menter, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Carvin
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Ford
NOTICE OF APPEAL NO. 3-95 JOHN P. CUSHING APPEAL BY JOHN P.
CUSHING REGARDING PROPERTY OWNED BY DOROTHY HODGKINS, CLEVERDALE,
ASSERTING THAT CURRENT SITUATION VIOLATES SECTION 179-12C, WHICH
STATES THAT THERE SHALL BE NO MORE THAN ONE (1) PRINCIPAL
BUILDING IN A RESIDENTIAL ZONE ON ANY SINGLE LOT LESS THAN TWO
(2) ACRES IN SIZE. LOCATION: 'TAX MAP NO. 13-1-10, CLEVERDALE
ROAD
JOHN AND MARION CUSHING, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
- 18 -
'-'"'
'-
Notes from Staff, Notice of Appeal No. 3-95, John P. Cushing,
Meeting Date: February 22, 1995 "Cushing Appeal concerning
Hodgkins property Reason for Appeal Appellant believes that the
garage/guest house situated on the Hodgkins property constitutes
a second dwelling, and that it is in violation of Section 179-12C
of the Zoning Ordinance, which does not allow more than one
principal structure on less than two acres. Background A
building permit was issued to construct a two-story garage on
9/9/93. Certificate of Occupancy 1/10/94. A ZBA decision on
expansion of the existing house was made March 16, 1994, followed
by Planning Board approval on March 22, 1994. The resolution
provided for an 800 s.f. addition to a 608 s.f. house. There was
discussion of the garage, and the potential for guest rooms on
the second floor of it. There was no mention of the garage in
the resolution. A building permit for alterations to the second
floor of the garage to create guest bedrooms and a bathroom was
approved 5/23/94, CO on 7/29/94. At the request of the
appellant, Jim Martin, Zoning Administrator, issued a letter
December 19, 1994, confirming his decision, made when the permit
was issued, that this did not constitute a second dwelling. It
was also explained several times p~ior to December why this did
not constitute a second principal dwelling, the main factor being
the lack of a kitchen. A building permit for the house expansion
was issued on 1/23/95. When work began on the house, it was
realized that the existing house could not be readily utilized as
a base for the new structure, and it was demolished. This does
not agree with the variance as granted, but is a separate issue
from the question posed by this appeal. Zoning Ordinance-
Sections which may be applicable
Section 179-12C - Use regulations
(5) Principal buildings in residential zones.
There shall be no more than one principal
building in a residential zone on any single
lot less than two acres in size. Subdivision
approval shall be required for more than one
principal building on such lot, which shall
not be granted if the zoning district maximum
density is not met.
Section 179-7 - Dwelling Unit
A building or portion thereof providing complete
housekeeping facilities for one (1) family.
Section 179-7 - Single-family dwelling - A building, not
including a mobile home, of one or more stories of
height above the main grade level, which is designed or
used exclusively as the living quarters for one family,
whether seasonal or year round.
Section 179-7
used or
families,
their own
- Multiple-family dwelling - Any building
designed as a residence for two or more
living independently of each other and doing
cooking therein,....
Section 179-7 - Family - One or more persons occupying the
premises and living as a single housekeeping unit, as
distinguished from a group occupying a boarding house,
lodging house, club, fraternity or hotel."
MR. THOMAS-A letter, dated January 26, 1995, ,addr.essed to Mr.
James M. Martin "Dear Mr. Martin: We are in receipt of your
letter of December 19, 1994 regarding the newly built structure
on the property of Dorothy Hodgkins on Mason Road, Cleverdale.
In your letter, it is your Judgement that this structure is being
used as a garage and not as a residence. It is our strong
feeling that this structure is not being used as a garage but as
a residence and therefore is in violation of Queensbury's Zoning
Code. At a hearing that I attended last year on the proposed
expansion of their current home it was stated that this structure
- 19 -
would be used for a garage and for strictly storage i~ the upper
level. As it is now being used as a residential property and
their original home is being expanded for residential purposes,
it is my strong feeling that the violation is two (2) residential
properties where the Code calls for one (1). We therefore
strongly disagree with your decision of December 19, 1994 that
this is a garage and appeal your decision. Sincerely, John P.
Cushing Marion S. Cushing" A letter dated'December 19, 1994, to
John P. tushing, "Dear Jack: I am writing this letter in
response to your inquiry of December 13, 1994, regarding the
possibility of a zoning violation at the garage of Dorothy
Hodgkins on Mason Road in Cleverdale. This garage was built
earlier this year. The garage plan as approved indicated two
garage bays with utility room on the first floor and a living
area with two bedrooms and a bathroom on the second floor. The
plan was approved in that the area of the footprint of the garage
does not exceed900 sq. ft. and the use as proposed does not
constitute a second dwelling unit on the parcel. To accurately
assess the situation, Sue Cipþerly from our planning office
visited the site on December 15, 1994. Her findings indicate the
use of the structure is consistent wi t,h the plan as approved (see
attached memo). We will continue to monitor the situation to
assure that compliance is maintained. Should you have any
further questions please feel free to call me at 745-4440.
Sincerely, James M. Martin, AICP; Zoning Administrator Executive
Director Community Devélopment" A correspondence to Jim Martin
from Sue Cipperly, regarding the Hodgkins property, Cleverdale,
"Per your rèquest, on December 15, 1994, I reviewed the Hodgkins
garage site and the file, with the neighbors' cöncerns in mind
and found the following: Outside - There are two white birch
trees with blue marking paint on them, apparently indicating
intent to remove them. One is a good-sized tree,leaning over the
garage, and appears to have some holes i~ it. The other is also
bending in nature, though not as big in diameter. Neither of
these trees is within the 35-foot no-disturb zone of the lake.
There are graveled areas below the eaves where normal runoff from
the roof would fall. In fact, there was melt water doing exactly
that while I was there. It did not appear that the existing
topography was such that water would leave the property under
normal weather conditions. InteriOr - The utility room contained
a deep laundry sink on one wall, a washer, dryer, and
refrigerator on the opposite wall. No cooking facilities were
evident. A freestanding 3-4 foot long counter unit was near the
laundry sink -- apparently salvaged from the house. As the
Cushings stated, there is an antenna hook-up on one wall, and the
outlets are placed at 'counter height' on all walls. Neither of
these featuTes would have bearing on defining a kitchen or living
space. The outlet height bould be out of concern for the
grandchildren who will be using the space. A ground-fault outlet
was at the same height, on a wall that wàs impossible to use for
anything. Fire-rated sheetrock applièd to the garage area is
required by the building codè where living areas are adjacent to
a garage."
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Mr. Cushing, do you have anything to add?
MR. CUSHING-Are you going to read letters into the record, or is
this?
MR. CARVIN-This is your opportunity to add anything to
appeal. As I said, the format of the meeting will be that
would give you an opportunity. We would give Mr. Hodgkins
opportunity. I then would open it up to the public. After
public hearing, we would then read any correspondence into
record. So, if we have letters, they will be read in.
your
we
an
the
the
MR. CUSHING-Okay. Thank you for having me here this evening and
allowing me to speak. I am going to represent myself. I have no
lawyer engaged in this activity. So, I'll be my own lawyer, so
to speak. My name is John Cushing P. Cushing, and I reside, and
- 20 -
',-,
---'
my mailing address, is at 8 Orchard Drive in the Town of
Queensbury. I have a summer home on Mason Road in Cleverdale, in
the Town of Queensbury, and this home is next to the Hodgkins
property, to the north. Although I call our Mason Road home a
summer home, it is fully insulated, and could be used year round.
I have come before you this evening with a very heavy heart. I
am not one to argue with our neighbors. I am not vindictive in
any way, and I have delayed this action until now simply because
I was hoping against hope that I was wrong, that my eyes were
deceiving me, but I can no longer hold back, and I have been
urged by many neighbors to take action. We, and I mean most of
the residents of Cleverdale, have been deceived by the lack of
good faith and duplicity and it is getting worse. Allover
Cleverdale, and especially as we approach Ripley Point, is
considered a Critical Environmental Area. There are very strict
rules and regulations regarding this environmentally sensitive
area, by the Town of Queensbury, by the Lake George Park
Commission, and by the Adirondack Park, but when residents do not
follow the rules, and the governing bodies let them slide
through, then we have unregulated growth, and it is detrimental
to all the residents. The key phrase here is that growth must
not adversely affect the integrity of the neighborhood, but I
maintain that that is happening. Number One, it's hurting the
environmentally sound, sensitive area. It is adversely affecting
the integrity of our neighborhood, and it is violating the Town
of Queensbury's Zoning rules, just to name a few, and as a
result, I am here this evening to stand up and be counted and
say, STOP. Do not let these travesties continue any longer.
Common sense must prevail. Logical judgement must be adhered to
and maintained, and at this point, I would like to review for the
Zoning Board of Appeals a chronological history of what has
happened. Back in early summer of 1993, the late Mr. John
Hodgkins invited me over to his house to discuss his plans for
expanding, and I emphasize the word "expand", for expanding his
present residence. He explained that he wanted to expand 20 feet
toward my property, as he desperately needed more space. Now he
said emphatically that he wanted to expand on his present house,
and that he would not be any closer to the lake. He did not
mention any additions to the back of the residence or make any
mention of a garage at that particular point in time, and I, at
this time, nothing else was discussed except that. I, at that
time, agreed, that this minimum expansion was a good idea and
would simply not bother my wife or myself in any way. I agreed
that I viewed this positively. We parted, and we said no more,
and later that year, in 1993, we were awakened by bull dozers,
chainsaws on trees, and earth removal equipment, all within 20
feet of our home. This was the beginning of the garage and
storage building. I immediately went to the zoning codes office
and looked at the plans and all was in order, insofar as Codes
were concerned. Twenty feet from our property, back from the
lake, closeness to the road, all those things, but the dimensions
just flabbergasted all of us. Twenty-eight by twenty-four feet
with a height of twenty-four feet, with a square footage of six
hundred and seventy-two square feet, if you multiply that times
two, because it's two stories, that's thirteen hundred and forty-
four square feet. As this magnificent edifice grew, our modest
home shrank in comparison, as it was towered over. It towered
over our second floor and our roof and the other neighbors'
buildings also. No longer could we see our modest home as we
came down Mason Road. Only when we turned into the driveway
could it be seen, and the topography of the land further meant
that the back of our, the interior of our house was flooded in
heavy thundershowers. Sue Cipperly was correct when she said
that normal rainfall doesn't bother, but we get a lot of
thunderstorms off, that lake, and every time we get a severe
thunderstorm, our back of our house is inundated, and it's caused
by the runoff from the structure, and the lack of permeation. No
downspouts or gutters, might I add, but there was nothing any of
us could do at all. It was all legal, said the Town. So we
watched in dismay, and our neighbors watched and commented, and
- 21 -
-'
we cried silently. I might add, never a word from the Hodgkins.
No neighborliness. It's ou)' right, so take or leave it, and ~..¡e
had to take it. Next, March 16, 1994, came the hearing before
this Board on the variance to expand their current home, and I
bring this up because everything is intertwined, and if you'll
bear with me, you'll see how it is intertwined. Remember the
word "expand", for I'll mention that later. I attended that
meeting, and I said absolutely nothing. The garage was still a
garage, and a storage space, I thought, and I had originally said
okay on the extension or the expansion of the original home. A
variance was granted for 800 additional square feet, and the
original 608, giving them 1408 square feet, and the variances
were granted for the lake setbacks. Now I think now is a good
time to review some of the minutes of that meeting, and answe)'
the questions that were raised regarding the garage. On Page Two
of the minutes, which I would like to réad from here, on Page Two
of ,the minutes, where it talks about the effects of the
neighborhood or community, and I )"ead, these are the Staff Notes,
by the way, that were given to the Zoning Board of Appeals.
"Concerns have been expressed by neighbors regarding the two
story garage constructed on the property last year, since there
appears to be intent on the part of the applicant to utilize the
upper floor as a guest room. Research into the building permit
files and thé conversation with the applicant show that their
intent to útilize the úpper level as à storage space. The space
could be utilized for sleeping in, but is not been proposed to
have toilet or cooking facilities". The key words here, in those
minutes, simply are "èuest room", "perhaPs som~ sleeping in", "no
toilets or cooking facilities", "storage only". This was March
16th. Going down further on this page just a tiny bit, was the
comment, and they were talking about trees, and Mr. Hodgkins
said, "very possibly in the construction the)'e is maybe, as I
mentioned, a six inch one there, because, so they can get in,
doing the work". I would like to just give to the Board a copy
of this photograph of the little sapling that has grown to a huge
birch, and that's a picture of what was really taken down, and I
simply bring that up to show that all through this whole mess
that we've got here, is what they say they're going to do, and
what they do are two different things, all the time. On Page
Three of the minutes, Mr. Carvin asks two questions, and I would
repeat these questions, "I guess this is a one story, is it? Mr.
Hodgkins - This would be a one story. And this", Mr. Carvin
says, "would be a one story also, 6r would this be two? No.
We're talking about one story, cathedral ceilings." And I'll
leave that, bring that up again, just talking about duplicity.
Going further, on page Fi0e, which is very pertinent to the
garage, Mr. Turner, who was then the Chairman of the Zoning Board
of Appeals, said, "I guess I would have one comment, on the
remarks made by staff about your garage. Is there an intent that
that is going to be made into sleeping quarters upstairs? Mr.
Hodgkins - At the present time, it coul-d be used, at the present
time, it was put in for storage and a garage. You've got two
cars, and it's also a great place to store a boat", and I might
add right here, that the year and a half that the building has
been up, it has never seen a car inside it. It's never been used
as a garage. "but that is not the intent at the moment", said
Mr. Hodgkins. "At some point, if our kids come up, they might
sleep up there, but at the present time, there is no bath
facilities in there." Those are the only things I want to quote
from the minutes, because most of them hàve to do with other
things. Now proceeding on this, the variance was granted and you
heard what was said in the minutes, but on May 16, 1994, just a
few short months along, this variance was given. This variance
was given and a new building permit application was submitted and
accepted by the Town. It never came back to the ZBA, but out of
courtesy, I, personally would have thought that that would have
been done. Now we have an extensive alteration, two sho)'t months
after they had said nothing was foreseen. So how can you believe
anything that's said? Further, upon examination of the original
application for the garage, the new alteration, eight months
- 22 -
'-
--'
later, the building has suddenly grown. It's grown from 672
square feet to 728 square feet, and you times that by two,
because of the two floOTS, that goes from 1344 square feet to
1456, over 100 more square feet than the building. Who are we to
believe? The dimensions from the old dimension of 28 times 24,
grew from 28 to 26. Again, who are we to believe? The height
changed, these are the building permits, from 24 feet to 23 feet.
Again, who are we to believe? Also, on the building permit dated
May 1994, for alterations to the garage, it states, nature of the
proposed work, alterations to building, that's residence. Now I
didn't put the word "residence" in there. They did, and they
knew it was a residence, but someone forgot to tell them not to
put that word in there. Also, on the architect's drawings of the
renovated garage residence, I show the following, and I would
like to share this with you, and we are talking about Northern
Design drawings, and they are public records. I've made copies
of this, and it's rough, but in the notes, the general notes that
each builder or architect has, to go along with the drawings, I
quote, I quote the fourth note, the fourth general note,
"Kitchen, 8ath, dryer, exhaust all to vent to the exterior".
Now, again, I didn't write that. I didn't put it in there. This
clearly shows the intent, and who are we to believe? I'll
believe the architect on this one. On Number Four, the door from
the house to the garage to have three quarter (lost word) rated
fire rated, and Number Eight, it talks about the common walls
between the house and the garage. Throughout the architect's
plan, they distinguish between the house and the garage. Why the
distinction? Because they are different. It's not a garage.
Not storage. The dictionary states that a house is a structure
serving as a dwelling for one or several families, a residence.
Again, who are you to believe? I go with the architect who
really knew what the intent was, and I would like to pass this
copy up to you, so that you can take a quick look at it. This is
the architect's drawing, and as you look at that, what a
magnificent second floor, what a huge living room, and two
bedrooms, and a complete modern bathroom with full tub, and only
two short months ago, a storage area. I ask you to think about
intent. Other facts that you should know about this residence,
Dorothy Hodgkins lived there most of last summer. It is a total
living environment, a residence. As a matter of fact, Mrs.
Hodgkins has referred to this abode to neighbors as "my new
home". This has been reported to us by neighbors. It may not
have a stove yet, but hot plates, microwaves and other
technologically advanced equipment, which are portable and would
allow even gourmet meals, I have observed people eating and
drinking while looking out of their magnificent picture windows,
facing the lake. Again, think of intent. Also, they have a 50
amp fuse installed into the building, and this kind of fuse calls
for heavy duty equipment, like a range or a welding unit. Now I
don't believe they're going to use a welding unit. So, again,
what is the intent? Again, the key thought here is a total
living environment. In remodeling, please note, the very large
picture windows facing the lake. It appears to be ceiling to
floor. Made for storage boxes? I think not. Again, look at
intent. I want to pass out some pictures to you that will depict
this structure, and as they say, a picture is worth a thousand
words. As you look at these pictures, I can only ask you, does
that look like a garage to you, and storage space? It is clearly
a residence and, again, the dictionary states a residence, a
place in which one lives, a total living environment, including
refrigerator, sinks, washer, dryer, full bathrooms, blenders,
coffee makers, etc. In addition, I bring the following to your
attention. When the bathroom was put in, the pipe for water
source were already in, the cap, that the original statement, no
toilets planned. If one were to look closely, you will probably
and undoubtedly other pipes, water pipes, to the upper level,
staffed and ready to go. What is the intent? In addition, I
bring to your attention that last June the 29th, 1994, the Town
of Queensbury Appraiser visited this residence and appraised the
property on the basis of two bedrooms, living room and dining
- 23 -
--'
---
room, one bath, kitchen down, electric base board heat. It is
approved RG7 Garage with Apartment. Need I say more. In talking
with the Appraiser, he was told by a person working there that
the kitchen would be downstairs. In addition, I bring your
attention to the municipal certificate, electrical approval,
dated 7/18/94, for the garage residence expansion. In installing
electrical equipment, they have 27 switches and 35 receptacles.
Does this sound like a garage and storage? But it does sound
like a total living environment. With everything that I have
said, let me draw an analogy. If it smells like a rose, if it
feels like a rose, and it looks like a rose, then it is a Yose.
If this structure looks like a residence, has all the
conveniences of a residence, it is used as a residence, with
people living in it, and it is a total living environmental, then
by golly it is a residence, and the last chronological order of
events, the last building permit application was submitted and
approved in December of 1994, and work began in January. This is
the house, but it's intertwined with the garage, and again,
intent and duplicity is my motive here. The discrepancies that I
found when I was studying this is that the square footage has
increased from the original variance given from 1408 feet to 2200
square feet, and a second floor has been added, where the
original milÎutes it said one. I understand that it is now being
investigated, but again, changes made in the hopes of getting it
through unnoticed. So who do you believe? I would also ask that
the ZBA, the Board, in light of the demolition, without a permit
I might add, of the old home, is this now truly an expansion, or
a whole new structure from ground up? I was led to believe that
the original structure would remain and just be expanded upon.
In my request to the Director of Community Development in
December of 1994, I asked for another determination, and because
Mr. Thomas has already read those letters, I will not ask to read
them again, but his answer to me was not satisfactory, in that no
one visited thè second floor of the residence. It was a visual
inspection from the outside looking through the windows on the
ground level. To me, that is not due diligence. It is a
residence, a total living environment. I appealed this, and in
my appeal, I said that in light of some errors that took place,
and I would just like to go over a couple of errors, in the
letter from Mr. Martin to me saying that it was not to be
determined as a residence, in the letter, this letter was dated
December 19, 1994, to me, all right. He states, this garage was
built earlier this year. Wrong. It was not built in 1994. The
garage was b8ilt in 1993, and they got a Certificate of Occupancy
for their garage, and the garage was built in 1993, and then he
goes on to state, the garage plan, as approved, indicated two
garage bays with utility room on thè first floor and the living
area two bedrooms and a bathroom on the second floor. That was
not the intent, and that was not what was in the original garage
plan. That came only in 1994, when they went over the expansion
of the garage and gave approval of it. Yet this letter appears
to say that these were part of the original plans for the garage,
and then lastly, the plan was approved, in that the area of the
footprint of the garage does not exceed 900 square feet, and the
use proposed does not constitute a second dwelling unit on the
par cel . I have tal ked with legal counsel' abòut" thá.t, ahd t'her e
is some ambiguity in that, but some people are saying that you
count both floors, so far as not just the footprint, so that the
total square footage of both these floors and this building would
be 1456 square feet, not the 728 that finally came out of it.
So, in light of these areas, I feel that the answer to my letter,
as determined, letter of determination is flawed, and not
consistent with the facts. Làétly, I and ~y neighbors feel that
these buildings are in violation of Section 179--12C of the Zoning
Code, that you do not allow more than one principal building on a
lot which is less than two acres, and of course this one is less
than a half acre in size. Remember some of the key phrases that
I have used, Critical En~ironmental Area, Environmentally
Sensitive Area, growth that will not adversely affect the
integrity of the neighborhood, a total living environment, and
- 24 -
'~
'--'c
intent, intent, intent. I request that the Zoning Board of
Appeals, which is a body of common sense individuals, looks
closely as to what has happened and correct the situation.
That's my statement. Mr. Chairman, I think Marion would like to
make a statement.
MRS. CUSHING-We feel that the 1456 square foot building at the
top of the hill, which was built with a permit for a garage with
storage, has been, in fact, converted into a total living area.
The contention that a stove makes the difference between a house
or a garage is easily negated by the fact that numerous portable
cooking facilities can be purchased to do a complete cooking and
baking on the premises. A trip to the hardware store found a
portable roaster oven which can roast a 22 pound turkey, cook up
to 18 quarts of chili, bake fish, breads, pies, and a large ham
or slow cook a full course meal. Also, available was a duel
burner buffet range. It's a very elegant two burner hot plate
with burners identical to those on the stove. So with four
burner units and a portable oven, a complete portable stove is
created, add the usual plug in appliances of a microwave oven,
coffee pot, toaster, electric skillet, food steamer and rice
cooker, deep fryer, crock pot, wok, waffle iron, toaster oven and
broiler, and any family can eat well on a variety of foods. Also
there is a laundry tub in the utility room which contains both
hot and cold running water and a drain for waste water. By
purchasing a brand new stainless steel sink, just that size, and
placing it over the edges of the laundry tub, you can create a
kitchen sink. Granted, it isn't as attractive a sink as one set
in a lovely wood quaker made cabinet, but the use is the same.
Meals can be prepared, washing vegetables and other food
preparations can be done, dishes washed and kitchen cleaned up
and there is a facility for the disposal of waste water, and all
these portable situations can be made permanent in the future.
Nowhere in the Queensbury Building Code book does it say you have
to put in a conventional stove in a house. What it does say is,
a dwelling unit is a building or portion thereof providing
complete housekeeping facilities for one family. This is the
Code on which this situation is being judged. Ninety-five
percent of the house is acknowledged by all as being completed.
We feel that the last five percent of use can be completed with
plug in appliances, thus providing complete housekeeping
facilities as the Code states. There is a say, do what I say,
not what I do. They are saying it is a garage, but what they are
doing is using it as a house. They lived in it last summer.
They will live in it this summer while building the other house,
and they will live in it or probably rent it each and every
summer down the road, and that is the point. Their intended use
of this building is as a house.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Thank you. Any questions?
MRS. CUSHING-Thank you.
MR. CARVIN-What I'd like to do, at this point, is open the public
hearing. Anyone wishing to be heard in support of the appeal?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
BILLINGS WHEELER
MR. WHEELER-My name is Billings Wheeler, and I live in Rutland,
but I own a camp next to the Cushings', two houses up from the
Hodgkins. What we seem to have here is not a problem of the
Zoning Board's, but with the person, Dorothy Hodgkins, who
blatantly flaunts the laws and regulations regarding variances,
zoning and building regulations on Cleverdale and Lake George.
She requested a garage with storage space, and built a garage
with an apartment above it. She requested a variance to expand
the original house more than 50 percent, and when this was
granted with a one story limit, now plans to include a two story
- 25 -
"--'
house, 12 feet from the lake, which violates the variance plus
the required setbacks from the lake. To violate these agreements
with the Zoning and Planning Board is a breach of public trust.
It is unethical. I think it brings a tone of anarchy to this
environment. It's very frusttating for us, and for those of us
who attempt to abide by the rules and regulations, to see this
happening. We do not know to whom to turn, and, the)-efore, make
a plea to you set things right. Thank you.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Anyone els-e wishing to be heard in support?
I'll now open it ûp to anyone wishing to oppose.
MARTIN AUFFREDOU
MR. AUFFREDOU-Good evening. My name is Martin Auffredou. I'm an
attórney with the law firm of Bartlett, Pontiff, Stewart and
Rhodes, and I represent Dorothy Hodgkins, the owner of the
property. Here tonight with me, sitting by me, is Lee Horning,
who is the contractor or the builder involved in this project
from Day One, including as far· back as the public hearing and
variance application and building permits and Certificates of
Occupancy, etc. Dorothy Hodgkins is sitting here. Her son John
Hodgkins the Third is sitting here, and her son David Hodgkins is
sitting to her left. I think rather than address Mr. Cushing's
statement piece by piebe, it woûld make a lot more sense and save
us a lot more time if we just simply say, we deny it. We deny
each and every word of it. We've heard words such as "anarchy".
We've heard words such as "outrageous", etc., etc., and I just
want to state for the record that we don't mean to mean-spirited
here tonight. That's not our intent, but it really gets ~nder my
skin when I hear people come to a public hearing and make
accusations about people who are otherwise fine people, 900d
people, well intentioned people, and people who have done
everything according to permit process, done everything according
to your Staff. There's absolutely no allegation by anyone on
your Staff, no evidence at all from anyone from your Staff that
they've done anything in violation at all, with regard to their
garage, nothing at all, not one iota of evidence, not one shred
of evidence, nothing. What we're left with is accusations from
the public about this and about that. Mr. Hodgkins didn't tell
me he was going to do this. Mr. Hodgkins didn't tell me he was
going to do that. It's really irrelevant, is what it comes down
to. I think one of the most important things here that must be
considered by this Board is the timeliness of the appeal. We're
talking about permits that were issued a long, long time ago.
The Certificate of Occupancy was issued for the garage, was
issued in July of 1994. Mr. Cushi ng did nothi ng for 'many months.
We went ahead and built, all in compliance. The plans were
there. Everything was there. It wasn't as if we were hiding
something. It's outrageous for someone to say that we've
misrepresented something. I'm offended by that. Everything was
with your Staff. They may not have known about it, because they
didn't look at it. Maybe they did know about it, but they didn't
do anything about it, 'and we've gone ahead and built in
accordance with the plans, the approved plans. We've gotten the
permits. We've done everything that we've had to do. Everything
is to Code. There is no allegation at all. There can't be any
allegation at all, that this is a complete housekeeping unit.
Are there bedrooms there on the second floor? Sure. Is there a
bathroom there? Sure. Is there living space? Sure. Is it a
residence? No. Has Mrs. Hodgkins staYed there? Sure she has.
Shortly after the variance was granted. As a matter of fact, on
March 26th, her husband, who was at the time of the variance
representing himself, passed away, and at that time, she decided,
after he died, that one of the things that could be done was to
add some of the bedrooms on the garage~ There was talk about
that all along~ One of the important points that Mr. Cushing
failed to mention, in the minutes, had to be intentional, he
stopped, on Page 5, he stopped. "At some point, if our kids come
up, they might sleep up there, but at the present time, there is
- 26 -
'-
-....,/
no bath facilities in there." That's where he stopped. Mr.
Hodgkins went on to say, "I believe the general thing of it is up
here, as long as there is no kitchen, and if there is no intent
of ever having a kitchen, this would not be made into a second
residence." It was discussed. It was well known that what they
intended to do was put bedrooms up there. It was discussed.
They went back. They got a building permit for it. They did it
in compliance with the plans. It was done. There's no
suggestion whatsoever that this is not in compliance with the
issued permits. To even suggest otherwise is completely
outrageous. Sue Cipperly went to the project site on December
15th and made a thorough review of it. It's my understanding
that both Sue and Scott went through this entire structure. Sue
reported to Jim exactly what she found. She found absolutely no
evidence of a complete housekeeping unit. She found exactly what
was called for in the plans. She found exactly what was called
for in the amount of square footage. She found exactly what was
called for by way of a foundation. She found exactly what was
approved. Now if there is a problem with that, then I suggest
that there was a problem with the original approval, but the fact
of the matter is that this Zoning Board granted the approval. We
went through site plan review with the Planning Board. We got
our building permits. We did everything we had to do, and now
it's costing my client a heck of a lot of money to be here
tonight, a heck of a lot of heartache, a heck of a lot of stress,
when we see absolutely no evidence at all that anything has been
done wrong. Accusations that anybody can make. It seems to me,
I don't know what's going on here, but it seems to me, and I hate
to use the word "personal", but it seems to me that there's got
to be something personal here. I've reviewed this. I've gone up
and down it. I just don't see what the gripe is.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Anything else? Is that it?
MR. AUFFREDOU-I just wanted to say, if you have any questions at
all, as to what is in the second floor, what is there, Mr.
Horning is here. He's be delighted to answer any questions that
you have, delighted to testify as to what he built there,
delighted to testify as to what's there, what isn't there, and
how long it's been there.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any questions?
MR. AUFFREDOU-I'd just like to point out, I really want to stress
this issue of timeliness, and I question whether the appeal is
timely, and my client has every right to make that request.
MR. CARVIN-I'm going to refer the timeliness issue to our
Attorney.
PAUL DUSEK, TOWN ATTORNEY
MR. DUSEK-As far as the issue of time is concerned, I had an
opportunity, recently, to do some study on that issue, and from
what I'm finding is that, although normally you would simply
measure, and the Ordinance provides for that, I believe, 60 days
from the time that a decision is made by the Zoning
Administrator. For instance, lets say that an applicant comes in
and says, I want to build a garage, and the Zoning Administrator
says, no, you can't build it because it's not allowed in that
Zoning Ordinance, and he denies the building permit. The
applicant, then, would have 60 days from the date that that
building permit was issued, in which to contest that decision.
Lets assume, for the sake of argument, that a building inspector
says, the Zoning Board makes a decision, or a Planning Board
does. Once again, this is 60 days from the decision making
process or the permit being issued, if you will. However, what I
have also found is that in the instance where a neighbor is
concerned, they are not bound by that 60 days from the date of
the permit. I find that you would measure the length of time
- 27 -
--
--
from a reasonable time period from which they received notice and
took appropriate action. For instance, I came across one case
where a neighbor found out that a permit was issued for a
structure. The neighbor said, once he found out about it, and I
think it was like within a reasonable length of time, maybe 30
days after it was issued, or whateve~ the time was, it wasn't
until he saw something going on at the site, though, and when he
noticed it, he contacted the Zoning Administrator. The Zoning
Administrator, in turn, led him into a hearing, and the thing got
dragged out for quite a while. Ultimately, the Zoning
Administrator rendered a decision, or a decision was rendered by
the ZBA. I can't 1"emember the exact fácts of the case, but the
bottom line is that a decision was ultimately rendered on the
complaint of the violation. The court said that the time period
did not run from the date of the original permit, but rather from
the date of the answer to the complaint that was given to that
applicant. Applying those same facts to this particular case, I
think that there's a strong case to be méde that the time runs
from the time that the complainant had a response, which would be
this past December, I believe, Mr. Martin formally responded to
the complaint. However, having said that~ I think that the Board
also has to examine all of the background facts to find out
whether or not there was any reaso~ to believe that Mr. Cushing
did not act at a proper time. Did he act at such a time that, in
other words, I think you've got to take a look at the background
circumstances, when did he find out, how much did he know, look
at when a reasoflable time frame would have started at that point.
Was it reasonable from December when he got the final decision,
that that's when he should appeal to this Board, or should he
have appealed to this Board sooner? I think you have to look
into the facts a little bit more. I~ve noticed, just sitting
here tonight, I'm a little unclear myself exactly what the
transgression of events were herej because I'm hearing, I thought
I heard that there was a permit for a gayage issued with storage.
Then I guess I'm hearing something, some activity occurred with
the ZBA. Then I'm hearing that there was yet another permit
issued for the bedrooms, I guess. So I think that chain of
events is important to establish, and I think it's important that
you get a feel for exactly what happened and who did what when,
and who knew what when, and when is a reasonable time for Mr.
Cushing to have made that appeal, and I think you need to take a
look at that.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I will continue the public hearing for anyone
wishing to speak in opposition to the appeal?
DOROTHY HODGKINS
MRS. HODGKINS-My name is Dorothy Hodgkins. Yes, I love my
garage. It's brand new, and my little house of 600 square feet
was very small and very old, very cold. When my husband dropped
dead in March, I decided shortly thereafter I didn't think I
could sleep down there by the water all by myself. So I,
therefore, decided to put the bedrooms and bathroom into the
garage, and while I was doing it, I decided I was going to have
laundry space up there, because there wasn't going to be much
room for that in the addition of the house. So I went ahead and
did that, and I love that garage. It's all brand new, and I made
the larger windows because you couldn't see the lake if you sat
down any time, we found out when we were up there one day, my son
and I, having a sandwich while we were trying to decide what to
do. You could not see the lake, and I said, what good is a spot
at Lake George if you can't see the lake. So I enlarge the
windows, in the living room, which is a play area, basically, for
grandchildren, and went ahead and did that. So, anyway, this is
what happened. However, the garage'got finished, and all summer
I slept down by the water, and I wasn't afraid. I thought I was
going to be, but I wasn't, and I stayed there, until my children
from Georgia carne in August. They said, we're all goi ng to sta)l
in one spot. Well, there's no room in a little house. So we all
- 28 -
',,---,
--../
went up and slept in the garage for the three nights they were
there, and then after that, after Labor Day, it gets too cold.
We've never stayed at 21 after Labor Day, and that's what we call
the little house. We never stayed there because it's just plain
too cold to sleep down there. So, I said, when I came up on
weekends or whenever I came up, I slept up in the garage. I
still had my kitchen down at the little house. I won't say I
never made a cup of coffee. I actually don't drink regular
coffee. I drink instant, so I went down and used the stove in
the main house, heated my water, and sometimes I'd bring it up in
a container to keep it hot. You will see in the upstairs in the
garage, you'll see a microwave. That came from the main house.
You'll see a toaster oven. That came from the main house. I put
a plaid clothe from the table in the main house, it was on the
kitchen table, over the mahogany table in the bedroom up there to
set these things on, so they wouldn't be destroyed, they wouldn't
destroy the table over the winter, while the house was being
constructed. So if I'm guilty of anything, I'm guilty of loving
Lake George. My husband loved it. He loved this side. He
didn't like the other side. We were on the other side of the
lake for many years, and he loved this west side, and my plan was
to go ahead and expand the house, as he got the permission to do,
and the extra bedroom and the space up there was so, if my
children come, or if I have guests come, there's room, but I was
really looking forward to using the new house, and the way things
are going, I don't know if that's ever going to be either. Right
now, I have nothing. I don't have a kitchen. r don't have any
water. I have nothing. I have two bedrooms, a useless bathroom,
a useless laundry. The refrigerator you see there was the one I
purchased for the new house, because I got a good buy by buying
three items at one time, instead of buying just the washer and
dryer. I bought the large refrigerator for the new house, and
that's what I'm guilty of, but, yes, I've said I love it, and I
do love that garage. It's just so nice to have everything shiny
and new, and I love to have people see it. I've taken people in
to see it, and people have loved it. I have, by the way, if
you'd like to know, I have three married children, and I have
five grandchildren, and I hope that they will be spending a great
deal of time. Three of the grandchildren are local. The other
two are in Georgia. My oldest grandchild is turning five on the
26th, and she was planning on coming up to Lake George and
spending a week or two with me this summer. Now, that's what's
going on, and r also have some, I'm a widow now, and I have many
widow friends, and I hope they were going to spend time with me
also. So that's what it's all about, but what one person can do
to occupy two places all time, I can't imagine, and I did not
plan on renting it out. There's no way to rent it out. There's
no way for anybody to live there. I mean, we lived over on the
other side for many years. We have another place there. There
was a boathouse. We never rented it out while we were there. We
kept it for the family to use, and that's what this will be for.
Thank you very much.
MR. CARVIN-Any questions, gentlemen?
speak in opposition to the appeal?
Again, anyone wishing to
LEE HORN I NG
MR. HORNING-I'd like to point out a couple of things. We
originally designed this garage for 26 by 28, and that's the way
it was. We did this in two different stages. The first one we
put the garage, and took the shell of the building out. The
second one, when we got the second permit, we put two bedrooms, a
bath, a living area upstairs, a garage out there, and a utility
room, and that's all it was designed for. There are no future
taps for any sink or anything else in there. There are no 50 amp
outlets. It complies with exactly what the plan said. She has
no desire putting a kitchen in this house at all.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any questions of any of these gentlemen?
- 29 -
MR. MARESCO-I do have one. The bathroom that's in there, I mean,
is everything hooked up, or nothing is?
MR. HORNING-Everything is hooked up in the bathroom.
MR. MARESCO-It's a functional bathroom?
MR. HORNING-Correct.
MR. CARVIN-Bath tub, shower?
MR. HORNING-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I believe Mrs. Hodgkins indicated that there's
no water. Is that because the pump.
MR. HORNING-The other house is torn down now.
water pumps there.
So there is no
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but my question is, is that because there's no
pump facilities at this point, because it was destroyed in the
other house?
MR. HORNING-The water from this garage comes from the main
residence. It does not have a separate water pump at all.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but that is a situation that could be installed?
I mean, that's not a real problem is it, or is it a real problem
to put a separate water pump at this point?
MR. HORNING-At this point, yes, it is a problem.
MR. CARVIN-Why would that be a problem, because the ground is
frozen?
MR. HORNING-No, because your house is in the way.
foundation that gets in the way.
You have a
MR. CARVIN-Okay. When the other house is built, is that going to
be reconnected?
MR. HORNING-Yes, it is.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and what would be the mechanics there? Is there
going to be a pump in the house that will service both?
MR. HORNING-There'll be a water pump in the main residence, which
will service the both houses.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but there would be a proble~ to put a water pump
in the garage at this point, to service just the garage? See,
I'm trying to find out what the distinction is here. I mean, we
have to have a 1400 square foot house to cover the pump, but we
can't have a pump in the garage?
MR. HORNING-It is possible.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. How about the sewer, is that on a separate
sewer system, or is it tied into the?
MR. HORNING-That's tied into the same sewer system.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and that's the old system, is it, from the
original house?
MR. HORNING-COrrect, yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Has that system ever failed?
MR. HORNING-No.
- 30 -
"---'
--./
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Would you anticipate failure, or is that system
up to specs, as far as having the two residences?
MR. HORNING-I don't anticipate failure of that system, no.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MS. CIPPERLY-There's a description of that system in the minutes
from the original variance hearing, and I believe John Hodgkins
talked to Dave Hatin about that. So, whatever their discussion
was.
MR. AUFFREDOU-If you follow down from Page Five where I left off
the1-e is.
MR. CARVIN-This is for the house, though.
about the house.
I'm not concerned
MS. CIPPERLY-It's the same system.
MR. AUFFREDOU-It's the same system.
MR. CARVIN-It's
assumption that
poi nt.
the same system, okay, but I'm under the
the garage was not tied into that system at that
MR. HORNING-It's all tied into one.
MR. CARVIN-Was this garage tied in in March?
MR. HORNING-Yes, it was.
JOHN HODGKINS, III
MR. HODGKINS-In March of when?
MR. CARVIN-In 1994.
MR. HODGKINS-It wasn't tied in
word) .
MR. CARVIN-Which was?
MR. HODGKINS-The summer.
until completion of the (lost
MR. CARVIN-Of? In other words, after this meeting?
MS. CIPPERLY-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-So I'm assuming that at this point, the system is only
referring to the house, and not the house and garage?
MR. HODGKINS-That's right.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MS. CIPPERLY-But that's what's
servicing.
in the ground, and that's
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but at this point, this information is based
only on the house, and not the house and the garage.
MR. MARTIN-There were questions in the minutes, in that meeting,
about what would happen if living space were to go in the garage.
Can your septic system handle a second bath, and that's where,
from the middle of Page Five on down, it speaks to the
possibility of living area in the garage, being serviced by the
existing septic system for the house.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but when they're referring to second bath, I'm
- 31 -
not sure they're referring to a bath and the original structure,
and then a second bath in the addition, and not the garage.
MR. MARTIN-Well, the question is asked right after Mr. Hodgkins
says, he speaks about the living area in the garage.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I actually thought the capacity of the system was
based upon the (lost word).
MR. MARTIN-And that's what it says further on.
MR. AUFFREDOU-The
bathrooms.
number of bedrooms, not
the numbe)" of
MR. MARTIN-That's the very next thing that's said, on Page Five
of the minutes. 'Okay, but that's what I'm saying, are they
referring, when they say second bath, to a bath in the house or
the garage? It must be that they're referring to the garage at
this point? See, at the present time, there were no bath
facilities in the garage, all right, but when Miss Hauser asked
the question, can your septic system handle a second bath, I
still am unclear as to whether she, I'm assuming that there was a
bath in the original house, the original 607 square feet. So I
don't know'if there was a second bath being planned for the
addition.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I wasn't at that meeting,· obviously,
follows that question, I can speculate, but I
certain, only that since that question follows
between Mr. Turner and Mr. Hodgkins, Sr. about.
but since that
can't say for
the discussion
MR. CARVIN-See, the leach field's at the top of the hill, and
that's why I'm under the assumption that they're talking about
the house, because if there's going to be a second bath in the
house, are we going to get the effluent up the hill?
MR. AUFFREDOU-Mr. Hodgkins, Sr. just got done talking about the
fact that there was no bath facilities above the garage at that
time, and the question follows, can your septic system handle a
second bath. I can't say for certain, but it may be that Miss
Hauser was referring to the garage issue. I don't know. It's
unclear, but again, I was under the impression that the capacity
of a septic system was based on the number of bedrooms.
MR. MARTIN-That's co)"rect.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Not the number of bathrooms.
MR. MARESCO-It is. Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any other 'questions? All right. Again, anyone
wishing to speak in opposition? All right. I will ask Mr.
Cushing if he has any comments, as far as a rebuttal?
LADY IN AUDIENCE-Could I just ask a question, do they have to
have an updated septic system? People next to us barely can fit
one into their 60 foot lot. How are they having a septic and all
this stuff on their little lot with houses and garages and
everything else?
MR. CARVIN-I think it's a very valid ~uestion, and I don't have
an answer for you.
MR. AUFFREDOU-You know what I'm going to do? John the Third is
familiar with the septic system, more so than I, and maybe if he
could enlighten us on that issue.
MR. HODGKINS-The septic system that was put in, it was installed
by my grandfather, who is a Civil Engineer, PED, owned a Plumbing
and Heating Supply house. Between, they owned houses on both
- 32 -
"--"'
...J
sides of the point. One up next to the church (lost word) on the
right side, and this house down here. They installed all brand
new septic systems when on the different sites, and the septic
system's fairly elaborate. It takes it from the house and goes
into a septic tank which is behind a retaining wall, and the
existing retaining wall's still there. As that septic system
fills up and gets good capacity, it overflows into the holding
tank with a pump, and that pump brings it all the way up to the
top of the hill. So it's at the farthest most point of the
property. That whole side of the property, if you look at the
plot plan, it is the opposite side from where the garage is.
That's why the garage is on one side, because that whole area is
a leaching area, which is divided up into five separate bays,
five or six separate bays that come across that whole area, and
in that area up there is a leach area. It's a fairly large
system. Most systems are on a point. They dump into, either
into their cess pool or their septic tank and flow downhill.
This one brings it all the way back uphill. So I think that as
far as being complete and operational, we haven't had any
problems with it. The property has been well used, as far as
that goes. There hasn't been any problems with it. It's been
well maintained. We don't anticipate, ourselves, any
difficulties at all. In fact, that leach field at the top of the
hill is, the front of the leach field comes out concrete, so it
doesn't allow the effluent to run back down the hill, subterrain.
So it seems to me, and I'm not an engineer, but (lost word).
MR. MARTIN-Fred, to answer the question, and I say this only on
reference from what I've heard Dave Hatin describe this, as long
as,a system is existing, and not failing, and no alteration is
proposed, then the system can be maintained. An alteration
constitutes any change in the ground itself, meaning a change in
the tank or the leach lines.
MR. CARVIN~Okay. Well, I guess the only question that I have to
that is the garage connection. Is that at the top of the hill,
or at the top of the hill? Did they tie in at the top, or does
it come all the way down to the bottom, and then get pumped up?
MR. HODGKINS-It had to go by, through the house.
MR. CARVIN-So at this point, because the house is not there, I'm
assuming the pump is not working.
MR. HODGKINS-There's nothing, no water in, no water out, at this
point.
MR. CARVIN-There's no system at all.
MR. HODGKINS-Until this house is complete, we're basically shut
down. In fact, I did talk to Dave about that today, and he said
to me that if we are delayed, which I hope we're not, Dave Hatin,
he said that that can be hooked back up, and there's nothing to
stop us from hooking that back into the system so it's
operational again.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
down?
Where's he suggesting, at the top so it goes
MR. HODGKINS-It has to go through the original system. You
cannot alter a system. You cannot touch the tanks. You can't
touch the leach fields. The only thing you can adjust are the
pipes between the anything, and that's called a minor repair they
call it. So any pipes can be repaired, no tanks. This is what
he told me today. So no tanks can be touched, and no leach
fields can be touched.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, well by minor repair, how far is the garage to
the connection? I'm assuming, I was going to say, it's got to be
more than a minor repair.
- 33 -
MR. HODGKINS-I was explaining this. He's aware of what I was
explaining. To be honest with you, it doesn't make sense, but
it's the way the rules are, and some of these rules don't, you
know, to the layman they might not make sense, but in o)"der to
follow them, that's what you have to do.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any other questions on the septic, at this
point? Okay. Then I will open up the rebuttal, I guess. Mr.
Cushing, Mrs. Cushing.
MR. CUSHING-I'll defer to the other folks here for the moment,
and I'll come up last.
SCOTT CUSHING
MR. CUSHING-I'm Scott Cushing. My parents live north of the
property. I had a question to John. Tonight you state that your
grandfather was a professional engineer, Civil Engineer.
MR. HODGKINS-He's a professional engineer. He's a licensed
engineer. He has a plumbing heating supply company out of Albany
and Plattsburgh. That was his business also.
MR. CUSHING-So I take it that he had a degree, a 8.S. in
engineering?
MR. HODGKINS-As far as, my grandfather was dead when I was two
years old. He went to RPI for engineering, and he went through
that. I can't comment anymore than that, other than that they
were a supply house for all these types of materials. I guess my
point was, they weren't skimping on materials for septic systems.
They didn't have to go down to the warehouse. A gentleman, Alger
Mason, on the streét, used to do a lot of work around the area.
He had a key to our garage so that he could go in and pullout
the pipes he needed, and the different things he needed that were
supplies that my grandfather had.
MR. CUSHING-Okay.
engineering?
Your grandfather went
to college for
MR. HODGKINS-He went to RPI.
MR. CUSHING-That's all I needed to know.
MR. AUFFREDOU-This isn't the first time that a reference to Mr.
Hodgkins, Sr. being a professional engineer has been before this
Board. It's clearly stated'in the minutes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, I'm not sure it's germane, because it
reverts back to the ToWn of Queensbury, as long as it's in with
compliance, I don't particularly care whether your grandfather
had a Ph.d., no offense.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Somebody over here had a comment?
JEAN MEYER
MRS. MEYER-My name is Jean Meyer. I live in Cleverdale. We've
had property at Cleverdale, in Perkins Point, for over 100 years.
So I am very:concerned about what this Cleverdale is going to be
looking at. I, too, have five gråndchildren, and I'm wondering
what it's going to look like, and 42 years ago, when my husband
and I were ~arried, we rented your cottage. So we're well aware
of it. I think the atmosphere at Cleverdale has gotten to the
point where it's neighbor against neighb01", and we're just
wondering if this Board is going to ever say no to anybody.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Thank you. Okay. Mrs. Cushing.
MRS. CUSHING-I would like to clarlfy the point about the timing
- 34 -
"-...--
---,'
of this appeal. I did explain it to John, because he filed our
appeal at 2 o'clock, and he called us at 4 o'clock, and he did
ask us that question, and I explained it to him, that when they
started the renovations on the garage, when they started the
alterations, there wasn't any announcement of it or any hearing
or anything. So we went up to the Planning Board and asked, and
we were told by the Planning Board that Dorothy was very
sentimental about losing her husband, and I can honestly say Jack
Hodgkins was a terrific person, but she was very sentimental and
she didn't want to live in that little house. So she was
renovating the garage as living area. So we made the assumption
that instead of this addition to the original house, she was more
or less putting the addition on the garage and using that as her
added space, and that we didn't think that they were going to go
through with their plans, which is what we were told, for
sentimental reasons, but anyway, I went to a dinner and bridge on
December 12th, and that's where I heard they were planning to
build a house, and that's why we came in later, at December 12th,
with questions about it. They made an issue out of it at the
time, that was why it was timed liked that, because we didn't
think they were going to build the house.
MS. CIPPERLY-Who did you speak to when you say, "the Planning
Board"?
MRS. CUSHING-I meant going up to your offices.
MS. CIPPERLY-And did we ever tell you tbat there was never going
to be a second house there?
MRS. CUSHING-No, you didn't tell us, but we asked what the
building was, and that's what we were told, was that was, she was
going to build there because she didn't want to live in the
little house. It was an assumption on our part, yes, and we saw
nothing, the alterations had been approved in March. They were
not put into effect, and nothing was done about it. So we just
assumed, and then when we heard, another client of Lee's, that's
how we heard, and that's why we came up in December.
MS. CIPPERLY-I'd just like it on the record that the Cushings
were never told that this was going to be a complete dwelling
unit, or contain a kitchen. They did know about it, earlier on
in June. Their son was over there, had come into our office,
talked to us about it, to go up and look and see whether there
was a kitchen. So as far as people knowing what was going on, I
would say, earlier summer of 1994.
MRS. CUSHING-He said why didn't we say anything about the
enlargement of the house. We knew what was going on in the
garage, but the reason we didn't say anything about the expanded
house was because we didn't know about it. We didn't know what
was going on in the garage. Okay. Thank you.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Jack, did you have another comment?
MR. CUSHING-Yes. I've got a couple. I didn't hear your
statement there, but I got the gist of it, but my conversations
with Jim, it was very ambiguous, and I think Mr. Martin would
agree with that, that it was ambiguous, because I don't think he
knew at the particular time whether the Hodgkins were going to
build and expand or do something to the house down below. He and
I discussed that a number of times, and I was just left up in the
air. They had until April, I think, of '95 to do something,
somewhere in that vicinity to do something, and I was led to
believe in my own mind that maybe they wouldn't. Jim didn't lead
me to believe, it was just the inactivity there, nothing was
going on, and so we were just waiting and waiting and waiting to
see if anything was going to happen, and nothing happened until
December, and that's when we were busy on it, because now we have
the two residences. We thought that they were going to destroy
- 35 -
'~
----'
or just keep vacant the one down below. So we were not misled by
anybody, so far as your office was concerned. I think we all
didn't know what was going to happen, and it didn't come until
very late, and I have a couple of other comments, if that answers
the question so far as timeliness is concerned, that's why it was
delayed. Martin Auffredou has mentioned that Sue and Scott went
through the entire structure, and I asked for a letter of
determination, and Sue went up there, when she came back; and I
got the answer ón the letter of determination, which was no, and
I asked both Mr. Martin and both Sue how the inspection made, and
I specifically asked the question whether or not she went
upstairs and looked at the upstairs, and she said, no, I was not
able to go upstairs. I did not have a key. It was visual
inspection from down below.
MS~ CIPPERLY-Excuse me, I never said that. I never said that. I
was asked if I looked at the electrical outlets upstairs, and I
said no, I didn't notice those. I did not, never said that I was
not in that house or that I didn't go upstairs.
MR. CUSHING-Well, we have a difference of opinion, difference of
agreement. I made the comment and I'll stand by it, that it, was
a visual inspection from the <Dutside, period.
MS. CIPPERLY-I never made that statement.
MR. CUSHING-Well, if th~ statement wasn't made by you, I
apologize, but I talked to you about it, and I talked to Jim
about it, and Jim, what is your version?
MR. MARTIN-I recall that she did go into the structure, because
they were fortunate enoUgh that, the way it worked out was that a
friend of Mrs. Hod~kins at the Mooring Post had a key to the
interioy of the structure and let her in to see it. That's what
I recall Sue describing to me how she got into that house.
MR. CUSHING-Okay. So I'll apologize to all concerned, but it was
my understanding that it was a visUal inspáction from the
outside. The other point that I wanted to make on this is that,
again, Martin has said that he went all through a site plan
review. There was no site plan review (lost word).
MS. CIPPERLY-There was no site plan review required on the
garage. It was a conforming structure.
MR. CUSHING-Was there a site plan review req~ired, or is there
one required, on the new house, on the new structure that they're
building?
MR. MARTIN-On the house there was, as a pr~posed addition.
MR. CUSHING-And did they have that?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. CUSHING-Okay. I'm not sure what Martin was referring to,
whether it was the house?
MR. AUFFREDOU-Just the house, but really my point, Jack, was just
basically that we've been through all the hoops.
MR. CUSHING-Yes. Okay, and the other comment that Martin
mentioned was that he thinks that I cut off very quickly on the
kitchen part of it, on the statement in the minutes. No, I did
that on purpose because Mrs. Cushing was going to make a comment
on it, as to what was defined in the Codes, and that was
adequately stressed all the way through, I mentioned kitchen
before, and I just didn't mention it because she was going to
talk about that at that particular point in time. 'I'd like to
ask just another question. If the system,. if the sewer system
- 36 -
---"
~
or the septic system is totally destroyed and isn't in existence
at this particular point in time, doesn't there have to be
another review before that thing is tied in again and all done
again?
MR. CARVIN-Well, I don't think the system is destroyed.
it's just disconnected, at this point.
I think
MR. CUSHING-Disconnected and everything, but because of the
enormity of the digging out there and everything, pipes going
down, I don't know what, I don't have the slightest idea. I'm
just asking the question, is there any review of that, to make
sure that it gets hooked up properly, and things like that?
MR. CARVIN-Well, I think the answer to that is that it would be
reviewed under the proper site plan. In other words, as long as
the system doesn't fail or hasn't failed, then it can be hooked
up.
MR. MARTIN-It's part of the building inspection process.
MR. CARVIN-Yes.
MR. CUSHING-Okay. I have nothing further to add except one last
comment. As I said at the beginning of my statements, I'm trying
to, I don't like to argue with neighbors. I have no
vindictiveness in myself in this whole thing, but I am trying
very, very hard to protect the environment and the neighborhood
up there, and I think things have been done that are just not
kosher, and I think they should be looked at very, very carefully
by everybody concerned. There's no personal animosities in
myself, or my wife, toward any of the neighbors up there, and I
know that I've lost a neighbor by doing this. I'm the fall guy.
I'm coming on heavy, and I'm sure that Dorothy will never speak
to me again in her entire life, but this is something I felt,
deep in my heart, that I had to do, and so be it. I'm the fall
guy. I'm the heavy, and I'm sorry.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Two brief comments, and
just one closing, two brief comments,
some chronology I think he wants to
Martin just would like to make a brief
then I'd just like to make
one from John, regarding
clear up, and then Linda
comment, in opposition.
MR. HODGKINS-Yes. A little bit on, a little bit more on just
trying to find the sequence, why things were done the way were
done. My parents' intention was to put up a new house. They got
the approval on March 22nd last year. Four days later, my dad
died, at that point. March 22nd they got the approval for the
house. The intentions were to start within, you'd have to wait
30 days and then start on the house. Obviously, my father died
four days later. My mother was not in any position to start
making decisions for that next couple of months. At that point
Lee, our builder, he was unable to start building over the
summer. Plus, we would have been without a summer home at that
point, if we had started the building at that time. She went and
thought, I can have some place to stay and then put it together,
and also have some place to stay while they're, there's enough
room for everybody to come up, and it's modernized and all put
together. So that was the thinking here, why this garage came
about. The garage was not, you know, the intention was to have
some extra overflow space. I mean, that's the intention of it.
My father pictured he and my uncle sitting there and cutting up a
little bit of space up there, like I think everybody else
pictured, and that the grandchildren would go up there and play
and put their things together, but that did not come to light.
One other thing I want to back up on a little bit. I talked
about my father's handshake, on saying, okay, I think you need
some more space over here and in your house, and at the same
time, Mr. Cushing was also asking for space on his house and came
before this Board and got an approval for an addition to his
- 37 -
-----
house that comes off the back, which is within two feet of the
property line, of our property line, and all our setbacks are 20,
and the house set back from this is 60, and his comments about
the water coming off the roof and all, I think it might be worth,
Jack, to look at your roof line that comes off and flows right
off the back of your house, and you've created a corner. I don't
know that that's it, but I just don't want to make everybody,
what we're doing, stuff is going down in the middle of the lot,
and if there is any problem with any kind of runoff or anything
else that comes off a roof or something, We'would, obviously,
somebody mentioned it to us, we would ~ddress it, and the first I
heard about any water running off anywhere was in December.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Thank you.
LINDA MARTIN
MRS. MARTIN-My name is Linda Martin. I'm a year round resident
of Cleverdale. I have known Dot Hodgkins for over 40 years, and
when she left in the fall, she entrusted me with a key to her
property. Sue and I have sort of struck up a relationship, and
in December, when some people were coming in to the Town Hall
here, questioning the garage ih Cleverdale, Sue came to me and
asked me if I would take her up and take her into the garage,
which I did, both Sue and Scott. They walked around the outside
of the garage. It was the day after it snowed, and it was rainy,
water was coming off the roof. Sue and Scott both went through
the downstairs and they went through the upstairs. Now, at this
time, Dot Hodgkins was very upset. Emotionally, there was a lot
going on in her life, and I asked Sue to please not tell her,
because I knew I was violating my good friend's trust, and I
said, some day down the road, when this is allover with, I'll
tell her. I just want to make the record clear, because Sue has
protected her, because I have asked her not to tell Dot, but in
the meantime, everyone now knows, and I think you should know
that Sue and Scott were both throughout that entire garage,
inside.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and Scott's last name?
MS. CIPPERLY-Harlicker.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. He's the other Planner for the Town.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I Just wanted to make sure that that was clear.
Thank you.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Mr. Chairman, just by way of closing, we've been
going at this now for a considerable period of time. I'd just
reiterate what I said, and I still have not heard anything to
suggest that what has gone on here is in violation of the Code,
is in violation of any of the validly issued permits. The
question posed by Mr. Cushing was, who should we believe. I
respectfully submit you should believe your staff. Thank you.
MR. MARTIN-'As the person who sort of started this problem, I'll
make a final comment. My interest, as Zoning Administrator, is
in maintaining the integrity and the consistency of the
Ordinance. This particular Code, the way it's particularly
written right now, I, pers'onally, feel does not deal well with
second dwellings, but nonetheless, I'm left to deal with what I
have to work with. This has been a problem not only in this
case. Things like this sort of swell when they're on the
lakeshore, for obvious reasons, but it's been a problem before,
in other areas of the community, and in some of our regular
single family residential or-suburban residential zones. We're
running into it more with mother-in-law apartments, as we see
more senior citizens in the population that want to live at home
or with their grandkids or anything like'that. It's coming more
and more to light. So what I'm interested here is what comes out
- 38 -
--.....
'--"
of this appeal, the interpretation that's given by this Board, in
light of this appeal. If this is determined to be a second
dwelling, then I want specific guidance, as an interpretation
from this Board, so I know what to take with me from this point
on, as to what does constitute a second dwelling. When are we
going to draw the line? Is it going to be just living space in
the form of a bedroom? Is it living space and a bathroom? Or is
it bathroom, kitchen, and living space? Is it, as I currently
make my determinations now. So I'd just ask for that much
guidance from you, obviously, in this case, but from this point
forward, in terms of interpretation that I can, then, use to
administrate the Ordinance.
MR. CARVIN-It's only fair. As soon as somebody gives me the
Ordinances, I'll be more than glad to share them with you.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I have to say that, as a matter of procedure, any
policy that's developed tonight, under Mr. Martin's guidance, I
would strongly object to a new policy being applied to an already
established situation.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, I'm going to continue the public comment,
and then I think we'll leave it open, but I do have some
comments, here, and a lot to read.
BERNIE LABORE
MR. LABORE-My name is Bernie LaBore, and I'm from Hudson Falls,
and I may not have an opportunity to talk, but I would like to
know if this residence is ever going to be rented, and if so, I
think it is wrong for it to be rented because I think that Lake
George, particularly Cleverdale, is too crowded for additional
renting. That's my statement.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Thank you.
MRS. HODGKINS-Do you want me to address that?
MR. AUFFREDOU-I believe it was already addressed.
MR. MARESCO-I don't think it's necessary.
necessary to address?
Do you think it's
MR. CARVIN-The rental? No, I don't think so, at this point. Any
final comments, at this point? Okay. Well, again, this is a
situation where, because of the limited number of Board members,
we're not going to take a vote tonight. It will be tabled, but I
will open it up for, well, we've got some Correspondence here.
Lets do that first.
MR. THOMAS-We've got a lot of correspondence. A letter dated
February 6, 1995, addressed to Mr. James Martin "Dear Gentlemen:
Once again, I am writing to ask that careful review be made of
the variance that was issued to Dorothy Hodgkins' property on
Mason Road on Cleverdale. At the time of the initial hearing on
March 22, 1994, I faxed a letter expressing our opposition to the
variance. At a public meeting in August, I mentioned that my
letter had not been read during the variance hearing, and Mr.
Martin wrote and told me they had no record of my faxed letter,
but that 'we do want input from the surrounding area when a
project is before either Board. This original letter and the fax
notation is enclosed. I then wrote another letter September 1,
1994 to Mr. Martin requesting a review of the variance and hand
delivered the letter to Mr. Martin's office. A copy of this
letter is enclosed. Again, I received no response. This is the
third time that I have written concerning the Hodgkins variance.
Although the variance for the house preceded the other house that
has now been built on the property, I still think that the appeal
this evening should consider that Mrs. Hodgkins did not do what
she led the zoning board and the neighbors to believe she was
- 39 -
'--
..-
going to do. She claimed that she was going to build a garage
with storage space. As the garage was being built, the windows
were enlarged to give greater lake visibility, a bathroom was
added, and it is evident to all the neighbors that she has been
residing in the house since its completion this summer. Although
Mr. Martin claims that a stove mðkes' a house, and no stove is
apparently on the premises, I don't understand how approval can
be given for further addition to a house when she already has
exceeded her living space by more than fifty percent. I refer to
Article XI, 179019 of the Zoning Code wherein it state that 'A
single-family dwelling or mobile home may be enlarged or rebuilt
as follows: (2) No enlargement or rebuilding shall exceed an
aggregate of fifty percent (50%) of the gross floor area of such
single-family dwelling or mobile home immediately prior to the
commencement of the first enlargement Or rebuilding. Mrs.
Hodgkins has already more than doubled the 600 square feet living
space of the original house with the new house she has built.
Furthermore, the lot is less than a'half acre and will be further
jeopardized by the loss of trees and soil permeability creating
an additional runoff into th'e lake. There seems to be a real
lack of concern for both the land: and the lake environment.
Finally, I realize that the zoning board and the neighbors gave
the original variance in good fait~. We all thought that Mrs.
Hodgkins was going to build a garage with storage space.
However, how can the zoning board uphold variances that are
blatantly disregarded in terms of expansion and utilization? Do
we all have the right to request a variance from you gentlemen
and then disregard it when actual building begins? As neighbors,
we come to you for both guidance and enforcement of the law. I
sincerely request that you take a look at the additional
residence that is already on the property before you give
permission for another larger residence to be built. Thank you
for your consideration in this matter. Sincerely, Sarah W.
Wheeler" A letter dated September 1, 1994, addressed to James M.
Martin "Dear Mr. Martin: I am responding to your August 22nd
letter which informed us, 'There is no letter in the file from
you, and no record of receiving one' regarding the John and
Dorothy Hodgkins property on Mason Road. I have enclosed copies
of the fax that we sent on March 21 regarding the property. I
realize that my husband's and my objections to the enlargement of
the Hodgkins house will be overlooked at this point, but I still
feel that a review of this variance would be appropriate at this
time. While neighbors were led to believe that a garage with
storage space was supposed to be built, it is apparent that a
house has been built instead. Therefore, the concerns about
over-utilization of land remain. Mr. Finnecy, our neighbor
across the street, built a garage with storage space, and clearly
the Hodgkins' building is not remotely the same. The point is
that a house demands the ground be used for waste water and
sew~ge; a garage and storage space do not require that.
Additionally, it appears that in order for the Hodgkins to
enlarge the house, there will be further cutting of trees which
results in the run-off into the Lake. Wé cannot help but wonder
if the ultimate goal is to sub-divide the land and further
increase the density of dwellings and people on Cleverdale, a
peninsula that appears to be reaching its maximum level of
accommodation for people and buildings. The enclosed copies
indicate that we really did try to respond to the public hearing
held on March 22, and once again we are trying to express our
concerns about the development on Cleverdale. Thank you for any
consideration you might give our thoughts on this matter.
Sincerely, D. Billings Wheeler Sarah W. Wheeler" A letter dated
August 22nd, addressed to Ms. Sarah Wheeler "Dear Ms. Wheeler:
At the August 11, 1994 meeting concerning the Town of Queensbury
Comprehensive Plan you inquired as to the handling of FAXed
letters regarding projects. You mentioned FAXing comments on two
projects, in particular. The'file and minutes for those projects
have been researched, and the following was found: John and
Dorothy Hodgkins, Mason Road. Variance for setback relief, for
expansion of existing 608 sq. ft. house. There is no letter in
- 40 -
"---"
J
the file from you, and no record of receiving one. If you wish
to send a copy of your FAX for the file, please do so.
Birchenough. Variance and Site Plan Review for expansion of
house in Cleverdale. A letter was in the file, and was read into
the minutes (12/16/92) of the Zoning Board meeting. A copy of
that page of minutes is attached. There was no letter found in
the Site Plan file. This office is very careful with incoming
documents of any kind. All materials received are date stamped
and filed appropriately. If there is an omission of
correspondence relating to a project, it is rare, and certainly
not done on purpose. In the case of FAXed material, it is
helpful to have the original sent by surface mail, as well as the
FAX. If you wish to confirm that a FAX was received, you may
wish to call this office at (518) 745-4440 after sending it. We
do want input from the surrounding area when a project is before
either Board. Please continue to comment when you have a
concern. Sincerely, DEPT. OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT James M.
Martin, AICP Executive Director" A letter dated March 21, 1994
"Dear Queensbury Planning Board: We appeal to the planning board
to deny the application for an addition to the existing house on
the property owned by John L. and Dorothy Hodgkins (Site Plan No.
7-94, Type I). Since the Hodgkins have recently built on this
property a second two-story structure which is evidently going to
serve as a garage and additional living space, this further
addition to the house would appear to ask more of a piece of land
than should be expected. Specifically, the land will be required
to accommodate additional septic and drainage and be severely
overburdened. Any further building on this property would set a
dangerous precedent for all property holders on Cleverdale since
over-building on property both diminishes the attractiveness of
the land and hinder ecological stability. All surrounding
property is affected when owners exploit land to the detriment of
the common good. It is time for all property owners on
Cleverdale and elsewhere to consider not just their own personal
rights but the long term implications of theiT decisions on the
community at large. Thank you for your consideration in this
matter. Sincerely, D. Billings Wheeler Sarah W. Wheeler" A
letter dated 2/13/95, addressed to the Zoning Board "Gentlemen:
I understand that a house about twice the size of the original is
slated for construction on the John Hodgkins property, Mason Rd.
Cleverdale. I object to this because: 1. There are already
living quarters on the property and the lot is not large enough
to accommodate both. Inadequate from a space viewpoint and
septic system. 2. If you continue to allow owners to build huge
and oversized houses on Cleverdale, soon it will look like a
metropolitan area. Just take a day and look at the excessively
large houses that you've allowed to be built on Cleverdale. They
dwarf their neighbors, impair everyone's view and spoil the
character of the area. It's time to put a stop to this ongoing
rape of the area. Are you up to the task? Sincerely, Richard A
Meyer, JT." A letter dated February 20, 1995, addressed to the
Zoning Board of Appeals "Dear Board Members: This is written in
reference to and in support of Appeal #3-95 by Mr. John P.
Cushing concerning the erection of buildings on property owned by
Dorothy Hodgkins on Mason Road, Cleverdale, New York. The notice
of appeal cites Section 179-12C of the Town of Queensbury zoning
ordinance, which provides that there will be no more than one
principal building in a residential zone on any single lot which
is less than two acres in size. Two principal buildings, each of
which is residential or may be used for residential purposes,
will result from the plans which have been submitted for this
property. The sequence of construction of buildings on this site
has produced an outcome which evades both the spirit and intent
of Section 179-12C, with its prohibition of more than one
principal building in a residential zone on a single lot of less
than two acres. Terminology and 1-epresentations notwithstanding,
a now completed structure whose construction was commenced in
1993 has a significant portion which is designed for residential
purposes. It apparently has been held that because this facility
includes no 'kitchen' in the conventional sense of the word, it
- 41 -
'-
does not represent a 'principal building'. Its intended and/or
potential use is nevertheless apparent. A conslder~bly smaller
cottage on the property has now been demolished and will be
replaced by a permanent, year-round usable residence of over
twice the size of the building it is replacing. Regardless of
whether the sequence of construction has been coincidental or
contrived, the consequence will be two ptincipal buildings on a
single lot where zoning provisions explicitly set a limit of one.
This form of property use and exploitation is exceedingly unfair
to neighbors and places undue and critical stress upon the
environment in an already densely developed area. Adjacent
property values are diminished; stormwater and groundwater run-
off patterns are altered and problems magnified, often impacting
upon neighbor~; vegetation is lost; and residential use of
property intensifies in spite of zoning provisions which
otherwise seek to limit development. In view of the foregoing,
the appeal of Mr. Cushing merits serious examination and
favorable disposition. Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely, William B. Wetherbee" A letter dated February 17,
1995, addressed to the Zoning Board of Appeals, "Dear Board
Members: I am writing in reference to the notice I received
concerning the property owned by Dorothy Hodgkins in Cleverdale
on Mason Road~ I am firmly opposed to the practice of allowing
more than one principal residence on the small lake shore lots.
This is a violation of the zoning code and must not be permitted.
We live in a critical en~ironmental area and protection of the
lake, which is our water supply, must be of foremost concern.
Thi s lot slopes steepl y to the la ke . With o'ne bui Idi ng on the
immediate edge of the road already and the much larger building
that is proposed to be erected, there is a minimal area for a
septic system. This is of utmost concern to those of us who are
trying to maintain the purity of Lake George. If the proposed
building is allowed, we would ask that you stipulate that there
be no living quarters in the large garage-type building on the
edge of the road, meaning bathroom and kitchen facilities. And
further that you stipulate that this may not be rented out for
living quarters, storage or anything else. Very truly yours,
Esther Frederick" Another letter submitted by Esther Frederick
with the same exact wording. A letter dated February 17, 1995,
addressed to the Zoning Board of Appeals "Dear Board Members: I
am writing in reference to the notice I read in the legal ads in
the Post Star concerning the property owned by Dorothy Hodgkins
in Cleverdale on Mason Road. I am firmly opposed to the practice
of allowing more than one principal residence on the small lake
shore lots. This has been allowed on a number of properties in
Cleverdale and is adding to the congestion of a very small
community. These lots are of minimal size and simply can not
support two residences. It is a violation of the zoning code and
must not be permitted. We live in a critical environmental area
and protection of the lake, which is our water supply, is of
utmost concern to all of us. This lot has a steep grade going
down to the lake. With one building on the immediate edge of the
road already and the much larger building that is proposed to be
erected, there isn't much room for an adequate septic system.
This is a real worry to those of us who are trying to maintain
the purity of Lake George and the water that we drink. If the
proposed new building that enlarges and expands the previous
small camp is permitted, we would ask that you stipulate that
there be no living quarters including, in particular, bathroom
and kitchen facilities in the large gara~e-type building on the
edge of the road. And further that you indicate in your ruling
that this building may not be rented out for living quarters,
storage, or anything else. Many of us who live here feel that
these variances should not be allowed due to the small size of
all of these non-60nforming lots. Very truly yours, Joan A.
Robertson" Another letter dated February 17th, from Joan A.
Robertson with the exact same wording, and that's it.
MR. DUSEK-Mr. Chairman, I was just handed something here, too, by
the Attorney for the Hodgkins, which apparently he received from
- 42 -
--
-.J'
somebody on this application.
MR. THOMAS-"To the Town of Queensbury, Regarding Neighboring
properties within 500 feet of tax map no. 13-1-10, Hodgkins, we,
the following, do not object to the addition to the Hodgkins
house or to the existing garage which has two bedrooms, bathroom
and a laundry area." And it's signed by Lee Tabner of Mason Road
and winter residents of Brookwood Drive in Latham, New York, and
Linda Martin of Cleverdale.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any final comments?
MR. DUSEK-I guess I'm looking for your cue at this point. I
think there's a few issues that you have to decide, and if you
get into the merits, I guess that we need to address them one at
a time, and if you get into the merits, I have certain
suggestions as to things to look at in the Ordinance.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. First of all, I think that I'm going to move for
a tabling, but I think we have a couple of major issues here.
I've gone through our Ordinance, and I know, in our Staff Notes,
they have referenced, I think, most of the applicable sections,
interpretations and so forth. I'm not real positive as to which
way we should proceed at this point. I think the first issue we
really should address is whether this is a garage/storage area,
or if it is a second residence. If we determine that it is,
indeed, a second residence, then that opens up a whole can of
worms as far as the house is concerned, because, as it stands
right now, if we determine that this garage/storage area/second
residence, it really isn't a second residence at this point.
It's the ~ residence at this point. So that really would
mandate a variance on the house. In other words, on the other
hand, if we determine that this is, indeed, a garage/storage
area, and not a second residence, I think that there are some
issues that have to be addressed on the house anyway, because it
does appear that that, the projected plans, the projected
activities out there, are in excess of what I think our variance
was back in March, which I think Mr. Martin has addressed some of
those concerns. So I think that we would be looking at,
possibly, another variance coming back on the house. I would
also add one other section or interpretation. I've gone through
a lot of the interpretations. I think dwelling unit is very
appropriate. I guess I have principal building, and I'm going
through and I'm showing what a principal building within the
Adirondack Park is, and under 179-71(g) says, any other structure
which exceeds 1,250 square feet of floor space constitutes one
principal building. I don't have a definition for floor space.
MR. MENTER-There's floor area definition in here.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. Floor area and floor space.
MR. MENTER-It mayor may not be the same thing.
MR. CARVIN-It may not be the same thing. I mean, if we say floor
space includes the garage, and I believe floor area does not,
then we're talking a building already. I mean, it's in excess no
matte)" what you look at. So, I thi nk that we need to get an
accurate definition of floor space and floor area. Going through
and listening to the testimony of the Hodgkins, looking at the
minutes from the March, I also, I mean, from what they're
describing, their intent falls under, as far as I..:..m.. concerned,
tourist accommodation, and if you take a look at the definition
of Tourist Accommodation, a building or group of buildings,
whether detached or in connected units, used as individual
sleeping or temporary dwelling units, designed for transients,
and providing for the accessory off-street parking facilities.
The term, Tourist Accommodations includes buildings designated as
tourist courts, motor lodges, motels, hotels, bed and breakfasts,
overnight cabins, housekeeping units, and similar facilities, and
- 43 -
-
'--,
--
I'm assuming that that probably is the most accurate description
of what they're looking to do with that, which, at least in ~
mind, is a tourist accommodation, a secondary building. Is that
a dwelling unit? I don't know. So, again, I would like the
Board to give consideration to ~ terminology. I've looked at
the building. I know M)-. Martin has requested guidance from this
Board, and that is our duty. We are the ultimate deciders of
what the i~terpretation is, and I think Mr. Martin has been
basing his decisions, in part, on the dwelling unit aspect, and I
think if you read that, it basically says, dw-elling unit: a
building or portion thereof providing complete housekeeping
facilities, and I' think it's up to this Board to determine what
complete housekeeping facilities are. I do not know of any other
written explanation of housekeeping, at least nobody has pointed
out to me anywhere in t.b..iâ. Ordinance that it says it has to be
all three. I think that's an interpretation that Mr. Martin or
the Zoning Administrator's have used in the past.
MR. MARTIN-That's correct.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but that does not necessarily.
MR. MARTIN-But how does onè keep house without a kitchen?
MR. CARVIN-Well, I think that's complete housekeeping facilities.
I mean, there are plenty of complete housekeeping facilities
without kitchens. I mean, that's!!!.:i. feeling. I think if you
look at the overall intent, that we have bedroom facilities. We
have bath facilities. We have electrical outlets. We have sewer
hook-ups. I mean, these are away from the definition of
"Garage". Nowhere in the Garage does it say, you know, that >'ou
can have a bedroom, nor, under Storage Facilities, does it say
that you should have a bedroom.
MR. MARTIN-When I was thinking of Dwelling Unit, can a family
unit live in that structure, live?
MR. CARVIN-In my opinion, it would be yes.
MR. MARTIN-Sleep, eat.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, but I'm also saying that you could probably live
in a garage, under certaih circumstances. That's why I'm saying
I think that this may be more along the lines of a Tourist
Facility, and not necessarily a dwelling unit.
MR. MENTER-It also may go to your definition of kitchen, whatever
that is.
MR. MARTIN-I think the key term to be defined is what constitutes
housekeeping facilities. I, quite frankly, think Tourist
Accommodations is a very big reath, myself.
MR. CARVIN-Well, essentially, that's what they're telling me
they're going to be using it for, is transient. They're saying
that it's going to be for the kids, the grandkids, not temporary,
not permanent.
MR. MARTIN-But those aren't tourists. They're family members.
MR. AUFFREDOU-That's not transient. That's not transient use,
and that's not commercial. I think a tourist accommodation is
riddled with the commercial aspect, definition.
MR. CARVIN-I agree, it's nota perfect definition.
are perfect definitions. I'm just saying that my
of what your comments have been is that this is not
permanent facility. Is that incorrect? If that
please correct me now:
None of these
unde)"standi ng
going to be a
is inco)-rect,
- 44 -
',,---,
.........,;
MR. AUFFREDOU-I don't think either one of those structures are
going to be permanent. I mean, all along, we're getting into the
difference between permanent and seasonal. I mean, is there
going to be a permanent bedroom there? Sure. Is it always going
to be used? No. I don't use the bedrooms in !:!lZ:. house, in the
Town of Queensbury, 365 days a year either, when I go on
vacation, when I go out of town.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but you're the primary user, is that correct?
MR. HODGKINS-My mother's home is in
second home, okay. So, everything
everything on the lake tourist
def i ni tion.
Latham. I mean, this is her
up there, you're calling
accommodations, by your
MRS. HODGKINS-I resent my family being called tourists.
MR. AUFFREDOU-You're stretching it, I
Just because she doesn't vote here
tourist.
think, an awful long way.
doesn't turn her into a
MR. CARVIN-No. I'm just saying that I've gone through the
terminology here, and it may be appropriate. It might not be
entirely inappropriate, but I think the term that I'm looking at
is Temporary Dwelling Unit, used as individual sleeping or
temporary dwelling units.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Designed for transients.
MR. CARVIN-Yes.
MR. MARTIN-I think housekeeping cottage is closer, if you were to
take out the word "rental".
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Which one's that?
MR. MARTIN-A single detached rental unit for a transient
occupancy. If the word "rental" wasn't there, I.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Mr. Chairman, I thought that's what we were
explaining was, you know, when grandkids are there, it's
overflow, basically, for that point in time. Mrs. Hodgkins
testified, I believe, that she intends to use this when her
grandchildren are there, when her sons and daughters are there,
when her daughter-in-law, sons-in-law are there, and when her
friends are there. I would respectfully submit that's a very
common occurrence around the lake, very common.
MR. HODGKINS-We've been doing that for 40 years. I mean, the
other house we had on the lake had two separate spots, and it was
not a rental spot.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but did you have two separate buildings before?
MR. HODGKINS-Yes, on another parcel of land on the same point,
and that was just common, it was just very common, at that time,
that one even had a kitchen, but that was allowed at that time,
but that's common up and down the point, with the exception of,
we were told we can't put a kitchen in. Fine. We don't need
one.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Again, I don't mean to harp on this, but that's the
important point here, and I don't want the Board to miss that,
and I know you're not, but I just need to reiterate it. We had a
permit to do this. We had a permit to do this, and we did it,
and now it seems to me you're going back and you're revisiting
that, and there's no evidence that we've done anything other than
what the permit authorized.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, again, that's another issue that I think
- 45 -
'-'
the Board will have to address, is the timeliness, and I think
Mr. Dusek has made ¢omment to that effect.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I think it goes to more than just the timeliness.
MS. CIPPERLY-As we as Staff has been discussing this issue, one
part of it comes down in our discussions to, it's all residential
space, but it's in two different places on the lot. Is there
anything particularly wrong with that? If you called it a guest
house, should that be an allowed use? If somebody wanted to put
guest area attached to their house, over their garage, would
there be a problem with that? Like if you wanted to put two
bedrooms over your house attached to your house. It's really not
the use, it's the configuration of the buildings. $0, if you can
provide guidance on that, if somebody wanted to put this same
situation and attach it to their house, there wouldn't be a
problem, but because it's a detached structure, you'Te expanding
your living space into another building, which, maybe it's an
accessory structure that's really, asI say, accessory to the
principal use of the property. So, you can think on that, too.
MR. CARVIN-I don't know. It still comes back to, what"is the
building, and that's up to the Board, I guess. We're going to
have to make that decision and come up with these guidelines, and
that is going to take some time, and unfortunately the house.
MR. MARTIN-Just as some background, what we're coming up with is,
as Staff additionally, and this does not help the situation, but,
in recognition of it, these continuing things we're seeing,
develop a floor area ratio for houses in Waterfront Residential
zoning or for living space, in other words, say you have a 20,000
square foot lot. You're entitled to 10 percent of that as living
space, and if you, th~t's 2,000 square feet~ and if you're going
to utilize that, you have 2,000 square feet. You take 600, put
it over your garage, then you're limited to 1300 in the main
house, but you have 2,000 square feet of 1 i vi ng space, then, fo,-
that lot.
MR. CARVIN-Well, that's something that's being projected into the
future, at this point.
MR. MARTIN-And that's what, we're looking at
overcome this problem. It doesn't help
applicant, or this appeal, but.
that concept, to
this particular
MR. MARESCO-I have a question for Paul. Paul, would our decision
be creating a precedent for the interpretation, now, of what a
residence would be?
MR. DUSEK-Well, I guess the only question, way you could answer
that is, possibly, it depends on what you're decision is. I
think you've heard tonight what the traditional interpretation
has been, by the Zoning Administrator, and the Building and Codes
Department, and the decision in this particular case, and it's
within, as I think Fred has very aptly put it, it's certainly
within the jurisdiction of this Board to decide whether or not,
after you've reviewed the Ordinance, you feel that that's right.
If you feel it is, then you wouldn't be setting any precedent, so
to speak, because you're going to be just following along as it
is. I guess you're ~etting some precedent, to the extent that
this Board has finally ruled on that issue, and, you know,
certainly I think you'd be requiTed to follow that in the future.
I mean, I don't see how you flip yourself around unless you have
a really good reason to do so, or, obviously, if you decided it
differently, then, yes, you'd be setting some really significant
precedent, because you'd be changing the way things are done, but
that's your job, as a Board, is to take a look at all of the
Ordinance. Take a look at the facts, and make that tough
decision, and I think, from what I was hearing from the Chairman
a little earlier, I think that it sounded to me like he was on
- 46 -
~
-/
the right track, in the sense of what ~ was thinking of earlier,
that you have to look at all of these words. You start at that
179-12, and you read that law, and then you try to find the
definition to every single word, and you go through everything.
You look at Principal Building, and one that he didn't mention,
Single Family Dwelling, for instance, you'd look at. Look at
every single definition and try to make some sense out of what it
is you're reading, and then you discard what you don't think is
appropriate, but you should look at every single word, and I
think that's the sense I got from the Chairman, he's trying to do
that.
MR. MARTIN-I will, now, put the Planner's spin on this. You've
just heard the legal spin. Bear in mind what zoning is meant to
do. Zoning is meant to regulate land use. Words do that for
you, but, bear in mind what the overall intent here of this whole
Code is, is land use regulation, at what time do we have too much
use of a piece of property, bulk height requirements and all
that, structures, and then the land use, at what time do we have
too much? When have we crossed the threshold, with the character
of the use in this community?
MR. MENTER-And the key to that is each of our interpretation of,
and you said it, intent.
MR. MARTIN-That's the intent of, generally, fundamentally
speaking, of any zoning code, is land use regulation.
MR. DUSEK-Certainly you're going to look at the entire Code and
the Master Plan. You're going to take everything into
consideration, but you're also going to have to look at the
individual words that are used in the Ordinance, because, here
again, the intent is actually not yours. You're deciding what
was meant when this whole thing was established, the entire Code,
the words, everything, and like I said earlier, I think Fred was
on the right track, in terms of looking at all of this, and I
think Jim is correct, too, that you look at the entire intent.
You look at the whole thing in trying to make sense out of it,
and you try to reach a reasonable conclusion as to what is meant
here.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Having said that, does anybody else have any
comments? Okay. I guess I am unclear as to what direction.
Now, I can leave the public hearing open. I think that I'd
almost prefer to do that. I know the Hodgkins are anxious to
move forward. So I'd like to try to get some kind of resolution,
I think. I guess it would probably be beneficial for us to come
up with a decision as soon as possible on this garage issue. I
don't know whether we should set a date at this point, or bring
in the house issue at this point. I'm looking for some counsel
there.
MR. MENTER-Jim, what's the status of the house issue?
MR. CARVIN-There is no status at this point.
MR. MENTER-There is no status?
MR. MARTIN-Well, I think you're going to hear later tonight that
there is a couple of violations occurring with the house
construction, as I see it. There's two primarily. One is that
the house was, or it was represented to this Board it was
approved in the application for a 25 foot shoreline setback. I
think the, in fairness, the old house was closer than that. The
representation of the old structure being that close was not
correct. I think it was closer than that, and so, therefore, the
new structure, or the new, whatever we end up with here, is
closer than that. Secondly, it was clearly represented that the
old camp would be retained, and there would simply be an addition
made to it. The old camp has been completely removed. That's of
- 47 -
-...,.'
greater concern. With those two violations occurring, the
Hodgkins offered to voluntarily stop work until these matters are
resolved with this Board, and I think they're going to attempt to
begin to take that up with you later on at the end of the regular
agenda, as to how you want to handle that issue.
MR. MENTER-Well, I was thinking in terms of scheduling. I'm not
sure how that plays.
MR. CARVIN-Well, the earliest opportunity that l will have will
be March the 8th.
MS. CIPPERLY-This room is not available on March 8th.
the 7th or the 9th.
It's on
MR. CARVIN-The 9th I am unavailable. The 7th is.
MS. CIPPERLY-That's a Tuesday.
MR. CARVIN-It's not the best date, but I cah do it. I'll do it,
March the 7th. Will we be in a position to do that on the 7th?
Will you be able to get the minutes and pertinent information out
to the Soard?
MR. MARTIN-Advertising can be done. Yes.
MR. MENTER-Well, on this issue. Are ~.Je talking solely about this
issue?
MS. CIPPERLY-About the garage?
MR. CARVIN-The garage anyway.
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
talk about the
on that or not.
Depending on what happens later on, when you
house. I don't know whether you want to put that
MR. MENTER-Yes, that's kind of ~hat I was getting at, because we
don't have to notice on tl:lis issue.
MR. CARVIN-No.
MR. MENTER-Which gives us a little more flexibility.
MS. CIPPERLY-If you close the public hearing, we don't have to
re-advertise.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I mean, I can table it and then I can always
schedule it for the 7th.
MR. MENTER-We could table this and schedule it and then just see
what happens. We want to table it for the next 60 days anyway.
They can always bring it back before. There's nothing that says
I can't schedule this before that, 1" ight, once ~.Je render a
decision? How much time do you need, before we re-post that?
MR. DUSEK-You have to have a decision within 60 days. Well,
actually, because you left the public hearing open, you've got an
extension, of sorts, going on. You can't leave· the public
hearing open indefinitely. I think you have to be reasonable,
but you can.
MR. MENTER-Sixty days after that closes?
MR. DUSEK-Right.
MR. CARVIN-Would it have to be re-advertised or anything like
that? '
MR. DUSEK-No, I don't think so, not under these circumstances.
- 48 -
',,--,,'
.........I
MR. MARTIN-So if I just tabled with the 60 day, and we decided to
come back on the 8th, we wouldn't have to re-advertise it?
MR. DUSEK-Well, I think you ought to, when I say, no re-
advertisement, I'm assuming that you're going to establish a date
tonight, before you leave this session. If you're not going to
establish the date until after you leave, I would recommend that
you advertise it.
MR. CARVIN-And that requires, what, normally five days?
MR. MARTIN-Yes, and then we need two or three extra days beyond
that for publication time frames, for the paper. I think we can
accommodate the 7th, if, for any reason, we have to do any
advertising.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
this application.
All right. I'm going to move that we table
I'm going to leave the public hearing open.
MOTION TO TABLE NOTICE OF APPEAL NO. 3-95 JOHN P. CUSHING,
Introduced by Fred Carvin who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Anthony Maresco:
Tabled until March 7th, for our decision, at 7:30 p.m., pending
proper notification.
Duly adopted this 22nd day of February, 1995, by the following
vote:
MR. CARVIN-And that all the missing Board members be supplied
with all the minutes and pertinent information.
AYES: Mr. Menter, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Carvin
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Ford
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So it's tabled until March the 7th, at which
point we will render a decision. The public hearing is open. So
I will entertain public comment at that point.
MR. CUSHING-Mr. Carvin, could I ask a
Because this is going to be carried over,
were the remarks that I made all taped?
procedural
an appeal,
question?
the 7th,
MR. CARVIN-Yes.
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. CUSHING-So you wouldn't want mine typed up?
MR. MARTIN-They'll be typed up. We type them up verbatim.
MR. CUSHING-Okay. I just wanted to make sure that they were all
taped.
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Would we have an opportunity, tonight, to discuss
the other issues at some point?
MR. CARVIN-Boy, I hope so. Yes. We've got one
that's on the agenda. So right after the agenda,
then I'll open it up for the general public.
other issue
that issue,
DISCUSSION ITEM:
NOTICE OF APPEAL NO. 4-94. MARGARET BLEIBTREY APPEAL BY MARGARET
BLEIBTREY FROM A DECISION OF THE ZONING ADMINISTRATOR STATING
- 49 -
~
THAT A FISHING GUIDE SERVICE INCIDENTAL TO THE PERMITTED BED AND
BREAKFAST WOULD BE AN ALLOWED USE UNDER SECTION 179-13, LAND
CONSERVATION ZONES. ACCORDINGLY, AN INTERPRETATION BY THE ZONING
BOARD OF APPEALS IS REQUESTED. PROPERTY IS LOCATED ON UPPER
RIDGE ROAD~ QUEENSBURY DESIGNATED ON THE TAX MAP AS PARCEL
NUMBER: 20-1-2.
MARGARET BLEIBTREY, PRESENT
MR. THOMAS-A letter dated July 31, 1994, to the Town of
Queensbury Zoning Board of Appeals, "Dear Members: Mr. Martin's
letter dated July 11, 1994 to the Lake George Park Commission
regarding Michael DiPalma's application for a Class A Marina at
his dock states that Mr. Martin finds no violation of the Town
Zoning Code and the operation of a fishing charter business by
Mr. DiPalma at this site. He also states that this business has
been in operation since 1984. Mr. DiPalma also states that he
has been operating his fishing business since 1984. See ~ttached
copies of Planning Board Site Plan Review minutes from January
25~ 1994. The charter fishing business is not an allowed use in
the current Town zoning, nor was'it an allowed use under the
previous zoning code of 1982. Therefore, this business was
illegal at the time it started. A use which is illegal at the
time it began has no vested rights, and, thus, cannot be
considered grandfathered. Attached also is a copy of the 1987
notice of violation issued to Mr. DiPalma by the Town of
Queensbury for operation of a fishing charter business at this
site. This verifies the fact that his business was definitely a
zoning violation at that time. The Zoning Administrator has
already rescinded his original statement that a Class A Marina at
this site would not violate the Town zoning code, by virtue of
its letter dated July 21, 1994 to the Lake George Park
Commission. He states correctly in that letter that a commercial
marina is not an allowed use in this zone. Since the Zoning
Administrator also concurred with the use of the site for a
charter fishing business in his original letter to the Lake
George Park Commission, and since the fishing charter business is
also a violation of the Town zoning code, a letter rescinding his
or igi na 1 determi nat ion regardi ng this use is necessary to c lat" i fy
the Town's position. According to the Zoning Code, neither a
Class A Marina nor a fishing charter business is allowed in this
zone. Both of these facts should be made clear to the Park
Commission and Mr. DiPalma. Thank you for your consideration.
Margaret Bleibtrey" A letter dated July 11, 1994, addressed to
Mike White, the Lake George Park Commission, "Dear Mr. White: I
am in receipt of a notice of meeting regarding the Class A Marina
permit for Mike DiPalma. His property has received an Area
Variance from the Town of Queensbury Zoning Board of Appeals for
expansion 'of the pr'i ncipal stt'ucture, and a Si te Plan Rev iew
approval from the Town Planning Board for establishment of a Bed
& Breakfast on the parcel. It is my understanding that this
Class A Marina permit would be allowed for incidental guide
fishing for guests of the Bed & Breakfast. During the Town's
deliberations of the above referenced actions, it was established
that the fishing guide business ,has been actively in existence on
this site since 1984. Providing that the fishing guide service
is incidental to the Bed & Breakfast, and that there will be no
boat slips for rent with the approval of this permit, I do not
find any violations of the Town Z6ning Code. Thank you for your
opportunity to comment." Signed, James Martin.
MR. MARTIN-We've since gotten two more letters. You have those,
right, Chris, from Grace Hanneford and Elsa Kraft?
MR. THOMAS-Yes. I do bel ieve I have a bunc'h'here fi,om the, yes,
one from Grace Hanneford and one from Elsa Kraft. I won't read
those until after we do the other stuff.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Mr. and Mrs. Bleibtrey.
- 50 -
"-'"
'--
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Margaret Bleibtrey. I was here in October when
this issue was tabled, and my position hasn'tohanged. None of
the circumstances haye changed. ,The whole point of my appeal was
the fact that 1 felt certain land uses thatwer~ not allowed by
the zoning code were being condone by the Zoning Administrator.
The fishing charter business was approved, in effect, to the Lake
George Park Commission, by the Zoning Administrator, and I,
personally, can find no allowance for that in any of your zoning
codes, either as a p,-imary 0'- an accessory use. So, I'm trying
to stop the use of this land which is at the edge of my home from
being used as a business in a residential area, and that's why
I'm here. I don't know what other information you need from me,
other than that's what I'm trying to appeal. 1 don't want a
fishing charter business operating out of my front yard. It's as
simple as that, and I cannot see where it could be allowed, given
the current zoning, or even the previous zoning. That's why I'm
here.
MR. MARTIN-Just to re-clarify ~ position, as you know, we have
an approved site plan on this property for a Bed & Breakfast, and
in ~ mind, the Bed & B,-eakfast use represents the mo,-e intense
use of the site. Associated with that are people staying
overnight, people parking on the property, breakfast is had, the
waste generated from that, and so on and so forth, and we have
never, in the past, began to regulate those things that are
accessory or incidental to a Bed & Breakfast. For example,
there's one in Town that has a swimming pool and the guests at
the Bed & Breakfast use the swimming pool. I think the Board's
seen that. This is the one on Ridge Road. Again, my other
concern is it's a very difficult thing to regulate. When Mr.
DiPalma takes several people down the path to the dock to go
fishing with fishing poles in their hand, it's going to be very
difficult to differentiate when those are clients and when
they're friends going on a fishing trip. So this is fraught with
enforcement perils. Those are just several thoughts I have in my
mind.
MR. CARVIN-I just would like to point out, on the swimming pool
issue there, that the first time around, I know the original
motion on the swimming pool was that they couldn't use it. There
were some stipulations on it that they could not use the pool
after eight o'clock or nine o'clock or something like that.
MR. MARTIN-I'm going to come jumping out of the bushes at nine-
thirty on a Saturday night and say, ha, gotcha.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I'm just saying that I know where you're coming
from, but we did try to restrict the use of that swimming pool,
and I think when that came back on appeal, or for renewal, that I
think we dropped that particular section, because I think it is
an unenforceable situation, but I just want the Board to be aware
that we do have the power, on incidental or accessory uses, to
make certain criteria, if it's so deemed.
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Well, I don't see where a fishing charter business
is allowed in the Zoning Ordinances, period. It's not there, so
why allow it, that's my other point, and why have the Zoning
Administrator condone the use of the land in this way? I'm sure
if it were your home, you'd feel the same way I do. I know you
wouldn't want a business running through your property.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Any questions of Mrs.
point, I would open the public hearing
speak in favor of the appeal.
Bleibtrey? At this
for anyone wishing to
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
GRACE HANNEFORD
MRS. HANNEFORD-I'm Grace Hanneford.
I have a piece of property
- 51 -
next to Mr. DiPalma's, and my residence overlooks where the dock
is. He's had this fishing business long before he decided he
wanted a Bed & Breakfast. Now, I would say that he's trying to
put in two businesses, the fishing business and the Bed &
Breakfast, and I feel that it's going to depreciate my property,
and, therefore, in a residential zone, why should one person be
allowed to have two businesses? It's supposed to be residential,
and I dorr't feel that it's helping anyon~. Thank you.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Anyone else wishing tb be heard in support of
the appeal? Okay. Anyone wishing to be heard in opposition to
the appeal?
MIKE O'CONNOR
MR. O'CONNOR-Mr. Chairman, Gentlemen, I'm Mike O'Connor. I'll
begin with maybe something different than what I was going to
begi n with, but I keep hear i ng, two busi nesses. I thi nk we
submitted, and I presume that the Board will take into
consideration in its deliberations everything that has taken
place on this property over the last year and a half,' when we've
been before this Board for an Area Variance for the building and
before the Planning Board for a Site plan Review for the addition
to the Building, and when we were before the Planning Board for
the site Plan Review for the operation of the Bed & Breakfast,
but the thing r want to ~ring to your attention up front, before
I go into, perhaps, a rather curse response, is that ~e submitted
proof that in 1993, over a four month period, there were 13
occasions when this was used as a Bed & Breakfast. 1994, I would
submit to you, I don't have the dates like !'did for 1993, but
there were less times. That's the potential impact that we've
been here for. We've been before the Planning Board. We've been
to the Lake George Park Commission. We've written to the
Adirondack Park Agency. We've had discussions with the New York
State Sales Tax people, all because M1". and Mrs. Bleibtrey don't
like the use of their right-of-way, which they knew when they
bought the property, which we have the right to use to get to our
dock. It's getting pretty much like the APA and the pool table
on the boathouse. It'é ridiculous. It really is ridiculous, and
the expense that these people are put to because the Town will
not stand UP and say, if you don't like the Town rules, go to
court. that's the recourse that these people should be seeking.
It's not the recourse before this Board. We filed for a Site
Plan Review, in our some 36 pages of minutes, and that decision
was given on January 25, 1994. By the CPLR, there's a 30 day
appeal from the date of the filing of that decision to file an
Article 78 to appeal that decision. No appeal was filed. The
time has passed for this issue to be discussed. This appeal is
not timely, insofar as it effects Mr. DiPalma. It may be timely
in the sense that the Board wants to make an interpretation for
future use, for future application~ but at some time, and I'll
change the saying so I don~t offend anybody, and I didn't intend
to offend anybody, the fat man has to sing. We have to be able
to tell people that when they go downstairs and get a building
permit, that they have the right to proceed on that building
permit within é certain time frame, and the CPLR says 30 days.
Mr. DiPalma proceeded on his site plan review. He built the
addition that he intended, and he had to complete it, and I think
all the Town inspections have taken place. I don't know if the
Certificate' of Occupancy actually was physically issued or not,
but we know that the final inspection was done. Now we're here
talking about, can we use that. Tim Brewer was here earlier, and
went home. He gave me his phone number and said I could call him
if you wanted to hear from him directly. He will testify that,
at the site plan review, we discussed, ånd the minutes reflect,
we discussed using the entire premises as a Bed & Breakfast, and
that as accessory to the ambiance of the Bed & Breakfast, people
would be allowed to go to the dock. They'd be allowed to fish
off the dock. They would be invited to go out onto the lake and
take charters on the lake, or whatever you want to call it. We
- 52 -
"---- ------
'-- --/
understood and agreed that we couldn't have people come in off
the street and come to the boat, or come to the dock and simply
go out on their cha,-te,-. That would be a sepa'"ate operation.
What we're talking about is, and I think what we should be
talking about is simply the issue of use of the boat dock and the
boat and the fishing guide services provided as part of the
ambiance of the Bed & Breakfast, for those that are guests of the
Bed & Breakfast. We went to the Lake George Park Commission.
Somebody said we couldn't operate the Bed & Breakfast, even with
the Site Plan Review, unless we had a Class A Marina permit. We
went there and we argued that we didn't need a Class A Marina
permit. Use of the dock by guests is exempt. It's not a Marina
operation. Even our particular Ordinance exempts that. Use of a
dock by family or guests staying at a residence is not a
commercial use of a dock, and I seriously question whether this
Board has any jurisdiction once the people step into the boat,
but I think you've got a time issue, here, and Paul disagrees
with me, but we've got a provision in our Ordinance. You can't
get into the APA frame of mind and say, well, we think we'd like
to extend the Ordinance. We'll give them another chance. If the
people don't agree with what the Ordinance says, the Town changes
the Ordinance, or they go to the court and say that the
Ordinance, there's reason to interpret it differently. I haven't
heard the applicant here tonight ask for a variance of the 60 day
appeal right, and there was no appeal within 60 days, or, no 30
day appeal, within the March 25, 1994 decision. So I don't know
why we're here. I don't think you have Jurisdiction, and I told
my client that. I've told my client to operate it. I'm going to
tell my client to operate tomorrow. If you want to make an
interpretation of your Ordinance, for other properties that you
might involve this issue with, then fine, but you've already got
a Planning Board decision that says he can do it, that has not
been appealed.
MR. MARTIN-Mike, could I ask you a question about the charter
business, you touched on that earlier. If it is a case where
someone simply wants to go fishing for a fee, and not stay over,
how is that treated?
MR. O'CONNOR-We will pick them up at some place else on the lake.
If they're staying at a motel, in the lake, and the Lake George
Park Commission said that that was also permissible, and we
didn't need to have a Marina permit to house our boat at our dock
on this stream to go out on to the lake to pick these people up,
and we do that. We go over to the Georgian and pick up people.
We go to the public docks at the Village to pick up people. We
also have some people even that stay. You ought to understand.
We have some people that stay, in those 13 occasions in 1993,
that stay at our place as Bed & Breakfast, that don't go out on
the lake. They go to area streams to fish, and they, you ought
to understand, too. We're not going through Mrs. Bleibtrey's
front yard, although I don't think there's a heck of a lot of
difference. As I understand it, their house faces onto the road.
We go down the back to the stream. I even question enforcement.
I don't even understand that issue. If we have a legitimate Bed
& Breakfast, and we look at the definition of Bed & Breakfast,
there's nothing in there that says you can't do what we are
doing, and our Ordinance has been interpreted consistently as
being permissive. It is an example type Ordinance of what you
can do, but it is not a limited O,-dinance as to what you can do,
and we've used that on occasion in the past. I don't think you
can say that people can't go down to the dock and fish. You
can't use, as I understand a Bed & Breakfast, it's the idea that,
it welcomes somebody into your home, and let them have the run
about of your home, pretty much, except for maybe something that
you would keep private, some portion that you might keep private
on occasion. The principal use is still your home, and that's
the principal use here. We showed actual dates and what not in
1993, and I've got those here with me if you want to look at them
again, as to the number of times that we had strangers there, if
- 53 -
you will. Most of the people that Mike DiPalma does business
with he's struck up some type of relationship, because they are
repeat type businesses. I've got the advertisement on the berry
farm, which is at 623 Bay Road, Queensbury, New York. It's run
by Eleanor and Al Oudekirk. They talk about the century old farm
house, or a walk down the lane to a blueberry patch located in
histo)" ic Queensbury. The homestead has a superb view of changi ng
seasons on its 50 acres of field and woods~ Those 50 acres are
open to the people to enjoy. That's payt of the ambiance of that
particular Bed & Breàkfast. The one at Sanford's Ridge, which
you spoke about earlier, at 749 Ridge Road, 9L Queensbury, in
their brochure, they talk about, our restored carriage house
features a slate billiard table. Maybe people, you know, if
they're only supposed to sleep there and have breakfast there,
and not supposed to play pool, maybe you ought to tell them to
take the pool table out of there, and a remarkable view of the
mountains to the west, taken in the sun on our spacious deck or
enjoy a relaxing swim in our in-ground pool. They don't say,
between such and such hours. Maybe that's a condition of that
permit, and I don't mean to be sarcastic to the Board members,
but I just have lost patience with the fact that we have a never
ending wheel that seems to go around and round, that we can't
bring to a conclusion. There is a procedure set forth, and Paul
has a remote case that talks about a neighbor's right to have an
extension on the stated appeal. That's not going to be the case
that's going to be applied in every case, and I hope that this
Board doesn't get into the APA complex, and I don't use that
negatively, of stretching, we've got a Town Board member that
takes great interest in our planning. We've got holes in the
Ordinance. The Zoning Ordinance is a living document, and
there's a lot of room for, perhaps, improvement of the Ordinance.
That's by legislation. That's not by overreaching
interpretations. I've got one, Chalet in the Pines, that's in
the Adirondacks. I don't know what their Zoning Ordinance is,
but I know it's in the APA, and I know that commercial uses
aren't allowed in this particular area. The Chalet is a couple
of hundred feet from a private sandy beach and beautiful lake.
Fishing and swimming are excellent. There is the use of a 12
foot row boat for each unit on which you may use your own
electric motor. It's the same content that we have. You've got
a Bed & Breakfast, Country Road Lodge in Warrensburg, and these
we picked up simply, I believe, from the brochure rack at the
Municipal Center. You can buy books on Bed & Breakfasts, too.
You aren't going to find Bed & Breakfasts that say, come stay in
your 12 by 12 room, and we're going to give you a continental
breakfast or we're going to give you a fancy breakfast in the
morning. If you've stayed at Breakfasts, you'll know. I think
the only one I've stayed in is the one in Martha's Vineyard.
That allowed us the use of their beach, and we fished from the
beach. The Bed & Breakfast guide to Saratoga, Lake George, Gore
Mt. I'll give these to you if you want to review them, but I
think they prove the point. Somebody is trying to invent for you
a definition that is not the common definition of Bed &
Breakfast. They're trying to play on words and say, Bed &
Breakfast will only be A, B. It won't be what everybody else in
the trade and everybody else in the business interprets it to be,
and just so you don't have a question on whether or not we're
talking about a marina or we get off into that mind set,
recreation facilities, private; recreation facilities, supplement
to a principal use for the utilization of proprietors and guests,
and excluding any such use which is open to the public for a
charge. We fall within that exception, with the people that are
guests of our Bed & Breakfast, and that's the only people we're
talking about. We acknowledge the fact that we are not open to
public people to come just to use the fishing ~spect of our
operation. Only can they use it in the manner that we intend to
use it, if it was incidental to their staying. They don't have
to use it. They can stay wi thout usi'ng it. I told you the date,
and I'll say it again for the record, 1/25/94 was the site plan
review, and 7/21/94 the Lake George Park Commission, where we
- 54 -
-.I'
"-'
went in with a Class A Marina, and they ended up saying that we
did not need a Class A Marina, and on that point I guess I would
also even pick up, arguing both sides, if I had to accept Paul
Dusek's case as being the rule of law here, you still have the
charge of what is a reasonable time of appeal. All these issues
have been on table. All these issues have been brought to the
attention of the account in this particular case, but it wasn't
until some time after July 21st when a reaffirmance of prior
determinations that were made that the appeal issued. I actually
think that the determination was made when the site plan review
application was accepted, because our standard is, if I
understand it right, is that they won't schedule a site plan
review if they think a variance is necessary.
MR. MARTIN-That's correct.
MR. O'CONNOR-If we were applying for a use that was not permitted
in that application, they would have told us then that we needed
a site plan review, and I get into the problem, and I think Paul,
maybe we haven't addressed the problem, simply because he re-
states a determination to another agency doesn't start running,
again, that 60 day rule that's within our Ordinance, and I'm
going to raise that as a point for another argument that this
Appeal is not timely, particularly it's not timely as to Mr.
DiPalma, and another interesting thing, which I'll say for Mrs.
Monahan and everybody else. I looked in the Ordinance, and
sometimes when you are arguing that something is permissible in
one zone, incidental or primary, somebody will come out and say,
no, it wasn't the intent of the writers of the Ordinance, because
they put it specifically some place else. Mrs. Bleibtrey is
correct. You don't have a fishing charter operation, principal
or primary, any place in the Town of Queensbury, and that seems
to be too bad, considering that we do have those facilities that
are available. I don't know what the intention was. I see that
Bed & Breakfasts are allowed in Rural Residential zones and Land
Conservation zones. Those are the two areas where they are
specifically permitted by site plan, Type II site plan review.
Both of those areas are areas, generally, that will have some
type of ambiance to it, other than a room and a breakfast. I
don't think that they are permitted, and out of curiosity, in
Waterfront Residential zones. I don't know why. I also, for the
record, will raise a question as to how it's considered this
Appeal to affect Mr. DiPalma, because they state it affects the
property of the applicant, but yet we're talking about the use of
the property of Mr. DiPalma. Maybe I've lost something there.
I'm not sure. We're also talking, for the record, I believe,
about the tax map number parcel of Mr. and Mrs. Bleibtrey's
property, which is different than ours. I am prepared to answer
questions that you might have as to the substance of our use or
the subject of our use, but I really think that you have to
address some procedural issues first. Is this Appeal timely? Is
this Appeal, or the determination of this Appeal, to be applied
retroactively to the permit and the activity of Mr. DiPalma, and
then, what is your determination, if you're going to entertain
the Appeal? Thank you.
MR. CARVIN-I just have a question. What is the name of the Bed &
Breakfast?
MICHAEL DIPALMA
MR. DIPALMA-The name of the
just a name I gave it.
Adirondack.
Lodge is Beaver
The name of the
Creek Lodge. It's
Guide Service is
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I notice on your sign you have a New York, is
that a Guide License Number?
MR. DIPALMA-A Guide License Number, yes.
- 55 -
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
Breakfasts?
Is there a licensing system for Bed &
MR. O'CONNOR-Not that I'm aware of.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but there is for hunting and fishing guide?
MR. MENTER-The Department of Health must have some guidelines.
MR. O'CONNOR-I don't think so, unless you're a certain size.
Even that's an issue here. I think maybe that's something that
the Town Board has to }ook at, too, is the Definitions, to give
it greater impact, but as to a limitation of Bed & Breakfast,
that you're only going to have facilities for so many people, we
don't have, I think we've got, perhaps if you push everybody
together, you've got room for six at one time.
MR. DIPALMA-That's really pushing it.
MR. O'CONNOR-Typically, you have two to four people~ and they
sleep like in a living room type area, and then there's Just one
bedroom that they use, along with the guest room.
MR. CARVIN-I think, at this point, I'd like to ask Mr. Dusek ~hat
the timeliness issue is. I think that that needs to be resolved.
MR. DUSEK-In this particular case, because of the request to come
in, and, you know, it 'wasn't' just tonight. I had a chance to go
back through and look at all the records and look at this matter
completely for you. First of all, I think that it's important
for the Board to recognize, which I'm sure you do, there is two
issues here. One is the procedural. One is the substantive, and
Mr. O'Connor has been going' back and forth between the two. So
some of the statements that you just heard apply to one and not
the other. As far as the procedural issue, which is what L was
asked to help you with, first of all, I think we have to
understand that anybody has a right to file an appeal and come
before this Board, if they feel that there's been a decision, and
it's UP to this Board to make that determination. So the Appeal
of Mrs. Bleibtrey is properly before you. The question you have
to ask yourself is, is she right to Appeal at this time? Does
she have something to appeal? And, you know, I started looking
at this Appeal, and I said, well, she would appeal from an action
of the Zoning Administrator, and she describes the nature of her
Appeal, which is that of the fishing guide service incidental to
the Bed & Breakfast, which is directly the comment that was
attributed to Jim Martin, but interestingly enough, she picks it
up off of a letter addressed to the Lake George Park Commission,
I believe it was. Right?
MS. CIPPERLY-Yes.
MR. DUSEK-Okay. So it doesn't fall in the typical case, where
she wrote Mr. Martin and said, can they do this ictivity, and he,
in turn, said, yes, but rather she picked it up indirectly, and I
said to myself, well, she could make an argument~ or an argument
could be made that, yes, she shouldn't properly be before this
Board, but because she hasn't gotten an answer directly from Mr.
Martin and, therefore, she should write to Mr. Martin, get an
answer, and send it back, a~d I said, that's, like, kind of a
waste of time, because then we're all 90ing to be back here
again, if that's true. So then I said, well, lets assume, for
the sake of argument, that we can treat Mr. Martin's response as
some sort of a response to her, even though it was indirectly.
Then the question became, on the other side of it, as Mr.
O'Connor's argui ng, ~.Jai t a minute. You al ready made a decision
on this, and Mr. Martin already made a decision, and this is not
timely. So I went back and looked at the record, and the one, I
think there's a very important paragraph in the January 25th
minutes, where Mr. O'Connor is speaking, and he says that, this
- 56 -
--...
--
is on Page 32, he says, "We, as part of our application, are not
asking this Board to condone the operation of a charter business
from the dock. We stipulate to that, and we understand that what
we are talking about is permission to allow people to stay over
at this premises and have breakfast, enjoy the premises",
whatever that means, "as people normally would enjoy the premises
as a Bed ;&IBreakfast", and then he goes on and starts talking
about some other things, the parking and other items, but as I
look through the entire record of this matter, including, most
importantly, the notices of hearing and the files, what came
apparent to me is, what was really before the Boards in the past
was, can they add a single family addition on, which the Board
said, yes, you can, and then the second issue that was before the
Board was, can we have a Bed & Breakfast. Well, the Board said,
yes, you can, but when those two issues were before the Board, I
don't find anywhere where the Board actually said, well, now,
lets get in and talk about what you can do, as part of a Bed &
Breakfast. I think what happened is everybody just assumed what
you could do. Mr. Martin, Mr. O'Connor had his ideas. His
client had his ideas. The Board, presumably maybe, didn't even
think about~ or had their own ideas of what was allowed, and
now all of a sudden Mrs. Bleibtrey has come up and said, wait a
minute. I don't think they should allow a fishing guide service
as part of this program, and, so, I don't see where this issue
has come up before. I think that the Board could say, well,
okay, she can appeal this. It isn't something that's been
previously decided at all. So, therefore, there's no time frame.
I think that you could say that, well, she hasn't even applied to
Mr. Martin, so we'll toss the thing right out. I think you could
do that, but I think that she could then come right back in, and
you'd be faced wi th the issue. So I guess !D..'i.. ,"ecommendation to
the Board is, I'm at a loss to see where this appeal is not
timely, in the direction as suggested by Mr. O'Connor, and I
might say to you, too, the case that I referred to earlier was
not a remote case. I researched this issue relatively carefully,
and I came to the conclusion that that appeal time doesn't just
run from the permit. It runs, as I suggested to you, from the
time of determination, or, you know, there's certainly a, what we
would call a leaches argument or equitable argument that could be
made by Mr. O'Connor's client that she wasn't timely in some
fashion, but I don't see where this issue has even come up or was
subject to the approvals. I think the approvals focused in on
Bed & Breakfasts, and they focused in on the other issue, which
was the Single Family home. Certainly, I think, over time, if
she'd brought up these questions constantly, but I don't see that
there's been a focus anywhere in the record. So, I offer that to
the Board for your consideration on this. This one is a little
bit, I think, clearer to me, anyway, then the other one you had,
but I think that L would recommend that you go to the merits and
decide it, and Mr. O'Connor, I think, has made a presentation as
to the merits, and so has Jim and Mrs. Bleibtrey.
MR. O'CONNOR-Paul, can I go back to that, though. I think you're
taking it out of context, when I said, then, that we consented,
and I still do consent. We cannot operate what I think everybody
thinks a charter business is, a stand alone charter business,
from this property. I acknowledge that. If you go back to 8/31
and you look at the question that George Stark asked Mr. DiPalma,
"Mr. DiPalma, what are your hours of operation? Do you take
people out real early in the morning fishing or real late at
night fishing?" Mr. DiPalma, "Never real late at night. As
early as seven o'clock, maybe quarter of seven in the morning.
I've gotten up myself at five. I like to fish myself." Mr.
Bleibtrey, "Every time he brings charters through there, it wakes
us uP." I don't think there's any question that, at that time,
we were talking about bringing guests to the dock and taking them
out fishing. We were simply, and I still repeat, we acknowledge
that we can't do it unless it's incidental to their staying as a
guest at the Bed & Breakfast. That was the intent of that
paragraph. That was the intent of that comment then. That's why
- 57 -
---
I asked Tim Brewer, when he was here earlier, if he had any
problem with ID.t.. representation that we fully discussed at that
Planning Board meeting that we would be taking our guests out
from that dock for fishing purposes, and he said, no, and I think
even if the initial Zoning Board of Appeals, we got into the same
discussion. We've been discussing this before every Board we've
been to.
MR. MARTIN-I clearly recall, in those meetings, it was discussed
that certain members, certain clientele, did stay overnight, had
breakfast the next morning, and went out fishing after that.
MR. O'CONNOR-There's a play on words, even from ID.t.. part, and
maybe I'm not, it's a play on words to a part, but you have to
read all 32 pages of that to get the context of what the intent
was.
MR. DUSEK-I just might add. I'm not trying to play on words,
Mike. I did review the entire records.
MR. O'CONNOR-I think if you read it through, you're going to see
that we talk about taking clients out.
MR. DUSEK-There's no question that there's always been some
conversation here going on about it, but my point to the Board is
if you look at what was approved and what was the subject of the
Planning Board, the subject that was before the Planning Board
is, do we approve a Bed & Breakfast, do we have site plan
jurisdiction, and I guess what I'm also, the other thought I had,
I'll throw out to the Board is, I say to myself that the Planning
Board doesn't even have jurisdiction to interpret anyway, whether
that's allowed or isn't allowed under the Bed & Breakfast. It's
Mr. Martin and it's this Board. So it's logical to assume that
they're, of course not, addressing that issue and certainly,
though, from what 1 understand the history here, certainly
there's been a lot of discussion over it, but I don;t believe
anybody's ever brought it to a head until Notice of Appeal \.Jas
filed.
MR. CARVIN-I just have a question. The LC-42, Section 179-13,
says the following uses are permitted in the Land Conservation
zone, Single Family, hunting, fishing camp less than 500 square
feet. The accessory use is private garage, storage shed, private
green house or outdoor athletic court, home occupation, private
boathouse and dock. Now, how about these other uses? Are these
site plan uses also considered accessory uses, the saw mill, the
recreation center and lodge and so forth? Would they be
accessory uses under the LC-42?
MR. MARTIN-They're typically the principal use. However, I think
the Bed & Breakfast is a rather unique animal, in that the
proprietor does stay in the house. Typically, they are the
primary use.
MR. CARVIN-That would be the primary use?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, and how about the Type II, in other words, game
preserve?
MR. MARTIN-That's true, as well.
MR. CARVIN-Hunting and fishing cabin over 500 square feet, a
sportsman club and firing range. See, I guess my question is,
suppose somebody wanted to go skeet shooting at this Bed &
Breakfast? I mean; can he go down there and fire skeets off the
b~ck and turn that into a firing range, if that is an accessory
use?
- 58 -
"--
---/
MR. MARTIN-I would say, again, if it's incidental to the use, if
it's a facility made available to the guests.
MR. CARVIN-That's what I need to know, whether these are also
accessory uses, or are they primary uses? In other words, if he
had a firing range there, could he have a Bed & Breakfast?
MR. MARTIN-If that were proposed to be the case, that would be
discussed in the context of the review of the Bed & Breakfast.
MR. CARVIN-Well, that's what I'm trying to come to, because I
think that this, if our accessory uses, I mean, to allow Mr.
O'Connor's, he's got the Bed & Breakfasts, well certainly walking
and viewing are probably accessory uses. I mean, there's nothing
in here, you know, if they wanted to go down to the storage shed
or walk through the private green house, I mean, that would be an
accessory use to a Bed & Breakfast. If somebody showed up with a
boat at this Bed & Breakfast, and said, I want to use my boat to
go out fishing, is that any different than somebody showing up
with a pair of shoes saying, I want ~ Reeboks when I go walking
at this Bed & Breakfast. I mean, these may be absurd situations,
but if we open the door on accessory uses, we're going to kick it
wide open.
MR. O'CONNOR-Let me make one other distinction. You don't have
Jurisdiction of the boat in the water, and that's a unique thing
to this particular property that may be maybe a little different
than some of the other aspects of what you're talking about.
MR. CARVIN-Well, again, I want to come back to this issue. I
mean, I'm looking at sportsman's club and firing ·range. Now, if
I was Mrs. Bleibtrey, and all of a sudden somebody was skeet
shooting off the firing range, off the dock, I'm not quite sure
that, under any stretch of the imagination, would I be
considering that part of a Bed & Breakfast, although, I guess,
now, that falls back to, is what Mr. DiPalma is doing?
MR. MARTIN-That would be permitted if that had obtained site plan
review and approval. Clearly, in the context of the discussion
of this site plan, the fishing was discussed and known. It was a
known entity with this particular Bed & Breakfast. Now had skeet
shooting been a proposal, that would have had to have been part
of that application and if it were not, it would not be permitted
until they did get site plan approval for that.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but I think Mrs. Bleibtrey's thing is, and again
I want to kind of address her letter, that what Mr. DiPalma was
doing pre-dated, and I think this other lady commented that a lot
of what Mr. DiPalma was doing pre-dated his establishment of the
Bed & Breakfast.
MR. MARTIN-And my recollection of the fix to that problem was the
charter business now operates away from this dock. He is to go
elsewhere. He consented to that.
MR. CARVIN-Well, that's the charter service. What about his
hunting and fishing guide? I think that we had addressed that.
MR. DIPALMA-I'm not a hunting guide.
MR. MARTIN-There's no hunting. That's the same charter fishing
guide service, if he's going to take somebody exclusively for
that use, then he goes off someone else's dock. He goes to
another dock and picks that client up. It's only those people
who stay overnight, that if they want to go down and fish the
next day, then that's part of the Bed & Breakfast.
MR. DUSEK-But that's also, Mr. Chairman, the new issue. I mean,
that did not exist before the Bed & Breakfast. I think you've
made a statement that there was an ongoing activity. tlZ
- 59 -
understanding is, as hopefully Mr. O'Connor will agree with this,
that the charter business and the idea of the boat picking up
other people around the lake and stuff, I don't think anybody's
contesting that. I think that was going on, I guess, and that's
that, as long as it's not taking people down, right there, and
doing business at that dock.
MR. CARVIN-Well, as I remember it, we've gone through this
conversation many times, and I know at one point Mr. DiPalma
vehemently denied having a Bed & Breakfast there, and in the
course of a couple of days, all of a sudden we had a Bed &
Breakfast there. I mean, I think if you go through the minutes,
you will find that we have argued this ve)-y situation going back
10,000 years it seems, and as I said, I still am unclear whether
this is, if we just take the hunting, I hate to use the term
"hunting", but anyway, the fishing lodge. I think at one point
he had argued that because he had a lodge, that it was actually a
lodge, and again, I'm going on memory from minutes that are
spread over the last couple of years.
MR. O'CONNOR-Mr. Carvin, the whole process here iito try to
bring this into conformance. I think since I've been involved
with this particula)" application, we started with an application
for a building permit for a 14 foot by 16 foot addition, and then
it got into an issue as to whether or not we could use that for
what had been going on on the p)"operty, and we stipulated befo)"e
this Board, some of whom are, members, are new to, that we
wouldn't use the 14 foot by 16 foot addition for the Bed &
Breakfast, and we would continue operating the Bed & Breakfast
and servicing some of the guests by allowing them to fish, or
take them from our dock for fishing purposes, but we wouldn't use
the room to accommodate that, to increase it, to do anything of
that nature. We then went to Mr. Martin and asked him for the
building permit, based upon the variance, and we have the
variance. The variance is required because this is a
nonconforming lot in a Critically Environmentally Sensitive area,
and the set backs are very large. When we went for the building
permit, he said, wait a minute. If you have any expansion in
that type area, you still need site plan review. You might just
as well get site plan review approval for the addition, for the
total use of Bed & Breakfast, because that's an issue, and that's
what we're here for.
MR. MARTIN-And that's why it was dealt with in that manner,
because in the context of the va)- iance hes)" i ngs, it was said that
people are staying overnight, so the thing was fully aired before
the Planning Board, a public hearing was held, and all these
things were discussed.
MR. MENTER-And if I could just say this. That's ~ recollection,
too, that this was at length discussed, and even the issue of the
prior business being the charter business was not going to be
operated there for members of the public and I know it went
around and round, and that became the understanding of what the
Bed & Breakfast would encompass. That was considered what the
accessory use is. The problem is, at this point, Fred, and I
would ask Jim, what is it, Jim, that prevents Mr. DiPalma from
providing and allowing skeet shooting on that property now?
MR. MARTIN-I think then you're falling into a classification of a
hunt or sportsman's club, or something like that. It's a
separately defined use, separately listed in site plari review.
Something like that would be a violation if it was occurring
without site plan review and approval from the Planning Board.
MR. CARVIN-And my specific question is does he have site plan
review approval for a hunting and fishing cabin over 500 square
feet, which is in the same Type II category as a "firing range"?
MR. MARTIN-He has approval for a Bed & Breakfast, where the
- 60 -
~
------
guests at that Bed & Breakfast eat breakfast there and they go
out fishing. That was fully discussed, fully acknowledged at the
Planning Board meetings.
MR. DUSEK-Of course, the only problem you have is there's no
reference at all to that in the decision.
MR. CARVIN-That's correct.
MR. MARTIN-I didn't say it was in the decision.
fully discussed and acknowledged.
MR. CARVIN-I'm just saying that he has site plan review and
approval for a Bed & Breakfast, and, really, only the accessory
uses of a Bed & Breakfast would be the private garage, the
storage shed, the private green house, the swimming pool or
outdoor athletic activities, home occupation and private
boathouse and dock.
I said it was
MR. O'CONNOR-Is fishing an outdoor athletic activity?
MR. CARVIN-It says athletic court, like a tennis court or a
badmitten court, I think is what they're referring to.
MR. MARTIN-I don't think it's fair, Fred, to say that only
accessory uses, as listed, that's all that can be accessory.
There's other incidental things that occur that, you take it to
the extreme of the skeet shooting. What happens if they have
wal ki ng paths? Should wal ki ng paths )-eceive si te plan rev iew
then? Should walking paths have received site plan review, of a
Bed & Breakfast, if they're going to have walking paths? I mean,
that's absurd the other way.
MR. MENTER-Well, I guess the question would be, where are the
teeth? I mean, what are your criteria for allowing or
disallowing any future uses that he may decide he wants to try?
Is that what you're getting at?
MR. CARVIN-That's, essentially, what I'm getting at, because he
could come up and maybe put horses on there, because, you know,
right under, you've got dog kennel and riding stable.
MR. MENTER-All this, to me, is separate from the issue that we're
discussing, but it's tied to it.
MR. CARVIN-No. I thi nk that is the issue. What is an accesso)-y
use to a Bed & Breakfast?
MR. o 'CONNOR-I think what we are doing, we submitted to the
Board, they gave us their approval.
MR. MARESCO-Mike, has anybody, you did address this question
early, but I'll just throw it out again. Nobody is coming there
specifically using that right-of-way to go in the charter
business, right?
MR. O'CONNOR-No.
MR. MARESCO-That's absolutely out of the question.
MR. O'CONNOR-We understand that that's not permitted.
MR. MARESCO-Right. So the only people that are using that right-
of-way, coming to your property, are the people that are staying
at the Bed & Breakfast?
MR. O'CONNOR-Yes, or guests or friends.
MR. MARESCO-Right.
- 61 -
---
MR. O'CONNOR-For hire, is the only people that stay at the Bed &
Breakfast.
MR. MARESCO-Okay.
MR. O'CONNOR-And if you go to the ridiculous, if we had people
stay at the Bed & Breakfast, Mr. DiPalma got in his car and drove
to the next marina, got his boat, drove down the tributary or
creek to the dock and said, come on, folks, get on my boat, and
then drove back out with his boat, there would be absolutely no
activity that you would be talking about. There'd be no
di fferent impact. There' 8 nathi n9 that says that somebod>'
staying at that Bed & Breakfast can't call a competing boat
person and say, come and get me. I don't think they'd be real
welcome the next time~ but, and I really take it to the point
that you've got to look at impacts. There are other (lost word)
common law remedies, perhaps, that the neighbors have. They
think that we are over-using their right-of-way, or putting a
burden on there that was not our right. They have remedies
beyond taking up two to three hours of this Board and every other
Board in the Town five or six times a year.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I'll continue the public
that's where we are, for anyone wishing
opposition to the Appeal. Any further
Hearing none, Mrs. Bleibtrey, I know you had
hearing.
to speak
opposition?
a comment.
I think
ou tin
Oka>' .
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Mr. O'Connor mentioned the impact and what you
have to consider is the potential impact. You don't know what's
going to happen there if you give approval, and, by the way, the
fishing charter was discussed at the site plan review, but it was
never approved. There was discussion of it, but they didn't get
approval for it. They only got approval fo)" the Bed & Breakfast,
and as Mr. Dusek quotèd 'from the minutes, on Page 32, Mr.
O'Connor stipulates to the fact that they were not addressing a
fishing charter business, only the Bed & Breakfast. So lets not
confuse the issue here, and also lets remember this is only a 10
foot right-of-way that extends to 20 feet at the water. The only
thing I object to is the commercial use of that. I don't object
to Mr. DiPalma peraonally using that, but I object to him running
a business through there. I mean, that's against the Zoning
Ordinances, and I hope that you will enforce the Zoning
Ordinances. That's my whole point in being here. The objections
that he raised about my application I addressed at the last
meeti ng in Octobe)". I'm the appl icant because I'm the proper ty
owner. I pay the taxes on that right-of-way. That was one
objection. My Appeal was based on the July 11th letter that was
written by Mr. Martin, and my Appeal was filed July 31st. So the
60 days, that's not an issue either. My house does face the
water. We brought that up as a concern. He couldn't understand
why it was a concern because my house faces the road. It faces
the water, ànd he sµggested something about us not liking the
Town rules. We QQ like the Town rules. We want them enforced,
and that's all I'm trying to do here. Like I said before, I
don't think anybody here would want a fishing charter business
running through their own property next to their home, and they
did not get approval for that at the site plan review, if you
look at the minutes of the January 25th meeting.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I just have one question for clarification.
You say the commercial business, can you expand upon that? What
is your interpretation of commercial business there? You said
you had no problem with Mr. DiPalma using his property.
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Mr. DiPalma has
property. His clientele do not.
a right-of-way through
Thèt's a residential area.
our
MR. MARESCO-The only traffic, and I don~t mean to cut you short.
The only,traffic you should see coming through your right-of-way
is people that are staying at his Bed & Breakfast, his guests or
- 62 -
'----
-.,../
his family members. That is the only traffic that you should see
coming through there. Do you see any other traffic? Do you see
people coming there, using his facilities specifically to go
fishing?
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Well, I really can't answer that, other than, I
know there's traffic through there all the time, and he takes the
people out.
MR. MARESCO-The only traffic should be people that are staying at
the Bed & Breakfast.
MRS. BLEIBTREY-And in the past he's had his charter fishing boat
there, picking people up. I mean, this has been going on. I
have a copy of a violation from the Town from 1987 telling him to
stop that business. So the traffic that's through there, I don't
know who they are. They're strangers running through my yard.
MR. MARESCO-How well can you see this?
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Well, in the summer time, it varies.
but the first indications that Mr. O'Connor mentioned
don't know if that's accurate, but I would be concerned
potential impact in the future. You don't know what's
happen.
It varies,
i n 1993, I
about the
going to
MR. MARESCO-Well, there
future. His facility
people, and that's it.
shouldn't be much of an impact in the
can only maintain a certain amount of
Is that correct, Mr. DiPalma?
MR. DIPALMA-Correct.
MRS. BLEIBTREY-(Lost word) people can stay there, but he can have
as many people as he wants going through the right-of-way and
down to the dock and getting on boats. He rents the dock for
rent.
MR. MARESCO-No, he can't.
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Well, what he £än do and what he can't do, I mean,
it's, I don't want to get into anything like that, but the
impact, the potential impact is my concern, one of my concerns.
MR. DUSEK-Perhaps I could be of assistance here. I think that
the fishing charter business, itself, directly coming from
wherever they come from, and getting on that boat, I don't
believe is an issue here.
MR. O'CONNOR-I said that once, and it keeps being held against
me. I don't know if I dare say it twice. I agree with you Mr.
Duse k .
MR. DUSEK-All right. We're in agreement on something. Now, I
think, though, what iê. an issue here is what is the scope, and
what is the, I mean, assuming that you don't have a procedural
problem, and I don't know that that's completely resolved yet,
but if you get by the procedural problem, and you feel that you
can listen to this Appeal, then I think the decision for the
Board is, is what is the proper scope of a Bed & Breakfast? Does
it include the type of activities suggested by Mr. O'Connor?
MR. MARESCO-Well, now we're going to Fred's view, here. I mean,
it just goes on and on and on.
MR. DUSEK-Well, maybe you have to look at some different angles
of it. For instance, I think you have to look at the angle of,
what is a Bed & Breakfast, and does the Bed & Breakfast
automatically have some sort of limitations of its own, all
right, in terms of these other types of activities. Do you know
what I'm saying? Look beyond just the words, but maybe look at
- 63 -
'--
---'
the whole concept here, and look at other Bed & Breakfasts,
is allowed elsewhere. What do you think the intent of
Ordinance is in terms of, how much can somebody do as part
Bed & Breakfast, and I think that's really the issue here.
what
the
of a
MS. CIPPERLY~Another question 1 have for you, Paul, is, if
there's an objection to the use of that right-of-way, that's
something that would normally go to a civil ¢ourt?
MR. DUSEK-Well, that's not an issue here. That's my point is.
MS. CIPPERLY-It seems to be that Mrs. Bleibtrey doesn't like the
use of her right-of-way for commercial purposes.
MR. DUSEK-Yes, but that's not the issue before the Board.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, the right-of-way has no bearing on this.
MS. CIPPERLY-Well, you have other recourse, I guess.
MRS. BLEIBTREY-Yes, but like Mr. Dusek
here. The issue is that the Zoning
land use which is 'not allowed in the
the fishing charter.
said, that's not the issue
Administrator approved the
Zoning Ordinance, which is
MR. DUSEK-Well, that's Mrs. Bleibtrey's position.
the Board to determine whether or not they agree.
That's up to
MR. MARTIN-Again, though, we're using terms here. The fishing
charter business has been clearly acknowledged not to be
occurring from this site. It's been acknowledged by the
applicant that he's not doing that, and it is a restriction of
the Planning,Soard approval as 1recall it, that that cannot
occur. That commitment was made in the minutes of that meeting,
that the charter business, in order to conduct itself, has to
conduct itself elsewhere on the lake. So we're talking, strictly
again, about the guests of the Bed & Breakfast, are they allowed
to go down to the dock and go fishing, out on the boat and go
fishing, across that dock. That is the issue.
MR. DUSEK-Again~ I guess you have to, I've heard a lot of good
comments here l'i ke, one of the thi ngs you have to ask yourse 1 f
is, what if Mr. DiPalma wasn't doing this? What if these people
were staying at the Bed & Breakfast and another guide service
came up and picked them up off the dock. Is that illegal? Is
that not allowed as part of the Bed & Breakfast? I think you
have to ask yourselves all these questions. I'm not trying to
steer you one way or another on that, because if you get to that
point, where you're trying to decide that issue, that is clearly
a good example of something that, it's your interpretation, as a
Board, as to what are the limitations, as to what is allowed
here, based on your reading of the Ordinance, understanding of
the Ordinance, etc.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Mrs. Bleibtrey, are you all fin~shed? Okay.
Good. Mr. O'Connor?
MR. O'CONNOR-I think I've made my point. Just, maybe for the
purposes of the record, Mr. DiPalma, we didn't bring people here
tonight, but I t'hink your record has got a number of letters from
people in the immediate area. I think four people use the dock
immediately adjacent to this dock, who said they have no problem
with this operation (lost word), their use and their enjoyment.
The other thing is the question of the 1987 violation, which I
didn't raise. That was withdrawn by the Town when Mr. DiPalma, I
believe, gave proof that he was in New Jersey at the time of the
alleged violation. There was no conclusion of that violation
noted. It was simply a violation notice, and that was before the
1988 Zoning Amendment which allowed Bed & Breakfast operation,
and I don't know if that has any relevancy anyway, but I'll
- 64 -
'--
--'
mention it for the purposes of your record. The other thing is,
you indicated that he could not be renting or have other boats at
that dock. He has a Class B Marina permit from the Lake George
Park Commission. That entitles him to have two boats there, one
which may be owned by a non landowner, and that's not an issue.
I don't think it is at issue, but I just wanted to make the
record clear so that somebody doesn't come back later and say,
you promised to have one boat there. I don't know what the
intention is, but he has another boat there from time to time,
and I don't know what the particular intention is in the future,
but that's something that the Lake George Park Commission takes
jurisdiction of. I don't know that this Board does at all. I'm
just trying to make my records clear. I think you have to
interpret what was presented to the Board with our site plan
review for this particular Bed & Breakfast, given the fact that
it's on a piece of property that has access to this lake by use
of a dock. I don't know if you're going to run into a lot of
those. I mean, if I'm correct, correct me if I'm wrong, it's not
a familiar use in WR-1A, Waterfront Residential, or WR-3A. It's
only permitted in Rural Residential and Land Conservation zones.
So you've got a unique question of facts.
MR. OUSEK-I feel just compelled to say one thing, since this is
part of our record, as Mr. O'Connor mentioned. I don't know that
I have, since I'm here, since I have some recollection of, and my
recollection is not very good of a, and this is involving that
1987 or '88 incident, but I almost recall being involved in some
aspect of that case that you're referring to, and I don't recall
what exactly the result was at this point, but I think I recall
enough of it to be able to say that my recollection was it
focused on the charter aspects, and I don't think it's germane to
the issue before the Board, of what is allowed under a Bed &
Breakfast. So I guess I'm in partially agreement with Mr.
O'Connor. I just don't know if I necessarily agree with his full
characterization of the case.
MR. O'CONNOR-I agree, it has nothing to do with the decision that
you've been asked to make tonight, and I just want to make that,
try and make sure that it doesn't have something to paint your
thinking.
MS. CIPPERLY-Could you, before you leave, clarify numbers for us?
Mrs. Bleibtrey mentioned, when you were talking, I think you said
there were 13 people who did not go out on the boat at all.
MR. O'CONNOR-In 1993, there were 13 occasions where we had people
stay, stays were one to three days, I believe. There was a
statement, I think, a written statement, part of your record, as
to what that is.
MS. CIPPERLY-But those people would have maybe used the boats and
maybe not.
MR. O'CONNOR-I found out afterwards, I found out, in fact, that a
couple of parties went to streams. I found out afterwards that
two of those parties, one was a relative, one was a friend, and
shouldn't have been considered pa)-t of the Bed & Breakfast. They
should just be considered guests. So you've got 11 occasions
where you've got Bed & Breakfast guests, probably 9 occasions
where you would be charged with them utilizing the dock, and in
1994, an equivalent use, maybe 10, 15 occasions, in that range.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Are you finished, Mr. O'Connor?
MR. O'CONNOR-I hope so.
MR. MENTER-First we should discuss if we're going to entertain
this.
MR. CARVIN-Well, there's two letters that we want to read into
- 65 -
'--.-
the record. It will be, I think, will we hear this or not?
MR. MENTER-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I think Mr. Dusek has kind of indicated that we
would be well within our re~lm of hearing it, and I don't want to
put words in your mouth, but would that be your suggestion?
MR. DUSEK-I think that's a fair, I mean, I'm trying to give you
some guidance on the procedural aspect. I was very cautious not
to usurp YOU1" role, but, I mean, I thi nk in this case, this is a
question of researching the law and reporting back to YOU on this
that I feel that, in ~ opinion, I think that as far as the
arguments made by Mr. O'Connor, I think that, I would say that
you can hear it. You don't have to say, you're prevented because
the time has elapsed. However, the only other thing I want to be
very careful about is that, technically, I think you could make
an argument that wé won't hear it because it's not appealing a
direct decision of Mr. Martin in response to Mrs. Bleibtrey's
request, but if you did that, then I think what would happen is
Mrs. Bleibtrey could just turn around and make the request, and
then it would be back before you anyway. We'd all be back here
again, and I don't think Mr. O'Connor would want that. Maybe he
would, but I don't think he 'would.
MR. O'CONNOR-But then you, procedurally, have to make the
decision that, even if you entertain the appeal, is it
retroactively applied to the property and use as was approved by
the Planning Board for Michael DiPalma? You may be saying you
(lost word). I didn't get involved in the last argument that you
folks here, but there are other precedents that have already been
set out there.
MR. MENTER-But as you said, Mike, we're not legislating.
answering an appeal on this one issue.
We're
MR. O'CONNOR-I'll give you the Hogan Appeal. I did the Hogan
Appeal on Glen Lake. We went through the whole appeal process.
I forget what we got for a variance. We got variances because we
tore down a building on a nonconforming lot, built on the same
footprint, didn't have frontage on a Town road. I forget what
else, and we did something else. We got all said and done.' The
building was up and underway, and somebody comes back and says,
did you really check out the square footage of something or
other, and I think then we got into an issue, you deter~ined that
you can only expand a seasonal property by 50 percent, but there
was a decision made. I started an Article 78, or we had a
conference about me doing an Article 78, and we agreed by this
Board's determination that it would not be applied retroactively,
and you have to worry, from a procedural point of view, when
decisions are final. Why are they going to come and get building
permits if they don't know if they're final?
MR. DUSEK-In this case, though, I don't see the retroactivity, I
guess. I just don~t see that. I think that that's not an issue
here.
MR. O'CONNOR-I argue that it is, and the same thing you argue
about the kitchen issue or not the kitchen issue. That was a
determination that was made in time.
MR. DUSEK-That's my opinion I've rendered before. There has been
no determination.' 'That's like saying the guy who violates the
Zoning Ordinance~ and then you finally catch up with him, because
he did it for a year, we're not going to make it retroactive. I
can't agree with that.
MR. O'CONNOR-People act upon decisions that are made. The
appeal time runs, you've got a statute of limitations.
- 66 -
'--
-/
MR. DUSEK-But that's the problem. There is no decision in this
case.
MR. O'CONNOR-There is the decision made at the site plan
application.
MR. DUSEK-Nobody has ever ruled that fishing, that a Bed &
Breakfast, I could not find this anywhere in the records, that a
Bed & Breakfast allows you to have people go onto a charter boat.
I don't see that anywhere.
MR. O'CONNOR-Then what you're
write every decision for the
here. Tim Brewer was here.
and remember the discussion.
saying is that we should have you
Board. Mr. Martin was here. I was
The three of us clearly understand
MR. DUSEK-There's nothing in any decision, Mike, that says that.
MR. O'CONNOR-If that's the
a problem with the Town.
field. You've got to have
Boards.
position the Town takes, I really have
We all try and play on a level playing
some faith in staff, some faith in the
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Well, again, I think if Paul is comfortable,
from a procedural aspect, that this Board can move ahead, that
the timeliness of this particular appeal is relevant, and I think
that the issues that are being raised by this appeal are very,
very relevant. It would be ~ opinion that we definitely move
ahead on this, that we actually render a decision with regard to
this appeal. I think it's well within the germane of this Board
to look at that. That's why we're here, to hopefully add clarity
or interpretation to what the Ordinances are. So, I mean, that's
my opinion. So I think that we, I'm very comfortable, if Paul's
very comfortable, moving ahead, from a procedural standpoint.
MR. MENTER-I agree, since, in all likelihood, we're going to be
answering the question anyway.
MR. MARESCO-Sure.
MR. THOMAS-That's right.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
letters in.
All right, which leads me to, lets read the
MR. THOMAS-A letter received February 22, 1995, to the members of
the Zoning Board of Appeals, "I live directly across Route 9L
from the Bleibtrey's and I also own a piece of property adjacent
to Mr. DiPalma. I feel that two businesses operated by Mr.
DiPalma on his small piece of property in a residential
neighborhood will severely depreciate the value of my property
for future use. There isn't enough parking area for those of us
who have use of a shared dock through our deeds. Mr. DiPalma's
fishing business will only make this situation worse. This area
is zoned residential and I'd like to see it kept that way. The
town zoning laws do not allow a fishing business here, so I think
Mr. DiPalma should be made to follow the zoning codes. Grace E.
Hanneford" A letter received February 22, 1995, "Dear Members of
the Zoning Board of Appeals: I object to Mr. Di Palma running
two businesses from a lot of less than one hundred feet in a
residential area. There is no way to Justify using a twenty foot
right of way to operate a fishing business so close to neighbors.
If one person is allowed to do this, then it opens the door for
anyone to have this type of business, even if they have only 10
or twenty feet of water frontage. I am sure that none of you
would like this situation of Mr. DiPalma running a fishing
business out of your front yard if it were your home. Sincerely,
Elsa Kraft" A letter dated 10/19/94, to the Town of Queensbury
Zoning Board of Appeals, "Dear Members: This letter is regarding
Michael DiPalma's use of his property as a business. The Zo,ning
- 67 -
't,.-/
Administrator and the Planning Board well stated in January 1994
that Mr. DiPalma's business was grandfathered and on that basis
gave him a Þermit to operate a Bed & Breakfast. This never
should have happened because his business was not in existence
before the 1982 zoning laws. I have lived here since 1930, and
Mr. DiPalma's residence has always been used as just a home. The
Town wrongly gave him a Bed & Breakfast permit, and now he wants
to have permission to run his fishing charter business here, too.
The Zoning laws do not allow a fishing charter business. They
never have allowed it in this zone. Mr. DiPalma's business was
illegal when it started. It is not grandfathered. This is a
residential zone. I not only do not want our neighborhood to
have a Bed & Breakfast, which are nothing more than rooming
houses, but I do not want to have a fishing charter here either.
This clearly violates our zoning laws. I cannot understand why
Mr. DiPalma should be allowed to have tv-JO businesses in our
residential zone. Why should he have special privileges? If you
allow hi~ to have these businesses, you are discriminating
against the rest of us." And it's signed Grace Elizabeth
Hannaford. A letter received 10/19/94, to the Town of Queensbury
Zoning Board 6f Aþpeals, "Dear Members of the Board: My
objection to Michael DiPalma having a fishing business is that
soon this area won't be rèsidential and resort, but all
commercial. If one person is allowed to do this, then others
will come along and want these businesses also. People with
beautiful homes don't want to be sandwiched in between
businesses. With the exorbitant taxes we have to pay, we should
not have to have a fishing business near us, particularly as
close as this is, and on just 20 feet of right-of-way. I am sure
that none of you would like this, if the situation were yours."
Signed Elsa Kraft. A letter received 9/27/94, addressed to James
Martin, Planning Department "Dear Mr. Martin: Ted Turner,
Chairman of the Zoning Board of Appeals, has granted my request,
on behalf of Michael DiPalma, to adjourn the Queensbury ZBA
consideration of the Margaret Bleibtreyappeal. I made the
request on the basis of a short notice and prior commitment that
I could not modify. This is a complicated matter with a
complicated history, and although I believe the appeal is without
merit and perhaps untimely, Mr. DiPalma would be greatly
prejudiced if this Board was not able to have my input on his
behalf. It is not a matter I can assign to someone else in the
firm, as I have been personally involved from Day One.
Rèspectfully per the direction of Chairman Turner, you are
requested to contact Mrs. Bleibtrey and tell her the matter has
been tabled until the next regularly scheduled meeting of the
ZBA. Please advise me of that date and time as well. Yours
respectfully, Michael J. O'Connor" That's it.
MR. O'CONNOR-Mr. Chairman, the only issue I think was raised that
hasn't been addressed was parking. A new issue. That was
addressed by the Planning Board in the site plan, as to how many
guests would at the property, and there was adequate parking.
MR. MARTIN-That clearly was.
MR. DUSEK-Well that would have been, as part of the Bed &
Breakfast.
MR. CARVIN-Under the site plan, sure. Okay. Well, once again,
I'm not going to put this to a vote, because of the lateness of
the hour and the shortness of the Board. I'm going to table it,
because I want the rest of the Board members to see the
information. I guess the only question I have is that I think
I'm going to close the public heating, and that'll give us 60
days to render the decision. So I hereby declare the public
hearing closed.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. CARVIN-And I will move, unless you gentlemen have any
- 68 -
'-"
-...../
questions. Any questions of anybody at this point? Okay.
MR. O'CONNOR-Mr. Chairman, I would like to object, on the record,
to the tabling. I know of no reason to table it. You're going
to present this, now, to three other Board members.
MR. CARVIN-I think there's an awful lot of issues here, Mike,
that I'm not going to entertain a motion at a quarter past
twelve, or twenty past twelve, whereby we may be setting some
stringent guidelines for Bed & Breakfasts. I think there's some
interpretational and gray areas that have to be addressed. I
think that there's a lot of research that the Board should look
into. I know that that's the posi tion of this Board member. I
am not comfortable voting this.
MR. O'CONNOR-For purposes of the record I will state that this
was the same discussion that was had in October. It really
hasn't been amplified at all, except Mr. Dusek amplified ä
position on the question of timeliness. We argued the merits and
substance of this issue in October, when this was first before
this Board. It was adjourned for the purposes of having (lost
word). We assume that the Board has done that, reviewed the
minutes of the other meetings of the other Boards that concerned
this subject, and for Mr. Dusek, and for the record, I object to
it. I think it's prejudicial to this applicant not to have it
voted upon and for the opponent not to have it voted upon.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So noted. I would make a motion to table this
application, for a maximum of 60 days. I don't think that any of
this is really relevant.
MS. CIPPERLY-No.
for a vote.
It really just needs to be put on the agenda
MR. CARVIN-Yes.
MS. C~PPERLY-If you want to do it in March.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. At this point, we've got some of these others.
r mean, I'd like to try to get this one resolved as soon as
possible, obviously.
MR. DUSEK-This might be a good one
you do the other one that you have.
what, March 7th or something?
to consider at the same time
I think you postponed it to,
MR. CARVIN-March 7th.
MS. CIPPERLY-Except for, you put the house.
MR. CARVIN-I was Just going to say, if they come back.
MR. MARTIN-I don't know how the agenda looks yet.
MR. CARVIN-So we probably will have two meetings in March, three,
with the Special.
MR. MARTIN-You may have a meeting on the 7th, and then just one
more after that. I don't know what the agenda looks like yet.
MR. CARVIN-The 15th and 22nd would be the normal, right?
MS. CIPPERLY-The 15th and the 22nd would be the normal.
MR. MARTIN-The two normal meetings, yes, the third and fourth
Wednesdays.
MR. CARVIN-Well, we'll table it until either the 15th or the
22nd, depending on the agenda.
- 69 -
--
--
MR. O'CONNOR-I am not available the 15th.
MR. CARVIN-Is the 22nd preferable?
MR. O'CONNOR-The 22nd I'm here.
applicant. That's why I'm objecting
five hours tonight, plus a couple of
what you're putting people through.
At great expense to the
to the tabling. I've spent
hours more. It's ridiculous
MR. CARVIN-We'll table it until March 22nd, I think.
MS. CIPPERLY-We'll put you first on the agenda.
MOTION TO TABLE NOTICE OF APPEAL NO. 4-94. MARGARET BLEIBTREY,
Introduèed by Fred Carvin who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Anthony Maresco:
Tabled until the March 22nd meeting, pending a decision.
Duly adopted this 22nd day of February, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Menter, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Carvin
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Ford
MR. DUSEK-Mr. Chairman, before
procedure; before Mr. O'Connor
O'Connor mentioned that there is a
at the Oct6ber meeting, I believe?
you leave, just a point of
leaves and Mr. 'DiPalma. Mr.
stack ofletterè he submitted,
MS. CIPPERLY-Yes.
MR. DUSEK-Was it October? There was a stack of letters submitted
on behalf of Mr. DiPalma at the October meeting?
MR. O'CONNOR-At one of the six prior meetings we've been to. I'm
not sure which one.
MR. DUSEK-Well, were they submitted in connection with this
particular application?
MR. O'CONNOR-This has been going on for at least six meetings.
MR. DUSEK-Okay. In fairness to Mr. DiPalma, he wants to make
sure that the Board goes þack into the record and looks at these
other letters and everything, just so that the Board is aware
that they exist, and I thought I should bring that to your
attention. I think that 's a reasonable request. The1-e is a
record, he~e, that's growing.
MR. MARTIN-Okay. The situation came to pass this week where the
building on the Hodgkins house has been halted, voluntarily by
the applicant. You have the letter there, of FebTuary 22nd, from
Martin' Auffredou, and as I stated earlier, this is primarily for
two reasons. As I see it, there's two violations on the site, in
connection with that building permit. The one is that it was
represented that there wa·s a 25' foot setback from the lake, from
the old structure, and that would be continued with the new, and
I was out there Monday afternoon. Lee Horning held the tape with
me, and I came up with a dimension of 19 feet 6 inches. I'm not
representing that I'm a surveyor by any means, but that's just
the distance I taped off when I was there. The other issue is
that the old camp that was supposed to be retained and added on
to is completely gone. We have a building permit application.
It has a site plan in it that indicates the existing structure.
However, when you get into the framing of it and the actual
details on that, you see that, essentially, the old structure
- 70 -
~
~
would have had to have been gutted anyhow, or very few elements
of it would have been left. A couple of reasons, dpparently,
have brought this to be the case. After they got their variance,
apparently they went out to lay the plans out, and when they did
so they found that a four foot frost wall had to be constructed
under the old camp, as well as increased insulation requirements
with the Building Code. Taking those two factors into account,
the decision was made on their part to tear down the entire
structure. As I indicated earlier, that violates the premise of
the variances given last year by this Board. So that's the point
we're at right now. No construction is ongoing until we get a
direction on this, or a resolution, and I believe we have some
plans there to put up and work from if you need to see the
situation.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Mr. Auffredou, is there anything that you would
care to add?
MR. AUFFREDOU-Yes. Mr. Chairman, Members, first of all, thank
you very much for staying this late. We very much appreciate.
We know it's been a long meeting for you, and I'm sure you can
appreciate our position, that we have a lot at stake here, and
when all this came down this week, honestly, I was just brought
in, I believe, yesterday, for the first time. I was contacted by
phone, earlier in the week. I had a brief phone conversation
with John, and I met with Jim and with Sue, and briefly with Paul
yesterday. The meeting with Jim and Sue was quite extensive. I
don't really want to kid around here. I want to stress to
everybody here that I don't believe that there's any intent to
evade any permit, any attempt to evade the Ordinance, any attempt
to evade what this Board did back in March, and there are two
issues, the setback and the demolition. With regard to the
setback, when the late Mr. Hodgkins represented himself at the
meeting in March, I believe it was his understanding that that
was 25 feet from the mean high water mark, or from the lake, or
whatever your measurement is. If, in reality, it's something
short of that, it's still nonconforming. So whether it's two
feet, or whether it's forty feet, or whether it's sixty feet,
it's still nonconforming. The fact of the matter is, and the
only thing that I can tell you is that we have not increased that
nonconformity. Where we thought we were 25, we're still at that
point. If, in fact, we're at 19 or 20, or whatever it is, we're
at that point. We haven't moved any closer to the lake, and I
don't think Jim is suggesting that we have.
MR. MARTIN-No. The old structure was at a closer distance than
25 feet.
MR. AUFFREDOU-That's right, but we didn't know, and I don't mean
to come here pleading ignorance, but I think it's pretty clear
that we didn't know, and we didn't know what it was, and maybe
that was some sloppiness back then. Maybe the property could
have been surveyed back then. Maybe it could have been clearer
back then, but for whatever reason, it wasn't, and now you're
talking about a difference of about five feet here, which is a
lot when you get that close to the lake, I'll admit, but we're
not increasing the nonconformity to that extent. What I think is
important here is to look at how Chairman Turner phrased the
resolution back in March of 1994, what were the reasons he found
for the granting of the variance. He used language such as, I'm
paraphrasing, there are a lot of houses in the area that are
faced with this problem. There are a lot of houses that are
close to the lake. It's not just a problem on Cleverdale, but I
think it's a problem basin wide, as I understand it. So I don't
think that there's really anything, I don't think there's any
harm as a result of the difference in the feet in the setback.
Do we wish it wasn't there? Of course we do. Do we wish this
issue didn't exist? Of course we do, but the fact of the matter
is that it does, and I don't really see, I see your role as
defining what the harm is here. What is it that we've done wrong
- 71 -
with regard to that prOV1Slon of the variance, to the granting of
that relief? I don't think that there's anything that we've
done. I think it's just a question of Mr. Martin coming out to
the property, measuring it, and coming up with a different
computation. I don't see what the harm is in building a
structure puisuant to a variance at that location. If it was
theYe to begin with, it was there to begin with, whether it was
25 fèet away or it was 19 feet, and again, I just don't think
~¡,Je're inc)"easing the nonconformity. With regard to the old camp,
and the restoration or thé alteration of that, I believe that it
came, and it's clear from the minutes, that we clearly intended
an alteration for an addition. Again, the late Mr. Hodgkins used
those words in the minutes, and it was clear that that was the
intent. I think what happened, based upon putting all this
together, it seems pretty clear to me that, and again, I'm going
to defer to Mr. Horning on a lot of this, because he's much more
expert in this area, but it seems to me what happened was, when
they got into it, when they realized what it would take to come
up to Code, when they realized that they were building a brand
new structure of 800 plus or minus feet, and were trying to make
that match ~n old dilapidated structure, which by all accounts is
circa 1930, bringing that up to Code, making it match what was to
be built, a new addition, it really wasn't possible to do. Mr.
Martin mentioned about the four foot frost wall. Mr. Martin
mentioned about the increased insulation. The plans that were
submitted to Dave Hatln, were approved to Dave Hatin, really
called for a new foundation in that area. Now that doesn't mean
that it should have been done that way, but the fact of the
matter is that it was; What I'm saying to you tonight is that
the building plans that were submitted, and our interpretation of
those building plans, Mr. Horning, of course, is here tonight to
tell you, is that they c~lled fbr a whole scale change of that
entire area. Now whether that was granted by the variance or
not, I think you know there's some question as to that, but what
came in as building plans, caime in as building plans. It's a
little bit foggy, quite honestly, but that's what happened.
Those building plans were approved, and here we are. We were
building in accordance with those plans. Now, there's some
matters of the dates and some of the conversations with Mr.
Martin that, from our position, I want you to know about.
Monday, February 21, Jim went up and measured the property.
Getting back to the issue of the setback, John, and here's here
tonight agai~; but it's my understanding that John, (lost word),
but when he heard that there was a problem, went to visit Mr.
Martin, showed him a picture of where the setback was, and there
was some talking about that, as far as where the setback was, and
we were under the impression that there was no longer a problem,
based upon that conversation with John and with Mr. Martin, and
then it came to our attention that, in fact, after that meeting,
that there was a problem. We were under the impression that we
had addressed Mr. Martin's concerns, but if, in fact, that's not
the case, as it is, obviously, we're here, but I want you to know
that we just didn't sit by idylly and do nothing. John is here
tonight, and if you have any questions about the specifics of
that conversation or the specifics of what his understanding of
the situation was, he'd be delighted to talk to you about that.
On February 14th, there was a meeting with Dave Hatin, Lee
Horning, John, and Jim Martin, at the site, I'm sorry, at the
meeting, at 9 am. Some of this information had come to Jim's
attention. What we said is, Lee said, and he's here tonight,
some of the old foundation would remain, but at that point, it
was understood, it was made clear what had to be done. We were
under the impression, at the end of that meeting, I wasn't there,
but the gentlemen that were there are here. We were under the
impression, at that meeting, that there was no longer a concern,
and that we could move forward with the project. We found out,
shortly thereafter, that the decision had been changed, and that
we could not move forward with the project. I want you to know
that we did incur some expense during that time, in between the
time when we were told we could move forward, and the time when
- 72 -
',,--,
-../
we were told that we couldn't move forward. We've got a lot of
money at stake here. We've got file accounts, $15 to $20,000 of
a foundation in the ground. We're not trying to evade anything.
That's the point that I really want to stress for tonight. We're
not trying to get away with anything. We're not trying to pull
anything off here. We want to do what's right, but quite
frankly, we don't know what to do, and that's why I asked Jim,
and I asked Paul for an opportunity to speak to you tonight. I
know that there's the issue of the garage. I know that that's a
pending issue. What I intend to do, I had a brief conversation
with Jack Cushing outside. I intend to be talking to him some
more. There may be a possibility of resolving that, there may
not be, but that's certainly an avenue that I'm going to pursue.
r don't think he's here anymore, and I'm not going to speak for
him, but I do believe that we have Jack's concerns with the house
issue resolved at this point, but again, I will let him speak to
that issue. I'm not going to speak for him. So r think we're
moving in the right direction with the issue of the garage with
Jack, and I think we've addressed his concerns with regard, his
concerns and his wife's concerns with regard to the house. We've
like to move forward. We have a situation here, with the thaw
coming up, that if the situation remains unattended, if we're not
allowed to do anymore work, Mr. Horning is telling me that the
property has the potential for some serious erosion there. We
need to be able to do something. We need to get this addressed
as quickly as we can. If it requires some type of an application
to you, I'm not sure that it's an application for a variance,
because it just seems to me, maybe it's a modification to what
was applied for, but I don't believe it would be a whole scale
new variance. Now you can disagree with me on that, but it seems
to me that the variance is granted to add the expansion, and what
we're doing is, we're telling you what ~ believe we have very
valid reasons for doing what we did. Could it have been done
differently? Could it have been cleaner? Sure, but show me a
case, one case in your entire arsenal of cases, in the history of
this Zoning Board, that couldn't have been done cleaner, and you
probably couldn't find one. God knows I've (lost word). So,
we're here. We're all ears, pledging cooperation. We'll do
whatever you want us to do within reason, but we've got to have
it done quickly. That's my pitch.
MR. CARVIN-Any questions or comments?
MR. MENTER-Well, I'm not real familiar with what you have in
front of you there.
MR. AUFFREDOU-The plans?
MR. MENTER-Yes.
MR. AUFFREDOU-These are the approved plans. We'd be happy to
show them to you.
MR. MENTER-I know, and I'd like to look at them. I know, in
reviewing the minutes, what I anticipated being there.
MS. CIPPERLY-It's the same house. It's just that this distance
was incorrect.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I wanted to make an important point. The roof
structure that you see here, the roof structure on the building
plan, this was given to you as part of the variance application.
MR. MARESCO-Do you have that in the file?
MS. CIPPERLY-Yes.
MR. MARESCO-This was with it?
MR. AUFFREDOU-This one was with it.
- 73 -
MS. CIPPERLY-At the time, this was the limits of the original
house, and this would be the addition, and this shows it as 25
feet from the lake, and the real difference, the building didn't
move, this number was wrong. I think the intent was to not go
closer than the.
MR. MENTER-It's one story though now, right?
MR. HODGKINS-This is one story, and this ~o.Jhole area now has been
completely sealed off. This is all cathedral.
MR. MARESCO-Right. There's no rooms. It's a cathedral.
MR. HODGKINS-The back end here, the back part that comes out is
also, is now set up as, one of the bedrooms is vaulted. So
there's no access up there.
MR. MENTER-You're not using trusses or anything?
MR. HODGKINS-No. It's vaulted, but it's only, ~ide, it's not 20
feet wide.
MR. MENTER-Okay, and this is gone?
MR. HODGKINS-This one here is going. This has to be replaced all
the way around, because of the hillside. This one's here. This
is here, and (lost word) in here, because to bring the, that was
three feet high.
MR. MENTER-It just didn't make any sense to leave it there.
MR. HODGKINS-Well, yes. We're going to (lost word) it up,
instead of havi ng three foot t,..Jide. This is what the patio looks
like. This is the side of the house, which would be right down
the side. The patio is all existing. It still is here, and this
whole area.
MR. MENTER-Right, and this is where the (lost word).
MR. HODGKINS-Right.
MR. MARESCO-So you're not touching that far?
MR. MENTER-Well, that's outside the house.
MR. HODGKINS-Outside of the house, but that all goes right down
to the side of the house. This here, this is the question when
Jim came up. They were looking at the distance and measuring
right to, and I brought the picture, and I said, you mean that
pier right there, and the tree's still there, and this tree is
still here. In fact, we're going behind that tree now. That
part of the house moves back.
MR. MENTER-That front's all enclosed, instead of being open like
it was here?
MR. HODGKINS-No. It'll be open. '
MR. MENTER-This here?
MR. HODGKINS-That's a screened in porch, and this is open, just
like it is here, except the roof will go this way, and as you can
see, there was attic space up in here with a window, also. The
same type of thing, just a shorte~ one. Here's a view where that
porch comes out farther than the house itself. The tree sits
there.
MR. MENTER-This here was supposed to be porch.
MR. HODGKINS-This is all porch now, all of it. All the red area
- 74 -
'---'
--i
is porch.
MR. MENTER-Okay.
MR. HODGKINS-This is the house back, and the problem with the
number, with the 25 foot, what we believe is that the original,
the number came off of where the house was. They didn't count
the porches, in the past. They counted the house, and that's, if
you go to exactly, if you go to 19 ft. 6 in., plus the 8 feet,
you're just about 25 feet.
MR. MENTER-To me, the 25 foot's not the big issue.
either understand it or you can't.
You can
MR. HODGKINS-That's right.
MR. MENTER-But you should know if there's a difference between an
alteration and a leveling. It's not the first time it's happened
out there either.
MR. HODGKINS-No. I'll be honest with you. It was probably my
fault at being naive. Lee's idea was to go in, and he came up
with the idea that he was going to take the floor and have to
jack it up, put the block out, put the block back in, and jack
the floor back down. The architect and I said, well, that's
crazy, just reach in and grab it and take it out.
MR. MENTER-There's no question that, from a builder's standpoint,
you know.
MR. HODGKINS-This is what he ~ going to do. So I've got to be
fair to Lee, because he sat there, and that was his intention,
and he said, no nobody ever has problems with that, and, frankly,
talking to the building people afterwards, they said, that
footprints have been standard as far as what's happened in the
past, and it comes up, but there are definite landmarks here. So
There's no question, those trees are all there, and I don't know
if you've been up there. All the trees up there, they did an
expert job not touching one of them. Those are all still there.
MR. MARTIN-See, here's the photograph they showed me Monday.
This is the old house. This retaining wall is still there. This
is the old house. You can see how close it was, and I stood in a
hole, for what was to be a footing for a new post on the new deck
right here, and I measured from, we tried, Lee and I tried to
approximate as best we could that distance. I stood in a hole
for this post right here, and measured from, as best I could,
that point, 19 and a half feet. This was a little better, at 20,
along here.
-And the whole reason this house was set back like this was
because the shoreline does make a slant inward, and this was set
back like this to maintain the setback from the house. This was
the original structure. That's why the addition was set back.
MR. CARVIN-I'm just looking at a plan. If
house, you still would have some frontage.
problem with this is that this is really not the
voted on in March.
you split up the
See, my biggest
variance that 1
MR. MENTER-Right.
MR. CARVIN-I mea n , that's Number One.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Why? Just, can I ask why?
MR. CARVIN-Because it was an addition, because it wasn't a new
construction. I understand where you're coming from.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Just so you know. Apparently, these things happen.
- 75 -
-'
MR. MENTER-I would say, I haven't discussed it with Fred at all,
but my first inclination would be that it is absolutely a
different project.
MR. HODGKINS-No. This was mentioned, in the variance, to be
gutted. Because what was here originally was a bedroom of 63
squ.are feet.
MR. MENTER-Right, but it wasn't gutted, it was
been up there, and the only thing that's left is
which is not part of the foundation any longer.
work that's over on the side of the buil~ing.
of the bui ldi ng.
leveled. I've
this over here,
It's just stone
So it's not part
MR. CARVIN-I guess I'd be more comfortable, if we're back at
Square One, to move this, I don't know, square this up, and then
have your deck. When I have something like this, if this was a
new proposal, if this was a vacant lot, I would try to get you
back away from the lake as far as possible. I mean, that's
always been my opinion.
MR. HODGKINS-Here's one thing. Where the corner of this house
sits, it sits on these blocks that are still here. This wall
right here you're seeing is existing, and that woodwork is still
there.
MR. MENTER-But this wall has nothing to with the new building.
The new building's over here.
MR. HODGKINS-No, no, no. It'll sit there.
That's where the porch comes out.
That's a porch.
MR. MENTER-Right. That's where the porch is, but isn't there a
new foundation wall inside that?
MR. HODGKINS-Inside, just like there was. See that foundation
wall back there, underneath the porch? That's the foundation
wall. The pier is out front. You don't see the piers unless you
look in those holes.
MR. MENTER-What I'm getting at is this here, okay. There's forms
there, and there's going to be a, there's an existing block wall
here, with àll the stonework outside at the patio. Isn't there
going to be a new poured wall inside that?
MR. HODGKINS-There's a wall right down through here.
MR. CARVIN-Well, it looks to me that the foundation is poured
right here, and that this is the end of the wall.
MR. MENTER-What I'm asking is, this is the stonework in the
pa t i 0 .
MR. HORNING-Yes.
MR. MENTER-So this is a block wall, poured wall.
wall is a poured wall.
The existing
MR. HORNING-The existing wall is block.
MR. MENTER-Okay. but you're going to pour one, you're going to do
a poured foundation wall adjacent to that?
MR. HORNING-Yes.
MR. MENTER-Okay. That's what my question was.
MR. HORNING-This part right here stays.
that.
We attach that deck to
- 76 -
'-~
,-/'
MR. AUFFREDOU-Lee, what Fred is wondering is, going from, and I'm
not saying that this is what we're going to do, but going from
scratch, could this be moved back here, so as to remove somewhat
of this nonconformity, have Dot's, have some porch, leave this,
but move this back here? Is that possible, knowing the
topography the way that you know it.
MR. HORNING-You can't use any of the foundation that way. If you
move it back, you certainly should bring it up a little bit,
because the hill just keeps on increasing here. None of the
footings are at where they should be (lost word) re-do
everything.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Totally re-do everything.
MR. HORNING-Totally re-do, take everything right out.
MR. CARVIN-Wouldn't you just be pouring this section here?
MR. MENTER-Where are you at? Have you got footings poured?
MR. CARVIN-As I-remember it, this is already poured, this outline
is already poured.
MR. HORNING-The footing's poured, and the wall is right over to
here, like this.
MR. MENTER-You've got it formed out?
MR. HORNING-It's all formed.
MR. MENTER-You've got it poured?
MR. HORNING-And all the floor is in, all the floor is poured. We
poured the wall Monday.
MR. CARVIN-When did the wall go up?
MR. HORNING-Monday.
MS. CIPPERLY-When the variance was addressed, it was ~ belief,
at least, that we were addressing the front of the building,
which did have a porch at the time, and whatever that distance
was, that's where we intended to put it, and then this one was
set back, because the shoreline angles over. So they were trying
to keep that same setback.
MR. HODGKINS-To protect that tree there, this has already been
cut back another two feet.
MR. CARVIN-So then I'm still going to come back to, that this was
the original house. It was just going to be an add on.
MS. CIPPERLY-Well, this was part of the original house.
MR. HORNING-This was part of the original house, right there.
There's the pier, and that is going to sit there still.
MR. CARVIN-Once the house was )"emoved, I'm not sure that the
preexisting nonconformity was lost. That's the issue.
MS. CIPPERLY-Well, that's the issue, yes, but if they came in
with a vacant site, you might end up with a very similar result,
but they also would not have had to come in for a variance on the
50 percent expansion.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, but they
different. They came in
construction. In other words,
starting from scratch, is what
came in with something totally
with just an add on, not new
not bulldozing the whole thing and
I'm trying to say.
- 77 -
----
MR. HODGKINS-Where would you consider, where's add on, ~here is
it stop in to here, the floor board a floor, a wall?
MS. CIPPERLY-This is the same size as the original house, right?
MR. HODGKINS-Yes.
MS. CIPPERLY-And it had a porch on
going to be done was the roof line,
replaced, to cover this.
it. What,
the roof
originally, was
was going to be
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but I still will come back that it's, that, you
know, when you remove all of the three walls, you no longer have
a house, and, ther.fore, it reverts back to new construction. I
mean, it's only common sense. I mean, you could keep a little
section of the wall, and I know what the argument is, but what
I'm saying, once this structure was taken down, I mean, it became
a whole, it became a vacant lot, essentially, is what ~ feeling
is.
MR. HODGKINS-I respectfully disagree.
MR. CARVIN-BecaÜse we gave a variance on an addition, not all new
construction.
MR. HODGKINS-The Building Department also saw it, exactly like
that, that it would be new foundations, new walls, the whole,
they had it for two, three weeks in their hands and were able to
study it and stamped their approval on it and weht with it.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, but this was going to be a cathedral ceiling,
right?
MR. HODGKINS-Right, that's exactly what it is.
MS. CIPPERLY-From a land use, and attractiveness point of view,
and the visibility and all that kind of stuff, this is a more
appealing house than a lot of other projects that get approved,
as far as fitting into the lake community.
MR. CARVIN-I don't know. I'm going to open it up to the Board.
What's the Board's pleasure?
MR. MENTER-I'll tell you what ~ opinion is. I believe that this
project has to come before the Board to be reviewed. I don't
consider us having approved that project, and I think it has to
be brought before us for consideration.
MR. HODGKINS~That's what we're here tonight, to find out what you
want us to do.
MR. MARESCO-Well, I wasn't involved in the first, I wasn't on the
Board for the first meeting, so the only information I have is
just what's been brought to me this evening.
MR. HODGKINS-I appreciate that.
MR. MARESCO-To make an intelligent decision is kind of difficult.
MR. THOMAS-The only reason they caught this is because of the 25
feet, or because they tore down the old building?
MR. MARTIN-Both.
MR. THOMAS-Both.
MR. CARVIN-I was going to say, a combination of things.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I just want to get a sense from the Board, and I'm
not asking for admissions, here, but I just hope you don't think
- 78 -
------
-../
we're trying to get away with something. If I get anything out
of tonight's meeting, I just want that concession, that we're not
evil people, and we're not trying to get away with something.
MR. MENTER-I don't look at it that way. I mean, there's nothing
punitive about what we do. I just look at it purely in terms of
the project itself, and a renovation and a new construction are
two different things, and I know what my mind set was when we
gave the variance for this. In fact, we talked about the type of
roofs and how they flow together and the whole thing, and the
existing building, and as I say, I know what my mind set was, and
this is different. So I have to, I feel like I really have to
consider this in a different light.
MR. HODGKINS-In order to put a house up, any house up, with (lost
word) 50 percent increase, it seems to me, right at this point,
because of the energy codes of the State of New York, and the
building codes, you, basically, would have to rebuild, if you're
saying, to put an addition on, you would have to rebuild the old
part, piece by piece, in order to (lost word) addition,
completely rebuild it, all brand new parts. The walls have to be
six inch thick. The footings have to be cross line fittings.
The foundation has to be insulated. So you're in a Catch-22.
This Board didn't know, when they approved this, that it's not
possible for this, and I think we're in a Catch-22.
MR. MARTIN-I would put a little bit different twist on that. I
think YOU didn't know.
MR. HODGKINS-I agree.
MR. MARTIN-I'm not establishing blame.
MR. HORNING-I disagree. I think we're looking at a situation
here, this is a law. This is a common sense issue, and it has to
(lost word) common sense for things.
MR. HODGKINS-If we kept half a wall in this place, everything
would still be going, but since half a wall is gone, everything's
stopped. Now, I'll concede if you would like changes, because of
your vision, and the design of that house right now, so it would
continue, I would concede that. We'll make a designer. If
somebody says, I don't want to see this, this roof line here,
we'll consider that (lost word) we've already poured the
foundation. Again, I think it's a common sense issue. There's
two opposing codes here. The State of New York tells you have to
do something. The Town of Queensbury tells you you have to do
something, but I think this Board can never approve an addition
that's over 50 percent. If it tried to approve, they're
approving something that cannot be done, and, is that fair to
your applicant, and should your applicant have to know that kind
of information? Those are the kinds of things I'm looking at.
If we had a wall there, we would still be building today.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but I think we also have to
couple of issues, and I think Jim has pointed
One, this Board moves on information that's
applicant. We assume that that information is
take a look at a
them out. Number
submitted by the
con-ect.
MR. HODGKINS-You have a staff that helps you, too.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, but on the other hand, you had requested a 25
foot setback. Now I do not know when that porch was, and I'm not
going to get into it, you know, big discussion, and it may very
well be that the house itself sits 25 feet back from the lake,
and that the deck may have been added at some point thereafter,
bringing it closer. Now, I don't know whether the deck is legal
or not legal, and I'm not about to open up that can of worms, but
we went on the assumption, Number One, that we were looking at a
plan that was 25 feet from the lake. That was Number One. Now
- 79 -
-
-
we find out that it actually is 19 feet. Well, ffiZ--feeling is
that that right there may invalidate the application, because
that opens up a whole new 11st of questions that should have been
asked at the time the original application came before this
Board. The seóond issue is that in your application, the
applicant proposed to add 800 square feet of living space to an
existing 608 square foot residen6e, and we granted a variance
based upon an existing ~eaidénce. Once the residence was bull
dozed, the wall is not the residence. It is a foundation, but
what I'm saying is that we were looking at one set of ~riteria of
an addition to an existing, not a new construction, not a new
existing building, an existing 800, or 600 square foot.
MR. HODGKINS-You cannot make an addition to that (lost word).
You have to say no to anyone who asks for 50 percent from now on.
MR. DUSEK-I have to disagree with that. I mean, that is not a
legally correct statement, and I don't think we should even get
into it, but I just wanted to say that for the record. That is
not a legally correct statement that was just made, about you can
never approve. Of course you can approve. I mean, somebody
could have just built it, or they might have built it higher
standards a few years ago or something.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. I wanted to make sure that ~ was on firm legal
ground here.
MR. HODGKINS-I'm saying nonconforming structures.
nonconforming structure.
It's a
MR. DUSEK-A nonconforming structure simply means it's not in
compliance with the setbacks. It doesn't mean that the structure
itsel f .
~1R. HODGKINS-A non, does not meet the energy codes and bui ldi ng
codes.
MR. DUSEK-Well~ that may be, but that'~ up to the applicant to
determine that.
MR. HODGKrNS-I thought you had the staff for that.
that's where I'm at.
I guess
MR. DUSEK-Well, the Town's job is not to design a house. It's to
review the plans to make sure they're in conformance with our
Ordi nance.
MR. CARVIN-So, again, I think we have a situation that we were
presented, and again, I'm not, casting any aspersions. We lI.Jere
presented with a set of facts, and we made a decision based upon
those facts, and now that we find that thesè facts have been
altered, I feel very strongly that a new variance should be
requested and we proceed as if this was a new construction. I
mean, that is my feeling here.
MR. MENTER-And I think it's, not just, it's different by a bit.
For instance, from m.:z::. standpoint, the setback is an issue that I
could understand. I could see that happening with the decks and
whatever. I could see something like that happening, but I think
there's a, you know, the whole building makes it a different
issue, and that's a big enough variation so that we can't just
kind of patch up the variance we gave you.
MR. HODGKINS-So what about the issue that, when that building was
knocked down, why was this stopped then? We went and then spent
$15,000 afterward. The i~sue was there.
MR. MENTER-Who's job is it to watch every minute? I don't know.
MR. HODGKINS-They went up and looked at it.
They mentioned it,
- 80 -
"'---
--../
and we walked in, and they said, I'll take a block. Jim Martin
said I will take a block.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. I looked at it that morning, in the office, and
it was represented to me that a wall was saved and a patio, and
I'd not seen that though, personally, until Monday, and then when
I saw it, it was a lot different than what L envisioned it. I'm
not saying you misrepresented it. It's just different than what
I envisioned to be left there. When I went up there and saw that
Monday, I came back with a very much different impression. I had
not seen it for the first time myself, personally, until Monday
afternoon.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I see which direction the Board is heading, and
that's why we ask Jim and Paul for this opportunity. I'm not
asking anybody to get out the tea leaves. I wouldn't do that. I
don't do that to my own clients, but, I mean, I'm not going to
put my people through this if this is just an act of, I mean, for
the variance application, I mean, you guys are tough, and this is
a Board that, the make up changes of the Board from year to year.
Variances, at one point, I'm not going to say were easier to get.
I'm not going to say they were harder to get, but I can't tell my
clients that they have a very good chance of getting a variance
from you guys. So why should I agree to go to a variance? It
doesn't make much sense at all.
MR. DUSEK-Well, I think it's not an issue of agreeing.
it's a matter of this Board making a determination.
I think
MR. AUFFREDOU-Exactly.
MR. MENTER-We've had people tonight, Martin, say how easy we
were. The woman earlier said, are we going to let things go on
forever? What I'm saying is, we're tougher, we're easier.
MR. AUFFREDOU-And please understand.
very, very frustrating.
From Q.YL perspective, it's
MR. MENTER-Yes. I understand.
MR. HODGKINS-There was not one bit of opposition to this when we
brought this to the Board before, not one bit. I mean, everyone
except for one person, there was only one person that decided not
to vote. There was not one person who stood up in opposition
from the Town, in the community. Obviously, from the drawings
you're seeing that roof line is exactly the same as we presented.
It's presented in the minutes about all the details and the
height. I guess I'm afraid that we're losing, I used this
analogy when I was talking about the placement of the block on
the house a few minutes ago. The way everything's being, under a
microscope, you have tighter tolerances on where we're moving
things on that house than there are on the space shuttle, and I
don't feel like this is a give and take, I'm concerned because
building permits are pulled. Building permits are given. Okays
are gone, and then they're coming back and forth, and I'm
probably burying myself deeper and deeper with everyone right
now, but I think it's a concern. I think this Town has got to
consider it, and I'll be frank. I might as well lay it on the
line. I wanted to live in this Town. I've got a business in the
Town. I employ a number of people, and I've got to buy a
building in two years. I'm not buying in this Town. I've got to
make considerations. I'll work, if somebody says, I don't like
the line of it, here tonight, lets change the line. Concede a
few feet over here for us, we can work with that, but obviously
we're putting the house exactly where it was. The differences
may be a technical error, and if I researched, I'm certain I
could find probably five or ten places that the same technical
error has been made, and I think we're under the microscope
because of other activities going on in the community. We have a
larger lot than all our neighbors, and I've got ten times the
- 81 -
---
number of trees than all my neighbors. My neighbors are
complaining about the trees going down. I would have to clear
cut their lot to have the number of trees that ~ took down in
our yard. I think everything's out of perspective. We're
looking at a total capacity of that whole lot of a couple
thousand square feet, when we're talking about the garage to the
other. All the houses on half the size lot up above are 2500
foot. You approved one down the street that's 4800 foot. We're
the good guys. We have no concrete paths down to the water. We
have elevated stairways. We don't have any lawn even mowed near
the lake. We've got all trees. Everybody else mows their lawn
land fertilizes it. Now are we bad? We're coming out here.
We're getting screwed. I think we're getting railroaded, to be
honest with you, and I think it's a terrible thing in this
community, and I'm very tired of it. I don't like what I'm
seeing, and Martin's probably upset with me right now, but I
think this is outrageous. I think that this Town has got to get
under control with this stuff~ We're in trouble, and this here
is minor. That was a minor thing. There was an article, and
I'll bring the magazine. I'm going to make a copy for you all,
the lack of common sense, the loss of common sense in this
Country, and the things that we've done. It was a very
interesting article, and that's ~<Jhat we've come to in this
Country. This is absolutely ridiculous. This is a small snafu
which had no actual bearing on the whole project that came up,
other than your finding some technicality to change something,
and I think that's all it i~, is a techhicality. Loopholes is
what we're looking for, and there was no objection before.
Somebody should have voiced any objection. I wish I could (lost
word) this guy really had an objection. He's got something to
grab for, but nobody sat there and objected.
DAVID HODGKINS
MR. D. HODGKINS-Okay. I have to ask one question 6f Mr. Menter,
and I'd like it on the record, what was your envisionment of this
house last year that you're not seeing now?
MR. MENTER-Thank you. I was going to address that.
MR. J. HODGKINS-Because
same roof line last year.
do the rest of the house.
the roof line, as it shows here, was the
So I want to know how you wanted us to
MR. MENTER-My vision was of a project as it was described to me.
My point was that this is just a, it's a different project. It's
demolishing a house and building a new house, which is not my, my
definitions are not in place here. This is a quasi judicial
Board. We have certain parameters within which we' need to make
decisions. It's not arbitrary. It's very well defined, what
steps we need to go through to make every single decision. It
seems arbitrary, but you can ask any of these people up here in
this whole room. It isn't.
MR. D. HODGKINS-But in oTder to put that roof line on the house.
MR. MENTER-The roof line is irrelevant. The roof line has
nothi n9 to do with it. If that statement misled you, that's.
MR. D. HODGKINS-It's part of the va~iance. The only way to
accomplish getting that roof line on the house is to remove the
existing that was there, in order to support that roof line.
MR. MENTER-Yes,
not the reasons
the way I feel
I mentioned the
but what I was just saying to him is that that's
I've given. I mean, the reasons I've given for
about this have nothing to do with the roof line.
roof line earlier, but forget that.
MR. J. HODGKINS-So if it was done stick by
holding up the new roof line, as the other house
stick of people
is rebuilt, the
- 82 -
'--
-./
existing house is rebuilt underneath it then, obviously, for all
the additional costs, that is the way this Board would prefer to
see a house done, and still end up with the same end product, the
same project is still the same thing. I mean, the fact that the
siding is all different on this house was, obviously, (lost
wor d).
MR. D. HODGKINS-It's the exact same thing, exact same project,
one way or the other, but you're dealing with, by doing it this
way, a more structurally sound property.
MR. J. HODGKINS-Again, we're sitting here ready to, we'll concede
things that we'd like to have, just to make everybody happy.
MR. MENTER-John, we're not saying we want to be tough on you or
anything like that. What we're saying is that we feel, I know ¡
feel, like, technically and legally, what I need to do is require
you to apply for another variance. We have parameters that we
need to work within, when we make decisions.
MR. J. HODGKINS-You make decisions based on your judgment, and
what I'm asking for you to do is make a common sense judgment,
and I think if I was sitting in your seat right now, and somebody
presented this to me, I would question and make sure they were
putting everything back where it was. I'd make sure those
things. I'd confirm it by land marks and those kinds of things,
but I'd look at it afterward and say, this makes sense. This is
ridiculous. This makes a hell of a lot of sense.
MR. CARVIN-I just have a question of Mr. Horning. The second
story, all right, the one that's going to have the pull down,
what do they call it, stairs, from an architectural standpoint,
would it be extremely difficult to put a permanent set of stairs
in that house, I mean, and open up that upstairs access?
MR. HORNING-Are you talking about in the kitchen?
MR. CARVIN-Yes. I'm not saying that that's the plan. I'm just
saying, from an architectural standpoint, is that a feasible
situation? If somebody were to come in and buy that house and
say, I want to open up that second story.
MR. HORNING-Could they do it? Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. Is it much of a project?
MR. HORNING-What do you consider much of a project?
MR. CARVIN-Well, I mean, an outlandish outlay? Would it require
restructuring foundations? I mean, or is it just a matter of
putting a set of stairs and cutting a hole and putting a rail up?
MR. HORNING-Well, it's a little more complicated than that.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, but it is possible and fairly within the realm
of possibility, is that correct? Let me ask you this, that
upstairs area, even though it's now, and I'm not casting any
aspersions here, because you're building a house that'll be
around for 150 years or longer, hopefully, but if somebody else
were to come in, could that upstairs space be converted into
living area?
MR. HORNING-With some structural modifications, I guess.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. In other words, that could be converted into
bedrooms and so forth?
MRS. HODGKINS-May I ask a question?
- 83 -
..........
--
MR. CARVIN-Su)'e.
MRS. HODGKINS-Wouldn·t that have to be a variance to get
additional square footage for living space in there?
MR. CARVIN-No. That's my point.
MR. HODGKINS-Our concession is if it can be structured so it's
impossible, in the i.e. trusses or whatever needs to be in there,
does that satisfy your concerns?
MR. CARVIN-I guess, how much additional space, if that conversion
were to occur, would that create?
MR. HORNING-Square footage?
MR. CARVIN-Yes. In other words, we granted a variance for 1400
square feet, or a little over 14 square feet, and that's assuming
that that upstairs area is inaccessible and not used,
MR. MARTIN-I think it can get up as much as 2200.
MR. HORNING-No, because the roof is peaked. The roof line starts
at the first floor. So you're automatically, you're coming in at
a 45 degree angle. You've got to come in five feet from each
wall before you have headroom up there.
MR. J. HODGKINS-Again, Jim, if we were to put trusses
there, it would be impossible, then, to reconfigure
that not correct?
up through
that. Is
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
don't believe.
That wouldn~t even qualify as attic space, I
MR. J. HODGKINS-That's right.
MRS. HODGKINS-The only thing to put in the stairway was so that I
could go up and put some stuff up there for storage and to put
artificial plants up on (lost word).
MR. J. HODGKINS-I will concede it if that's what we need, That's
what we're here for, to try to do. If that's what it's going to
take to keep the project going, great, lets do that.
MR. CARVIN-Well, again, I think that that's just one more
situation. In other words, we were looking at, basically, 1400
square feet, and certainly your plans are within the realm of
1400 square feet, but now we have à technicality on your part
that that is going to be nonusable space, when, with very minor
alterations, or what appears to be minor alterations, it could be
turned into prime living space,
MR. J. HODGKINS-That's what I'm sayin~.
there, it cannot be altered. I think
right Jim?
If you put trusses up
you'll agree with that,
MR. MARTIN-I'm not a building inspector.
I would think not.
MR. HORNING-He's right. You'd have to tear the whole roof off.
MR. J. HODGKINS-The way it's laid out right now, since the old
side is supposed to be a cathedral ceiling, if you put trusses on
the new addition, the biggest possible floor plan, or floor space
you're going to have up there that's open to anything is above
the kitchen area, and that measures 12 by 13 feet, and if you use
trusses in the new addition, there's no access to it.
MR. CARVIN-See, I would just like to try to get some of this
stuff back on the record. I think that that's not being
addressed in this particular variance. I mean, there's nothing
- 84 -
',--
--../
in this variance that stipulates that you have to put trusses
there. I think that we have drifted away from this original
variance by so much that a new variance is required, and I don't
think it's just nit picking. I think that we've got some pretty
substantial differences here.
MR. MENTER-We're not trying to trash the plan.
MRS. HODGKINS-I'm sorry. I'm going to be 65 years old. I went
through last summer of construction. My husband dropped dead.
So I didn't have him to live with that with me. Do you think I
want to live through another summer. This project was supposed
to be finished by May 15th. You've stopped us. You've taken
away business from Lee. Lee was all signed up to finish my
project. Now he's unemployed.
MR. MARTIN-I've got to say, though, and I've got to emphasize
this. I did not tear down the house. I did not say it was 25
feet back when it's 20. I'm only going to tolerate being blamed
here so long. I've tried to bend over backwards to look at every
aspect of this project, from every conceivable possible favorable
nice way, and there comes a point at which, I didn't tear the
house down.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I agree.
MR. J. HODGKINS-Jim, I think you did the right things on those
other times. I think other pressures came up, and I think it was
the common sense thing to do. It's the common sense thing to put
the items together, and I think that's what I'm looking at here.
We're here to conceded. We're giving our bones up here, and we
don't have many bones to take back, other than, all we're trying
to get back is to start construction work.
MR. MARTIN-I don't think it's too much to ask
jumping to an assumption that the Area Variance
denied. This Board looks at every application
They're willing to provide a special meeting on
only two weeks away.
for you, you're
is going to be
on its merits.
March 7th. It's
MR. J. HODGKINS-What happens if this Board determines that that
other use is a principal structure? What happens then?
MR. CARVIN-Then I would say that you would have to come back for
a variance to continue.
MR. J. HODGKINS-We got another variance.
MR. CARVIN-Well, you'd be in compliance with the Ordinance if
that garage is deemed a living, because you have got one
principal structure on it.
MR. J. HODGKINS-But what I'm saying is that you've got another
variance to come for. So you have two variances.
MR. CARVIN-Or the same variance. I mean, I don't know. I mean,
the house, I think, is going to require a variance almost either
way you go, and that was my point earlier this evening, that if
the garage is not deemed as a residence or a primary building, or
whatever the term is.
MR. J. HODGKINS-What I'd like is I'd like, tonight, to have
access, and I'll put it in writing, for all the files that this
Board has ever deliberated on concerning double residences,
anywhere in the Town of Queensbury. I want to review those.
MR. CARVIN-I still think it comes down to the path of least
resistance, to apply for another variance.
MR. DUSEK-Can I just interrupt there? Technically, that should
- 85 -
-
go to Darlene Dougher, as the Records Access Officer.
MR. J. HODGKINS-Fine.
MR. CARVIN-So, I guess we're at an impasse here.
MR. AUFFREDOU-What I'd like to be able to do is, I just want to
make sure, I'm not sure what direction my client~ are headed, but
if it is a variance, and the variance is the way to go, are we
going to be able to get this on in time? I mean, I've got to
fill out an application. I~ve got some modified plans that I've
got to submit.
MR. MARTIN-Today is February 23rd.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Today is the deadline.
MR. MARTIN-I think it's up to the Board if they'll give special
consideration for an application on the 7th.
MR. CARVIN-As long as we can meet the legal requirements for
advertising, I don't have a problem with the 7th.
'MR. MARTIN-We can do that.
MR. CARVIN-I don't know about the rest of the Board, but that's
mY feeling.
MR. AUFFREDOU-How much time do you need to advertise?
MS. CIPPERLY-It's at least five days.
MR. MARTIN-So we've have to have it In, probably,
then we've got two or three days back from
publication requirements of the Post star.
the 3rd, and
that for the
MR. DUSEK-It would have to be publ ished on the second of Ma)"ch.
Which means you'd have to have it before that.
MR. MARTIN-Try the 28th.
MR. DUSEK-The 28th is Tuesday. So that would be two or three
days from now.
MS. CIPPERLY-If you don't, you can be on the 15th. The other
problem is, as I just mentioned, if you do that, you have to go
to Warren County. Warren County doesn't meet until the second
Wednesday. So you'd be on the 15th, which doesn't do you much
good on the 7th.
i"1R. DUSEK-Well, they could reach a consensus just pendi ng that,
and then re-meet briefly. I think, if you want to do it the 7th,
it would work.
MR. CARVIN-In fairness to the applicant, I think that they
deserve, I mean, if we can be concrete on this.
MR. DUSEK-Well, I think the only thing ¡ would see that would
happen is if you had to get Warren County approval, which I'm
being told I guess you would, then YOU would be able to reach a
consensus the 7th. You'd have to wait it out the 8th, and then
once you receive the approva'l, you could re-meet really quick,
five minutes the next, you know, right after the Warren County
Board meeting, or else Thursday, and give it the formal approval.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. I mean, this Board is trying to work with you,
bel ieve me.
MR. AUFFREDOU-I appreciate that, and
high. It's 1:30 in the morning, and
believe me,
there's an
emotions run
avJfu 1 lot of
- 86 -
'--
~J
frustration.
MR. MARTIN-It's very frustrating for me. I spent all day on
Tuesday and three hours on a holiday Monday.
MR. AUFFREDOU-Jim, I've worked with you on a number of cases, and
I think you're great. I have no problems with what you do here
or any of these cases, and I'm glad you're here. I mean, I have
no gripe with you. It's just this process is driving my clients
crazy.
MR. MARTIN-I understand that. I take it to heart when somebody
stands there and says that common sense is not being applied. To
every extent possible, common sense is applied, but there are
rules and regulations in which we have to work with, nonetheless.
MR. CARVIN-Okay, then is it my understanding that the applicant,
or, well, I guess you can't really call them applicants, I guess.
I don't know.
MR. AUFFREDOU-The aggrieved. What we'll do is we'll talk about
it, and we will let Jim know by, we're going to need some time.
We'll let Jim know by Friday what our intentions are.
MR. MARTIN-Now, we are talking
there's an opportunity here.
floor living space, ask for it.
about a new application. Now
If, in fact, you do want second
I'm serious.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, that's what I'm saying. I agree.
MS. CIPPERLY-If you want the house as it is, you have a clean
slate to work with, here.
MR. CARVIN-And if you can move it back, again, as far from the
lake as possible. I mean, whether that means sacrificing a deck
or something.
MR. J.HODGKINS-Are you saying, suggesting that, this plan, as it
stands, will not meet your approval?
MR. CARVIN-I'm not saying that. I'm just saying that this is a
clean slate to come in and put your wish list, as it were, on the
table, with the accurate figures so that this Board now has the
accurate figures to make a decision.
MR. MARTIN-Martin is fully aware of the standards for an Area
Variance, the maximum relief and so on, but I think this is an
opportunity, now, and make sure, so you don't get a month down
the road and say, oops, I meant to show that, or I wanted to do
that.
MR. J. HODGKINS-That will not happen.
MRS. HODGKINS-One more question. I believe, and I don't
because I don't have them here in front of me, but
minutes, it referred to the porches. Am I right, Sue?
know
in the
MS. CIPPERLY-I don't have them memorized, either.
MR. MARTIN-I recall that your husband described the old house as
having a porch. That the new house would have porches.
MRS. HODGKINS-Right, 1408 plus the porches.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. I recall that he always represented that the new
structure would have porches.
MRS. HODGKINS-When you
section were moved back
are we talking?
talk about moving it back, if the old
to the new section, how many feet back
- 87 -
,,'
-
MR. CARVIN-I think the house is going to fall about 25 feet, the
actual house.
MR. MARTIN-I think the foundation wall now is about 28 feet.
MRS. HODGKINS-I'm talking about this, right here, 35 from
lake. So I could have a 10 foot porch there, then, or is
other variance not going to work at all, the old one, is
what you're saying?
the
this
that
MR. J. HODGKINS-They're saying that they never had an opportunit>'
to (lost word)"
MR. CARVIN-Okay. The only thing that I would say to the
aggrieved is that the Town is willing to bend over backwards to
get you on the 7th. So, I mean, I would hope that you could come
and give us as much latitude, so that we can comply with the
legal requirements, as far as advertising and scheduling.
MR. MARTIN-Ma,-tin, would you call me tomorrow and we can give you
the publication dates that we have to meet with the Post Star?
MR. AUFFREDOU-Yes.
Town"
I'll have my office call you. I'm out of
MR. MARTIN-Okay. I'll lay that out for you.
MR. CARVIN-The only thing I just want to point out is that we do
have to make mailings, right, if this a new application. So I
want to make sure that, we do not want any people coming in
saying that they didn't get letters and things.
MR. MARTIN-That's all part of it.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MOTION TO GO INTO EXECUTIVE SESSION TO DISCUSS THE MOORING POST
LITIGATION, Introduced by Fred Carvin who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Chris Thomas:
Duly adopted this 22nd day of February, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Menter, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Carvin
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Ford
MOTION TO COME OUT OF EXECUTIVE SESSION AND ADJOURN, Introduced
by Fred Carvin who moved for its adoption, seconded by Chris
Thomas:
Duly adopted this 22nd day of February, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Menter, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Carvin
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Ford
On motion meeting was adjourned.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Fred Carvin, Acting Chairman
- 88 -