1995-01-18
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ORIGINAL
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QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD OFAPP'~AL$,
FIRST REGULAR MEETING
JANUARY 18, 1995
INDEX
Area Variance No. 71-1994 Jeffrey & Debra Godnick
Sign Variance No. 1-1995 Ben Franklin Crafts
Area Variance No. 2-1995 Mc Donald's Corporation
Area Variance No. 3-1995 Charles R. Barber
Use Variance No. 4-1995 William Threw
1.
10.
13.
13.
30.
THESE ARE NOT OFFICIALLY ADOPTED MINUTES AND ARE SUBJECT TO ßOARD
AND STAFF REVISIONS.
MONTHS MINUTES (IF
MINUTES.
REVISIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING
ANY) AND WILL STATE SUCH APPROVAL, ;.oF SAID
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QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
FIRST REGULAR MÈE-r'INGi i \, ¡
JANUARY 18, 1995
7:30 P.M.
MEMBERS PRESENT
THEODORE TURNER, CHAIRMAN
CHRIS THOMAS, SECRETARY
FRED CARVIN
THOMAS FORD
ANTHONY MARESCO
ROBERT KARPELES
MEMBERS ABSENT
DAVID MENTER
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR-JAMES MARTIN
PLANNER-SUSAN CIPPERLY
STENOGRAPHER-MARIA GAGLIARDI
MR. TURNER-If anyone is here for the McDonald's Corporation
application, the application has been tabled until February, by
the applicant.
MR. MARTIN-It'll be re-notified.
MR. TURNER-Yes. It'll be re-notified.
notice.
Everybody will get a new
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
JEFFREY & DEBRA GODNICK, PRESENT
MR. TURNER-Do you want to read the tabling?
MR. THOMAS-liThe Queensbury Zoning Board of Appeals has reviewed
the following request at the below stated meeting and has
resolved the following: Variance File # 71-1994, TABLED
MOTION TO TABLE AREA VARIANCE NO. 71-1994 JEfFREY & DEBRA
GODNICK, Introduced by Theodore Turner who moved for its
adoption, seconded by Fred Carvin:
To move the application to the Planning Board and table it until
we hear back from them. We would like them to look at the on
site drainage, permeability, visibility from the lake. get input
from them and have it come back to the ZBA.
Duly adopted this 21st day of December, 1994, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Ford. Mr. Menter, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Carvin,
Mr. Thomas. Mr. Turner
NOES: NONE
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ABSENT: Mr. Ford"
MR. MARTIN-Ted, I wanted to read the Staff Notes into the record,
if' ! could / fT'om Scott Hsr 1 icker .
MR. TURNER-Sure.
MR. MARTIN-I think these are indicative of the new Staff position
since we've gotten the information with the site plan information
that came in, 'as well as the desl~n of the house has bee'n changed
and increased si ncethe last set were WYi tten. "This project is
currently before the Zoning Board of Appeals for vayiances to
shoreline setback and garage size. It was referred to the
(Planning) Board for input regard1~~ drainage, ~eimeability and
visibility. The engineering concerns, drainage, sewage and
permeability are addressed in the Rist-Frost letter dated
1/10/95. Because of the building's height, approximately 35
feet, and bulk, apþroxi~ately 5,900 ¡~quare feet, the hoUse will
have an adverse visual impact when seen from the lake and
adjacent propertIes. The' structure~s'proximity to the lake, 45
feet, and the removal of a number of large trees will magnify the
visual impact. When viewed from the lakè~ the house will appear
as a three story 35 foot high structure that is 55 feet wide.
RECOMMENDATION: The proposed ':' house is completely out of
character with the neighboring properties, and will dwarf any
house aló'J'Igthat part 'Of the lake t. Some alternative designs that
would reduce the height and bulk of the proposed house~ so that
the negative visual impacts would be reduced, should be
presented~1I
MR. TURNER-Okay. Mr. Godnick, you heard the Staff comment. Do
you have any commént?
MR. GODNICK-The only comments ~ had was I tfied to ~eet every
request that your Board and the Board prior has made. We've
downsized the garage to meet Your 900 square foot. The septic,
the other Board recommended a ~ew system, which we've 'agreed to,
if that's the route they want to go. I mentioned to the other
Board that we've talked to Dave Hatin, the Building Inspector,
and h~J tecomme~ded that we leave t~e existing system in. The
house was used beforé, as part' of the Glenmore Lodge. It was
rented out as a five bedroom, kind of a bed and breakfast type
deal, and we'd upgrade the sewer to accommodate the extra
bedrooms and bath'~ He said 'the system ~as fine, more than
bapable of doing the three bedroom, but If0~!got no þroblem. I'd
just as soon do, when we're excavating, þutting i~ a new'system.
MR~ TURNER-Yes. It would be better to do it now tha~ it would
later on.
MR. GODNICK-Yes, three or four years down the road.
MR. TURNER-Becausèyou're going tó' Have to do it anyway.
MR. GODNICK-Exactly. The other, the permeability, my architect,
we thought the meeting was next 'week, a'T'ld I'm sorry he can't
attend tonight, but his figö~e~ don't agree with Rist-Frost's.
They're, like, 1,000 square feet off. He thought he was 'under
it. If that's the case, we've got no problem, that little jog
that we had talked about last time, o~ the garage, if that's the
case, we could knock that off. I've got no objection to that,
but he was going to talk to Rié;t"'F'ro~;t;'ànd see why his figures
don't agree. He thinks they~te taking thè whole house into
consideration, rather than the footprint of it, but he didn't
have the data in'front of hi~ to comþare it.
MR. TURNER-Well, as far
that the house is too
acre. You're squeezing
lot. That's too big.
as my own position,
big fot the lot.
almost 6,000 square
It's t6tally out
my position is this,
You've got'; J44 of an
feet of house on that
bf character for the
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neighborhood. It
like Staff says.
will create a visual impact
That's too big a house.
on the lake, just
MR. GODNICK-I don't agree. It's only 55 feet wide, or 54 feet
wide. There's actually only about 3,000 square feet of actual
living space. I'm not counting the garage and the basement.
It's built on a hill. I mean, the basement, you have to have a
foundation under the house.
MR. TURNER-Yes, but you're going to convert it to
That still becomes another story. You've got
everything, glas~ and sliders.
living space.
sliders and
MR. GODNICK-Future use downstairs.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. GODNICK-For now it wouldn't have anything.
MR. TURNER-The elevation's taken from the ground.
MR. GODNICK-It's no higher than the house next door.
MR. TURNER-It's too big a house. Way too big.
MR. GODNICK-We're meeting all requirements by the State. I don't
understand.
MR. TURNER-I know,
proposes to remove a
construct a new
nonconforming lot.
but you came here and you said, applicant
preexisting nonconforming two-story camp and
two-story house o~ the pre-existing,
Now you're going with a three story house.
MR. GODNICK-We meet all the setbacks and the height setback. I
don't understand.
MR. TURNER-It's too big. As far as I'm concerned, it's way too
big.
MRS. GODNICK-We could gQ lower, but by keeping
have to have a bigger foundation (lost word).
around as best we could.
it lower, we'd
We juggled it
MR. TURNER-Yes, but you look at it from the lake, it's, an
enormous house. It's 54 feet wide, 35 feet high. Just visualize
it. It's a big, big house.
MR. GODNICK-I could show you dozens on the lake. I mean, that's,
all your newer homes have been done that way. The lake is on a
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MR. TURNER-I can tell you right now that we've made one other
applicant come back and downsize the house because it was too big
for the lot. I'll tell you right now. Right up front.
MR. GODNICK-The Zoning Regulations, by requiring bigger lots,
they're trying to get nicer houses. They're trying to do away
with the shacks.
MR. TURNER-You've got 19,560 feet of.
MR. GODNICK-(lost word) shack with a nice home that's going to
increase everybody's value around the lake.
MR. TURNER-You've got 19,560 square feet of lot.
you've got.
That's all
MR. GODNICK-It's still one of the biggest lots on the lake.
MR. TURNER-It might be, but it's too big a house for the lot.
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MR. GODNICK-There's bigger houses on the,lak~ on smaller lots.
MR. TURNER-It's just too big, as far as l.:m. concerned. I
couldn't support your appl ication, and I won't support it.
MRS. GODN1CK-"What would you consider?; ¡
MR. TURNER-He should replace it in kind, like what,you just said,
two-story house with a two-story house. That's plenty big
èñocrgh .
MRS. GODNICK-In order to build into the hillside, you're losing a
lot of th~ basement, because you can't put bedroom$ :'and such
agalhst that wall because the . Windows (lost word) fire. There
wouldn't be any way to get out.'
MR. TURNER-Yes, but you're saying you cén't ~et out now, but
you're proposing to get out, b~cause' you're going to put a slider
in the front, so that leavès YOU' access out of th~' basement, to
get but of therè.
MR. GODNICK-We don't w.nt to use th~ b~sement for living area.
MR. TURNER-You said you did, the last time you were here. I
thought you told us that you were going to use it?
MR. GODNICK-For a family room, fot access fr~m the lake.
,
MR. TURNER-That's living area. It still counts as a floor.
MR: GúDN1CK-It's ~ot our actual living area for every day use.
That was our whole purpose in buying the lot~
MR. CARVIN-The thing that l.:m. looking at, it looks to me like
it's a three story building.
MR. TURNER-It is.
¡,r
MR. GODNICK..i.The only thing on the third floor is the master
bedroom.
MR. CARVIN-Wel'l, is this an accuratèbetrayal of the landscaping,
here?
MR. GODNICK~Yes, it is.
MR. CARVIN-So, none of this is going to be in the ground? You're
going to have a door here? I mean, I carr agrèe that this is
partially buried.
MRS. GODN!CK-There's nothing back there anyway~
word) garage now.
That's (lost
MR. GODNICK-It actually depends a lót on the neighbor'~ lot and
how it's go i ng to be 9r aded. ¡ It's' probab 1 y go i ng to be a 1 it tIe
higher than that.
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MR. CARVIN-Yes, but I'm looking at, even àn the right side, rough
estimate, 70 percent of the living space is exposed as a three
story, to the left and right, the front, very definite. I mean,
that is .bbut as fancy of a storage shèd as I've ever' seen, or
storage/garage ~nt'l'"ance, ahd I ¿án appreciate the architectural,
but, I've lòokèd at this and, believe m'e, I ;know where you're
coming from, but I'm looking ~t athreé stori structure? here,
not a two story.
MR. GODNlèK-Well, why is there a height n9st'l'"iction if you can't
butldto t~e height?
MR. CARVIN~Well, I think it has more to do 'with the'size of the
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house, the square footage
necessarily the height.
it's like a 5,000 square
quite a bit of house on a
on the lot, more than it does the, not
I mean, that's a lot of, as Ted says,
foot house, and not a 3,000. So it's
very, very small lot.
MR. GODNICK-I guess I just don't understand. We meet all the
requirements, all setbacks, except for the lake setback and the
height setback.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I think you have to take a look at the character
of the neighborhood.
MR. MARTIN-That was the other issue that came up, in terms of the
setbacks, is there's, if you'll notice, there's road frontage
here, as well, and the shoreline frontage, and I'll call your
attention to the definition of "Shoreline", which is always
considered to be the front yard, and we have a 75 foot setback
there. On the road side yard, alsQ, there, typically, is 30
feet, because that's typically thought of as the front yard. So,
I think in this particular case, we may have two front yards
here, and there's a 30 foot requirement. If that were the case,
it would be 30 feet from ~he road side lot line.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-I just spent half an hour going through the minutes,
here. It looks like the Planning Board had a real tough time
with this whole thing last night, too.
MR. GODNICK-They were split. I don't remember the count. I
think it was four to two. Four of them saw no problem with the
size of it, and the impact. They thought that it would benefit
the rest of the neighborhood.
MR. CARVIN-I think there was quite a bit of conversation on the
size and the impact. I know Betty Monahan made an appeal to the
Board to consider that. "When you looked at this site, and we
have a purpose for our Waterfront Residential. Do you know the
purpose in our Ordinance? Did you consider that the neighbors on
the other side of the road and their view shed, and what is going
to happen to their aesthetics of the lake?" "I'm talking about,
not on the lake side, but the side across the road. Did you
visualize yourself in their livingroom, as to what the effect
would be?" I know that there's other comments all the way
through here indicating, I know Mr. Brewer had quite a time, and
Mr. Paling, "Three bedrooms, that's a big house for three
bedrooms. I think we're all struggling with the size of the
house relative to the size of the lot in the neighborhood" and
"Do you have any alternative plans, or are you considering
anything?" I know Mr. Brewer expressed similar concerns. I
think there was a lot of concern about the size of the house on
the lot.
MR. GODNICK-From the roadside, it's not a three story home. I
think it's a story and a half, most of it.
MR. CARVIN-Mr. Martin, I think what we were looking for were some
hard engineerin~ numbers as far as the permeability, the
aesthetics and everything else.
MR. MARTIN-They came up with 67 percent, as permeable, but that
was on the footprint, and the numbers being that fine, if you
were to consider the overhang or eaves on the house, it might
kick that over, because we only have two percent there to work
with, and two percent of a 19,000 square foot lot only amounts to
380 square feet. So, even if the Rist-Frost number is accurate,
and apparently now the architect is questioning that, that leaves
very little leeway, in the event that, even if somebody wanted to
place a storage shed or a gazebo or something like that on this
lot, it would kick it over. Permeability is very tight.
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MR. tARVIN-Just as a matter of information, Jim, how in-depth
does the Plannins Board·get with visual impact and things like
that, 0-(' would that be more in this bailiwick? '
MR. MARTIN-I have seen where they will explore visual impact from
the standpoint of angles of view of neighbor i ng , properties.
Apþlicants have pr~sented data on site lines, visuålly on plot
plans. I've! even seen informðtion'presented where people will,
or applicants will try and project ,the size of a proposed
structure in a photograph, and then they'll show that from
terta i n angles', depending on the nature 'of the application . It
cari get that detailed.
MR. CARVIN-Although the minutes don't reflect it, do you have any
feel for what that Boa~d's feeling was?
MR. MARTIN-I was there last night, and I would get the impression
that there was, at least ön the part 'of seveyal membe~s,' 'great
concern over visual 'impact, and there were 'a couple of other
members who thought;', that the house was an improvement, but 'there
weYe certainly concerns expressed, that the visual i~pact would
'be a concern.
MR. CARVIN-I guess, Mr. Godnick,what you're saying is that the
septi6 system is not a problem, a~'far as you're cohcerned1
"rl,
MR. GODNICK-Not at all.
MR. CARVIN-You would be willing to?
MR. MARTIN-I think if you read in the early part of the minutes,
too, Scott 'also tead as part of the Staff not~s' the :purpos~ of
the Waterfront Residential zOne, and I thin~ that's important to
bear inm~nd, here. "The purpose of the Waterfront Residential
Zorle is I to' pr'otect the del icate ecological balance "Of' all the
lakes and the Hudson River, while providfngadequate
opportunities for development that would not be detrimental to
the visual character of the ~h'oreline", and h~ncef6rth, that's
why the 75 foot setb,ack is there., The other practical reason for
that is to ~llow adequate permeability between hard sdŸfaces and
the lake, so that any stormwater runoff is infiltrated 'b~fofe it
gets to the lake itself.
MR. TURNER-Do you have any other design that's an alternative to
this, that would compliment what you wanttó do ther'é ,'to reduce
the height?
MR. GODNICK-No. We've taken 'àll the data, the 'recommendations
we've g'otten, and that'~ the plan we came up with that best suits
the lot. We spent a lot of mOney 'getting all the drawings done
for you folks, so you could see what it would look like.
MRS. GODNICK-It ' s ki nd of di ff icul t bei ~:j 'the:fe~Jt' bit:kau~e now
(lost word) storage, because of permeability, we can't put in out
buildings without losing that, so we thought we'tejtY9in~ to
incorporate storage in the basement, plus (lost word) mechanical.
We've done the best we could trying to 'get" ¡evrêlry:thi~fIg"1¡4¡;11t:here
and still have it liveable. It's kind of shortsighted to build
something 'now' that, down the road, should we eveY wa'nt' to "sell
it, with the amount we have to get for lakeshore property, we
don"t want to spend that for sométhing, for a small ¡house (lost
; word) . As I unders'ta'nd the zoni n9 laws, try i ng to upgrade the
buildings that will be put o~there, ;we might not be in the
charactir of the nei~hboYhood now, its~ems like (lost word)
first of whåt we mIght' intend it to be in the future. '
MR. TURNER-My ow~ feeling' is, I hope that, down the
these höme~'that are buiít ~n the lake are ~ased on
the lot, and in proportion to t~e lot, and that size
the hei'ght be reduced, the size of the house on the
road, that
the size of
be reduced,
property be
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reduced to fit the lot that's already there. If you have two
acres, that's fine. That's different. You've only got 19,000
square feet, and you're putting 6,000 square feet of house on it.
That's a pretty enormous house.
MRS. GODNICK-If you want us to take a floor down, then
cutting out half a space (lost word) and we can't go any
with the foundation, and we want to comply at this time,
it's not going to be (lost word) with those that are there
you're
bigger
but if
now.
MR. TURNER-That's the whole problem with the lakes. The lakes
are being destroyed by over-building on the shoreline, runoff and
everything.
MR. MARTIN-Well, I think that's the important thing to bear in
mind here. I mean, we're not trying to single people out. We're
not trying to be unfair. These Ordinances were developed after a
community wide look through the master planning process. This
was a conscious decision on the part of the Town and the
community as a whole to set these standards for a Waterfront
Residential zone. I mean, this was not done willy nilly, or, you
know, just throwing a number at a wall and whatever sticks is the
number. These numbers were developed after careful consideration
to the development pressures along the lake. It's not ~
numbers. It's not the Soard's numbers. This is reflected under
the master plan and the community as a whole.
MR. TURNER-Any thoughts? Any questions?
MR. KARPELES-Are we having a public hearing?
MR. TURNER-Well, no. You can question the applicant, if you
want, or you can address any issue with the applicant you want.
MR. KARPELES-I'd just as soon reserve my comment until after we
have the public hearing.
MR. MARTIN-I think it was opened.
MR. TURNER-Yes. I don't think I closed it, though.
think we ever got to a public hearing.
I don't
MR. CARVIN-It doesn't look it. Wait a minute.
MR. TURNER-Yes. Public hearing's closed. Well, I can open it
again. That's no problem. I think, in respect to the public
hearing, I think the other thing that you, maybe some people not
coming in was the fact that this was advertised as only a two-
story house and a garage. Since then, I think there's been
comments, and you've heard them, size, height, visual impact.
I'll now open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. TURNER-Okay. Do you have any questions of the applicant?
MR. KARPELES-I agree with you. I think it's kind of big for the
lot. However, I don't see where we have any control over the
height of it. He's meeting the requirements as far aS"I feel I
was duped a little bit because it said it was a two-story house,
but, obviously, it's a three story house, but I still don't see
where you have much control over that, because it's within the
height limitations. However, we do have some control over the
setback, and I think that should be met. I hope we're being
consistent, because I'm thinking of times in the past that we
have not required people to meet that setback. I think we've got
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to make up our minds, we're either going to do it or: we:'re not
going to do it.
MR. TURNER-Yes, you're right, but we had a similar house, down at
the other end of the lake, on the same side they're on. It was
an enormous house for the size of the lot. The lot was real
narrow in the front, they wanted it right up clos~ to the lake.
So they did reduce the aize of it.
MR. KARPELES-And if he met the setbacks and, all the setbacks and
square footage, I don't see where we'd have anything to say about
it.
MR. GODNICK-Could I just add one thing? When we submitted the
application in question, one (lost words) and we called the
Building Department and asked them specific, and the best we
could come up with is a basement is a basement, whether it's walk
out or not.
MR. KARPELES-I can'u~derstand it, but still, yoti öa~ seè my
feeling whén' I see this after being ad.J.ertised as two-story.
MR. GODNICK-It was written up as two-story with a walk out
basement. We had questioned how to write it up.
MR. FORD-Has this re'ar elevation been modified si nce our previous
meeting?
MR. GODNICK-I don't know if that's the one.
MR. TURNER-We took and outlined this in red, all right. That's
the square footage in there. ~e can build the house back there
and meet all the setbacks. Hdwwould you sell that house if you
built it, if you were going to sell it, two story or three?
MR. GObNICKJ.A realtor" would say a two story with a walk out
basement, because I'm putting ~ house on the market the same way
as it is right now.
MR. FORD-I'm glad we have these visual representations tonight,
because the last time we met, we w~re concerned about the size
and whether it was two, two and a half, or three stories, and I
recall, and the minutes indicate my asking the question, I was
wondering if your design, at three stories, would allow for that
to be a part of the living space, and Mr. Jager said, they may
bui Id a"fami ly room or somethi ng else downstairs. ' Currentl y ,
it's going to be basically open space, and I asked the questions,
just a sealed wall, and the response was, yes. That is far from
a sealed Wall in the basement ar~a.
MR. MARESCO~MY feeling is, also, pretty much, that the size of
the house is a little bit too big for the lot. I think you folks
are really trying, though. I think as you said you'would ~eet
the septic. I think we have to be con¢ernéd with all the other
applicants that we get. We can't say yes to you, and then when
somebody els~ comes in, who has¢ome i~ previously, and say no to
them.
MR. TURNER-I guess the other thing to consider, also, we've never
done it before, but you want to consider the road as a second
front. That changes the setback of 30 feet instead of 20. It's
not considered a resr, the front being the lake.
MR. CARVIN-I don't think we've ever used that criteria in the
past.
MR. TURNER-No, we haven't.
MR. CARVIN-I don't see where 'we can, I don't see where we can
impose that situation.
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MR. TURNER-No. I don't think we should impose it.
MR. KARPELES-I think we make it almost impossible for him to use
the lot if we did that.
MR. TURNER-The comment came up, so I threw it out there. Did you
guys see this? What we did today is we sketched this all in.
You could put that house in there and meet every setback, and you
don't need any variance. There's 5,062 square feet, and you meet
every setback.
MR. MARESCO-This is for a smaller house, though, than they're
proposing?
MR. TURNER-Well, that's what I'm saying. It's a two story. They
advertise it as two story.
MR. MARESCO-This is 75 from the shoreline.
MR. TURNER-And you meet the side setback here. They have to have
a total of 50 feet, the sum of 50 and a minimum of 20 on one
side.
MR. FORD-That is not fitting this.
MR. TURNER-That's how much room they've got to work with, right
there.
MR. FORD-And that 5,062 square feet.
MR. TURNER-Within that area.
MR. FORD-And that is counting how many stories?
MR. TURNER-Didn't elaborate on that. They could put it in there.
They could put a house in there and meet all the setbacks, a
house.
MR. CARVIN-Does that take into consideration septic, Ted?
MR. TURNER-Yes. They could get the septic in there.
MR. GODNICK-Yes, but why should L be required to build in back of
everybody else?
MR. TURNER-I'll tell you why, because if this guy down the road
comes and says, I want a new one, he's going to have to move his
back, because that's the purpose of the Ordinance. It used to be
50 feet. Now it's 75. We want to get them away from the lake.
MR. GODNICK-Yes, but that's penalizing me.
money for the lake property. I pay my taxes,
build in back of everybody else and look at
they remodel? That's not fair.
I mean, I pay good
and now I've got to
their shacks, until
MR. TURNER-That's 75 foot. That's what's required.
MR. GODNICK-I disagree.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MR. GODNICK-If that's the case, I'd like to ask that the meeting
be tabled so I can get my attorney.
MR. TURNER-If that's what you want.
MR. GODNICK-That's what I'd like to do.
MR. TURNER-Okay. I'll make a motion.
- 9 -
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MOTIONI '10':!Tf%BLE, AREAJ'VAfÜAN€e· NO'. 71-1994 JEFFREY & DEBRA
iORNICK, Introduced by Theodore Turner who moved for its
~doption, seconded by Fred Carvin:
, '
App1î¿alß'è hå~~f n9qû~~'ted £8 tâble the application until he can
refer to counsel.
Duly adopted this 18th day of J~nuary, 1995, by the following
vote:
~R. KARPELES-I don't see why we should table this.
MR. TURN~R-He's tabling it. He's asking to table it. He wants
to get counsel:
MR. KARPELES-Well, he can appeal it after we make a decision,
can't he?
MR. TURNER-He could.
MR.'CARVIN.....He could.
MR. KARPELES~If he wanted counsel, he should have brought him
with him. No, I vote no.
MR. CARVIN-You brought up a real good point.
MR. TURNER-He did.
MR. CARVIN-I'm not quite sure what counsel is going to do, but
I'll, if he wants counsel, I'll vote yes.
AYES: Mr. Ford, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Carvin, Mr. Thomas, Mr. Turner
NOES: Mr. Karpeles
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
NEW BUSINESS:
SIGN VARIANCE NO. 1-1995 TYPE: UNLISTED PC-1A BEN FRANKLIN
CRAFTS OWNER: NORTHWAY PLAZA ASSOCIATES; NORTHWAY 'ÞLAZA, 'SITE
5F UPPER GLEN STREET APPLICANT PROPOSES TO INSTALL THREE (3)
WALL SIGNS ÌN ADDITION TO ITS EXISTING WALL $IGN~' :ÄND SEEKS
RELIEF FROM, $ECTION 140~6, WHICH ALLOWS ONE WALL SIGN PER
OCCUPANT "OF A BUSINE$S COMPLEX. (WARREN COUNTY PLANNING)
1/11/95 TAX MAP NO. 72-7-4 LOT SIZE: N/A SECTION 140-6
JOEL BOVAIR, SIGNTECH, REPRESËNTINè APPLICANT, PRESENt
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Sign Variance No. 1-1995, Ben Franklin Crafts,
Meeting Date: January 18, 1995 "APPLIC~~T: Ben Franklin Crafts
PROJECT LOCATION: Northway Plaza,' Queensbury PROÞòSÊÖ"ACTION:
Applicant Þropóse~ to install three (3) wall signs in addition to
its existin!¡;Jwall sign.' CÖNFORMANCe:WITH THE, ORDINANCE:
Aþplicant seè~s relief from Se¿tion 140-6, which allows one wal
sign per occupant of a business complex. REASON FOR VARIANCE
REQUEST AND BENEFIT TO APPLICANT: Applicant believes the signs
would m~k~ the storefront more visible to customers, and
advertise the type of merchandise sold within. FEASIBLE
~LTERNATIVES: If the applicant believes the store is not being
'seen, perhaps it'can be adverti~ed on the freestanding sign, as
ailowed. IS'THISRELIEF SÚBSTANTIAL RE~ATIVE TOTH~:ORDINANCE?
The applicant is asking for 3 more signs than allowed (total
square footage 37.8 square feet). The existing sign is red,
illûminated, and 147.5 square feet. EFFf;CTS ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD
OR COMMUNITY: The additional signage would have the effect of
visual clutter, particularly if this route were followed by
- 10 -
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others in the plaza. IS THISDIFFIÇU4TY SE4F-C8EAT~D? ,The
desire for more signage is self-created. There does not ,appear
to be a site-related difficulty in seeing this store. PARCEL
HISTORY: This store is part of Northway Plaza, one of the older
shopping plazas in the area. STAFF COMMENTS AND CONCERNS: No
further comments. S~QR: Unlisted. Short Form EAF should be
reviewed. "
MR. THOMAS-"At a meeting of the Warren County Planning Board held
on the 11th day of January 1995, the above application for a Sign
Variance to install three wall signs in addition to its existing
wall sign was reviewed and the following action was taken.
Recommendation to: Disapprove Comments: The Warren County
Planning Board has always tried to conform with the Queensbury
Sign Ordinance and the existing sign is more than sufficient."
Signed by Thomas Haley, Chairperson.
MR. TURNER-Okay. Would you care to add any further comments to
your application?
MR. BOVAIR-It states that I'm adding signs to there, but the
signs already exist. All we want to do is put copy on the face
of it, to tell people that pull in the Plaza to know what type of
store it is. Right now, the Plaza is, that storefront is over
400 feet from the road. You really don't notice that (lost word)
from the road (lost word) channel letters higher up on the
building. So I don't think it's going to have an adverse effect
on the area. You've got Queensbury Plaza that's filled up over
the last two years, and there's a lot of competition around. All
I can say is it's hardly noticeable until you're in the parking
lot, for potential customers.
MR. TURNER-Well, the store isn't "hardly noticeable", because I
looked at it today, and you can drive right down the Lake George
Road and you can see it. Those big, bold red letters stick r,ight
out.
MR. BOVAIR-Right, the store, but.
MR. TURNER-As far as what they carry.
MR. BOVAIR-Right~ the products.
. , . '"1·
j "; .'
MR. TURNER.-But th~Y're only allowed one sign:on:the wall.
it,. To grant YOl!- a var i~nce on this would,op~n aT)
P~npora's" Box. Ste.inbach's has come in here, and they'ye
theirs changed. ')!
That's
awful
wanted
MR. BOVAIR-Steinbach's is the only store in there that's allowed
a sign on the building and a spot on the pylon sign.
MR. MARESCO-Steinbach's only has one sign, don't they?
don't have any others.
They
MR. MARTIN-Yes, but it should be pointed out that that's not the
Town'~ fault that that's the case with the pylon sign. It's not
Aµr Tegulations that prohibit that. It may be a private lease
agreement in the' Plaza, 'but that's not our problem, to be quite
blunt.
MR. BOVAIR-So any store in that Plaza, with the agreement of the
own~rs of that Plaza can add to that pylon sign?
MR. MARTIN-I don't know. I've heard that said before that
St~inbach~~ is the only one permitted on that pylon sign. That's
not a part of this Code.
MR. TURNER-;No.
on there?
They're not allowed on there.
How did they get
- 11 -
......'
MR. MARTIN-They're allowed, with the change that was last done,
the Business Complex.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
"I! ¡,'¡¡-it, '] ~'I
.'
["Ii, I \', ¡:
"j ¡ I
MS. CIPPERLY-Wit.hin square footage requir~~ents.
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. MARËSCO-I don't think there's any way to possibly miss that
store. 1 mean, I've driven up and down that 1,000 tiMes, and
that store is ~xtre~ély visible. I doh't think you'd have to
worry about competition. I think Benjamin Franklin is goirig to
put the other people out of business. Peoþle that shop in
Benjamin Franklin know what they carry. They know it's a craft
store. They're well aware of what's there, I'm sure.
MR. BOVAIR-There are potential customers that have not ever been
to Ben Franklin.
MR. MARESCO-But you can't miss the sign.
visible.
I mean, it~s extremely
MR. BOVAIR-Right, but you don't know what they sell there.
Before I got this job from Ben Franklin, I'd'never 'been in that
store. I've got Ames right up the roªd, the new K-Mart down the
r'()~d,. ,"1 " , ! ,; 1,' ¡ "¡,' " " " ' , i : II '¡,.: "
j '.'¡ j) ¡ .' ! ' ¡ " i ~ !~. ( ,
M~. ", MARESbb-Ybu also'Ravè word' ôf!mouth'adJértisi 1'''9, ,1~i' :, 'þeople
'that are' outsrdé the!" area th~t, ddM~t :'k110W 'W11ât "â "Benjami n
""Frankl'In: 'is, but.)most'þèoP'lê T wHo' ðre fnto¡~râif:t~ kt1ow<:tbout that
, name. It;s'a êh~'in'~: i~Tr!\ti'it?!~:;That·s 'not'thefÖMÏ!y 'srt8Y~?
L '~ ~ r-;~'>lrt,,'I~'1 r>j:ft,¡, ¡' i..,j' .' ;,::1,' ¡;..--~:"~)'.'
MR. CARV:ItìI.lT 'know ttl'eT Stlflday'1!yer has thê' 'BeniPra'nkïi n ' stuff.
So, I mean, there's plenty of other advertising media besides the
three signs on the building. I' know my wife knows what Ben
Franklin is. I didn't know what it was, but she promptly
informed me what it was.
MR. FORD-I believe that the existing sidnage is sufficient.
MR. TURNER-It's more than adequate.
MR. MARESCO-You're not going to lose any business, believe me,
because of not having those threesi~ns.
,.!. "¡,,-~. Jd/1,.-j¡.J!r~-: '~- .-, ,~k¡ '0":./;" ,- .'-'It". /-,' .
MR. KARPELES-I think we've been pretty consist ~it~~ot .llowing
multiple signs.
MR. TURNER-Unless there's a real good reason, hardship, whatever.
Okay. I'll now open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
CORRESPONDENCE
MR. THOMAS-One letter. "A r:ecord of telephone ,conversation,
dated:JandlfOY 16, 1993, bètweiêh'M<:iry' 'Bodenw'rser'/ 'owner of- the
Alpén'haus MoteI'bn Route': cy; and .susan CipÞer 1 ý,{l€)¥, ,the Pl!ëi1'1'ni ng
Depa'r'tmênt ~':, I J'ª3b~e¿t: ,,1åQii 'phhiklih' " C-faft: !,1s1~n' Variance
,¡~pplicatf?n';',caï~Jfbr",.i n~ßY!ry~~'H~,~",~e~~+9~ ~s.;'J~f'ò~¿~~~,..,þ ~i~n:.1':, She
l~ already âble to' seè 'the Be'nt'tt"ranRl¡ns:tgn fro\'òJacro~s RoU't'ê 9,
esp'€kiaiiy (át nlgfh:.,and belie0ès:' "th'at oT"le'~ï'ªYtr p~~' s~'6~é is
enough. 'othéfwifse; thek'Pl~za' 'and' ':'ar'Jð i n ge11~ri:il wi 11 "ntYt look
. ^,'- '<0 _ . '. ,,". : _,-' _." ,_"_, - . " -I" . j', -i' ,:,,> - ..
good. : The call'er>is unable' to atte'nd the meet'irlg'ånd :would like
her concerns as summar ized here to be read' i n'to tKê" m'i nut'es. "
'- 12 -
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And it's signed Sue Cipperly.
MR. TURNER-Okay, a motion's in order.
MOTION TO DENY SIGN VARIANCE NO. 1-1995 BEN FRANKL¡N CRAFTS,
Introduced by Theodore Turner who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Thomas Ford:
The applicant's sign that exists on the building now is more thanf
adequate and visible from the roadways that encompass this
shopping center. The approval of this Variance would open a
Pa~dora's Box and would put a further burden on the community as
to the signage and would overburden the Sign Ordinance, with the
excessive signage. It would have a detrimental effect on the
communi ty.
Duly adopted this 18th day of January, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Ford, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Carvin,
Mr. Thomas, Mr. Turner
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
AREA VARIANCE NO. 2-1995 TYPE: UNLISTED HC-1A MC DONALD'S
CORPORATION OWNER: EDWIN D. KING QUAKER ROAD, DIX AVE.,
HIGHLAND AVE. APPLICANT PROPOSES PLACEMENT OF A CURB CUT FOR A
FAST-FOOD RESTAURANT THIRTY-SEVEN (37) FEET FROM AN EXISTING CURB
CUT, CLOSER THAN ALLOWED BY SECTION 179-66B(4), WHICH REQUIRES
ONE HUNDRED FIFTY, (150) FEET BETWEEN ADJOINING ACCESS POINTS FOR
COMMERCIAL USES. (WARREN COUNTY PLANNING) 1/11/95 TAX MAP NO.
110-1-3.3 LOT SIZE: 1.833 ACRES SECTION 179-66B(4)
MR. TURNER-We have a letter from McDonald's Corporation, in
respect to their application.
MR. MARTIN-Regarding Area Variance request, McDonald's
Corporation "Dear Mr. Martin, It is requested that our
application for an area variance be tabled until the February
15th meeting. Sincerely, Edward J. Bealer Project Manager"
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MOTION TO TABLE AREA VARIANCE NO. 2-1995 MCDONALD'S CORPORATION,
Introduced by Theodore Turner who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Chris Thomas:
At the request of the applicant, until February.
Duly adopted this 18th day of January, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Maresco, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Carvin, Mr. Thom~s",
Mr. Ford, Mr. Turner
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
AREA VARIANCE NO. 3-1995 TYPE, II SFR-1A CHARLES R. BARBER
OWNER: CHARLES R. BARBER APPROX. 2,000 FT. NORTH OF
INTERSECTION OF BAY AND BLIND ROCK ROADS APPLICANT PROPOSES TO
CONSTRUCT ONE SINGLE-FAMILY HOME ,ON A FIVE (5) ACRE LOT WHICH
WOULD HAVE 16.24 FEET OF FRONTAGE ON BAY ROAD. RELIEF IS SOUGHT
FROM SECTION 179-70, WHICH STATES THAT FORTY (40) FEET OF ROAD
FRONTAGE IS REQUIRED FOR ONE (1) PRINCIPAL BUILDING. (WARREN
COUNTY PLANNING) 1/11/95 TAX MAP NO. 48-3-43 LOT SIZE: 3
ACRES SECTION 179-70
- 13 -
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TIM BARBER AND RIC~ARD BARBER, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 3-1995, Charles R. Barber,
Meeting Date: January 18, 1995 "APP~IÇANT:. Charles R. Barber
PROJECT LOCATION: Bay Róad, north of Blind Ro¿kRoad PROPOSED
ACTION: Applicant proposes to build one single-family home on a
5-acre parcèl, which is currently landlocl<e'd'. CONFÖRMANCEWITH
ORDINANCE: The applicant has arranged to modify the parcel so
that access to Bay 'Road is available. However, it was only
possible to secure 16.24 feet of road frontage from adjoining
landowners. Applicant seeks relief from Section 179-70, which
requires 40 feet of frontage on a Town road for one principal
building. BEASON FOR VARIANCE REQUEST. AND BENEFiT TO APPLICANT:
The applicant would be able to build a home, and utilize an other
wise unusable parcel. FEASIBLE ALTERNATIVES: There may be
alternatives. Information regarding an adjoining~ubdivision is
provided per reque~tby . Ted Turn~r. I§ THIS RELIEF SUBSTANTIAL
RELATIVE TO THE ORDINANCE? The reliêf sought is approximately
60% of the requirement. EFfECTS ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD OR
COMMUNITY: Other than the road frontage issue~ this is a
complying lot and would only generate traffic from one single-
family home. No comment 'from the neighb6rhöod has been received
as of this writing. IS THIS DIFFICULTY SELF-CREATED?: The
di ff icul ty seems to be an ex isti ng landlocked parcel' plus the
apparent unavailability of any additional land to increase the
road frontage. PARCEL HISTORY: Thi~'parcel was created prid~ to
1977, according to Assessór's records. Tax map showing existing
situation is attached. ,SIAFF COMM~NTS ~NQ CONCERNS: According
to the apþIicant, thesé'twó lots w~fe' part of a 'proposed
subdivision development plan. That plan has been abandoned at
this time. SEOR: Type II, no further action required."
MR. THOMAS-"At a meeting of the Warren County Planning Board held
on the 11th day of January 1995, the above application for an
Area Variance to construct a single family home on a five acre
lot which would have 16.24' of frontage on Bay Road was reviewed
and the following action was taken. Recommendation to: No
County Impact". Signed by ThomasHal~y, Chairperson.
MR. TURNER-Anythi~g?
MR. T. BARBER~I'd like
What we're proposing
foot road and make
are consolidating,
to subMit another documeni t~ th~ Board.
to do there is take the existing sixteen
it the entrance to 'Lots 44 and 43, which we
and it's going to be a: sin~le famil~ d~elling.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MR. T. BARBER-And the article I just gave ,you was the deed to
that 16 foot road.
MR. TURNER-All tight. See the subdivision right here? This is
Dallek's subdivision. See this road right here? That was
dedicated as a road system to this property.
MR. T. BARBER-Okay.
MR. TURNER-Did a~ybody e~Þlore the thought of going 'out this way?
Can we get? It's a whole lot shorter.
MR. T. BARB~R-The thing is, Ted, it's not oOr land.'
MR. TURNER-I know it isn't.
MR. T. BARBER-And secondly, we really do want to make use of that
16 foot drive, becaUse that will b~ owned by Richard, and he's
going to put in an eight fòot drive there. We didn't explore
that, and we don't really want to explore that as an option: If
, J - 14 -
'--
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we don't utilize the 16 foot strip of land there, it's really
going to become useless.
MR. CARVIN-Do you own that? Is that a right-of-way, or is this
ownership?
MR. T. BARBER-No. That is an owned parcel of Ipnd~
MR. TVRNER-It's an owned parcel. The Dalleks own it.
MR. T. BARBER-That's been a farm road for 31 years or so.
MR. TURNER-This one here.
MR. T. BARBER-Yes.
, , .j
MR. CARVIN-So we're not talki~g a right-of-way.
MR. T" :BARBER-No.
parcel of property.
It is not a right-of~way. It is an owned
The deed that Ipre.ented to you shows that.
MR. CARVIN-Okay.
MR. KARPELES-It would sure make a lot more sense, it seems.
MR. CARVIN-It would.
MR. FORD-What efforts have been made to purchase sufficient
property on either side of that 16 foot section?
MR. T. BARBER-On both sides of that, there's homes and there
would be no options.
MR. FORD-No. That wasn't the question.
made to secure that land?
What efforts have been
MR. T. BARBER-There has been none. There has been no effort. I
believe it's not an option. The houses are pretty close.
MR. MARESCO-Is there a business on the other side, right?
MR. T. BARBER-No. There's residential housing on both sides.
MR. MARTIN-It also should be pointed out, in terms of purchase of
property of either of the adjoining lots would require a variance
also, because you would be increasing the nonconformity of the
adjoining lots, because they're nonconforming as well.
MR. TURNER-Right.
MR. CARVIN-How do you address the tree? There's a pretty large
pine tree right at the end of that road.
MR. T. BARBER-We've always dealt with it.
obstacle, trucks and tractors.
It has not been a
MR. CARVIN-Well, it doesn't look like it's used that frequently,
at this point.
MR. T. BARBER-It's used, it's the only entrance right now, other
than a rough mountain road (lost word) Glen Lake.
MR. CARVIN-But how many times is it used in the course .of a
month?
MR. T. BARBER-Maybe 10, 10, 15.
MR. CARVIN-Because it certainly doesn't look it. I was out there
the other day, and it doesn't look like there's been anything up
there in quite a while.
- 15 -
--"
MR. TURNER-$omebody was in there tðday.' Because I looked at it
today. I 'don't know who was in there.
MR. T. BARBER-I would say 10. 15 times. Not in the winter time.
obviously. There's been no traffic in there. that l k~ow of. in
the last month or two because of the weather and snow.
MR. CARVIN-I assume then. because there's so much traffic up
through there. that's the reason why, that the children's play
area is all fenced off?
MR. T. BARBER-In that particular atéa? I don-t know. That fence
has always been there. You have clear view coming out both
sides.
MR. CARVIN-No. I disagree with you there. That pine tree sits
right smack dab in the middle.
MR. T. BARBER-Did you happen to pull into the lot?
MR. CARVIN-Yes. I've been
there, and that tree,sits
coming up and down.
in through there. around there, by
right'in the visual linø of impact
MR. T. BARBER-Well. maybe it needs pruning.
MR. CARVIN-That's a real challenging driveway you have there,
with that tree sitting there.
MR. T. BARBER-I don't think the tree should be a problem.
could be either removed, pruned.
That
'.:i ~'-.; ",;
, : -~, :
,1,-1, '
'.. "
MR. CARVIN-It probably wouldn't unless somebody was coming down
the Bay Road at 100 miles an hour, and then youwóuld have a
problem, a very serious one.
MR. T. BARBER-Yes. you're right.
MR. TURNER-Does that tree belong to you?
MR. T. BARBER-Yes, I believe it's qn the property'.
d;
MR. CARVIN-Well, there's a very largè tree that sits right in
this corner. right he~e, and I Would reall~ want to get the
ownership of that tree straightened away.
MR. TURNER-I parked right in froDt and I walked in there. and
like you said, that fence is right up to the roád.
.J ~ ,
MR. CARVIN-That fence is right Q.D. the' r'oad.
MR. TURNER-I know, it might even be on l:Q.YL property.
MR. T~ BARBER-It may be on the' property. that fence has been
there .1nce I can remember as a little kid~ They used to h~ve a
garden in that entir~ area. I do~~t<know what they have in there
right now. I haven't paid much attent~on t~ it.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
n,ow.
It looks like a place for kids to play, right
,
MR. CARVIN-wéll, there's a swing set.
MR. 'Tt,JRNER-A swing set and everything else in there.
. MR. CARVIN-I'm assumi n9 that the'rê's kiids that gO with tha;t.
MR. TURNER-Any other questions. anybody?
,
MR. T. BARBER-Maybe the one thing that should be considered,
- 16 -
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also, on that five
family residence.
split the parcel
entire five acres
reqrquadrant.
acre lot, there's only going to be one single
We're not going to put another home, or try to
at a later date. We're going to take that
and utilize it and put the house towards the
MR. TURNER-Where, back here?
MR. T. BARBER-Yes. Approximately where the 43, 44 lot line
merge, or I guess the west, south corner.
MR. FORD-That's where the hedgerow is now?
MR. T. BARBER-Yes, it is.
MR. TURNER-See, with the proposed
that subdivision is right there,
that's down the road.
subdivision, and the road for
and that's that white house
MR. T. BARBER-That's that (lost word) style house there. Up the
road a few parcels from there, I'm trying to see where it is here
on the map, there's a cedar home that was built behind the front
lots there, with a similar type situation.
MR. TURNER-Yes, you're right. Anything else?
MR. T. BARBER-I believe that's it.
MR. TURNER-Okay. Let me open the public hearing, then. I'll now
open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
JOHN MCPHEE
MR. MCPHEE-My name is John McPhee. I live in that cedar house in
the back. My point of being here is a matter of principal. Mr.
Barber has applied to have an existing road, Code of 40 foot
frontage on Bay Road reduced to 16 feet. This is taking
advantage of the 16 foot farm road going 551 feet into the
property he wants to build on. As to my involvement, I own 161
feet of that 551 feet of the farm road. In 1988, I applied to
subdivide four acres of land with an existing house on it. I
wanted to build a house on the back with other property behind
the existing home. I was told I needed 30 feet of frontage on
Bay Road. I had the property surveyed to reflect this. Six
months later, when I was ready to go ahead with the building, I
was told I needed 40 feet on Bay Road. They had a special
meeting on this in the Town, to see if the 30 feet could be kept.
The reply was, no. I had to go with 40 feet. I had to re-survey
the property at my own expense, change the driveway, and change
the house layout. As to the farm road, a friend wanted to
purchase a parcel of land on Susan Place, next to that 25 foot
piece of road there. They also wanted to buy a piece of [!)Y land
and put them together. This is when we found out about the farm
road, meaning we couldn't put the two pieces together. We went
to the Warren County Center to investigate the fa'"m road. As it
turned out, the County had no record of anyone owning it, nor did
it have any record of anyone paying taxes on it. This, of
course, meant the thought of joining the two pieces of property
was out. In fact, this 16 foot right-of-way, or farm road, if
it's proven to belong to Mr. Barber, why should he be given a
variance of 16 feet when I had to use 40, with this being on my
own subdivision? Also I believe the five acres in question
adjoins another fifty acres owned by the same person, with other
means of access. In closing, I believe that going from the
required 40 feet of frontage to 16 feet of frontage is a bit
extreme.
MR. KARPELES-Can I ask you a question? I don't know which lot
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you're located on, which one's yours?
MR. MCPHEE-Forty-one.
MR. KARPELES-Forty-one. Okay.
MR. TURNER-You alluded to the fact you own, how muc~,121 feet?
MR. MCPHEE-I own 161 foot of frontage, a19ng the Farm to Market
road, the farm road.
MR. TURNER-One hundred and sixty one, and that goes from your
back corner toward the road, is that correct?
MR. MCPHEE-Yes.
MR. TURNER-This '1 i ne right here, Mr. McPheé",";r ight from that
corne, to there?
MR. MCPHEE-Yes, and I have had to go from jo to 40 here to put
this in, and I had to move all the b,oundar ies on this one, and
moving the hOl,lse back to giVé' me ~nough space between th¡is line
and my house.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So you're conten~ing that you own the (lost
word) point up here?
MR. TURNER-This is your side yard?
MR. MCPHEE~That's my side' yard.
MR. TURNER-Yes. You own to that, and that's it. You don't own
the right~of-way?
MR. MCPHEE-No.
MR. TURNER-You onl y own, abut "that right-of-way'?
MR. MCPHEE-We went to the county. They couldn't prove who owned
it.
MR. TURNER-Did you want to see this?
MR. CARVIN-The deed from 1971.
MR. MCPHEE-The bottom of the one I ~ave is datede~rlier than
that. There's also granting and conveying to the party of the
second part, a right~of-way for áll purposes ovér a 16 foot farm
road adjacent to the said parcel.. The way I read this, it was
just to go in the back and farm, cut the hay. Now what becomes
of that 55 acres of hay back there, how they're going to get in
to farm there? Is it just going to die? And it is also part of
50 other acres belong to the same people, and there are other
ways in there.
MR. CARVIN-See, I'm not sure this is ownership, Ted.
MR. TURNER-For the sum of a dollar, and he just conveyed it to
him.
MR. MCPHEE-As 'of right now, if you go in the back of that parcel,
of that farm road, you're not driving on the 16 foot they're
talking about. You're driving on somebody else's property,
because from my property line, my stake, 16 feet out is in the
middle of the tire tracks. They are driving over somebody else's
property right now. ' ,
MR. CARVIN-I'd ~ant a clarificátion, tf that's ownêrship, or if
that's just conveying the right-of-way:
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MR. FORD-I would agree with the need for that clarification.
MR. CARVIN-I mean, am I reading it wrong?
MR. FORD-No, the way L read it, any interest he may have in the
right-of-way.
MR. CARVIN-In the right-of-way.
MR. TURNER-Okay. Who else wishes to be heard on this matter?
JOAN METRAW
MS. METRAW-My name is Joan Metraw, and I live at 16 Susan Place.
I'm opposed to this variance. The back yard of my property runs
along this farm road. My house is 25 feet from this road. I
will have no privacy in my back yard. I bought my land because
the land is beautiful and quiet. This will now all change. I
will have noise from vehicles. I'll have car lights coming in
the back of my house. The land is clay soil out on that roadway.
When it rains in the spring and the fall, it's one big mess.
Even if it was graveled, I'd have stones thrown in my yard. We
have no fire hydrants in this area. What if there was a fire up
in their house? The water has to be trucked in by tankers. No
way can two tankers meet on that 16 and three quarter foot road
and meet each other and pass each other without going onto
somebody's property. There's a danger for children playing in
the back yard. I have nieces and nephews that spend weekends
with me. I'm 25 feet out, like I'm out there, but there are
vehicles going up and down that road. What happens if a vehicle
goes off the road and goes on my property and there's an
accident? I can't afford this liability. I have no protection,
unless I put up a fence, and I don't want to do that, because
that will spoil the beautiful landscape out there. What happens
to the re-sale value of my property? Would any of you like to
live with a street in front of your house and another roadway,
with active traffic 25 feet from the back of your house? And I
would like to add, they are correct. They are traveling over ~
property on that roadway. The hedgerow has grown up so far that
when they go over, they are on my land. Thank you.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MR. CARVIN-Excuse me. Could you point out which parcel?
MR. TURNER-Right here, Fred.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So that's this one right here.
MR. TURNER-Yours is the light blue house?
MS. METRAW-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-If this is a deeded road, she's going to have a road
up through the side there.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. You are aware of that road?
MS. METRAW-Between my house and the, yes, I knew that when I
bought the property. Yes, I was well aware of that.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. METRAW-This is where they turn. My property, my home is
right in the middle, and as they come out of this corner, the car
lights are going to shine right into the back of my house, plus
being 25 feet from (lost word).
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MR. CARVIN~Yes, but you wouldn't have a problem if this was
developed?
MS~ METRAW-No, I wouldn't.
MR. FORD-What's the status of that property right now?
MR. CARVIN-That's a deeded road. That's a road.
ðllocated.to be access to this property, apparently.
MS. METRAW-That's what I was under tne
bought, that that wa~ be a road to a future
and I bought my property knowing that, but
bought my property knoWing a road was going
It was
understanding when I
development out back,
I would not have ever
in there.
MR. KARPELES-I drove in there yesterday. I almoét got stuck,
wi th four wheel dr ive. '"
MR. TURNER-Who wishes to be heard next?
GAY JARVIS
MRS. JARVIS-My name is Gay Jarvis, and,I live at One Susan Place,
which is the adjoining subdivi.ion to the f~rm ro~~. I'd like to
say that I am opposed to this, for several reasons. When my
husband and I first bought the proPért~in 1984, we bought it
from Mr. and Mrs. Dallek, and they shci~ed us how it was
subdivided, what homes would gO in. We Were the onl~ bnes there
with woods ând a dirt road, and there we were standing ih the
middle looking where things would be before we' put our money
down, and we asked a ~uestion.What haþ,pens to the fields next
door? I~ there going to be a circumstance whøn the~e's øoing to
be . a build up? And they said, possibly so. " That's why we need
to give the Town access to ~hose parcels of property through the
middle of Susan Place. If you'll look on your map, you'll see
Alice Drive tees in to Susan Place, but if you continue ~traight,
that now is grass and bushes grown up, but that is the legal
access road to that property that's being talked about today
here. I don't have my (lo~t word) with me, but that was how it
Was explained to us.
MR. TURNER-It's right here.
MRS. JARVIS-Yes. Right straight through there. So there is an
alternate access to that, and that is a very short little access
to me, compared to cutting in another road from Bay Road.' It
seems that we have so much development going on in Queensbury.
To keep it picturesque and' somewhat' country~ish should be
considered. Also, about the farm road and its use, its present
use, I have a son five years old, ~nd a daughter eight. Needless
to say, they are children who like to play outside and who are
outside a lot, and I, of coùrse, have been outside with them a
lot over the past eight years that we've lived there, and, as far
as use of that farm road goes, very rarely do I ever see anything
on the farm road~ As a matter of fact, when a tract~r did come
up to the farm road, there was a,car that followed it, a~d my
children were all excited, look at thi~, here's â car. I mean,
it was like the first time we'd ever seen a car on the road. The
farmer does come off, and I don't know what they do, hay it or
there might be something that the~ take care of in the back, but
as far as it being an accessible road, I don't know if can put my
four wheel vehicle on it. You said you saw it yourself. You
were up there yourself. I think that'~.ll I had to~ay, and I
did have a note that I'd like read, from my husband. He couldn't
be here tonight. "
MR. TURNER-Okay. Sure.
heard next?
Thank you,
Next?
Wryo wishes to be
DOROTHY KEECH
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MRS. KEECH-We are the neighbors of this farm road, whatever it
is, Harold and Dorothy Keech. We live at 562 Bay Road, just
south of the road. We're opposed to it for these reasons. It
would create a situation with driveways in too close proximity,
and there's (lost word) on one side of our property. This would
become a driveway which is adjacent to the other side, and the
next door neighbor that's on the other side, both houses up above
and through almost directly across from the entrance to this.
You probably have seen there is another house with a driveway,
and they have to back there to get (lost word) out of that
driveway. It's, you know, jogged a little, but it's almost
across from it, and then there's the barn that would be (lost
word) with their lot, trailer lot, going in and out of that a
good deal. So there are already all of these driveways within a
very short distance and also traffic is sometimes heavy and fast
on that road and coming down over the top of the hill a very
short distance that it's visible from the road. Also, a
variance, as I have been told, is only meant to be granted in
circumstances of extreme need or hardship, which does not appear
to be the case here. There being other lots, other places that
could be obtained for building. The access road, which is
different places is called a right-of-way or a farm road. On our
deed, it calls it a right-of-way, a 15 foot right-of-way, and it
was created solely to access the land for farm and garden work.
It runs between established properties which could suffer damage,
defacement and drastically reduced value if a lane or driveway is
constructed and use of the roadway changed. We believe it would
create serious problems for all concerned, the people (lost word)
to use it as a driveway, as well as the people on either side of
it. We see it as a detriment to, a definite way we are going to
be hurt. Certainly the value of the property would be reduced
considerably, and so we asked that the rights of the adjacent
property owners be seriously considered.
MR. TURNER-Mrs. Keech, could I ask yoU, your deed has the ,-ight-
of-way in it also?
MRS. KEECH-It calls it a right-of-way, not that we own it, but it
refers to it, because our property comes up against it. So when
surveying it, they used it to define our property line.
MR. TURNER-Yes. It's bounded.
way.
It says bounded by the right-of-
MRS. KEECH-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-Okay. So her boundary comes to the right-of-way?
MR. TURNER-Right-of-way. She doesn't have it.
MRS. KEECH-Our lot fronts the main road.
back.
It's about 400 feet
MR. TURNER-A point was raised. Jim brought it to our attention.
There's no line. There's no break in here. So since that's been
surveyed, they own that right-of-way
MR. T. BARBER-It's a surveyed right-of-way.
MR. TURNER-Yes. There's no break in the boundary line here.
MRS. KEECH-I'm not disputing that.
MR. TURNER-No. I'm just pointing it out.
there. So they do own that right-of-way.
There's no break
MR. MCPHEE-Why weren't the taxes paid on it?
never been paid on it over the years?
Why have taxes
MR. T. BARBER-Taxes have been paid for all the years.
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MR. MCPHEE-The County doesn't have it. The County has no record
of ownership or the taxes.
CAROLINE BARBER
MRS. BARBER-Who did yOu speak with at the County?
MR. MCPHEE-1988.
MRS. BARBER-Weil; I was up the,re the
to Dr. BarberJs 'l~nd. I wcisin the
day.
other day. I got the deed
Re6eiver's Offic~ the other
MR. MCPHEE-Regardless of who owns the land,
40 feet, after they told me I need 30 feet.
go in there with 16 feet?
I was told I needed
Now wè~re going to
MR. TURNER-No. Are you done, Mrs.
the rebuttal in a few minutes.
turn. This gentleman right here.
Keech? Okay. We'll 'get to
Let othe~ speakers have their
BRIAN MURPHY
MR. MURþHY-Hi. I'm Brian Murphy, and I live on 8?j Bay Road, and
I'm the One with the fence everybody's t~lking about. I'm
opposing this, and theYe's a mUltiple of factors on this, I'll
just state a few at this point. One of them 'is, yes, this is a
dangerous entrance on her&. Th~re is ~ tree on thére. There is
a large Spruce t~ee, and I bèlieve,if I look ~t ~y ~urveY~ that
belongs on my property. I don't want to cut it down.' I don't
want it moved. I don't want it trimmed, pruned, or anything.
One of the other 'thi t.gs also is it's a very active road. If you
do look, t~e tree has got a b~g chunk of bark taken out of it
from a while back, from an accident that o'ccurred :there, 'and the
entrance and exit there, as one of the Bo~rd m~mber~ pointed out,
is coming oUt of there, people ¿oming over the top of that hill
at 40 miles an hour, 50 miles an hour sometimes. It's very
dangerous. It's just a very dangerous entrance on there, and
that's One of the oppositions on that. One of the other ones is,
I have two children. One's two yearg old and one's three and a
half years b1d, and they play out in the yard all the time, and
the reason we put a fence up there i~ to contain the~ inside the
yard there. What I'm worried about, if ~ road it put' down
through here, if Tor some r~asOn,'God forbid, a car goes out of
control or a truck goes out of control,' comes'acroas, crashing
through that fence and into the playground there, you know, I
don't want to ~ee one of my children hurt. ThatJa cine of the
factors, major factors, right there, is the welfare of my
chi Idren. The other factor' is 1 iabi 1 i ty . If anythi ng does
happen on there, whether it be Mr. Barber or another party, they
get hurt, am I liable? I, don't want to take that into
consideration on that. A cou~le of other things I do wa~t to
point out is, in the sprins time, there is standins water right
in the middle of that ~oadright there, and I thi~k if a road is
built on top of there with crUshed stQne, it is goi~g to push the
water back on ~ property. That's something I don't need. One
of the other factors Jnside that also'is my septic system is very
close to there, a~dbyputting the road there, and the water
drainage would still come back on to it. I'm afraid my septic
syst~m is going to, or my leachfield is not going to be able to
percolate enough in order to do whatever, the operation, whatever
the leachfield does. That's one of the factors on that. One of
the other things I'm worrièd about als0 is, ,in Queensbury, you
have, like, NiMo has to basicallY bury the cable. Where are they
going to bury the cable underneath the road? I do not know, on
something like that. Snow removal's another factorJwhere the
snow's going to go. It's probably going to be pushed, you know,
you push it forward, it's going to be pushed on Bay Ro~d. If you
push it back, where's it gOing to ~o? It's almost 550 feet
pushing that back on a straight away. It's got to be pushed on
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someone's property there. I don't want it on ~ property.
That's one of the factors. The other factor is, when you go to
construct a home, there are going to be large trucks in there,
cement trucks, building trucks, things of that nature. They're
going to cause massive ruts, and if these things go off their
path and cause property damage, I don't need that, only to go out
and sand, re-seed, things of that nature. One of the other
things, too, is I've been living there for almost a whole seven
years now. The Keechs are my neighbors. One of the factors that
I bought the house was, it was a quiet neighborhood. The other
thing that I was told, when I bought the house, that it was a
farm road, specifically used for a farm road, and that was about
it, and that's about it at this time.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MR. MURPHY-One of my major concerns is my children and the fence
being that close.
MR. TURNER-Who wishes to be next? Anyone else?
RICHARD DALLEK
MR. DALLEK-My name's Richard Dallek. I live at 833 Bay Road. I
have a parcel I own that is against that road in question, Number
Three on the subdivision on Susan Place. I really don't have
much to add to what the people here have said. I think you've
gotten some pretty good points, and I will just reiterate them.
I think that, I agree with the majority of what's been said, and
I'd like to oppose it.
MR. TURNER-Anyone else? Any response right now?
MR. T. BARBER-I think the biggest problem, with all these
concerns that were brought up, is that we're hearing what former
owners have told them about the property. We're basing it on all
hearsay. They've enjoyed the property, ridden snowmobiles on the
property, for years and years and years. I think we have a
situation where, you know, it's obvious they're going to flat out
hate to see anything go back there. They're enjoying the fields,
the streams. They're children are safe. I have two little
children. All road front properties and property owners have to
face these things. Fire trucks, if there's ever a fire, they're
going to get back there. If we have to put fences on both sides
of the property, if that has to be a stipulation of the permit,
we can do that. Snow removal is not a problem. I'd also like to
mention that I noticed here on the tax map that Mr. John McPhee
only has 38.95 feet, not 40 foot, right-of-way that he claims to
have a variance for, or in conformance with. I don't know how
that got by. Other than what I just said, I just think that all
these people are objecting to this because they've enjoyed the
property, and they don't want the true owners of the property to
start enjoying the property for themselves. It is a surveyed
parcel of property. We've been paying taxes on it for three
decades. Judge Dyer looked at the deed and said it was owned and
is owned by my grandfather, and it's a piece of the property.
That's why we want to make use of it. It's for a single family
residence, one driveway. We're not talking about extension of
the Northway, here. I think it's getting a little bit blown up
in that sense. Also, the danger of coming out that driveway, Mr.
Murphy's driveway is 20 feet away from this driveway. He's got
to have the same dangers that we're going to have. I don't see
where he validates that statement. As far as the NiMo cable,
we'll install that and it will go under the roadway. That's all
I have.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MR. MCPHEE-My name is John McPhee. He states I have 39 foot for
a driveway. I had a choice of 157 feet of frontage to pick from.
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Why would I pick 39, when they told me
surveyor's map right here which says 40.
know, if I was go~ng to, wanted to put 39,
to choose from, ~hy would I pick?
I had 40? I have a
So whether it's, you
and I've got 157 feet
MR. TURNER-I 'don't even really think that's an issue right now.
MR. MCPHEE-Well, he brought it up.
MR; TURNER-It's not really an issue because you're already th.re.
Aren't you?
MR. MCPHEE-Beside the point, he mentioned that I had 39. Why
would I bother with 39?
MR. TURNER-I know, but it's not really pertinent, because you're
there. So, if you weren't allowed to be~ther~, you wou,ld have
had to come and get a variance just like they do.
MRS. JARVIS~I just wanted to reiterate the fact that ~qcess off
Susan Place is not hearsay, it's factual. It's o~ th~ map in
front of you. The Town intended that as an access to that
property. That's how it was written up and accepted ,when the
parce Is were divided up. That's how it went across' the Town's
legal books. That's a fact, and that's where it stands on that
map, and we understood, from the very first day we mbved into
that home, that that property would be developed, and that would
be the access. That was our understandi~g from tHe Town' of
Queensbury.
MR. TURNER~Jim, in response to that?
MR. MARTIN"""AlI I know is !!ll.. direct exper ienc~' with this' property
in the back was there was a sketch plan subdivision submitted for
this, I think about a year 'ago or so, and it was a Staff comment
that that access be opened up, and it was the overwhelming input
of the neighborhood that they did not want that access through
Susan Place used, and that they wanted the access for the then
proposed subdivision strictly off of Bay Road, and I think if you
look at the sketch provided for this aþplication tonight and
substantially, I think, that subdivision, you'll see that no
access was proposed through that Susa~ Place, and it was a Staff
comment, because we'd prefer alternate access points for
emergency vehicles and so on.
MR. TURNER-All right, but when they initiated t~e subdivision on
Susan Place, that road became, did that road become?
MR. MARTIN-I think, as it's set Up, it,obv~busIY, was reserved
for that. OtherWise,they ~oul~ have incorþorated it into a
building lot.
MR. TURNER-I mea~, you can't bUild on it. It's not big enough to
build on.
MR. MARTIN-Right.
MR. CARVIN-I think this lóoks like something that we did up on
Clendon Ridge there, that Phase II, where we, with the Miner
property.
MR. MARTIN-Exactly. It's the exact same thing.
MR. CARVIN-We extended the road. It's not built, but it~s on the
plan that if the Miners should ever develop that piece of
property, that that road be access point.
MR. MARTIN-Exactly.
MR. CARVIN-That's what that looked like to me, is that particular
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situation.
MR. MARTIN-And we have gotten a little bit smarter with these as
time has gone by. If you notice in the Clendon Ridge example
that you cite, the developer of that Phase of it was required to
run the road right up to the edge of the property line. So it
could be picked up. In this case here, the road, it's an open
grassed or treed area.
MR. CARVIN-Well, it's pretty obvious where the road is intended
to be, if you go out on that.
MR. TURNER-Yes. If you go out on Susan Place, you can spot it.
MR. CARVIN-There's a definite dead piece of property there.
MR. MARTIN-Well, we
subdivision that you
design, not done.
were going to re-open that with this
see on that overall plan, and it was by
MR. TURNER-There's no road, hasn't been dedicated to the Town.
So who's the owner of that road?
MR. THOMAS-The owner is Alice Dallek.
MR. TURNER-Okay.
MR. THOMAS-Alice Dallek owns that piece of property.
MR. T. BARBER-The problem with that right-of-way we're all
talking about, I don't know if it's a right-of-way or it's a
skinny lot or forever wild or what, but Alice Dallek owns this.
I think she would have to say if that can be a road.
MR. TURNER-I know, but have you approached her?
MR. T. BARBER-No. We're not looking at that option. We have the
land. We have an access that's always been an access. That's
what we're looking at to obtain, to use that access as a
relatively quiet runway.
MRS. JARVIS-Can I say something in response to what he said?
MR. TURNER-Sure.
MRS. JARVIS-When we were kind of pacing out what would be our
property and where our house would be set and so on, the Dalleks
made clear to us that the Town acquired a certain amount of
property from Center Line road out, and I recall him saying they
had to comply with three inch ditches and this kind of thing, and
it was their parcel of land to start with, and they had, to turn
over, develop it, whatever, and then turn it over to the Town in
agreement for putting that subdivision there, and then that
little right-of-way was part of that. So, in ~ understanding,
the Town has every right and owns it right now. That's like
saying that Mrs. Dallek owns Susan Place, the paved Susan Place.
She does not. My understanding was, the Town took over so much
footage, I guess it looks like (lost word).
MR. TURNER-No. They
didn't take it over.
dedicated it for the roadway.
It's never been built on.
The Town
MRS. JARVIS-I'm sorry. They didn't take it over.
of words, but that was the intentions from
intentions.
Wrong choice
the start, the
MR. TURNER-Yes, I agree. That's a 50 foot wide strip that's
proposed to be a right-of-way for those lots in the back.
MR. MARTIN-That's the other thing we're doing differently now is
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that we do, in fact, take ownership to the property. So this
type of thing is not a problem in the future, that there'~ not an
ownership concern, like in the Miner case. The Town owns that
strip up to the Miner property.
MR. TURNER~Yes. If this was done in that fashion, there wouldn't
be a próblem with this lot now. They could go right out there,
boom.
MR. FORD-Is there a problem with it now? Has anyone apprbached
this owner?
MR. T. BARBER-In the past, there's been objection, as Jim has
said, to using that right-of-way or chunk of land for developing
the back property.
MRS. JARVIS-Well, who did that? I live there. I've lived there.
I was the first one to live there. This is the first time I've
ever even heard of opposition. I'd like to know who we're
talking about.
MR. TURNER-Right at the end, Timmy, the long' house at the end..
MR. MARTIN-I can go back to when that subdivision was submitted
and pull those minutes and look that up.
MRS. JA~VIS-We were the only ones
then one other house was built.
people who are on Country Colony
not Susan Place.'
there for years and years, and
Now maybe you're referring to
Road, perhaps, which is nearby,
MR. MARTIN-Well, Tim, am I miss, you were on the Soard, also.
TIM BREWER
MR. BREW~R-Exactly. There was opposition when 6a~ Barber was in
to subdi~ide that próperty. There was opposition to him using
that. I can picture the piece of property you're talking about.
There was opposition to it. I don't recall who they were, but
the neighbors you're tal ki ng about, ,I thi nk; were the neighbors
in question. I haven't looked at the map, but I presume the
subdivision is up further on BaY,RQad, where Danny's was?
MR. MARTIN-It's ac~ually a piece of it. That actually is a piece
of what was to be a larger sUbdivision.
MR. TURNER-Yes, the subdivision to the south, the south of this.
MR. MARTIN-It only went as far as sketch plan, 'and then it was.
MR. MCPHEE-That five acres is part of fifty acres, at one 'time it
was fifty-five. There is access for it. Right now, there.'s a
house on the property. It'~ owned by Mr. Barber. At any time,
the people live in that rent it, and àny time he 'wants to develop
that, he just has to take the barn down and develop it.
MR. TURNER-He doesn't own it.
MR. T. BARBER-That's owned by a different Barber.
MR. TURNER-That's owned by a different Barber. Dan Barber owns
the house in the front~ Charles Barbér, Sr. owns the 'land in the
back. That's his father.
MR. MCPHEE-Well, the reason they (lost word) there's 25 feet of
access.
MR. TURNER-He boUght that for that access. That's what he did.
MR. MCPHEE-That's what I mean.
- 26 -
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~
MR. TURNER-Yes, but.
MR. MCPHEE-So it's available to go into the back. Why would he
divide the whole lot for nothing?
MR. TURNER-It's not a subdivision. He bought it hoping that he
was going to subdivide the property in the back, get the right to
subdivide the property in the back, and it's withdrawn. So it's
a dead issue now. He owns the house and the land that fronts Bay
Road, and that's it.
MR. MCPHEE-That, right now, is a dead issue.
subdivision going in there?
There's no
MR. TURNER-Yes, no subdivision.
MR. T. BARBER-Can I say something?
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. T. BARBER-I'd like to just mention to the Board that the
biggest problem we have with this road is, if we were to get
denied on that owned piece of parcel coming through there, we'd
have. no choice but to go to Mrs. Dallek and say, listen, this is
our only option, to buy your piece of property, enter our land.
What's that going to do to the value of that little piece of land
cost to us? It could exceed, you know, it could be a lot of
money.
MR. FORD-Excuse me. Lets pursue that for a moment.
the Town accept responsibility for that?
Would not
MR. T. BARBER-Could I finish something here? What I'd like to
propose, if the owner of that property, and both adjoining
neighbors were in agreeance to giving us that right-of-way for
that one single lot, make that a stipulation of this road, we
would forfeit the ownership and use of that farm road, but if she
won't.
MR. TURNER-I guess I'd almost say to you, why don't you explore
the option and then come back.
MR. KARPELES-Yes. That's what 1 think, too.
MR.
have
this.
T. BARBER-I don't know if that's
the support of the surrounding
good, because we need to
neighbors that don't want
MR. TURNER-I think someday down the road they've got to realize
that if that road and that property does develop, there's going
to be some roadways in there some place.
MR. T. BARBER-Exactly. It's just not going to be pretty
hayfields. We don't have them anymore, I don't believe.
MR. TURNER-No.
MS. METRAW-I bought my land. When I bought it, this proposed
roadway, Joan Metraw, this proposed roadway between my house and
my neighbor's was in all the plans. I knew about it. I knew
about it buying my lot, and I knew some day there would be a
road, and I'd be on a corner lot. I have never objected to this,
and I dOD't object to it. I have no reason they can't go through
there with a road. It's a shorter way, much shorter. It doesn't
bother any of the neighbors. In fact, when I had the plans made
to my house, my garage was on the other end of my house, and I
asked them to reverse my plans and they wanted to know why, I
said because there is a proposed road going in there and some day
there will be a road and the cars coming down Alice Drive, the
lights will shine into my house. So I reversed my house so the
- 27 -
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garage would be on the other end, for that purpose, for cars
coming down the road going into another road out onto the back
lot. I'd never have an objection to that being there used, and I
know my neighbor was sick tonight. She couldn't come. I know
she'd never have an objection. She knew, too.
MR. CARVIN-So this is not a surprise situation?
MRS. METRAW-No, but I've lived there four y~ars. I built four
years ago, anq I knew the day I built that house that that
proposed road was right there.
MR. CARVIN":'My' biggest fear, when I went around there , was that I
was going to find lawns over the roadway, and that was not the
case. It look~ like the neighbors are aware.
MR. TURNER-It's clearly defined.
MR . MARTIN-Tim, I cal) tell you , if you were to get, ov.p;ership of
that piece, it àppears to be 51 feet wide on the sùrvey there,
then you could build as a matter of right, and would not need any
action from the Board. You'd have a conforming lot, then~
MR. T. BARBER-I don't know if that's in Richard's budget, though.
He's buying the one piece of parcel. It's another mon~tary issue
that he's going to have to.
MR. TURNER-Yes, but the land itself is of no value to the Dalleks
because they can't build on it anyway. Nobody can build On it,
only as an access.
MR. T. BARBER-Right.
MR. TURNER-And that might be the key that.
MR. T. BARBER-Right, and you know, 'inc~rt~in c~ses, ~hen there's
a great desire and need for certain things, pribescan go up.
MR. TURNER-The prices go up.
MR. CARVIN-If I might interject, I think it would be of benefit
for you to pursue that, beca~~e I have a very hard time'~Yanting
a variance on a 16 foot strip of property. I think that the
detriment to the community and the safety and the wel~~~e of the
community is in great jeopardy ~f we were to grant a variance of,
I think it's maximum va,"iance. 'So I think, I'm speaking for
myself, I know that I have a very, very difficult t,ime granting
that ki nd of var iance Qn a str ip of property.' SÒ, I thi nk !:!:!..l:..
suggestion to ypu would be to exþlore that possïbi1ity and
convince the owner to come ~þ with a reasonable prIce, if that's,
indeed, the case. I don't know if ~ can explore it, whether
that has actually been dedicat~d to the Tqwn.
MR. MARr::¡:N-I wOI,lldn,'t take very long to go back and pull the
subdivision that was done for Susan Place and see.
MR. CARVIN-~.s. I mean, it may be the case that it's on pUblic
record that éhe has acknowled~ed that that 1s to be used for a
road.
MR. T. BARBER-We're tryirié to get a hold of that þarty right now,
to see if that is the case. HopefUlly, we'll be successful.
MR. KARPELES-Why don't we table this.
MR. FORD-I. agre'é that this
in favor of a variance on 16
not been explored. This may
be a much shorter access and
should be pursued. I could not vote
feet, when these other optIons have
fall into place beautifully for you,
much better for everybody.
- 28 -
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MR. TURNER-Yes. Certainly the cost of running underground cable
in there and upgrading the road is going to be an enormous
expense, in lieu of maybe getting this right here. This may
well, the difference between this and this may well make it
affordable.
MR. MARTIN-I can tell you, personal experience is you're going to
have to put in a transformer with NiMo to run power that
distance, and that's not a cheap affair.
MR. T. BARBER-I've got the same obstacle in my home.
MR. TURNER-I'd like to have you table it, request
tabled, and pursue that avenue on that right-of-way
to have it
right there.
MR. T. BARBER-I'd like to possibly talk with the adjoining
homeowners that are here tonight, on the possibilities of maybe
convincing this lady to make a deeded right-of-way.
MR. CARVIN-You may find that you don't have the problem that you
think you have.
MR. TURNER-It's no good for anything, other than just a block
development.
MR. T. BARBER-No, it's not, that's right.
MR. FORD-If it's on the plan as access to that area, I don't
think she's going to have a problem with it.
MR. MARTIN-I want to make sure you understand, we're talking
about ownership, not deeded right-of-way.
MR. TURNER-Not deeded right-of-way, ownership.
MR. MCPHEE-I don't know if he's aware of it. ~ had to do it. If
he's going to bring electric in there, he's going to have to have
a pole in his property to bring that electric from the east side
of the road over Bay Road. So that pole is going to be buried in
16 feet somewhere, to cut the size of that 16 feet down. Even if
they bury the electrical all the way in the back, they still have
to have a pole on this side of the road.
MR. TURNER-Yes. I know that.
MR. MCPHEE-So that's part of that 16 foot.
MR. TURNER-Okay. Does
statements? Okay. I'll
they're going to explore
that one letter?
anyone else want to make any further
leave the public hearing open, because
that avenue, and do you want to read
MR. THOMAS-Yes. I have one letter, "Dear Sirs: I'm opposed to
the Variance No. 3-1995. I feel it would hurt the character of
the neighborhood. Sincerely, David Jarvis". It's dated 1/18/95.
MR. TURNER-Okay. So you're making a request of the Board to
table the application so you can explore the other alternatives
to?
MR. T. BARBER-Yes. I just need to understand that I have support
from both the corner lot owners, they would be corner lot owners
if we do receive that. I just, I believe they're both here
tonight.
MR. TURNER-Yes. No, one is.
Metraw, Joan Metraw, is here.
you do.
Thomas is the other one. Ms.
So, that's what I'd like to have
MR. T. BARBER-I agree.
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'/
MR. TURNER-Okay. I really think that if you can make ð deal with
them, the expenditure of making' that driveway Is going to well
come above the ¢ost of that little str ip of property. !',
MR. CARVIN-And if he resolves it.
MR. TURNER-He won't even have to come back, if he resolves it.
Okay. So I'll move to table.
MOTION TO TABLE AREA VARIANCE
Introduced by Theodore Turner
seconded by Robert Karpeles:
NO. 3-1995
who moved
CHARLES
for its
R. BARBER,
adoption,
FOr the applicant to explore other alternatives in respect to
gaining ingress and egress from the property.
Duly adopted this
vote:
l$th day of January, 1995,
, I
by the following
AYES: Mr. Ford, Mr. Mares¢o, Mr. Karpeles~ Mr. Carvin,
Mr. Thomas, Mr. Turner
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
MR. TURNER-The tabling proceduTe is 60 daYs.
extension, notify the PlanningOffi¢e, with
Board will consider the extension.
So if yoÚ
a letter,
need an
and the
MR. T. BARBER-Okay. Thank you.
MR. TURNER-Thànk you.
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 P~ANNING) 2/8/95 TAX MAP NO. 137-2-
9.8 LOT SIZE: 7.02 ACRES SECTION 179-16
MR. TURNER-And this is just to establish Lead Agency because this
is.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. I just would advise that the resolution should
reference this as being é Type I Actiòn~ and you'ré referring it
on to the other involved agencies for their consent, for the
Zoning Board to be Lead Agent.
MR. TURNER-Yes. we'rf?,:t,?e L~~d! A~ÿnqi>; qn this.
~ ' ,':: - " ¡ , ';, ¡ . ¡"\ _ ',: .", " !,' ~ _ ' , ' , ,j ,"; '.. j ·t'" 1 ' ",' : ~ i
MR. MARTIN-RiQ~t.' ·YQU'~. ~,k+~g~fo~¡~~eit corise~t to' you. being
Lead Agent. A couple of agençtesthat wIll be Involved wIll be
DEC, as they are a'~ermitti~ga~~~a9~'ov~r landfills of this type,
and also the Town Board.
MR. TURNER-Okay. You have that resolution right there?
MR. THOMAS-I've
Planning Board.
got one for the Town 8oðrd' and one
I don't have one for the Zoning Board.
for the
MR. TURNER-Well, the Pl~nning Board, just insert the néîme of the
Zoning Board.
MR. MARTIN-It's the same type of.
MR. TURNER-The same thing.
- 30 -
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--
MR. MARTIN-There's usually a statutory 30 day period here.
Sometimes we hear before that from the involved agencies. It's
just a matter of establishing Lead Agent at this point, and then
go through the Environmental Assessment after the public hearing,
probably. There's also a matter of getting the consent from the
other agencies. The other agencies may want to take Lead Agent
status.
MEMBER OF AUDIENCE-When you say "other agencies", do you mean the
,Town Board?
MR. MARTIN-Or DEC.
MEMBER OF AUDIENCE-DEC has already issued a permit at one time.
MR. TURNER-That was 1989.
MR. MARTIN-Well, the permit, I just called to the Warrensburg
office. The permit expired December 12th, I believe, of last
year. It was a one year permit, and that was for a C & D
Landfill. Since the issuance of that permit, the standards have
changed, for treatment of a C & D Landfill. It was explained to
me that should this come back again, it would not be a situation
of a renewal, but DEC would likely require a new application, as
they would like to see a liner installed with a C & D Landfill.
The other option here, quite frankly, is that this could be what
is referred to as a stump dump, placement of organic materials
such as stumps and so on. DEC's requirements for that are less
stringent. It was explained to me, by DEC, that it's basically a
registration process. So those are the two treatments of
landfills of those types.
MR. TURNER-So they're real lenient on a stump dump?
,MR. MARTIN-Well, I should say they're less stringent. It would
be m~ impression.Î talked to Jerry ~arris. He is the ,DEC
contact up at Warrensburg.
MEHsER, OF AUDIENCE-That would mean a new apÞtication though,
correct?
MR. MARTIN-Yes, but as it st~nds right now, there is no DEC
permit on this landfill.
MEMBER OF AUDIENCE-There would still be a variance required?
MR. MARTIN-Yes. That doesn't affect our local process, and also
a Town Board permit is also required. There's a two step
process, so to speak here, at the local level.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
RESOLUTION OF INTENT OF
THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS OF THE TOWN OF QUEENSBURY
TO BE LEAD AGENT IN THE REVIEW OF
USE VARIANCE NO. 4-1995
RESOLUTION NO.; 4-1995
MOTION BY: Theodore Turner
WHO MOVED ITS ADOPTION
SECONDED BY: Fred Carvin
WHEREAS, William E. Threw has submitted an application for
a Use Variance No. 4-1995, in connection with a
project known as or described as a commercial
landfill; and
WHEREAS, the Town of Queensbury Zoning Board of Appeals
- 31 -
'-
desires to commence a coordinated review process
as pyovided under the DEC Regulations adopted in
accordance with the State Environmental Quality
Review Act;
; _;:~OW ,}:~E~F;:FOR~ t'1~§} T
, ,
, ,
""I
; j' r
"
RESOLVED, that the Town of oueèn~buryzdni1"lg Boàrd~ of
Appeals hereby determines that the action proposed
by the applicant constitutes a Typci I actioh under
SEQRA; and
BE IT FURTHER,
RESOLVED, that the Town of Queensbury Zoning Board of
Appeals hereby indicates its desire to be lead
agent for the purposes of the SEORA review
process, and hereby authorizes and directs the
Executive Director to notify other involved
agencies that:
1. an application has been made by William E.
Threw, for Use Variance No. 4-1995
2. a coordlnatedSEQRA review is desired
3. a lead, agency for purposes of SEQRA review
must, therefore, be agreed to among the
involved agencies within 30 days; and
4.' the Town of Queensbury Zoning Board of
Apþeals desires to þe the lead agent foy the
purposes of SEQRA review; and "
BE IT FURTHER,
that when notifying the other involved
the Executive Director shall also mail a
explanation, together' with copies
resolution, the ap¢li6atión, ahd the EAF
I completed by ,the projéct sponèor,
apprópriate, the Draft EIS.
Duly adopted this 18th day of January, 1995, by the following
vote:
RESOLVED,
agencies,
letter of
of this
with Part
or where
AYES: Mr. Ford, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Karpelè~, Mr. Carvin,
Mr. Thomas, Mr. Turner
NOES: NONE'
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
MR. TURNER-Okay. We've got one other it~m.of þusiness. We have
to elect a Secretary and a Vice Chairman for the new year.
Nominations are open for ViceChairma~.
MR. KARPELES-Why don't We continue the way we are.
Fred Carvin.
I nominate
MOTION TO NOMINATE FRED ÇARVINAS VICECHAIR~~NOF THE QUEENSBURY
ZONING BO~RD OF APPEALS, Introduced by Robert Karpeles who moved
for its adoption, seconded by Thomas Ford:
Duly adopted this 18th day of January, 1995, by thê following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Ford, Mr. Maresco, Mr. Karpeles, 'Mr. Thomaè,
M1". TUr'ne1"
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
- 32 -
~
MR. TURNER-Nominations are open for Secretary.
MR. CARVIN-I'd like to nominate Mr. Thomas, because he's got that
nice, deep melodic voice.
MOTION TO NOMINATE CHRIS THOMAS AS SECRETARY OF THE QUEENSBURY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS, Introduced by Fred Carvin who moved for
its adoption, seconded by Theodore Turner who moved for its
adoption, seconded by:
Duly adopted this 18th day of January, 1995, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Maresco, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Carvin, Mr. Ford,
Mr. Turner
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Menter
BETTY MONAHAN
MRS. MONAHAN-Sometimes I think that one arm of government doesn't
know what the other arm is doing. So I thought maybe you'd like
to know some of the things we're doing on the Town Board. Last
spring, because of the concern we have about some of our water
bodies, we're starting to take some active steps, and we
appointed a Technical Advisory Committee for the Glen Lake
Watershed area, and this Technical Committee has got a lot of
people with good professional expertise on it. They applied to
the Glen Lake Association and the Town for grants to the Open
Space Institute and were turned down. So the Town, at that time,
put almost $5,000 dollars in, set aside~ to start water testing
in Glen Lake. As of December, another, or I shouldn't say as of
December. Another grant was applied for, and I'm delighted to
tell you that as of December 1, the Open Space Institute sent a
letter to me and said, I am delighted to inform you that in
response to you,- application to the Rural New York Grant Program,
a grant of $5,000 has been approved to provide partial funding
for water sampling and analysis leading to identification of
point and non-point sources of water pollution. A check is
enclosed, and the money we've put aside will be a matching grant,
which is an indication of a concern the Town has of what's
happening to the Lake. We also just received a grant, Jim, I
hope I've got the right organization, the Lake George Park
Commission, for $10,000 to hire an engineer to start looking into
the causes of some of the problems in the North Queensbury
watershed district, which, of course, will be the Lake George
basin. So we're well aware, on the Board, that our water is a
precious resource to us, and it's having a lot of sources of
pollution. I don't have my copy, because I've lent two or three
of my copies out of the Master Plan of 1988, which is kind of the
Bible for Planning and Zoning, but if you check it or ask Staff
to check it, I think you will find there a concern was voiced by
that advisory board of the size of the houses that were being
built on the small lots around the lake, and I just thought maybe
that '$, some information I should share with yoU, to let,you know
where we are coming f'rom, on the Town Board, and the effort that
we're making to correct and keep our lakes in good condition,
because if our lakes go down the tubes, we're going to have a lot
of economic backlash around here.
MR. MARTIN-Just to echo those thoughts, I think what you heard
tonight was a little bit more strong statement than maybe has
been done in the past by Staff, in terms of Area Variances on the
lake, and that is in light of, we just concluded a series of
public meetings around the Town, as we're updating our
Comprehensive Plan right now, and, certainly, an overwhelming
comment from the lake communities, meaning North Queensbury and
- 33 -
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around Glen Lake was the concern over the conversions, or the
upgrades of structures along the lakeshores, and that continues
to be a concern, and I think it's going to result in either
further, even more restrictive components to the Ordinance, in
regards to these areas. As a matter of fact, I'~ going to
advance, in the next week or so to the Town Board, change to the
Ordinance on the height from 35 down to 28 feet.
MR. TU~NER-TheY're just too enormous. because the lots are too
sma 11.
MR. MARTIN-It's creating a lot of problems, and
relatively simple change to make that'll, at least in
term, address one of the concerns.
that's a
the short
MR. CARVIN-Yes. I think that this is a situation that is getting
extremely out of hand. What I'd like to maybe get a little
feedback to the Town Board, and again, I don't know what the
mechanics are here, but we have some pretty stringent Use
Variances for businesses, in other words, if businesèes want to
expand and so forth~ and what I'm observing is a situation on the
lake where we are having summer residences actually being
converted to full time residences, which, as far as I'm
concerned, it's no,different than a business. I mean, if you're
going to go fYom a part time residence to a fulltime on a small
lot, then it should have some kind of review from a Use
situation, and I think that we should 'have some teeth there.
MRS. MONAHAN-If it's the same building, and it's the conversion
of the ,same building, I know we were, checking that in the
Ordinance, and now I forgot, because it didn't'apply to this
project we were working on. What are the requirements, when you
change the very same structure to a conversion?
MR. MARTIN-Oftentimes that will kick in th~ need for an Area
Variance from this Board, and that will, by definition in the
Ordinance, require a Site Plan Review from the Planning Board.
Depending on the nature of the project, it likely does ,equire an
Area Variance, but it does need Site Plan Review as well.
MR. CARVIN-Because I think the comments that were voiced for the
applicant tonight is a comment that we hear quite frequently, you
know, you guys are picking on me. Why do 1 have to comply?
MR. MARTIN-Well, that's what Lwas trying to say. We're not
singling anybody out. We're not trying to be unfair or impose
undue expense. It's ju~t tha~ these Ordinances are a reflection
of the overall community input that was developed after a very
extensive þrocedure in '88 to update the Master Plan, and we're
going through that again right now, ándif anything, the only
change is that the concerns are more intense than they were six
years ago, or $even yea,s ago.
MR. CARVIN-Well, it would certainly have a cumulative effect
situation.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. KARPELES-I'm glad to hear ,that other people feel the same way
I feel, but I think, in the past, we have been very, very
generous in giving people the right to build on these little
dinky lots, and now all of a sudden, it looks like we're
changing, and we better get the word oqt, because I think people
are buying these lots with the thought that they're going to
build all year round houses.
MR. MARTIN-Well, I think if you ~ant to see the practical impact
of one of these is go up and look at the Dittus residence on
Cleverdale.
- 34 -
--../
',,-,
MR. KARPELES-Yes. I know, I agree with you.
MRS. MONAHAN-Well, what about McCall's?
MR. MARTIN-Well, McCall, that met the requirements.
there was not.
I mean,
MRS. MONAHAN-Well, not really, because he didn't come in with a
lot of stuff he was supposed to. He started in, Jim, ahead of
time. He did an awful lot of pollution and sedimentation and all
that. I mean, I've got pictures of that running right into Lake
George.
MR. MARTIN-Well, he had violations. Yes. Those are violations
that enforcement actions have been taken.
MR. TURNER-Again, I really think what's got to happen is you've
got to take the size of the lot, and you've got to proportion the
house to the size of the lot, and you've got to drop that height
down from 35 feet. No doubt about it, but if a guy has a bigger
lot, maybe he can have a little bigger house, but if he's got a
small lot, like this one here, and trying to put 6,000 square
feet of house on it, that's just.
MR. CARVIN-You may even want to look at it from a Use Variance.
I mean, like an expansion. I mean, anything over, if he's going
from a, I don't know what he's got there. If he's got 1,000
square feet, I mean, we've had a number of cases where they've
gone from 1,000 or 1,200 to 3 or 4,000.
MRS. MONAHAN-The old structure there, because I did check it, was
a little under 1400 square feet on that lot.
MR. CARVIN-So we're more than doubling it, almost tripling it,
actually. So, I mean, if it was a business that had a 50 percent
expansion, they'd have to have a variance.
MR. MARTIN-Well, the provision that could be in the Ordinance,
and it's relatively common in Ordinance, is a floor to area
,-atio.
MR. TURNER-Yes.
MR. MARTIN-A floor to area ratio. In other words, you
ratio between the square footage of the floor within a
floor area, and the area of the lot.
have a
house,
MR. KARPELES-I think you've got to do something about all year
round house versus a summer camp. I mean, an all year round
house, there's no comparison to the amount of pollution that that
puts out to a summer camp. You've got an all year round house.
You've got a dishwasher. You've got a washing machine. You've
got showers. You've got people living there all the while, and a
summer camp, and you're not only getting this, but you're getting
them in-depth around the lake. They used to be just on the
shore. Now they go way back.
MR. CARVIN-Yes. Absolutely.
MR. TURNER-That's the whole trouble with Cleverdale/Assembly
Point/Rockhurst/Glen Lake, everyone of them.
MRS. MONAHAN-That's why we're having all the stormwater problems
up there. You go up there last summer in those big rainstorms.
MR. MARTIN-Well, those are cases where those are extremely unique
environmental settings, very narrow peninsulas.
MR. KARPELES-So, even if you
keep the same footprint, with
take these summer camps, and you
an all year round house, you're
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increasing
to be done
completely.
pollution 10 fold. ,So, I don't know, something's got
about it, or we're going to' lose these lakes
MRS. MONAHAN-You know, like p~¿ple say, well, it's always been
done, and, fine, but, you know, that's like saying you do~'i use
the new knowledge that you have, and that's what happened in '88.
We had the new knowledge of the impact on the lake. We ha~ the
knowledge of the impact of year round houses, and that's why we
said, when the houses that are removed on these lake areas, and
lets go back that many feet so'that that has a cha~ce to cleanse
everything before it gets to the lake. It would be just like
saying, all right, we used to allow roads like the road that goes
up to Rockhurst, that you have to back out of practically when
you get up there, in, we don't permit that any more because we
know, today, you can't get the fire trucks up, and you can't get
the kind of vehicles tha~ are up today. So we said, yes, we have
to change those standards, and 'that's ~hat planning is. It's
acknowledging how communities change, and how what you use change
and you have to change your regulations to acknowledge that.
MR. TURNER-You have to adopt to the times.
MRS. MONAHAN-That's right. That's why
about every five years, so that you
what's happening in your community.
we do a new Master Plan
take into consideration
MR. TURNER-Well, you can see exactly what's happening around the
lakes. Every time we've come heYe, there's a variance for
something on Lake George, Glen' Lake, or wherever.
MRS. MONAHAN-And talk to the people who have lived on any of
those lakes, that includes the lake that I'm so familiar with,
Sunnyside. The water quality is much, much different today than
it was when I was growing up.
MR. FORD-And I also think there's some way we need to address
this ratio, because no one is going in, tearing down a place, and
building a smaller one. So, we can antiç:1pate more and more of
these coming before us, I believe, and I like that idea of ratio,
between the square footage and the comparison of that and the
siie of your lot.
MR. MARTIN-That's very standard in some Ordinance's approach to
density.
MRS. MONAHAN-Well, I know that we have a gentleman on the Master
Plan Advisory Committee now who is from the Lake George area, and
he's asked Jim, could theY please look at that area as one of the
first area because he knows the problems that are up there.
MR. MARTIN-Well, the other unique aspect to the lakèshores, in
terms of this Town is that, from a land use standpoint, they are
strictly residential. There's no, commercial conce~ns, really.
It's strictly residential, and I, think that that's a positive, in
that you can, it's very easy to ke~p a handle on it.
MRS. MONAHAN-That's not true on Lake George, though, Jim. That's
not true on Lake George.
MR. MARTIN-No. I'm talking about the zoning, Betty.
strictly residential.
It's
MRS. MONAHAN-Yes.
MR. KARPELES-What are you sayin~, Jim? I'm not with you.
MR. MARTIN-Well, 'what I'm saying is our particular lakeshores,
like in the case of Lake George, we're not like a Village of Lake
George or Bolton or something like that, where they have a lot of
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commercial uses to grapple with as well. Ours is strictly a
residential standpoint. So, therefore, I think it's a lot easier
to keep a handle on that.
MR. KARPELES-How about the boathouse? How about the Mooring Post
that we're fighting about now?
MRS. MONAHAN-I think what Jim is saying, they're nonconforming.
Those are nonconforming.
MR. MARTIN-They have commercial uses allowed as a matter of
right.
MR. THOMAS-I'll tell you, when I was a member of the Zoning Board
in Lake George, we used to wrestle with a lot of those,
when I was on the Board, it was back in, well, between
'87, and that's when the big building boom was going on
George, big resurgence. Every week there was always
motel in there for a variance.
because
'83 and
in Lake
another
MR. MARTIN-The other thing, even the residence, it's strictly
single family. It's not even multifamily.
MR. CARVIN-That's something else that I think has
addressed, because we're getting a lot of these rental
situations.
to be
types of
MR. MARTIN-Well, the problem ~ see is we're getting, there's a
couple. I think we've got to start looking at boathouses that
permit decks on top of the boathouse. I think we've got to look
at these semi, quasi dwellings or living areas that occur in
garages and things like that. People are looking, they're
finding any way they can to get living space on those lots along
the lake.
MRS. MONAHAN-Or actual rental space, I believe.
MR. MARTIN-Well, yes, that's why it's got to be really buttoned
down, that we're confining this to one principal dwelling, and
not these questionable things that we're seeing now.
MR. MARESCO-I'm in full agreement with everybody, too. There's
nobody probably more than me, I'd love to see the lake saved as
much as possible, but on the other hand, these people are paying
real good money for these lots, and, talk about the smaller homes
that were built in the 30's and 40's, I think, too, we have to
look at progress. I think certain stipulations, and I like your
idea about the height. I think 28 feet is really a good idea,
but like Mr. Godnick, when he came in, you know, we're not
talking about the 30's. We are talking about the '90's, and
Queensbury has changed. The whole Town has changed, but I'd like
to meet somewhere in the middle.
MRS. MONAHAN-But don't forget,
somebody owned it before 1988,
know what I mean, but anybody
knew exactly the setbacks that
within.
people buy those lots, and if
they're getting caught. Do you
that buys those lots after 1988
they had to design a house to be
MR. MARESCO-Sure.
MRS. MONAHAN-So it isn't like we've changed anything in the
middle of the stream, except for the people who've owned them for
a long time.
MR. KARPELES-Yes, except we haven't been enforcing the setbacks.
MRS. MONAHAN-And they're going to face the same thing. If they
want to take their houses down, they're going to have to meet the
setback, even if people have owned them for 50 years.
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MR. KARPELES-But if we start enforcing the setbacks, then we are
changing something in the middle of the stream. I'm not saying
we shouldn't do it. I say we should. I think we should be
enforcing it, but I think that a lot of people are buying these
lots thinking that they're going to get'wnat they want.
MR. TURNER-You're exactly right, Bob.
MR. FORD-There's a history there that says we can apply and we'll
get it.
MRS. MONAHAN-And I think you have to
The land on these lakes is taxed
comparison, than thê houses. So if
you get the big house on it.
look at something else, too.
very high, more highly, in
you buy a small lot, and if
MR. MARESCO-So you can't blame a fellow like Mr. Godnick for
coming in and saYing that.
MRS. MONAHAN-But what is going to happen when this ~eeps going,
and you send that lake down the tubes, and you've wrêbked the
lake for everybody that's been on there.
MR. THOMAS-We have an example of thàt'right
the 80;s, you couldn't give away a lot on
they put that sewer system arou~d there.
turn around. You couldn't give à lot away
at Saratoga Lake. In
Saratoga Lake, until
Now it's starting to
on Saratoga.
MRS. MONAHAN-Well, I want to tell you, we èven Iookêd at putting
water around Glen Lake, and the cost was going to be extremely
high, and sewers would be, I wouldn't evèn ~~nt to think. You
couldn't afford to live on there unless you were a millionaire.
MR. THOMAS-I would think you'd put sewers in before you put water
in.
MRS. MONAHAN-The only reason is because the water was cheaper to
do, and at least we cquldgive them pure water, and, make sure
they weren't getting drinking water that they shouldn't.
MR. THOMAS-Yes.
MR. MARTIN-I'll say this, in terms of sewe~s. Do a little
exercise. If you see a proje¿tèd'cost at this timè:for the North
Queensbury Sewer on, Lake George'in the paper, cliþ that out and
save it, and save it until the final price tag is paid for.
MRS. MONAHAN-And triple it, right, Jim?
MR. MARTIN-You just wait and you see.
MR. TURNER-Well, you can see it right with the Queensbury Central
Sewer District. It was budgeted at seven million dollars. It
went two and a half million dollars over budget.
MRS. MONAHAN-Thirty percent cost overrun on that sewer system.
MR. MARTIN-By the time you get done going through all that ledge
up there and running, you think about all the toads that have got
to be covered up there, Mason Road, Rockhurst, Cleverdale, all
those little roads, and all the chanQes in terrain,.
MR. MARESCO-You won't be able to live. You'd have to be pretty
wealthy to pay those taxes.
MR. TURNER-Tony, in response to your remark about the people
buying those lots, if a guy pays that kind of money for that kind
of a lot, and he knows up front what the conditions are, he's got
no excuse at all, as far as I...:m. concerned. He bought himself a
hardship, not in that sense, in the sense that it cost him a lot
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of money for the lot, but he knew what he could put on there, and
when a guy comes before this Board and says, I want 6,000 square
feet of building.
MR. MARESCO-I agree with you. It was way too big for that.
MR. MARTIN-My advice is if you strictly apply the Area Variance
test as mandated in the law, you'll never go wrong. That'll
guide you through every time.
MR. CARVIN-The biggest problem that I have with this Godnick is
that there was no public opposition.
MRS. MONAHAN-I was talking with some people in the back of the
room who are neighbors within 500 feet that never got their
notice, and in fact, I talked to some of the people from Glen
Lake during the 149 public meeting we had here, and I said, I'm
surprised nobody's called me, and they said, about what, and they
had no idea about it.
MR. MARTIN-They're on our mailing list. It was sent off.
MR. CARVIN-I went through, I agree with you, Jim. We've got some
pretty good criteria, but I went through that, and, I don't know,
of the four or five, I think he's got, I mean, I think he could
have a legitimate argument on that, and the biggest one is that
there was no detriment to the community, other than what this
Board feels is a detriment, because there wasn't one public
comment on that, in two meetings.
MR. FORD-And what the Planning Board feels.
MR. MARESCO-But the Planning Board was split, though.
MR. CARVIN-But they wanted a public hearing, and we had a public
hearing, not only tonight.
MR. MARTIN-Yes, but
community, is, okay,
terms of your public
expressed in here and
the other factor to apply, as you assess
yes, you have the obvious which comes in
hearing, but you also have the community is
in your master plan.
MR. CARVIN-I'm not arguing that this Board may feel that there's
a detriment there. but I think it carries more credence and
weight when we have public, if it goes, because if he comes back
with counsel, and that seems to be the indication, the direction
he's going, that's what they're going to, they're going to go for
our jugular on that.
MR. TURNER-That's fine, but he hasn't presented any alternative
plan. He's just said, this is what I want. Give me a variance
on it.
MR. CARVIN-Yes, but again. according to our Ordinance.
MRS. MONAHAN-If there's a variance required, it requires the
least, minimum.
MR. TURNER-Minimum.
MR. CARVIN-And I would also caution that we, this
meeting, and I'm not quite sure, we're discussing a
shouldn't really be talking about this.
is a public
tabled. We
MR. TURNER-We shouldn't even talk about it.
MR. CARVIN-Not about specifics.
MR. MARESCO-He agreed to do everything other than the setback,
too. I mean, the height restriction was there, the 35 feet. So,
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the one thing l had a little trouble with, what difference does
it make how many stories, as long as it's meeting the 35 feet?
It does~'t matter if you have eight stories.
MR. CARVIN-Again. I think we should refrain from continuing an
ongoing conversation.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. I agree.
MR. CARVIN-But I think, I'm glad to hear that the Town is moving
in that direction.
MRS. MONAHAN-I wanted you to know that we were looking at that.
MR. TURNER-I guess, since you're here, I want to just tell you
one other thing. Look at Suburban Residential zone, duplexes and
multifamily dwelling projects. A lot of the residential areas
that are SR zones are, Chestnut Ridge Road, Meadowbrook Road.
MRS. MONAHAN-Jim, put that in your notes for the Advisory
Commi t tee.
MR. TURNER-I think the multi dwelling units should come right out
of there. I don't mind duplexes.
MR. MARTIN-Agricultural uses are in there, too.
uses are permitted, too.
Agricultural
MR. TURNER-Yes, but I can see a real case of somebody putting in
a development that people have got huge investments in a nice
residential home, just the equity in their house.
MR. MARTIN-I can guarantee you, somebody's going to have a
neighborhood dispute, and they're going to fix their neighbor by
putting pigs right in their corne,-.
MR. TURNER-Yes. That's got to come out of there.
MR. CARVIN-Jim, is there any movement towards a better definition
of garages and storage sheds?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. CARVIN-I know we've hassled that for quite a while.
MRS. MONAHAN-By the way, any definitions, and I know there's a
lot of them in here that aren't good. So if you think of them,
would you start to give Jim a list of them, because there are a
lot of definitions.
MR. CARVIN-We bump into them all the time, all the time.
MR. MARTIN-Is there anything you want to make as individuals, or
as Board members? By all means, submit them, even if it's in the
record. I can just take a copy of the minutes.
MR. CARVIN-Well, I know we've had this conversation many times.
I mean, the applicants sit there and they can come up with about
four dozen ways of ducking through loopholes.
MRS. MONAHAN-Well, we've done these same things and we've tried
to research them, and we say, really, what does this mean, the
way they've got it written.
MR. MARTIN-Well, that's a pitfall with Ordinance writing. I
mean, you try and foresee.
MR. MARESCO-It's almost impossible to cover everything.
MRS. MONAHAN-No, but at least the ones we know are a problem we
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could at least change those. So anything, any comments that you
have on anything in the Ordinance certainly should go right to
Jim now, so the Advisory Committee can start putting that in. I
thank you.
MR. TURNER-Okay. Thank you.
On motion meeting was adjourned.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Theodore Turner, Chairman
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