1996-11-21 SP
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QUEENS BURY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
SPECIAL MEETING
NOVEMBER 21, 1996
INDEX
Area Variance No. 85-1996
Tax Map No. 90-3-1
Arthur Radigan
1.
Area Variance No. 100-1996
Tax Map No. 127-6-9
Timothy S. Condon, Sr.
11.
Area Variance No. 101-1996
Tax Map No. 138-1-6
Gary & Sandy Austin
16,
Area Variance No. 104-1996
Tax Map No. 131-8-5, 6, 7,
10, 11, 22, 26
Vilinis Neilands
24.
Area Variance No. 105-1996
Tax Map No. 20-1-21, 22
Jane L. Crannell
31.
Area Variance No. 108-1996
Tax Map No. 137-1-4.2
Jorge Constantino
37.
Use Variance No. 109-1996
Tax Map No. 93-3-4,5
Robert J. & Mary E. Wood
42.
THESE ARE NOT OFFICIALLY ADOPTED MINUTES AND ARE SUBJECT TO BOARD
AND STAFF REVISIONS. REVISIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING MONTHS
MINUTES (IF ANY) AND WILL STATE SUCH APPROVAL OF SAID MINUTES.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
QUEENSBURY ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
SPECIAL MEETING
NOVEMBER 21, 1996
7:00 P.M.
MEMBERS PRESENT
CHRIS THOMAS, CHAIRMAN
BONNIE LAPHAM, SECRETARY
WILLIAM GREEN
LOUIS STONE
ROBERT KARPELES
MEMBERS ABSENT
DONALD 0' LEARY
CODE COMPLIANCE OFFICER-JOHN GORALSKI
STENOGRAPHER-MARIA GAGLIARDI
OLD BUSINESS:
AREA VARIANCE NO. 85-1996 TYPE II SFR-1A ARTHUR RADIGAN OWNER:
SAME AS ABOVE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF WEST MT. ROAD AND STEWART ROAD
APPLICANT IS PROPOSING TO CONSTRUCT A SWIMMING POOL AND FENCE ON A
RESIDENTIAL LOT. THE SWIMMING POOL WOULD NOT CONFORM TO THE
LOCATIONAL REQUIREMENTS FOR POOLS, AND THE FENCE IS PROPOSED TO BE
TALLER THAN ALLOWED BY THE ZONING ORDINANCE. RELIEF IS BEING
REQUESTED FROM SECTION 179-67B REGARDING THE LOCATION OF POOLS; AND
SECTION 179 -7 4B REGARDING THE HEIGHT OF FENCES IN RESIDENTIAL
AREAS. WARREN COUNTY PLANNING 10/9/96 TAX MAP NO. 90-3-1 LOT
SIZE: 0.57 ACRES SECTION 179-74B, 179-67B
ARTHUR RADIGAN, PRESENT
MRS. LAPHAM-Zoning Board of Appeals, record of resolution, Town of
Queensbury, Christian G. Thomas, Chairman, Bonnie Lapham,
Secretary, Arthur Radigan 784 West Mountain Road, Queensbury, New
York 12804, Project for Arthur Radigan, The Queensbury Zoning Board
of Appeals has reviewed the following request at the below stated
meeting and has resolved the following, meeting date October 23,
1996, Variance File No. 85-1996 Tabled "MOTION TO TABLE AREA
VARIANCE NO. 85-1996 ARTHUR RADIGAN, Introduced by Chris Thomas
who moved for its adoption, seconded by Donald O'Leary:
For no more than 62 days, so that the applicant can supply the
Board with the actual measurements of the fence and the pool off
the existing property line.
Duly adopted this 23rd day of October, 1996, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. O'Leary, Mr. Karpeles, Mrs. Lapham, Mr. Stone,
Mr. Thomas
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Menter, Mr. Green
Sincerely,
Christian G. Thomas, Chairman
Queensbury Zoning Board of Appeals"
MR. THOMAS-Is Mr. or Mrs. Radigan here? Do you want to come up
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
here? We've got some more questions for you. You submitted this
drawing with setbacks and everything, and I see on the Stewart Road
side, that the setback'from the side line is 11 feet.
MR. RADIGAN-Right.
MR. THOMAS-Is that from your property line, or is that from the
edge of the road?
MR. RADIGAN-That's from the edge of the road.
MR. THOMAS-Do you know how far it is from the property line?
MR. RADIGAN-No.
MR. THOMAS-See, that's what we need to give relief from is the
property line, not the edge of the road.
MR. GORALSKI - You're right, but in the interest of moving this
along, the pool is there now, right, as is the fence?
MR. RADIGAN-Right.
MR. GORALSKI-Okay. In the interest of moving this along, if the
Board was going to act favorably on this, you could put in your
motion, as the pool and the fence exist now, or 11 feet from the
actual pavement, something like that. The only other way to do it
would be to go out and survey the property, which typically you
don't require.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, well we had one like this last night, but the
applicant measured off the edge of the road, and he also had a plot
plan there where it showed the property line where we could measure
off it, but, you know, if it's all right to give it off the edge of
the road.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, as long as you specify where the pool and where
the fence is going to be, I think you're within your rights.
MR. THOMAS-If you say so.
MR. GREEN-You don't have any idea where your lot line is relative
to, say, the fence, going down that side?
MR. KARPELES-The fence must be on your property.
MR. RADIGAN-The fence is definitely on my property. It's 11 feet
in from the pavement.
MR. KARPELES-Is that your property line, the fence?
MR. RADIGAN-I didn't have it surveyed, so I wouldn't know.
MR. THOMAS-And there's no way you can move that pool to the south,
any closer to that end, like the garden, back that way? Is the
leach field that close?
MR. RADIGAN-YeS, the leach field is close.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, and you did measure that pool six feet off the
fence?
MR. RADIGAN-Right.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, and 24 feet off that back fence?
MR. RADIGAN-Right.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting
11/21/96)
MR. STONE-It's six feet off the fence at the closest point, you
mean?
MR. RADIGAN-At the closest point.
MR. STONE-The drawing doesn't quite show that.
MR. THOMAS-Any more questions for the applicant?
MR. STONE-The only question that comes up is that, where is the
property line, in terms of, is the fence on Mr. Radigan's property?
.
MR. KARPELES-I think there's two questions. Where's the septic
tank? Where's the leach field? To me, it looks on this diagram
that there's no reason that that couldn't be moved south.
MR. GORALSKI-As far as the leach field goes, we attempted to go
through all of our records to determine where that leach field is,
and if those lines showed the general area based on the way the
plumbing comes out of the house, the required separation between
the house and the septic tank, and the approximate feet of leach
field that would be required for that house, but there's no record
of specifically where that leach field is.
MR. KARPELES-Usually there's an indication on the grass in the
summer time of where the leach field is.
MR. GORALSKI-Right.
MR. KARPELES-So he must know where it is.
MR. GORALSKI-Right.
MR. THOMAS-Well, there's a letter attached to the additional
information we got. The pool wasn't the only question on this one.
It's also the height of the fence. The required height, maximum
height in the SFR-1 Acre zone is six feet, and I believe the
applicant's fence is seven feet high.
MR. RADIGAN-No, it's six feet.
MR. THOMAS-It is six feet?
MR. GORALSKI-No, you can only have a four foot high fence along the
road there.
MR. THOMAS-Along the road you can only have four?
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-Actually, I'm sorry, five on a corner lot.
MR. THOMAS-Five on a corner lot, but seeing as how that's on a
corner lot that has no side yards.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, the way that the fence ordinance was revised,
you can have four feet in the front, the architectural front, which
would be West Mountain Road, and five feet on the side, which would
be Stewart Road, and his is six feet.
MR. THOMAS-All right, six feet, five is what's allowed, okay. Is
there any questions by the Board members of the applicant about
that? Is there any more questions for the applicant? I'll open
the public hearing. I think I did leave the public hearing open on
this one.
PUBLIC HEARING OPEN
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
LYNN POTENZA
MRS. POTENZA-I'll speak in favor of it. My name is Lynn Potenza
from the Town of Queensbury, and I got a call from Mrs. Radigan
after the last meeting because she was upset when she left because,
to her knowledge, she had not done anything wrong, and she came
here thinking that all she had to do was explain it to the Board
and once I met with her, she then realized that, when your home i~
on a corner lot, you have no back yard, and unfortunately prior to
the pool being put in and the fence being put up, as most of us
would do, we would assume that anything behind the house would be
a back yard. So everything that was done, she did to the best
intentions. She went around and she talked to the neighbors. She
measured the neighbor's height of their fence so she wouldn't be
any higher than the neighbor's fence. So she meant to do the right
thing, and until John stopped in and notified her, was she aware
that she had broken any zoning laws within the Town, and certainly
she has all of the neighbor's approval. They support her. Her
intention truly was to make her home more attractive and to make it
more convenient for her family.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Does anyone have any questions of Mrs. Potenza?
MR. GREEN-Could you just clarify who you are again, I'm sorry.
MRS. POTENZA-My name is Lynn Potenza. I'm a resident of the Town
of Queensbury. I'm a County Supervisor for the Town of Queensbury.
MR. GREEN-Thank you.
MR. THOMAS-Would anyone else like to speak in favor or opposed to
this application? All right. I'll close the public hearing now.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. THOMAS-Any correspondence?
MRS. LAPHAM-Yes. 10/13/96, "We have no objections to this variance
application. Donald P. Stockman and Shirley StockmanJl
MR. STONE-Did you get an address?
MRS. LAPHAM-778 West Mountain Road, Queensbury, New York. So it's
probably right.
MR. THOMAS-It's probably right across the street, if I'm not
mistaken.
MRS. LAPHAM- Is it right across the street, or on the other
corner, right in front of her?
MRS. POTENZA-Next door. It's right next door.
MR. THOMAS-Anything else in there?
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-Alb right.
think?
Lets start with you, Bill, what do you
MR. GREEN-Well, I kind of came in in the middle of this. I went
out the other day and looked over the yard. The first thing that
struck me was that, just looking at the map here, it does seem like
an awful lot of leach field for the house, and we've looked at
pools over the top of leach fields in the past, and then we have
the extenuating circumstance of it already being in, and that, I
think, bothers me more than anything else. The fence I don't have
a problem with, five feet, six feet. It's pretty far off the road.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
It's no obstruction to the turning around the corner onto West
Mountain Road. I don't think the fence is a problem. I do have,
you know, this idea of the cart bef~re the horse really bothers me.
Especially with a back yard that Slze.
MR. THOMAS-Bob?
MR. KARPELES-Yes. I think our mandate is to grant minimum reliehf,
and I see no reason why that pool can't be moved farther from t e
property line, back into the garden. I hav:en' t h~ar<;i a good
explanation as to why the fence has to be as hlgh,as lt lS. When
I looked at it, it looked to me like the fence could be a foot
lower and still mask the pool.
MRS. RADIGAN
MRS. RADIGAN-I'd like to say something on that. I tried to say it
last time I was here, but you said it was closed and that I'd have
to save my comments. Our property is on a slope. So ~here t~e
pool is, you could see right by the road, you need a 11ttle blt
higher, so that we have a little bit more privacy from the road.
Our property is like on a slope.
MR. KARPELES-Yes, but I saw the pool. The pool looks like it's a
foot below the fence, at least, the top of, the pool.
MRS. RADIGAN-Yes, and for our privacy it would have to be a little
bit above the pool for us to have any privacy, not to be even with
the pool.
MR. KARPELES-Well, how does one foot difference give you any
privacy? I mean, if you're standing up on the edge of the pool,
you're more than a foot above the top of the pool.
MRS. RADIGAN-Well, I don't want to have to, you know, be on my
knees walking around the pool. I mean, I'd like to be in my
bathing suit and have a little privacy.
MR. KARPELES-That's my sentiment.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. Okay. Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, I mean, my biggest thing is the same as Bill's,
these applications after the fact. It seems like a cart before the
horse kind of thing, but I don't really have a problem with the
pool, and it would seem to me that if you don't have a problem with
the fence, you can't have a problem with the pool because you can't
see the pool, unless you go right up and stand on tiptoes and look
over the fence. So, I guess I would have to say that I really
don't have as much of a problem with this as some of the other
Board members, except for the fact that we're sitting here in
November when the pool is installed probably in July.
MRS. POTENZA-Can I just make a comment? When new people move into
this community, they are completely unaware how restrictive the
Zoning Ordinances are in this Town, and I know because I've Town
Board, but when they walk in and move in to the community, their
motivation is to improve their property and be good citizens of
this community. There is nothing, there's nothing in the press.
There's no handouts. There's no books. There's nothing that's
sent out by the local government saying, these are restrictions to
your property, unless you move into a development or you move into
some sort of a subdivision. New,people in this community, this
home was built in 1965. We did extensive research as to where the
septic system was. The reason the pool wasn't put over the septic
system was because we only knew where it was through the green of
the grass. There's no written document to verify where the septic
system is, and there is a philosophy out there that if it works and
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
it works very well, then leave it alone, don't disturb it. Our
only other choice was to bring in somebody and have it dug up and
verify exactly where the septic system and the leach field was.
That is an expense to the homeowner that shouldn't be incurred. So
they did the best they can do. As far as the garden goes, these
people live off that garden. They grow the vegetables. They can
them. They freeze them, and they feed their family with it. So
all of these things have to be taken into consideration when a
decision is made by any Board in this Town.
MR. THOMAS-I think the only thing I'd have to say on that, is
there's a lot of signs when you come into the Town of Queensbury
that says Zoning Ordinance in effect.
MRS. POTENZA-That's true, except that if I were to put in an above
ground pool, I would be a little, I would think that that's okay,
and it would be okay, if he wasn't on a corner lot.
MR. KARPELES-Well, you know, there's no big deal in moving an above
ground pool anyway.
MRS. POTENZA-Well, it's an inconvenience.
MR. KARPELES-Are you saying we shouldn' t have zoning laws, or
anybody who's new into the community isn't subject to those zoning
laws, or isn't supposed to know about them?
MRS. POTENZA-No. I believe we should have zoning laws, but I think
new people should be contacted with some sort of a book or written
explanation as to what's going on in the Town.
MR. STONE-The Town Board has public forums every night they meet.
This is certainly something that can be brought to the Town Board's
attention. We are a function of the Town Board. We are not the
Town Board. We do not make zoning laws.
MRS. POTENZA-I understand that.
MR. STONE-The one thing I didn't understand is, you kept saying
lIourll. What is your involvement in this piece of property?
MRS. POTENZA-Little or none. I met the Radigans as the mortgage
originator, and they got their mortgage through my bank, through M
& T Mortgage Corporation, and then I got involved as a personal
friend.
MR. STONE-I just heard the personal pronoun and was just trying to
determine what, do you want my thoughts?
MR. THOMAS-Yes. You're up next.
MR. STONE-I share the thoughts of my two Board members to the left.
I have been getting more and more outspoken since I've been on this
Board for two months. I really don't like to have people come
before this Board with a fate accompli. I really don't like to see
things up before. It seems to me that there's enough information
around. There may not be total information, but there's enough
information around that says if you're going to do something to
your property, check. We have a Department in the other building
that is at anybody's disposal to give you as much information as
they possibly can. I believe the pool can be moved. I am also
troubled by the fence. I'm troubled by the fact that I don't even
know where the property line is, and the fact that a six foot
fence.
MRS. POTENZA-But a survey wasn't requi red. The bank didn' t require
a survey. It didn't come with the deed, and you expect, at the
cost of the resident, to go out and get a survey?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. GREEN-I'll tell you, if I'm going to spend however many
thousands of dollars for a piece of property, I want to know where
it starts and ends.
MRS. POTENZA-Well, some people can't afford it. Some people can't
afford a survey when they apply for a mortgage. Some people are
first time home buyers and they have to be gauged by what their
pocketbook has.
MR. STONE-But somebody puts a fence up on something that may not
even be their property. It's possible. I don't kpow though.
MRS. POTENZA- It is possible. It's possible if you match the
neighbor's fence and go with their fence line.
MR. STONE - I'm be ing asked to
variance that may be illegal.
give a variance, to vote for a
I don't believe I can do it.
MR. GREEN-If I knew, you know, definitively where that property
line was down through there, in relation to that pool and the edge
of the road, you know, I might have a different feeling about it.
MRS. POTENZA-But do you know that a survey isn't required by the
banks anymore?
MR. KARPELES-There are no stakes, there's no nothing?
MRS. POTENZA-According to the deed, there is. If you look at the
deed, the deed will give a description of the property, but as far
as a plot plan, as far as the survey goes.
MR. KARPELES-You can string a string between stakes, and you can
measure from the string.
MRS. POTENZA-This house was built in 1965. There are no stakes.
MR. KARPELES-And he bought a house without knowing where the
property line was?
MRS. POTENZA-He went with the deed description, as probably a good
percentage of first time home buyers do.
MRS. LAPHAM-Especially if they get title insurance.
MRS. POTENZA-Which is required by the lending institution.
MRS. LAPHAM-When they get title insurance, that's taken care of.
MR. THOMAS-Anything else, Lou?
MR. STONE-Well, I'm concerned by the height of the fence. I mean,
we have a zoning that says five. I don't see any need for six,
particularly when I look at the front gate coming off, which is
four feet high. So there is an opening that's four feet high, and
yet the applicant says she needs privacy to have six feet, when
there is an opening of four feet.
MRS. POTENZA-Well, she has four foot high kids.
little kids.
I mean, she has
MR. STONE-There is a gap in the fence where it is four feet high.
MR. RADIGAN-And it's only three feet wide, and the way it' s
positioned, you would have to be standing directly in the middle of
the road to be looking in.
MRS. RADIGAN-Is that where the door is going to go in, they're
talking about? That's where the door is going to go in.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. STONE-There is a door there. It's four feet high.
MRS. RADIGAN-Yes. You'd have to be standing directly in, you know,
to be looking in. That's if someone was going to be that obvious
to stop and stand there to look in.
MR. RADIGAN-The bulk of the fence is just to shield us from Stewart
Road.
MR. STONE-But you have a six foot fence parallel to West Mountain
Road also, with the exception of that four foot gate?
MR. RADIGAN-Right.
MR. STONE-So it's not just to shield you from Stewart Road, six
foot high all the way around.
MRS. RADIGAN-Stewart and West Mountain.
MRS. POTENZA-How long is it on West Mountain Road?
MR. RADIGAN-It's only about, I guess, 30 feet long.
MR. THOMAS-Twenty-eight feet, twenty-eight, probably maybe 30 feet
according to the drawing. Okay. I'll say it again that I don't
like coming in for variances after the fact. I do live in that
neighborhood. I have seen that fence. I've never stopped to
measure it, but I really can't in my position. Mrs. Radigan did
say, and I have seen it, that the lot does elevate a little from
the road surface. So I really don't have a problem with the fence,
but it's the pool setback that I have a problem with, and I think
that can be moved to the south, you know, to get it farther away
from that fence.
MRS. RADIGAN- I'd like to say one other thing. The vegetable garden
that you keep on talking about is directly under a pine tree that
is not on our property. So if we were to put it there, it would be
covered in pine needles all summer long. I get pine needles all
summer in my vegetable garden, but that can be raked up without a
problem at my convenience. It would be a real mess if the pool
were under that.
MR. THOMAS-That's something that the Radigans can' t control is what
falls off that pine tree.
MRS. RADIGAN-And it's not our pine tree.
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, I would like to make one comment, is I really
think that people that have a corner lot, and that's why we've had
several people before this Board with the same kind of thing,
because people on a corner lot really have a problem providing any
kind of privacy in their yard for themselves, because they don't
have a back yard, and this isn't the first one we've heard.
MR. THOMAS-Any other Board members have any comments they want to
make? If not, does somebody want to make a motion one way or the
other?
MR. GREEN-Can you split this in half, fence and pool?
MR. THOMAS-No.
MR. GORALSKI-Actually, they are two separate sections. So you can
make two separate motions if you want.
MR. THOMAS-For one application?
MR. GORALSKI - Yes, because they're two separate sections of the
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
Ordinance.
MR. GREEN-So you can give relief from one, but not the other.
MR. THOMAS-Well, how would you split them up like that?
MR. GORALSKI-If they're asking for a variance from Section 179-74B,
which is the height of the fence, and also a variance from Section
179-67B.
MR. THOMAS-Which is the pool.
MR. GORALSKI-Which is the pool. So you can make a motion approving
the height of the fence and disapproving the location of the pool,
or vice versa, or disapproving both or approving both.
MR. GREEN-What is the setback supposed to be, from the line, for a
pool?
MR. GORALSKI-Well, for that pool, actually it would have to be
behind the north line of the house, to be a conforming pool.
MR. GREEN-Okay. So it's supposed to be how many feet?
MR. GORALSKI-The footage, in this case, doesn't really matter. The
pool can't be any closer to the road than the house is.
MR. GREEN-I see.
MR. THOMAS-You'd have to go about 32 feet to the south to get
behind the house.
MR. GORALSKI-Plus the width of the pool.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, I counted right from the width of the pool, also.
MR. GREEN-It's got to go back about one pool flip, if you're going
to go 32 feet and 32 feet.
MR. GORALSKI-At least. It looks like the pool's diameter is 21
feet, so, a little more than that.
MR. GREEN-I just went, you know, the house is 10 boxes off the road
up here, and it comes.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, but see, that comes at an angle.
MR. GREEN-Well, that's what I did. I came down here and I went 10
boxes off the road line down here.
MR. KARPELES-No, but he's saying it's got to be the same distance
back as the house.
MR. GORALSKI-Right. You've got to take that.
MR. GREEN-Straight down, or at the angle?
MR. GORALSKI-Straight down, in line with the wall of the house.
MR. GREEN-From the house.
MR. THOMAS-From the north wall.
MR. GORALSKI-So actually it would be behind the garden.
MR. GREEN-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-In order to be a conforming pool.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. THOMAS-Yes, it would be almost in front of the woodshed, right
over the top of the leach field.
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-And I don't think.
MR. GORALSKI-You can't put a pool over a leach field.
MR. THOMAS-No, you can't. There's really no other place for that
pool. You can't put it over the top of the leach field.
MR. STONE-And you can't put it down behind the patio?
MR. GREEN-Yes. Why can't you go down behind the patio?
MR. RADIGAN-It's all shade.
MR. GREEN-Well, that's not necessarily the problem.
MRS. RADIGAN-Well, there's all trees there, too.
MR. GREEN-See, the problem is to meet the setbacks and not be over
the leach field. The shade is kind of irrelevant, as far as I'm
concerned.
MRS. RADIGAN-That's where our play area is. The play area is right
there. He didn't draw in the swings and all that's there, the fort
set up.
MR. THOMAS-That would fit in there.
MRS. LAPHAM-Yes, but if that's all shady, we just agreed before
that they can't be held responsible for the weather.
MR. GREEN-I didn't agree to that.
MR. KARPELES-No, I didn't, either.
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, they can't be responsible for the weather ~ don't
think.
MR. KARPELES-I had a pool under a willow tree once.
great.
It worked
MR. THOMAS-Well, lets get this thing rolling. Does somebody want
to make a motion? We could sit here and talk about this all night.
MOTION TO DENY AREA VARIANCE NO. 85-1996 ARTHUR RADIGAN, Robert
Karpeles who moved for its adoption, seconded by Louis Stone:
The applicant is proposing to construct a swimming pool and fence
on a residential lot. The swimming pool would not conform to the
locational requirements for pools, which allows for swimming pools
to be constructed behind a principal structure. The fence is
proposed to be taller than allowed by the Zoning Ordinance.
Feasible alternatives. I am not convinced that this is the minimum
variance that can be granted. It appears that this pool could be
moved further away from the property line, and the property line is
pretty nebulous. We don't know where that is. The difficulty
appears to be self created because the pool is already erected.
The fence is six feet tall, and the Ordinance calls for a five foot
tall fence, and we haven't heard any good reason, in my opinion, as
to why the fence has to be taller than the Ordinance allows.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
- 10 -
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
AYES: Mr. Stone, Mr. Green, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Thomas
NOES: Mrs. Lapham
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. THOMAS-That's a four to one, so the application is denied.
NEW BUSINESS:
AREA VARIANCE NO. 100-1996 TYPE II MR-5 MHO TIMOTHY S. CONDON,
SR. OWNER: ARTHUR J. RIVERS NORTHEAST CORNER OF ðHIO AND CENTRAL
AVENUE APPLICANT PROPOSES THE PLACEMENT OF A MOBILE HOME ON A LOT
LOCATED ON THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF OHIO AND CENTRAL AVENUES. THE
APPLICANT IS SEEKING RELIEF FROM THE FRONT YARD SETBACKS OF THE MR-
5 ZONING DISTRICT LISTED IN SECTION 179-18. TAX MAP NO. 127-6-9
LOT SIZE: 0.14 ACRES SECTION 179-18
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 100-1996, Timothy S. Condon,
Sr., Meeting Date: November 21, 1996 "APPLICANT: Timothy Condon
PROJECT LOCATION: Northeast corner of Ohio and Central Ave.
Proposed proj ect and Conformance with the Ordinance: The applicant
is proposing to place a mobile home on a piece of property located
at Ohio and Central Ave. The home would have a 14 foot setback
from Ohio Avenue. This setback does not conform to the front yard
requirements of the MR-5 zone. Criteria for considering an Area
Variance, according to Chapter 267, Town Law. 1. Benefit to the
applicant: Relief would allow the applicant to place a mobile home
on his property. 2. Feasible alternatives: The length of this
lot limits the ability of this mobile home to meet the front yard
setback along Ohio Avenue. 3. Is this relief substantial relative
to the Ordinance? The applicant is seeking 16 feet of front yard
setback relief. 4. Effects on the neighborhood or community? No
negative effects are anticipated with this relief request. 5. Is
this difficulty self created? A difficulty exists because the size
of the proposed mobile home will not be able to meet the front yard
setback on Ohio Avenue. 6. Staff Comments & Concerns: The
applicant has not indicated where he plans to locate the septic
system on this property. If this application is approved, septic
facilities will need to be shown and approved by the Building
Department prior to the issuance of a building permit. SEQR: Type
II, no further action required."
MR. THOMAS-Okay, and there's nothing from Warren County.
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-Is Mr. Condon or Mr. Rivers here? No? Nobody here to
represent the application? I guess we'll go on to the next one.
JENNY DUPELL
MR. DUPELL-Sir, I'm here regarding the corner lot there, because I
live right next door.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, but nobody has shown up for the application.
MRS. DUPELL-Then what happens in a case like that?
MR. THOMAS-All right.
nobody showed up and we
We'll do it anyway.
application, I'll open
I think last meeting or two meetings ago
went through and did it anyway. All right.
If no one's here to talk about the
the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
- 11 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
JENNY DUPELL
MRS. DUPELL-My name is Jenny Dupell and I own the lot next door,
and when Mrs. Crumb's house burnt there I almost lost my house due
to a fire that was, when the house burnt, it was nothing but a
shack.
MR. STONE-Are you on Ohio?
MRS. DUPELL-Yes, I am. I'm right next door.
MRS. LAPHAM-The white house?
MRS. DUPELL-Yes, and I just had new windows, new storm windows and
new siding. I've tried to improve my home, and I just don't feel
that I should have to have a trailer put on that corner to bring
the valuation of my house down, unless the Town of Queensbury wants
to drop my taxes, because I'm paying enough taxes. So I don't feel
that I should have to have a trailer that close to my home.
MR. GREEN-Just right here, as a point of reference, this is in a
mobile home overlay zone, isn't it?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes, it is.
MR. KARPELES-There are no other mobile homes in that area, though.
MRS. DUPELL-Not on that end, except one Joe Maille has, down the
road from us.
MR. KARPELES-It is a mobile home area?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. Mobile homes are allowable there. The reason
they're here is for the front yard setback on Ohio Avenue.
MR. STONE-That foundat~on that's there was a house, something that
burned down?
MRS. DUPELL-That was a house previous, yes.
MR. GREEN-A regular stick built house?
MRS. DUPELL-It was a shack, tar paper shack and they wrapped it in
black plastic in the winter time, and I threatened to go on over
and put a bow on it. I mean, I've done everything I could to
improve mY property, and, I mean, I don't want to get another dump
next to me, and that's what I had when Crumb's place was there.
MR. THOMAS-I have a question for you.
Rivers.
The property is Arthur J.
MRS. DUPELL-Right.
MR. THOMAS-Of Vermont Avenue. Do you think that Mr. Rivers is
going to live there or Mr. Condon's going to live there?
MRS. DUPELL-Mr. Condon plans on living there. I don't know how
many children they have. I know they have kids. He's a young kid.
I mean, he's not that old, and I know they do have young kids, but
I don't know exactly how many, and it's going to have to be a
pretty good sized trailer with a family.
MR. THOMAS-It looks like it's going to be 20 wide and, it's not a
double wide at 20 foot.
MR. GREEN-14 by 80.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, 14 by 80.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting
11/21/96)
MRS. DUPELL-60 by 100 the lot is.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, and the lot's 60 by 100. Do any Board members have
any questions for the?
MR. STONE-Do you know, since we don't have the applicant here,
there's a pipe sticking up in the middle of the?
MRS. DUPELL-Yes, that used to be the old gas pipe. That was a gas
pipe, it's been there for years.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MRS. DUPELL-As a matter of fact, I cleaned those lots off after the
fire was over. I took all her garbage away when she moved out and
left the garbage laying in the yard. I cleaned that yard up to
have it look half way decent so my place wouldn't look so bad, and
I just don't feel that I want to have somebody come in and make a
dump out of it again.
MR. STONE-Just out of curiosity, what would you consider, since it
is a buildable lot, what would you consider acceptable?
MRS. DUPELL-Well, I don't know. A trailer is going to bring the
valuation of my house down. Would you like a trailer on your?
MR. STONE-Well, I wasn't, I was just curious if there was anything
that would go there, that you would find acceptable.
MRS. DUPELL-Well, if it wasn't as close to my house as this one
was. They had to put a water barrier up to keep my house from
burning when that house burnt. Pete Smith ran a fire barrier up,
because my shingles were smoking and my siding was smoking, from
the heat from the fire when they had that fire there.
MR. THOMAS-This is the only lot that Mr. Rivers owns? He doesn't
have a lot like next door to it or something?
MRS. DUPELL-No. That's the only lot, is 60 by 100.
MRS. LAPHAM-Is Mr. Condon buying the lot from Mr. Rivers?
MRS. DUPELL-He wants to buy it. He hasn't bought it yet.
MRS. LAPHAM-He hasn't purchased it yet?
MRS. DUPELL-No.
MRS. LAPHAM-And he hasn't purchased his mobile home yet?
MRS. DUPELL-Not that I know of.
MR. THOMAS-Any more questions? Do you have anything else you want
to add?
MRS. DUPELL-No. Well, if they put a trailer that close to the
road, the kids do get on the school bus out there, too, and when
the snow is piled up out there, you cannot see the kids when you're
standing on the corner. I mean, I had grandkids that were getting
on the bus out there. My grandkids are moved away now, but there
are still other kids that use that corner, and when the snow banks
get real high, there's no place for the kids to stand except in the
road. If they can push the snow banks back a little, it would give
them more room for the kids to stand, but if they've got a trailer
that close to the road, they're not going to be able to, and I
applied to put a roof on my house, and I went and applied for a
permit to put a roof on my porch, on the foundation of my porch,
and, well, they said I wasn't far enough off the road to put a roof
- 13 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
over the existing foundation that was already there. I had a
cement thing that was there when I bought my house. All I wanted
to do was put a roof over it to keep the people from falling when
they came in on account of the ice and snow. The Town of
Queensbury gave me a hard time just putting a roof over my porch.
When I went to the Building Inspectors and I said, look, I'm doing
it to protect the people that come to my house. I don't want to
get sued. If they slip and fall on your property, you're going to
get sued, right?
MR. THOMAS-That's right.
MRS. DUPELL-So you want to put a roof over it to protect it, but
the Town of Queensbury told me I couldn't put a roof over it, and
I said either give me a permit or I'm doing it anyway, because I'm
protecting the people that come on my property. I said, I'm sorry,
that's the way it is. They did end up giving me a permit, but they
didn't want to. That's why I say, you know, they wouldn't give me
any leeway. Why give somebody else that hasn't even been in the
area that long, I've been there almost 30 years now, at my place
where I'm living, and you know, I plan on staying there, but I
mean, if I'm going to have a trailer right on top of me and I'm
going to take a chance of losing my house, because my house is
built too close to the fence as it was, but that was built there
when I bought the house.
MR. THOMAS-According to the Ordinance, all he needs is a 10 foot
setback. Well, there's no rear lot on this, is there? There's
just, both fronts and sides, fronts and rears. Well, the rear on
that is 10 feet. So, the drawing does show 10 feet off the rear.
MR. GORALSKI-Right.
MR. THOMAS-So the only thing they're looking at is that 14 foot off
Ohio Avenue, which should be 30 feet.
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-But, if this was a lot sitting between two other lots,
all he would need is 10 feet, and he wouldn't have to be here.
MR. STONE-Is this sewered, John?
MR. GORALSKI-No.
MR. STONE-So he needs a septic system.
MRS. DUPELL-There is no sewer system there.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. I'm not even sure how you would fit a septic
system on that lot, given the size of that mobile home.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. Anything else?
MRS. DUPELL-That's it.
MR. THOMAS-Okay.
correspondence?
\
,
Anyone else like to speak opposed?
Any
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-I'll close the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. THOMAS-What do you think, Bob?
MR. KARPELES-Well, it doesn't look like the kind of neighborhood
- 14 -
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
that ought to have a mobile home in there, to me, but it's in a
Mobile Home Overlay Zone, which, it's hard for me to understand,
but since the applicant isn't even he:e, and the~e are a ,lot of
unanswered questions as to how he's g01ng to put 1n a sept1c tank
and so forth, I really don't see how we could grant this. That's
my opinion.
MR. THOMAS-Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, I agree with Bob, and I just would like t~ add
that since, according to this lady, the applicant hasn't e1ther
purchased the lot or purchased his mobile home, he still has plenty
of latitude to make changes that would fit into the Zoning
Ordinance. So I would be against this.
MR. GREEN-In the application it does say, to move our 14 by 80
mobile home on to, I would read that to say that they've got a home
some place else and they want to move it here.
MRS. LAPHAM-Maybe White Burch Estates, it's just not here.
MR. THOMAS-Yes.
MRS. LAPHAM-But he hasn't purchased the lot yet.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. He doesn't own the lot yet.
MR. THOMAS-Lou?
MR. STONE-I see no reason to grant this variance, for some of the
reasons that have been mentioned before. I also have a, it's a
small thing, but I was annoyed that there was no pink sign, unless
some of you saw the pink sign.
MR. THOMAS-I didn't see it.
MR. STONE-I didn't see a pink sign, and the applicant isn't even
here to answer that question. So I'm inclined to turn it down.
MR. THOMAS-Bill?
MR. GREEN-I don' t want to turn this down yet. I have some
questions. I would be more apt to want to table this. In general,
I don't, personally, think it's a bad idea. A lot that size, it's
a Mobile Home Overlay. We can't contest whether he wants to put a
mobile home there or not. He's meeting his two rear setbacks.
Sure, I have a question about the septic. Sure it would be nice if
he were here to answer some questions, but I, personally, don't
feel like denying this simply on the basis of a few unanswered
questions.
MR. THOMAS-Well, I'll have to agree with the other Board members,
that, Number One, the applicant, nor his agent, nor the owner
showed up to answer the questions, and they were notified that the
meeting was here tonight. My biggest question is, is the septic
system, where is that going to go? If this was a smaller
structure, such as a 14 by 70, instead of an 18 by 80, that might
be more feasible to put that on there, but I think this lot is way
too small for a structure that size, and it is on a corner lot, and
with the snow piling up and everything like that, that 14 feet off
that property line, I can see problems. I can also see problems
that the applicant at some point may want to build a garage, and
would have to come back for a variance for a garage. Also, parking
on there may be difficult with a structure that size. So I'd be
inclined to turn this down. Having said that, would anyone like to
make a motion?
MOTION TO DENY AREA VARIANCE NO. 100-1996 TIMOTHY S. CONDON, SR.,
- 15 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
Introduced by Bonnie Lapham who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Robert Karpeles:
The applicant is proposing to place a mobile home on a piece of
property located at Ohio and Central Avenue. The home would have
a 14 foot setback from Ohio Avenue. This setback does not conform
to the front yard requirements of the MR-5 zone. The benefit to
the applicant, the relief would allow the applicant to place a
mobile home at his property. I think some of the feasible
alternatives, there are no feasible alternatives for this
particular lot, but there are alternative choices that the
applicant could make in looking into property. The applicant is
seeking 16 feet of front yard setback relief. We've heard some
public comment that the surrounding neighborhood feels that there
is a negativity connected with this project. Difficulty does exist
because of the size of the proposed mobile home will not be able to
meet the front yard setback on Ohio Avenue. I feel it's somewhat
self created because the mobile home is not there yet and the lot
is not purchased, and the applicant further has not indicated where
he plans to locate his septic system on this property, and that
would certainly have to be reviewed by the Building Department.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Karpeles, Mrs. Lapham, Mr. Stone, Mr. Thomas
NOES: Mr. Green
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. THOMAS-The application is denied.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 101-1996 TYPE II WR-1A GARY & SANDY AUSTIN
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE SECOND TO LAST HOUSE ON LEFT ON TWIN
CHANNELS ROAD APPLICANT PROPOSES TO CONSTRUCT A SECOND FLOOR
ADDITION TO AN EXISTING HOME LOCATED ON TWIN CHANNELS ROAD. RELIEF
IS BEING SOUGHT FROM SECTION 179-79A2, WHICH LIMITS THE EXPANSION
OF NONCONFORMING STRUCTURES. WARREN COUNTY PLANNING 11/13/96 TAX
MAP NO. 138-1-6 LOT SIZE: 0.24 ACRES SECTION 179-79A2
GARY AUSTIN, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
I
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 101-1996, Gary & Sandy Austin,
Meeting Date: November 21, 1996 "APPLICANT: Gary & Sandy Austin
PROJECT LOCATION: Twin Channels Road Proposed Project and
Conformance with the Ordinance: The applicant is proposing to
construct a second floor addition to an existing home. This
expansion would be more than 50% of the area of the original
structure built on this property. Criteria for considering an Area
Variance, according to Chapter 267, Town Law. 1. Benefit to the
applicant: Relief would allow the applicant to build a second
floor addition to an existing home. 2. Feasible alternatives: It
appears there are no feasible alternatives which could provide a
lesser amount of relief. 3. Is this relief substantial relative
to the Ordinanqe? Although no floor plans have been submitted, the
maximum amount of floor area that could be added would be 500 sq.
ft. This would bring the total square footage of the home up to
1000 sq. ft. 4. Effects on the neighborhood or community? No
negative effects are anticipated with this relief request. 5. Is
this difficulty self created? The current square footage of this
home, 500 square feet, is below the minimum house size of 800 sq.
ft. that is listed in the Zoning Ordinance. 6. Staff Comments &
Concerns: The total square footage, permeability and floor area
ratio at this location will comply with the standards of the WR-1A
zone. Staff anticipates no negative impacts with this application
- 16 -
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
for relief. SEQR: Type II, no further action required."
MR. THOMAS-And nothing from Warren County.
MRS. LAPHAM-And nothing from Warren County.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Is the applicant here?
MR. AUSTIN-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-Warren County said No County Impact. ,
MR. STONE-No County Impact, yes.
MR. GORALSKI-You said nothing from Warren County.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. I haven't got the statement.
MRS. LAPHAM-There's no statement.
MR. GORALSKI-Is it in that file?
MRS. LAPHAM-Not that I'm aware of. It wasn't attached.
MR. GORALSKI -Actually, they said No County Impact, the septic
system has to conform, something about the septic system has to
conform. There is a functioning septic system there.
MRS. LAPHAM-Usually it's attached to the Notes to File.
MR. THOMAS-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-I don't know why it's not there, but at any rate, the
only comment Warren County had was about the septic system, and
there is a functioning septic system on the site.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Any questions for the applicant from the Board?
MR. GREEN-You've got the same name and two different addressed. Is
this your primary residence?
MR. AUSTIN-No. My primary residence is primary residence is 1602
St. James Road.
MR. GREEN-So what do you use this residence for?
MR. AUSTIN-It's a camp.
MR. GREEN-Essentially summer residence, seasonal?
MR. AUSTIN-Yes.
MR. GREEN-Would you be staying there during the winter?
MR. AUSTIN-Myself, not right now, no.
MR. GREEN-Did you have plans to rent it in the future?
MR. AUSTIN-Possibility, yes. I do have it rented right now. So
there is somebody in the camp right now.
MR. GREEN-Are they year round tenants?
MR. AUSTIN-Yes, right now they are.
MR. GREEN-So that is a year round residence at this point?
MR. AUSTIN-Yes.
- 17 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. GREEN-And did they plan on staying after this construction?
MR. AUSTIN-I don't know that. That I don't know.
MR. GREEN-So when you say that you need additional living space,
some place here, a second bedroom, that's really not for your use,
it's to generate a better rentability aspect?
MR. AUSTIN-Yes, or as I'm looking at the place, we have a family.
I mean, down the road, is I want to use that for a camp or
whatever, there's a small bedroom, which is, if you have the print
out, there's a little block on there that shows the bedroom. It's
barely big enough to stick a bed in. The ceiling height in that is
only like, at the outside wall, five and a half feet. I mean,
there's a sloped roof on the camp itself, which to be shoveled
during the winter. It's an old structure. It needs some
renovation, and the bedroom itself is extremely small that' s
existing there.
MR. GREEN-So the rest of the area, essentially , living room,
kitchen.
MR. AUSTIN-Yes, it's basically, that's all small. I mean, it's all
within 500 square feet there. It's a pretty small structure. It's
also below grade, basically. Hillside is, the top of the roof is,
as you walk out on that, it's basically a basement more. I was
thinking with putting a second story on that, that would actually
bring it up to ground level, actually, for access on the top.
MR. STONE-Except that this is on a deck, isn't it, John? The front
part, toward the river, is on a deck?
MR. GORALSKI-There's a deck in front of it.
MR. STONE-Yes, but where is the ground? Is it in front of it?
Where is the ground actually to the front of the house, under the
new law where we're talking?
MR. GORALSKI-You measure from whatever point on the roof you're
measuring from to the vertical distance to that point on grade.
MR. STONE-Is this going to be higher than 28?
MR. GORALSKI-No. Definitely not.
MR. STONE-From grade in front of it?
MR. GORALSKI -Right. Well, you've got to remember now, at the
front, it may be, as long as the roof comes down, he's okay. He's
not asking for relief from the height restriction.
MR. STONE-Well, I'm just curious. Is it going to exceed the height
restriction?
MR. GORALSKI-The plan that I've discussed with the applicant, it's
not going to exceed the height restriction.
MR. THOMAS-Any, other questions for the applicant? The only
question I have is this eight by fifteen, is that on the river side
that's going to be filled in?
MR. AUSTIN-Yes, it is.
MR. THOMAS-Is that the notch that's going to be filled in there?
MR. AUSTIN-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-And then build up right on top of that?
- 18 -
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting
11/21/96)
MR. AUSTIN-Right. So that would make it a square structure, and
then build on top of that.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. So that would bring the second floor addition to
616 square feet.
MR. AUSTIN-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. No more questions? I'll open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
GARY MARKWELL
MR. MARKWELL-My name is Gary Markwell. I'm the next door neighbor.
I'd have to say I'm opposed at the moment, because there are too
many things, I'm very unf ami 1 iar wi th laws and so forth, and
there's things that, right now, I don't really know enough about,
other than Gary and myself talking some about this. What concerns
me is the property line running so close to it, within, I think, a
matter of six feet or so, and there's so, the property is so
limited around the structure now as it is, as far as septic, a well
or what have you, that I think it would overtax the area right
there, or open up a can of worms or something like that. I'm not
saying maybe down the road I'd be for it, but right now there's too
many things that, with this close proximity of the property line to
it, that I'm kind of, right like I say at the moment I feel
opposition to it.
MR. KARPELES-Which side are you on?
MR. MARKWELL-I'm to the south.
MR. KARPELES-You're the south side?
MR. MARKWELL-Right.
MR. STONE-You're at the end of the road?
MR. MARKWELL-Right. I'm the last house. He is to the north of me.
MR. STONE-Where is the septic system, John, do we know? Mr.
Austin, where is the septic system?
MR. AUSTIN-It's close to, as far as I know, it's right on or close
to the border that he's talking about along his house right there.
MR. STONE-In the back yard?
MR. AUSTIN-It would be on the right side of the structure, close to
his boundary.
MR. STONE-As you're looking at the river on the right side?
MR. AUSTIN-Correct.
MR. STONE-Between there and the garage?
MR. AUSTIN-No. It's right next to the camp somewhere down there on
the right side. It's very close to his boundary line.
MR. THOMAS-But you did say, is that a working septic system?
MR. GORALSKI-A functioning system.
MR. THOMAS-A functioning system, so there's nothing we can do about
that, nothing the Town can do about it. Does anyone have any
questions for the person speaking opposed, Mr. Markwell? I have
- 19 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
two more questions for Mr. Austin. Number One, with this addition,
are you going to put another bathroom upstairs, in that?
MR. AUSTIN-I haven't really drawn the plans up, as far as what was
going on. Basically, I'm trying to see what's going on with the
variance, whether it's going to fly or not. That was a
possibility, if things were going to work out for it. Does that
have something to do with the variance as far as what's going on?
MR. THOMAS-Yes, it does.
MR. AUSTIN-Okay.
MR. THOMAS-John, if he adds a bathroom on to that, and it overtaxes
the system, what happens then?
MR. GORALSKI -Well, if the system fails, he's got to put in a
conforming system, but to go back to adding a bathroom, adding a
bathroom does not change the requirements for the septic system one
way or another, whether you put a conforming system or whether you
have an existing system. You have an existing system and it's
functioning, in this case, which is when the application was
received and everything, if he's got a functioning septic system,
he can put the addition on and maintain the septic system. If he
decides to put a new septic system, or if he is forced to because
the existing septic system fails, he would have to design a septic
system based on the number of bedrooms, not the number of baths.
MR. THO~S-Okay, and the other question I have is, what's the shape
of the roof going to be? Is it going to be a pitched roof, a
peaked roof?
MR. AUSTIN-Right, a peaked roof rather than the sloped roof that's
on there now.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, and the ridge of that roof running parallel with
that property line with Mr. Markwell?
MR. AUSTIN-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. So the runoff would go toward the property lines
on both sides?
MR. AUSTIN-Right. If that's a problem, that could be changed also.
That's not in stone either.
MR. THOMAS-Runoff in the Waterfront Residential, see,
passed new laws, or a new Zoning Ordinance for the
Residential, and we're not quite up to speed on this.
keep going back to John.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, technically, this application is under the old
Waterfront Residential.
they just
Waterfront
We have to
MR. THOMAS-It's under the old one?
MR. GORALSKI-Because it was received prior to the enactment of the
Waterfront, th~ new ordinance.
MR. THOMAS-You're kidding?
6th.
That was back in September, October
MR. GORALSKI-This was received before that.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, because there's no date stamped on here. All
right. So we don't have any say about the runoff then either.
MR. GORALSKI-If that's a concern, you can either put conditions on
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
it that would direct the runoff in a different direction, or, you
know, in the past, the Board has put a condition that site plan
review be, that he gets a site plan review.
MR. AUSTIN-To me, it's a square structure and it basically doesn't
matter. That was illY intent for the roof. It doesn't matter if it
goes the other way. It's not a big issue to me, if it's a problem
with the Board.
MR. THOMAS - Yes. My concern is the runof f going on to Mr.
Markwell's property, and also, if you say that s~ptic system is
right there next to the building, between, it's 8.3 feet between
the building and the property line, you know, if that runoff goes
into there, I don' t know what it's going to do to that septic
system. Because now it slopes from front to back, you know, it
comes off the back of the building, and if you put a peaked roof on
there, then it's going to, start going toward that side.
MR. AUSTIN-There's a couple of options with that. I mean, there's
gutters that could be put up to take care of the runoff. The soil
there is very sandy. I mean, the soil there is very sandy. I
mean, drainage is good, but if that's a problem, I could change the
roof the other way.
MR. THOMAS-All right.
MR. MARKWELL-Again, something like that, that really is not a
concern, more so as just the close proximity of the septic. There
is or was a well there, and again, so close to the property line,
where if anything is done, how can they upgrade anything else? I'd
say there's an impossibility to upgrade anything else, to meet.
MR. AUSTIN-Okay. I would say, Gary, there's a couple of options I
have there. Town water is available, as far as the structure
itself, and as far as the septic problem down the road, the septic
system could be put back toward the road side there. Am I right in
that, John, is there area for that?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes, it looks like you have enough room to put a
conforming system in there.
MR. AUSTIN-If that was a problem down the road, that that could
take care of that problem.
MR. GORALSKI-I mean, I'm just looking at it very quickly. I
haven't scaled it out, but there appears, the lot's 49 feet wide,
you have 30 feet in which to put a septic system in. You could put
at least three, probably four fingers for a leach field, or you
could put seepage pits. You'd probably have to put a pump in to
pump up to it.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, but right now it's a moot point, the septic system,
because it is an existing system that works.
MR. GORALSKI-Right.
MR. THOMAS-So, we can't do anything about the septic system.
MR. STONE-I am confused, Mr. Austin. The roof right now, here's
the river, the roof is this way, correct, going back toward the
garage?
MR. AUSTIN-No, it slopes towards the river.
MR. STONE-The other way? Okay. I knew it was one way or the
other, and you're proposing it to continue that pitch?
MR. AUSTIN-No.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. STONE-Okay. You're going to turn it.
MR. AUSTIN-Right.
MR. STONE-That's what I heard. I just wanted to confirm it.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Any more questions, Mr. Markwell?
MR. MARKWELL-No, I guess not. My concern just really fell upon
that, the septic in close proximity to everything.
MR. THOMAS-Did you get your questions answered? Maybe or maybe not
to your satisfaction, but that's the way it is. Okay. Is there
anyone else that would like to speak opposed? Any correspondence?
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-No correspondence. All right.
hearing.
I'll close the public
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. THOMAS-Bob, what do you think?
MR. KARPELES-Well, I was waiting to see if the neighbors from the
north would be here, because the first thing that struck me when I
went out there was that if you build another story on top of that,
it would appear to me that it would block off their view, and it's
a pretty view out in that area. It doesn't bother Mr. Markwell.
He's out far enough so I don't think it's going to bother his view,
but the people on the north.
MR. AUSTIN-I spoke to the woman before I applied for the variance.
She said she didn't have a problem with that.
MR. STONE-The person across the street either?
MR. AUSTIN-That's who he's talking about.
MR. KARPELES-No. I'm talking about the white, the one on the north
of you.
MR. GREEN-VanDusen.
MR. AUSTIN-Okay. The one, Mr. McCully also is to the north of me.
He said he had no problem whatsoever with it.
MR. THOMAS-We didn't get any correspondence from anybody.
had his chance to talk. Anything else?
So he
MR. KARPELES-That's all I have.
MR. THOMAS-Bill?
MR. GREEN-I don't have a big concern. I would like to see site
plan take a look at this, just because of the skinny nature of this
lot, and the slope of the land and some other things going on, but
I generally don't have a problem with the variance.
MR. THOMAS-Before I go on to Lou, what do you think about site
plan, Bob? Do you think we should send it to site plan?
MR. KARPELES-Yes, I think we should.
MR. THOMAS-Lou, what do you think?
MR. STONE-Well, I had my note, after I looked at the property, was
I needed to listen and convince me, and I guess I'm convinced. The
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
only other thing that I would say, since I've said it before, is I
didn't see a pink sign on the property.
MR. AUSTIN-I apologize for that. The thing was mailed to the wrong
address. They delivered it a couple of days ago to me here. So I
apologize for that.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MR. THOMAS-And what about site plan review?
MR. STONE-Yes, I think it would be a good idea, because it is a
very congested area, and it should be looked at that way.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-I think it should be granted because the house is way
undersized for anyone to really live in comfortably, and I think
since it's in a Waterfront Residential district it should
definitely go to site plan.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. I'd agree with the other Board members. This is
an existing dwelling that is way under the minimum for a building
in a Waterfront Residential area. It's only 500 feet, and it
should be 800 feet. The building does sit down low, so putting a
second story addition on there, I don't think, would really block
anyone's view because even the garage at the top of the hill is
blocking the view from across the road. The septic system is
working, in working order now, and we all know what happens if it
fails. Really, Mr. Markwell did speak in opposition to this, but
I don' t think there's a, there isn' t any other neighborhood
opposition to it, and I think Mr. Markwell's questions were
answered, hopefully, to his satisfaction, as to what will happen
and what will happen in the future in case something goes wrong,
and I also think this should go to site plan. So having said that,
I'm looking for a motion.
MR. GORALSKI-If you want to send it to site plan, that's fine with
me, but are there specific things that, I assume, stormwater is the
main issue?
MR. THOMAS-Yes, stormwater runoff, because of the proximity of the
septic system to the house. That's my concern.
MR. GORALSKI-Is that something you can address here, or do you feel
that's better with the Planning Board?
MR. THOMAS-Well, that's the Planning Board's, really, not ours.
MR. GORALSKI-Okay.
MR. THOMAS-But I really would, because it is in a Waterfront
Residential, it is close to the property line. The septic system
is within the, very close to the house. If the septic system was
somewhere else, I wouldn't have a problem with it, but I'd rather
let the Planning Board take a look at this. They're the experts on
that.
MR. GORALSKI-Okay.
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 101-1996 GARY & SANDY AUSTIN,
Introduced by Louis Stone who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Bonnie Lapham:
Applicant is proposing to construct a second floor addition to an
existing home. This expansion would be more than 50% of the area
of the original structure built on this property. Benefit to the
applicant, relief would allow the applicant to build a second floor
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
addition to an existing home, and it appears there are no feasible
alternatives that could provide a lesser amount of relief. No
floor plans have been submitted, however, the maximum amount of
floor ar~a that would be added would be 616 square feet, which
would brlng the total square footage of the house up to 1232 square
feet. No negative effects are anticipated on this relief request.
Is this difficulty self created? The current square footage of the
home, 500 square feet, is below the minimum house size of 800
square feet listed in the Zoning Ordinance. Because of the change
of the nature of the roof as proposed by the applicant, that is the
roof would slope to either side property lines, we believe that
this should be looked at by site plan, also because the septic
system lies directly under one of the sides of the roof between the
house and the property line, which is quite close. This grants
relief from 179~79A2.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Is there any question on the motion by any of the
Board members?
MR. AUSTIN-I've got a question on the square footage. Okay. I
propose to put an extra 100 square feet on the 500, on the
basement, there's that little block area. So, and then you put a
second story on that, there would actually be another 100 square.
MR. STONE-It would be 1232. So then the total square footage of
the house would be 1232 square feet. Thank you.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Forgot about that.
second floor, forgot all about the
motion by any of the Board members?
what we're granting?
Everybody's worried about the
first. Any questions on the
Does the applicant understand
MR. AUSTIN-Yes, I do.
MR. THOMAS-Does Staff understand what we're granting here?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes.
AYES: Mr. Karpeles, Mrs. Lapham, Mr. Stone, Mr. Green, Mr. Thomas
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. THOMAS-You have the blessing of the Zoning Board of Appeals.
Now you have to go apply to the Planning Board.
MR. AUSTIN-Okay. Thank you.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 104-1996 TYPE II SR-1A VILINIS NEILANDS
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE MAIN STREET TO CAROLINE STREET, LOTS ARE
LOCATED AT THE END OF THE STREET WHERE KNIGHT STREET BEGINS
APPLICANT IS PROPOSING TO MODIFY THE PROPERTY LINES OF SEVEN
EXISTING LOTS. THE LOTS WILL BE MODIFIED SO THAT SOME OF THEM WILL
NOT MEET THE AREA REQUIREMENTS OF THE SR-1A ZONE. RELIEF IS BEING
REQUESTED FROM THE AREA REQUIREMENTS CONTAINED IN SECTION 179-19.
WARREN COUNTY PLANNING 11/13/96 TAX MAP NO. 131-8-5, 6, 7, 10,
11, 22, 26 LOT SIZE: 7.18 ACRES TOTAL SECTION 179-19
ELIZABETH PERRY, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
MR. THOMAS-Read that letter in.
MR. GORALSKI-You probably don't have to read that entire letter.
Basically it says that the culvert work that's proposed to mitigate
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting
11/21/96)
the drainage problem and erosion problem that comes under the
Nationwide General Permit for Freshwater Wetlands.
MR. THOMAS-Okay.
MR. GORALSKI-It's long and it's boring.
MR. THOMAS-Thanks, John. It's not like all of us haven't read it
anyway, but just to let you know that it is, you know, put it in
the minutes that it is in the file.
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 104-1996, Vilinis Neilands,
Meeting Date: November 21, 1996 "APPLICANT: Vilinis Neilands
PROJECT LOCATION: Knight & Caroline Street Proposed Project and
Conformance with the Ordinance: The applicant is proposing to
modify the property lines of seven existing lots. The lots will be
modified so that some of them will not meet the area and/or width
requirements of the SR-1A district. The lots identified as A, C,
D, E and F will not meet the one acre minimum lot area for the
district. Lots C, and D will not conform to the width requirements
of the zone. Criteria for considering an Area Variance, according
to Chapter 267, Town Law. 1. Benefit to the applicant: Relief
would allow the applicant to modify the lot lines of seven existing
lots, resulting in seven reconfigured lots. 2. Feasible
alternatives: The applicant may have the ability to merge and
redesign some of the lots so that all lots meet the area
requirements. However, if this were done, the result would be less
than seven lots which currently exist. 3. Is this relief
substantial relative to the ordinance? The applicant seeks to
modify seven existing lots. The result will be seven lots, five of
which will be nonconforming. 4. Effects on the neighborhood or
community? No negative effects are anticipated with this relief
request. 5. Is this difficulty self created? The applicant seeks
to modify seven lots, five will be nonconforming, where seven lots
exist (three of which appear to be nonconforming). 6. Staff
Comments & Concerns: The nonconforming lots which will be created
all appear to be in character with development in the surrounding
neighborhood. The new nonconforming lots will have more acreage
than existing lots immediately surrounding this site. SEQR: Type
II, no further action required."
MRS. LAPHAM-IIAt a meeting of the Warren County Planning Board, held
on the 13th day of November 1996, the above application for an Area
Variance to modify the property lines of seven existinq lots. was
reviewed and the following action was taken. Recommendation to:
No County Impact" Signed by Linda Bassarab, Vice Chairperson.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Is the applicant or his agent here tonight?
MS. PERRY-I'm Elizabeth Perry, and I'm going to represent Mr. Perry
in this matter. This is a parcel of property that ViI has
purchased various parcels over the last 20 years at tax sales, in
different ways, to put together the land out behind his house.
He's used this land as a wood lot for firewood over the years, and
now he's approaching retirement and looking for a way to market the
property, and I've taken it on to try to figure out the best way to
use the land, and in talking to the neighbors and to people putting
out a sign to see who would be interested in purchasing land, find
that the way we've broken it up is of interest, both someone
wanting the large parcel and people expressing interest in
purchasing some of the smaller parcels around Caroline and Knight
Streets. Lot A is an area, is a parcel that would be very
difficult to build on, and the Town of Queensbury has expressed
interest from the Highway Department in straightening out Fifth
Avenue extension, and that would be a good use of that piece of
land there. We've offered to donate that parcel, eliminating that
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
problem, and at the same time, the Highway Department would deal
with some of the issues of runoff coming down Caroline and Knight
Street, and the general intention here is to make good use of this
land and incorporate it into the neighborhood, in a positive
manner, being that right now it, there's all kinds of problems with
the kids and other things in this wooded parcel.
MR. THOMAS-Have you got any questions for the applicant?
MR. GREEN-I've got just kind of a curiosity question. That one
green strip that runs along the back, what was that, aNiMo
purchase or something?
MS. PERRY-Well, no. It's an old railroad bed.
MR. GREEN-Okay. That answers the question.
MR. STONE-Are there any wetlands on this parcel?
MS. PERRY -The railroaÇi bed goes down to a Federally regulated
wetland. That's why we've dealt with DEC and the Army Corps of
Engineers already. The actual property line does, the wetland does
stray over onto our line, too, but it basically, that whole curve
is the railroad bed. So it's just a matter of what the railroad
bed does and what DEC's interests are is that that railroad bed not
be disturbed. They want that to act as a filtration medium to
protect the wetland and suggested permitting with filtration and
also that the water not surge into the swamp, and they are
overlooking that aspect with their 100 foot buffer, that basically
is the railroad bed and in some places is more than the railroad
bed, but above that they have expressed that it's not wetland to be
concerned about. There's little pockets that are wet, mainly an
old sand pit that was mined out, and also an area where the
stormwater has been dumping off the road. So they don't feel that,
technically, those are areas that need to be protected, but that
below the bank is a sensitive area.
MR. STONE-You mean down at the, where it says "properties of", that
area?
MS. PERRY-Yes.
MR. THOMAS-I have a question on the proposed lot lines, on Lot B.
In the lower drawing it shows that green strip of land coming up to
Fifth Street, is that part of Lot B?
MS. PERRY-Yes, it. That will be the access to it.
MR. THOMAS-And that's frontage on Town road. Okay, and how wide is
that?
MS. PERRY-49.5 feet, I think.
MR. THOMAS-On your chart here it shows proposed for Lot B, it says
incorporated.
MS. PERRY-Incorporated?
MR. STONE-49.56 or something.
MR. GORALSKI-The survey shows 49.55 feet.
MR. THOMAS-For Lot C, on this one I've got, it shows 49.55, for Lot
C.
MR. GORALSKI-No. Lot C has 85.
MR. THOMAS-That's for Lot F on the one I've got.
Did I get a
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
different one, again?
MR. STONE-Do you have this one?
MR. GREEN-He's got a nice one over here.
MR. THOMAS-I'm reading it off this.
MR. STONE-I've got this one.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, see that's where I'm getting the difference here.
Do I have that one, yes, I do. '
MR. STONE-Lot B it says 54.8.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, and this map here is the one that's proposed?
MS. PERRY-Yes. It is. I may have goofed up the letters on the
lots. It was unintentional.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, because like I say, I'm reading this chart here,
and the first one across the top, it says "Proposed size of lot is
2.4 acres", and the frontage map shows 54.8 feet on a tax map, and
proposed survey says incorporated, and what's the incorporated
mean?
MS. PERRY-I was trying to make it clear. I guess I confused it,
just that, the whole project is a little peculiar. I think it just
meant that the Fifth Street lot, that small narrow one, is being
incorporated into the bigger lot.
MR. THOMAS-All right.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. The difference in the number for the frontage on
the chart, the difference between the number on the chart and the
number on the map is that the map is an actual survey. The
frontage on the chart was taken from the tax map. So that the
survey map would be more accurate.
MR. STONE-Okay. What does it read?
MR. GORALSKI-49.55.
MR. STONE-That's what I read.
MR. THOMAS-Any other questions for the applicant? I'll open up the
public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. THOMAS-Any correspondence?
MRS. LAPHAM-None.
MR. THOMAS-What do you think, Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, actually I don't know at this point. Come back
to me later. I'm not against it, so to speak, even though there's
a large number of lots that are going to be created that aren't
going to be meeting, you know, zoning, and I'm not absolutely
positive that something more couldn't be rearranged, but it might
prove an economic hardship if we had to list the number of lots.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. I'll come back to you.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MRS. LAPHAM-All right.
MR. THOMAS-Lou?
MR. STONE-I'm kind of at the same place that Bonnie is. My first
inclination is we have zoning, and here is an opportunity to stick
with the zoning. I recognize what the applicant's agent has said.
Certainly, if you combine C and D and made six lots, you would at
least be up to, the smallest would be .64 rather than .38, which
would be more to my liking if I went along with it at all. I
recognize the willingness of the applicant to give up some of the
land for a Town road, which is commendable, but I guess I still
want to hear some more as we talk among ourselves.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Bill?
MR. GREEN-How many lots now conform with the one acre?
MR. STONE-Two.
MR. GREEN-Just two?
MR. KARPELES-Three, B, G, and A.
MR. THOMAS-B, G, and A, right now.
MR. STONE-That's the current size.
MR. GREE~-That's what I meant, how many conform now.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, conforming.
MR. STONE-Three.
MR. GREEN-Okay. I think this is a wonderful idea. I can't say it
any easier than I think an awful lot of thought has gone into this.
I think that they're trying to do this 100% the right way. I wish
a lot of other plans that came before us had this much forethought
put into them before they get here. You look at Lot C there, that
we spoke about being a .38 acres. That's still, judging from the
area of other lots on this map, larger than any of them in the
area. I think this would be a nice sort of transition from one
area to another. I think it's a nice idea.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, and Bob?
MR. KARPELES-Well, my initial reaction was pretty much along the
first two that spoke, but after looking in the area and seeing the
size of the lots and seeing it's a nice neighborhood and these
would be bigger than the average lot in the neighborhood, the
existing lots, I guess I really can't see any big objection to it.
MR. STONE-I do have one question of the applicant. The lands, the
wetlands that we're talking about, that's not buildable?
MS. PERRY-The Federally regulated wetlands?
MR. STONE-Yes, ,the swamp, you called it a swamp.
MS. PERRY-Definitely not.
MR. STONE-So there would be no further transition to one acre
property?
MS. PERRY-That's correct. I mean, the Army Corps of Engineers they
protect, they're very strict.
MR. GREEN-And you said you can't build on that railroad bed anyway,
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
--
essentially?
MS. PERRY-Well, it's within the 100 foot buffer.
permits, and the way we've designed it, that
necessary.
It requires DEC
shouldn't be
MR. THOMAS-That was going to be mY question there. The Lots E, F
and G seem to drop off as you go away from the road. Do you
propose to bring fill into there to bring those up?
MS. PERRY-Yes. There's some mounds of dirt back in \ that have been
there probably since the construction of the railroad bed, the DEC
has given us permission to move, and then people have been putting
fill in there, too, over the years, but to be buildable, they do
need to be brought up to grade.
MR. THOMAS-Will you have to get any permits from DEC or Army Corps
of Engineers, because you will be, will some of that fill come
within the 100 feet of the DEC?
MS. PERRY-No. That area around the corner, assuming people were
going to build on the front along the street, they would not be
subject to the DEC or Army Corps of Engineers.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. A question for John. Is there any stipulation in
the Town law about how much fill you can bring in without a mining
permit?
MR. GORALSKI-No. There's stipulations as to how much you can take
out.
MR. THOMAS-But not how much you can bring in, how much you can
fill? Okay. I just want to make that clear.
MR. GORALSKI-There are requirements as far as finished grades and
slopes. Slopes can' t be any greater than three on one. Any slopes
that are resulting from bringing the fill in need to be stabilized
by vegetation or some other means, but as far as the amount of
fill, there's no regulation.
MR. THOMAS-I just wanted to make sure.
MR. GREEN-I would just like to say that, judging from
preliminary information, most anything that goes on there,
almost certain, is going to be done up to par.
this
I'm
MR. GORALSKI-Something else I just want to mention is that this is
not a subdivision, because the resulting number of lots is no more
than what was there before. So this will not get any subdivision.
It will not require any subdivision approval.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. So this doesn't have to go before the Planning
Board for any reason?
MR. GORALSKI-No.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Lot A that you're planning on deeding over to the
Town of Queensbury, are they going to accept it as the lot sits
right now, or is there anything you have to do to that lot before
they'll take it?
MS. PERRY-I'm not of the impression that there's anything we need
to do. They haven't specifically said that they want it, but
they've indicated, verbally, that they do.
MR. THOMAS-Okay.
MR. GORALSKI-I can give you a little more information on that also.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
I did speak to Rick Missita, Deputy Highway Superintendent. He
said they were very interested. They did think it was a great idea
to be able to straighten out Richardson Street, and if the land is
donated, is offered for donation, I do believe that the Highway
Department is anxious to do that proj ect and straighten out
Richardson Street, Fifth Street Extension.
MR. THOMAS-Is Lot A a buildable lot as it's proposed?
MR. GORALSKI-No.
MR. THOMAS-Without variances?
MR. GORALSKI-I don't think it could meet the setbacks.
MS. PERRY-Actually, I know that it does have the setbacks.
just very steep.
It's
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. You might be able to, but the topography there
is really going to be tough, and they're definitely going to be
within the 100 foot boundary, to do anything on that lot.
MR. THOMAS-Does that fit into the three on one slope? I mean, I
know it doesn't, because there's a steep drop off, but if you
brought fill in there.
MR. GORALSKI-That's what I'm saying. If you brought fill in there,
first of all, you'd definitely need a DEC permit, and it would be
tricky. , You could probably meet the setbacks, but it would be a
tricky lot to be develop. It would not be an easy lot to develop.
MR. THOMAS-All right. I think it's a great idea. It conforms to
the lots in the neighborhood. In fact, there's another list on
here gi ving properties in the area, and only one lot in this
proposed realignment of property lines is larger than the smallest
lot that they're proposing. So, I have no problem whatsoever with
this. The only thing I'm going to have a problem with is doing a
resolution on this one~ because we have to give relief for each and
every lot, by lot size.
MR. GORALSKI-Would you like me to read them off, when you make the
resolution and get to the lots, I can read them off the survey map.
I'll give the date, I'll describe the survey map and I'll give the
lot letter and lot sizes on this map.
MR. THOMAS-Can I talk you into doing the resolution? No? Is there
any other questions of the applicant?
MR. STONE-No, I'm satisfied.
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-Does somebody want to make a motion?
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 104-1996 VILINIS NEILANDS,
Introduced by Chris Thomas who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Louis Stone:
The applicant is proposing to modify the lot lines of seven
existing lots. The lots will be modified so that five of them will
not meet the zoning requirements of the SR-1A district. These lots
are identified as Lots A, C, D, E, and F. Lot C and D will not
conform to the width requirements of the zone. The benefit to the
applicant, the applicant would be able to modify the lot lines of
seven existing lots, resulting in seven reconfigured lots.
Feasible alternatives. The applicant may have the ability to merge
and redesign some lots so that all the lots meet the area
requirements. However, if this was done, the result would be less
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
than seven lots, which currently exist. It would also make the
lots bigger than the areas of the lots in the neighborhood now: Is
this relief substantial relative to the Ordinance? The appllcant
is seeking to modify seven existing lots. The result will be seven
lots five of which will not be conforming. Effects on the
neighborhood or community? There doesn't seem to be any negative
effects anticipated with this relief request, and there has been no
public comment on this. ~s the difficulty: self cr~ated? The
applicant is seeking to modlfy seven lots, flve of WhlCh wlll be
nonconforming where seven lots exist, three of which appear to be
nonconforming. I would grant relief from thE\ Single Family
Residential One Acre zone of 0.19 acres for Lot A. Lot B conforms.
Lot C, proposed is 0.38, so I would grant 0.62 acres of relief on
Lot C. On Lot D I would grant relief of 0.54 acres, and Lot E, I
would grant relief of 0.36 acres, and Lot F, I would grant relief
of 0.25 acres, and Lot G is a conforming lot. As far as the width
of Lot C, it's about 100 foot average and 150 foot is required. I
would grant 50 feet of relief from the lot width requirement of the
Ordinance for Lot C, and Lot D I would grant relief of 58 feet from
the lot width of Lot D.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mrs. Lapham, Mr. Stone, Mr. Green, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Thomas
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. THOMAS-You have the approval of the Zoning Board of Appeals.
MS. PERRY-Thank you very much.
MR. THOMAS-You're quite welcome.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 105-1996 TYPE II WR-1A/CEA JANE L. CRANNELL
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE EAST SIDE OF HANNEFORD ROAD, OPPOSITE NUMBER
5 HANNEFORD ROAD APPLICANT IS PROPOSING TO MODIFY THE PROPERTY
LINES OF TWO EXISTING LOTS. THE MODIFICATION WOULD RESULT IN LOTS
WHICH DO NOT CONFORM TO THE AREA REQUIREMENTS LISTED IN SECTION
179-16. WARREN COUNTY PLANNING 11/13/96 ADIRONDACK PARK AGENCY
TAX MAP NO. 20-1-21, 22 LOT SIZE: 0.82, 0.45 ACRES SECTION 179-
16
JANE CRANNELL, PRESENT
MRS. LAPHAM-Do I need to read this letter from the Adirondack Park
Agency?
MR. THOMAS-No. It just states that the Adirondack Park Agency is
not jurisdictional in this action.
MRS. LAPHAM-Okay.
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Area Variance No. 105-1996, Jane L. Crannell,
Meeting Date: November 21, 1996 "APPLICANT: Jane Crannell
PROJECT LOCATION: Hanneford Road Proposed Project and Conformance
wi th the Ordinance: The applicant is proposing to modify the
property lines of two existing lots. The modification would result
in two lots which do not conform to the area requirements for the
WR-1A zone. Criteria for considering an Area Variance, according
to Chapter 267, Town Law. 1. Benefit to the applicant: Relief
would allow the modification of two lots into two nonconforming
lots. 2. Feasible alternatives: It appears there are no
alternatives which could provide a lesser amount of relief and
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
still provide minimum frontage on a town road for each lot. 3. Is
this relief substantial relative to the Ordinance? Both lots
within the town of Queensbury are presently nonconforming. The
applicant seeks a minor modification in order to provide one of the
lots with frontage on a town road. 4. Effects on the neighborhood
or community? No negative effects are anticipated with this relief
request. 5. Is this difficulty self created? A difficulty exists
due to the fact that one of these existing lots currently does not
have frontage on a public street. 6. Staff Comments '& Concerns:
The applicant seeks a lot line modification in order to provide
public street access to an existing lot. It should be noted that
if the applicant wishes to eventually develop or subdivide her
property existing in the Town of Fort Ann, and provide access from
Hanneford Rd., a minimum of 50 feet will be needed to construct a
new street. SEQR: Type II, no further action required."
MRS. LAPHAM-IIAt a meeting of the Warren County Planning Board, held
on the 13th day of November, 1996, the above application for an
Area Variance to modify the property lines of two existinq lots.
was reviewed and the following action was taken. Recommendation
to: No County Impact." Signed by Linda Bassarab, Vice
Chairperson.
MR. THOMAS-All right.
applicant?
Miss Crannell.
Okay.
Questions for the
MR. GREEN-I guess I'm a little confused as to what you want to do,
according to, maybe on this map.
MS. CRANNELL-You see a slanted, large rectangle? That's my five
acres in Fort Ann.
MR. GREEN-Okay.
MS. CRANNELL-It was horse pasture, but I no longer have animals, so
I propose to sell it, and APA says it's within the Blue Line and
they would allow one residence on it, and that there are no
registered wetlands upon it.
MR. GREEN-Okay, and where are you coming up with the access? This
is this little 40 foot strip you're to subdivide off your bottom
lot down here?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes, just off, at the bottom of this drawing, where
you see Hanneford Road come in, that lot is my garage and back lot.
My residence is on the other side of Hanneford Road. So I propose
to cut 40, allow 40 feet off the north end of that lot, of lot 22,
and to add about 2/3rds of the long Queensbury lot that you see
that is 21 to sort of square off what I propose to sell to add to
that.
MR. GREEN-So you want to add this bottom section into the big one?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes.
MR. GREEN-And what are you going to do with this little tail over
here?
MS. CRANNELL-Keep it.
MR. GREEN-Just keep that as a separate lot also and merge it into?
MS. CRANNELL-Well, it isn't really a separate lot. That's the way
it was sold, and it looks like it's separate, but it's just.
MR. GREEN-But it would stay part of the big lot, you're saying?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. GREEN-That little tail would continue to be part of the?
MRS. LAPHAM-Your residence lot, it would be part of that, right?
MS. CRANNELL-The little tail on the right side of the map would be
part of my residence lot.
MR. GREEN-Okay. Is it now?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes, it is.
\
MR. GREEN-Okay, but you've got a line through it there.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, I believe that's correct. The little tail
there, according to the tax map, I believe is actually part of this
long piece.
MR. GREEN-Long piece.
MR. GORALSKI-That's going to be taken and added to the portion that
has the garage on it now.
MR. GREEN-Okay. So you're going to take and merge the tail into
your garage lot.
MS. CRANNELL-Yes, correct.
MR. GREEN-Wonderful. I understand.
MR. STONE-So where it says, I think I do, too, NA, from that line,
NA15E, all the way over to the road, is going to be the one lot?
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MRS. LAPHAM-Now you've lost me.
there?
This would be her house right
MR. GORALSKI-That's correct. That's what she's going to retain.
MRS. LAPHAM-That's what she's going to retain as a residence, and
this is what we're selling, and that's the right-of-way. Okay.
MR. GORALSKI-Correct. She's going to retain this right here.
MR. GREEN-So she ends up with access on a relatively square lot,
and this is going to go into this one.
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MS. CRANNELL-With these crazy shaped lots, I think you all are
amazing to figure out so quickly.
MR. STONE-Mrs. Crannell, on that 40 foot section that you're
talking about putting onto the big lot?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes.
MR. STONE-Between Washington County and the little (lost word),
there is a pond on there, is there not?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes. I call it a frog pond. It was originally a
ditch, and we deepened it to about five feet. It was a little frog
pond, and it also is part of the total drainage system from that
whole mountain basin.
MR. STONE-So if we granted this variance, we would have to put a
condition on that the new owner would maintain this pond, which
would be to the right of his access road, his or her?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MS. CRANNELL-You would because it's natural drainage. You can't
shut that off.
MR. STONE-Yes.
MR. THOMAS-Anymore questions for the applicant? Do the Board
members understand how the lot lines are going to lay, if this is
granted as proposed?
MR. STONE-You're going to have the square box.
MRS. LAPHAM-At the end.
MR. STONE-And then a big square box with a little tail, no a
rectangular box with a little tail.
MS. CRANNELL-That's what we're going to have.
MR. STONE-You're going to have like Lot B on that previous one.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. All right. Anymore questions for the applicant
before I open up the public hearing?
MR. GREEN-Do you have someone interested in the lot at this point?
MS. CRANNELL-No. I haven't even offered it for sale yet. I'm just
going through the preliminary steps to be legal.
MR. GREE~-That's always nice.
MR. GORALSKI-We appreciate that.
MR. THOMAS-If there's no other questions for the applicant, I'll
open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. THOMAS-Any correspondence?
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-All right. Lets talk about this one. Bob, we'll start
with you.
MR. KARPELES-I don't see any objection to it. It looks okay to me.
MR. THOMAS-Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-I agree with Bob. She's not really increasing the
density in Warren County, and what she's retaining for her
residence is a nice buffer. So, I don't have a problem with this
either.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Lou?
MR. STONE-No, I have no problem at all, except
mentioned that we should put in any motion that
maintained by the new owner.
what I just
thi s pond be
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Bill?
MR. GREEN-I was just trying to decide exactly, I guess, what the
variances here for our motion. It's because of the smaller lot
being created, is essentially the problem, not the big one?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. THOMAS-No. It's for road frontage.
MR. GORALSKI-No.
MR. THOMAS-It's not for road frontage? That's part of it.
MR. GORALSKI-It's because two lots are being created by lot line
adjustment, and actually both of those lots, the portions that are
in Warren County, will be under one acre.
MR. THOMAS-Do we know how much under one acre?
MR. GORALSKI-I don't know specifically. What I would recommend you
do is.
MR. GREEN-Well, you've got some other figures here on the side.
The Washington County lot would essentially stay the same.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, we don't worry about that one.
MR. GORALSKI-What you could say is the northern lot would.
MR. GREEN-See, the long skinny one there is .75, and we're adding
some onto it and taking off.
MS. CRANNELL-You're taking off about, I'm sorry, 2/3rds of the .75.
MR. GORALSKI -What I would recommend you do is say the lot that
fronts on Hanneford Road.
MR. GREEN-The 196-59?
MR. STONE-So it would be 146-59?
number?
Is that feet, or what is that
MS. CRANNELL-22.
MR. GORALSKI-That's Lot 22, the one that fronts on Hanneford Road
there.
MR. GREEN-That you have your garage on?
MS. CRANNELL-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-Okay. Why don't you grant them a variance to create
two lots from lots 20-1-21 and 20-1-22, with the northern portion,
the northern 40 feet of Lot 22 being combined with the northern
portion of Lot 21, and the southern 166 feet of Lot 21 to be
combined with Lot 22.
MR. STONE-That sounds good to me.
MR. KARPELES-They're not on the map.
MR. THOMAS-No, they're not on the map.
MR. STONE-The lot numbers, no.
MR. THOMAS-All right. Anymore questions for the applicant?
MR. GREEN-No.
MR. THOMAS-All right. Does somebody want to try a motion?
Somebody can just repeat what John said.
MR. STONE-I'll try.
MR. GREEN-There's something in here that might help you.
- 35 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. STONE-Yes, I was going to say, I just noticed that. Yes.
MR. GREEN-I was just reading through here, too.
MR. GORALSKI-George's Staff Notes might explain it.
MR. STONE-No, look in the Adirondack Park Agency, John, on Page 2.
Does that?
MR. GREEN-Page 2, Section 5 has got some numbers there.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. They're usually pretty good at this stuff.
MR. GREEN-That gives it in square footage.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes.
MR. KARPELES-Yes, that looks good.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, it does, doesn't it.
MR. STONE-Okay.
MRS. LAPHAM-Where are you looking?
MR. THOMAS-On the APA letter, Page Two.
MR. STONE-I'll read that in, that's what I'm going to do.
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 105-1996 JANE L. CRANNELL,
Introduced by Louis Stone who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Bonnie Lapham:
Applicant is proposing to modify the property lines of two existing
lots. The modification would result in two lots which do not
conform to the area requirements for the WR-1A zone. The subject
property is improved by one single family dwelling, located on Tax
Parcel 22, and the aDolicant would convey all of Tax Parcel 24 in
Washington Coun ~~ 1~~1~~ . square foot portion
of Tax Parcel 2 ~ant would retain Tax
Parcel 22 in j ~(,Gv'(~(,¡U ((yO ( 3,624+/ - square foot
remainder of Ta: -, '. 'nd the 40 foot access
to the approxim of which is in Warren
County and the ~ 1'l-1/~1 C{e, 1 County, and that 40
foot access con 22. The benefit to
the applicant, ification of two lots
into two noncon I^^ d\J~t--S -b>ý ernatives, it appears
there are no a: v Y' le a lesser amount of
relief and sti] \ \ ~ a Town road for each
lot. Is this:r (t.AJ~~(1 (t..). \J~ the Ordinance? Both
lots within thi lently nonconforming.
The applicant s ~der to provide one of
the lots with negative effects are
anticipated on lity. The difficulty
is self created ~ of the existing lots
currently does ~oad. The variance is
conditioned on the fact that the new parcei w1th the 40 foot access
on Hanneford Road incorporates a pond which is an integral part of
the drainage system coming off the Mountain going down to Lake
George, and this should be continued to be maintained by the
current owner and any new owner of this property.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
MR. THOMAS-One more question for you, John. Is this going to go to
site plan review because it's in a CEA?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. GORALSKI-No.
MR. THOMAS-It's not going to?
MR. GORALSKI-I believe that it will go for subdivision, but not
site plan approval.
MR. THOMAS-Even in a CEA like that?
MR. GORALSKI-Because it's not a site plan review use.
subdivision because they're changing property lin~s.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. It's not a site they're doing. It's a subdivision
they're doing, but the Planning Board's going to see it?
It's a
MR. GORALSKI-Yes.
MR. THOMAS-Okay.
MR. GREEN- I've got one question here. The Staff alluded to, if you
ever wanted to subdivide that parcel in the back you'd need an
access road rather than merely a driveway? You'd need 50 feet
rather than 40.
MS. CRANNELL-The 40 foot specification was made by Jim Martin.
MR. GREEN-That's for just access to one lot.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes, but something that I heard Mrs. Crannell say is
that the Adirondack Park Agency has already informed her that they
would allow the construction of one single family dwelling on that
lot. So there would never be a need for (lost word) .
MR. GREEN-Wonderful.
MS. CRANNELL-I'm not sure I understand what my next step is.
You're talking about more to a site plan?
MR. GORALSKI-Subdivision. You have to get a survey map drawn up.
MS. CRANNELL-Survey is next.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, and then go to the Planning Board, okay.
MS. CRANNELL-All right. Thanks.
AYES: Mrs. Lapham, Mr. Stone, Mr. Green, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Thomas
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. THOMAS-There you go. You're all set.
MS. CRANNELL-Thanks so much.
AREA VARIANCE NO. 108-1996 TYPE II WR-1A JORGE CONSTANTINO
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE BIG BAY ROAD TO EAGAN ROAD, PROPERTY IS
LOCATED ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF EAGAN ROAD APPLICANT PROPOSES TO
CONSTRUCT A HOME ON AN EXISTING LOT ZONED WR-1A. THE LOT DOES NOT
CURRENTLY HAVE FRONTAGE ON A TOWN ROAD. RELIEF IS BEING REQUESTED
FROM SECTION 179-70 WHICH REQUIRES ALL LOTS HAVE FRONTAGE ON A TOWN
ROAD. WARREN COUNTY PLANNING 11/13/96 TAX MAP NO. 137-1-4.2 LOT
SIZE: 0.76 ACRES
LEON STEVES, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
- 37 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
Note~ from Staff, Area Variance No. 108-1996, Jorge Constantino,
Meetlng Date: November 21, 1996 "APPLICANT: Jorge Constantino
PROJECT LOCATION: Eagan Road Proposed Project and Conformance
wi th the Ordinance: The applicant is proposing to construct a home
on an existing lot zoned WR-1A. The lot does not currently have
frontage on a town road. The applicant is seeking relief from the
requirement that all lots have frontage on a town road. Criteria
for considering an Area Variance, according to Chapter 267, Town
Law. 1. Benefi t to the applicant: Relief would allow the
applicant to construct a home on an existing lot. 2. Feasible
alternative: It appears there are no alternatives which could
provide relief from the requirement that this lot front on a public
street. 3. Is this relief substantial relative to the ordinance?
This existing lot, which currently contains a home, does not have
frontage on a town road. 4. Effects on the neighborhood or
community? No negative effects are anticipated with this relief
request. 5. Is this difficulty self created? This existing lot
has been used as a residential property without access on a public
street. 6. Staff Comments & Concerns: The proposed construction
would meet the setback, permeability and floor area ratio
requirements of the WR-1A district. Staff anticipates no negative
impacts associated with this relief request. SEQR: Type II, no
further action required.
MRS. LAPHAM-IIAt a meeting of the Warren County Planning Board, held
on the 13th day of November 1996, the above application for an Area
Variance to construct a home on an existinq lot. was reviewed and
the following action was taken. Recommendation to: Approve II
Signed L~nda Bassarab, Vice Chairperson.
MR. THOMAS-All right. You're up.
MR. STEVES-My name is Leon Steves, from VanDusen and Steves. I'm
here representing the owners, who are also here in the audience.
I would be glad to answer any questions that have not been answered
in the application.
MR. THOMAS-All right. The first question I have is, how far is
this property from a Town road? It doesn't show on the map that
came with the application.
MR. STEVES-320 feet.
MR. THOMAS-It's 320 feet from the nearest intersection of a Town
road?
MR. STEVES-The nearest Town road.
MR. THOMAS-Okay.
MR. STONE-How far does Eagan Road go, because I have to admit, the
first time I drove down the road, I gave up and went back, and then
I went back again and I decided, well, maybe it's out here. This
is a case where I would have liked to have seen two pink signs,
because I finally found this road winding, and I walked it. I
didn't drive it, because I was afraid. I was just curious.
MR. STEVES-Well, I said 320 feet. 320 is up to the upper level.
Eagan Road its~lf has a distinct distance from Big Bay Road, and I
don't have the information here tonight to answer that question for
you.
MRS. LAPHAM-Eagan Road where it's (lost word) doesn't go very far.
It becomes private.
MR. STEVES-It goes about 1,000 feet in.
MRS. LAPHAM-That log house that used to be Richardson's, I think
- 38 -
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
that's private there.
MR. STEVES-Yes. That's almost all the way in, though.
MR. STONE-There was a house on the right, as you're going out,
there was a house on the right, the last house on the right. Was
that on private road already?
MR. STEVES-As you're going in or going out?
MR. STONE-As you're going out, going down toward, this property,
before you, still up on Eagan Road?
MR. STEVES-Okay. Up on Eagan Road there's a house right on the
corner, as you enter off of Big Bay.
MR. STONE-Right.
MR. STEVES-And then you go on in, I think there's two more new
houses in there, three?
JORGE CONSTANTINO
MR. CONSTANTINO-At the present time, there are about five houses.
MR. STONE-Well, there's one
There's a house to the right.
time.
where the road becomes a trail.
That's where I stopped the first
MR. GREEN-How accurate are these, John?
MRS. CONSTANTINO
MRS. CONSTANTINO-No, that house is on Eagan.
MR. STONE-It is on Eagan?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-I mean, that map is to scale.
MR. THOMAS-Yes, it looks like it may have been reduced or
something.
MR. GREEN-It says one inch to fifty.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. I'd like to have the land that goes one inch to
fifty on that one. I'd be a land baron.
MR. STONE-I can say, I found it.
MR. THOMAS-You're saying that the land, this lot, is not within, is
considerable distance from an existing Town road?
MR. STEVES-That's correct.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. That's all I want to establish.
MR. STEVES-Thank you.
MR. STONE-Is their own private road driveable?
driveable?
I assume it' s
MR. STEVES-Yes.
MRS. LAPHAM-Yes, it's driveable.
MR. STONE-I didn't try it.
- 39 -
(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. GREEN-How long has it been this way?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-There have been houses down there for 50 years.
There are six houses that were built there, camps.
MR. GREEN-And they're all just summer residences?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-Yes. There is a family that lives all year long
there, next to the property.
MR. GREEN-And they go up and down that road, up and down that
steep?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-They don't go by car.
leave their car up there.
They walk up, and they
MR. STONE-That's what I did. Okay.
MR. KARPELES-Are you going to make an all year round house there?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-We're not planning to live all year round, but the
house is going to be built as an all year house, yes. At the
present time, there is a house there.
MR. STONE-Right.
MR. KARPELES-You're going to rip it down?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-That's right.
MR. STONE-Have you ever had an emergency down there when the rescue
squad had to come?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-We have had that, yes.
MR. STONE-And they come down the road?
MRS. CONSTANTINO-There's no problem coming down. I'm talking about
summer with no snow. With snow, you cannot come down.
MRS. LAPHAM-There isn't really much problem even coming up, in good
weather.
MR. STONE-And if nobody's coming the other way.
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, you honk first.
MRS. CONSTANTINO-There's no problem coming down in good weather.
You have been there.
MRS. LAPHAM-Yes. My husband's aunt owned two houses away from you.
That's why I know that that road really.
MR. STONE-I should have talked to you before looking at this place.
MRS. LAPHAM-I know it's not a problem, except I wouldn't want to do
it in the bad weather.
MR. STONE-The private road is paved, or down.
MRS. CONSTANTINO-Or down, the road is paved.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. Anymore questions for the applicant before I open
the public hearing?
MR. STONE-No.
MR. THOMAS-All right. I'll open the public hearing.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. THOMAS-Any correspondence?
MRS. LAPHAM-No.
MR. THOMAS-What do you think, Bob?
MR. KARPELES-Well, I think we're replacing one house with another
house, and I don't see any objection to that. There are five other
houses down there, and I don't see where it's creating any problem
that doesn't exist right now.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Bill?
MR. GREEN-No, I don't have a real problem with this, since
basically they're all residential, and it's been existing this way
for so long, I don't think we can penalize this gentleman because
of something that's been in existence for so long.
MR. THOMAS-Lou?
MR. STONE-I agree.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-I agree also.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. I agree also. There's really nothing we can do
about it, unless we want to have the Town extend the road down to
them. I don't think the Town wants to go through that expense at
this point in time. So, having said that, does anyone care to make
a motion?
MOTION TO APPROVE AREA VARIANCE NO. 108-1996 JORGE CONSTANTINO,
Introduced by William Green who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Louis Stone:
The applicant is proposing to construct a home on an existing lot
zoned WR-1A. The lot does not currently have frontage on a Town
road. The applicant is seeking relief from the requirement that
all lots have frontage on a Town road. The benefit to the
applicant would be he would be able to construct a new home on an
existing lot, replacing a previous dwelling already on the lot. It
does not appear that there would be any feasible alternatives to
provide less relief, being that this lot is so far from a public
street. It does appear that this relief may be substantial, due to
the distance from a road, but extenuating circumstances, such as
the pre-existence of a home and right-of-way, in my opinion, would
override the appearance of substantial relief. There does not
appear to be any negative effects on the neighborhood or community.
No public comment in opposition was heard. It does not appear to
be self created, again, to the pre-existing condition of this lot.
We're granting relief from Section 179-70 of the Zoning Ordinance.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
MR. THOMAS-I see a hand in the back there. I'm not supposed to.
EDWIN BOGUE
MR. BOGUE-Well, I tried, when you asked for opposition, you didn't
ask for in favor.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. THOMAS-Yes, I did. I always ask in favor first, and opposition
second.
MR. BOGUE-I drove up from Ballston Spa. My name is Edwin Bogue.
MR. THOMAS-Just to make it legal, I'll open the public hearing back
up.
PUBLIC HEARING RE-OPENED
EDWIN BOGUE
MR. BOGUE- I drove up from Ballston Spa to support these people. My
name is Edwin Bogue. My wife's name is Mary. We have two parcels
on that same river front. There's no objection on our part
whatsoever. Some years back, the Zoning Board also allowed the
Atkinson's to tear one down and put up another one. So there's no
opposition whatsoever, but I feel someone should speak in their
support.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. So noted in the record. I have one question for
you. On your parcels, do you have buildings on there now?
MR. BOGUE-Yes.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. You do have?
MR. BOGUE-One on each parcel.
MR. THOMAS-One on each parcel. Okay.
That's all I want to know.
MR. BOGUE-Okay.
MR. THOMAS-All right. I'll close the public hearing back down.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
AYES: Mr. Green, Mr. Karpeles, Mrs. Lapham, Mr. Stone, Mr. Thomas
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. STEVES-Thank you very much.
MR. THOMAS-Granted relief.
USE VARIANCE NO. 109-1996 TYPE II LI-1A ROBERT J. & MARY E. WOOD
OWNERS: SAME AS ABOVE 174 EAST DRIVE APPLICANTS ARE SEEKING A
USE VARIANCE TO ALLOW A MOBILE HOME IN A LI -lA ZONE. THE
APPLICANTS ARE ALSO SEEKING A USE VARIANCE TO ALLOW A MOBILE HOME
ON A PIECE OF PROPERTY NOT WITHIN A MOBILE HOME OVERLAY ZONE. TAX
MAP NO. 93-3-4, 5 LOT SIZE: 0.15 AND 0.15 ACRES SECTION 179-76,
179-29
ROBERT & MARY WOOD, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Use Variance No. 109-1996, Robert J. & Mary E.
Wood, Meeting Date: November 21, 1996 "APPLICANTS: Robert & Mary
Wood PROJECT LOCATION: 174 East Drive PROPOSED PROJECT AND
CONFORMANCE WITH THE ORDINANCE: The applicant is proposing the
placement of a mobile home in a Light Industrial Zone (LI-1A).
Mobile homes are not a permitted use within the LI-1A zone. In
addition, the applicant is seeking relief to place a mobile home on
a piece of property that is not within a Mobile Home Overlay Zone.
Relief is being requested from the allowed uses in the LI-1A zone,
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
Section 179-26, and Section 179-29 which outlines which areas of
Queensbury are Mobile Home Overlay Zones. REVIEW CRITERIA, BASED
ON SECTION 267-b OF TOWN LAW: 1. IS A REASONABLE RETURN POSSIBLE
IF THE LAND IS USED AS ZONED? The Board should consider whether or
not the applicant has provided adequate information to prove that
this land cannot be used as zoned. 2. IS THE ALLEGED HARDSHIP
RELATING TO THIS PROPERTY UNIQUE, OR DOES IT ALSO APPLY TO A
SUBSTANTIAL PORTION OF THE DISTRICT OR NEIGHBORHOOD? It appears
that these two lots have the same development potential and
restrictions as other lots along East Drive. 3. IS THERE AN
ADVERSE EFFECT ON THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTER OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD?
Comment on possible effects on the surrounding neighborhood will be
provided at the public hearing. 4. IS THIS THE MINIMUM VARIANCE
NECESSARY TO ADDRESS THE UNNECESSARY HARDSHIP PROVEN BY THE
APPLICANT AND AT THE SAME TIME PROTECT THE CHARACTER OF THE
NEIGHBORHOOD AND THE HEALTH, SAFETY, AND WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY?
The ZBA should determine if this property can be used for one or
more of the allowed uses in the LI -lA district. If relief is
necessary, the board should determine what land use would be
considered minimum relief. STAFF COMMENTS AND CONCERNS: The
applicant plans to place a 48 foot by 14 foot mobile home on two
lots. If approved, the applicant will be required to merge the two
lots so that all setbacks will be met. Construction of a septic
system will need to conform to building code requirements. SEQR:
Type Unlisted, short EAF attached"
MR. THOMAS-All right. Is the applicant here? Okay.
state your name for the record?
Would you
MR. WOOD-My name is Robert J. Wood.
MRS. WOOD-Mary E. Wood.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Any questions for the applicant? All right.
I'll start it out. Do you have any financial proof that this lot
cannot be used as zoned? One of the criteria of a Use Variance is
"The applicant cannot realize a reasonable return provided that
lack of return is substantial as demonstrated by competent
financial evidence." That means dollars and cents in black and
white. Do you have dollars and cents figures for us tonight, in
regard to why this can't be used for any of the uses listed in the
Light Industrial zone, for example, a freight terminal, extraction
of sand, stone and gravel; a restaurant; a building, lumber supply
yard, a warehouse, laboratory, truck repair facility, heavy
machinery repair facility, television and radio station,
construction company, logging company, heavy equipment storage,
heavy equipment sales, agricultural service use, passenger
limousine and/or bus storage and terminal facility?
MR. WOOD-No.
MR. THOMAS-There's four questions here we have to answer that
being the first. The second one, is this unique number three
. "
w1ll not alter the essential character of the neighborhood, and,
four, alleged hardship has not been self created. If we answer no
to anyone of those, we have to deny the variance.
MR. GORALSKI-All right. Well, in order to keep things moving here,
everyone's gone out to see the site.
MR. THOMAS-Right.
MR. GORALSKI-It's a residential neighborhood. I'm not sure that
you could put any of these uses there. I'm not trying to be an
advocate for anyone. I'm not sure how you would provide financial.
MR. THOMAS-If somebody wanted to come in there and put a freight
terminal in there, we couldn't stop them.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MR. GORALSKI-Well, I don't know how you could put a freight
terminal on a lot that's that big.
MR. THOMAS-If somebody wanted to put a radio or t.V. station there,
we couldn't stop them.
MR. GORALSKI-It would require site plan review.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. By site plan review, if somebody wanted to put
heavy equipment sales in there, they could do it. If they wanted
to bring in bulldozers and sell them off that lot, as long as they
went through the Planning Board, they could do it.
MR. GORALSKI-That's true. I'm not sure that they would get a site
plan review.
MR. THOMAS-May not get a site plan review, but they could do it if
they wanted to, but the State law, and we're real sensitive to this
now due to other Use Variances in the past, if you don't have the
dollars and cents, you know, there's nothing we can do about that.
We've go to have that, in dollars in cents, in black and white, and
that's been handed down, court decision after court decision.
MR. GORALSKI-How long has this property been listed, do you know?
How long has the real estate agent had it for?
MR. WOOD-I really don't know 100%. I had only put down a binder on
the property, only because when we asked the Town, on an old map,
it was in the Overlay Zone, and then once I had already put down
money on the property, we found out that it wasn't in the Overlay
Zone, and so that's why we're here tonight.
MR. STONE-As long as it's LI-1A, our hands are kind of tied.
MR. THOMAS-Yes. We went through this same thing last night, and
they provided competent.
MR. GREEN-I think, I don't know, maybe we're getting ahead of
ourselves. Are we into the discussion aspect here, or do we want
to?
MR. THOMAS-Yes, right. Well, questions for the applicant. We can
talk about it.
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, at this point, you don't own the property, or do
you own the property?
MR. WOOD-Well, everything's all signed with our name on it.
MRS. LAPHAM-So you're pending, in contract?
MR. WOOD-Pending your approval.
MR. KARPELES-Yes, but you're not out any money if we don't approve
it, right?
MR. WOOD-Well, in a way, no, in a way, yes. I've already had
appraisals don~ on the property. I have a home that's essentially
bought.
MR. STONE-Okay, but you have a contingency to get out of the sale?
MR. WOOD-Out of the property, yes.
MRS. WOOD-But again, we won't get our appraisal back or anything.
MR. STONE-I understand that.
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MRS. WOOD-And we were not told that we needed the dollars. and
cents and we weren't told about this at all, what you're saYlng.
, .
If we had known, we wouldn't have even done It.
MR. GORALSKI-Let me give you a little bit of history here. When
the Woods originally called and the tax map was checked, there was
a mistake on the tax map that was checked. The tax map that was
looked at when they originally called showed East and West Drive as
a Mobile Home Overlay Zone. It was then confirmed that, in fact,
the Mobile Home Overlay Zone ends at Homestead Village. So
originally they were under the impression that they,didn't need the
variance.
MR. THOMAS-So they went on the word from somebody from the Town,
and whoever it was was reading the wrong map.
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-Does that obligate us to give the variance?
MR. GORALSKI-I don't think it obliqates you, no. I wouldn't say it
obligates you.
MR. THOMAS-I was going to go through the public hearing and all the
other stuff, but in the end here I think we may want to table it
for the stuff we've done before, give them a chance to come in with
the.
MR. GORALSKI-Just to get back to that.
MR. GREEN-I don't think you could. The lot was probably never
marketed as a, I mean, sand and gravel pit.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. I don't know what you're going to get, or what
you're looking for, as far as financial information. I think the
only way you're going to determine whether or not this can be used
for one of these Light Industrial uses, to be perfectly honest with
you, is just your best judgement as to whether or not it can be
used for one of those uses or not.
MR. THOMAS-Well, how big is the lot?
MR. GORALSKI-The two lots combined are.
MR. KARPELES-120 by 110.
MR. GORALSKI-I think that's what they are.
MR. THOMAS-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, 110 by 120, right.
MR. THOMAS-Well, you could put a radio or t.v. station in there, a
building with an antenna. You might be able to squeeze a small
restaurant in there.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, you couldn' t put a restaurant in there with
parking and septic system and everything else.
MR. THOMAS-Everything goes back to the Mooring Post variance, and
all the competent financial information they had to provide, and I
think that's where I'm coming from, that ever since that one, we're
running scared on that.
MR. GORALSKI-That's up to you. If you don't feel comfortable,
that's fine, but what I'm telling you is, you know, it's up to you.
It your discretion as to how much evidence you need, that the
allowable uses aren't appropriate, or there isn't an allowable use
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
that's appropriate for that site. It's up to you to determine how
much evidence you need. Okay.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. We'll get on with this. Anymore questions for
the applicant? If not, I'll open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MELISSA & JASON CLAPPER
MRS. CLAPPER-Our names are Melissa and Jason Clapper, and we live
at 13 East Drive, and the reason we're here is we don't mind if
someone wants to put a modular home or something on this property,
but we took on a mortgage payment, and we do have a trailer, under
the Grandfather Clause to the right of our home, and we have
Homestead Trailer Park across the street, and we feel that if we
have anymore trailers put on our street, that it's going to look
and feel like living in the middle of a trailer park, and we
wouldn't have taken on the mortgage payment to do that. We feel
that this would really decrease our property value if we ever tried
to sell our home, because if anybody came to look at our home on
that street with another trailer, and there are also, there's
another lot by the side of my house, and if somebody gets a
variance for a mobile home, and then someone new comes in and tries
to do that also, it's going to be like being in the middle of a
mobile home park, and I am sure we would have a tough time trying
to sell our home if we ever decided to do so, and I also feel that
we would feel like we were in the middle of a mobile home park,
because that's what it would look and feel like to us, and we have
no problem with someone wanting to put a modular home or something
on this property. It's a nice lot. We don't think that it would
be appropriate for a business, because it is very small, but we
just don't want to see our property value go down and stuff,
because otherwise we wouldn't have taken on a mortgage payment.
MR. STONE-Where are you relationship to these two pieces of
property?
MRS. CLAPPER-We live on 13 East Drive, and then there's an empty
lot, the two empty lots that these people are talking about that
are for sale, and then there's our neighbor's house, between our
two homes, and I have a mobile home to the right of me. Then
there's an empty lot. There's a shack on that. It's supposed to
be coming to the Town Board meeting to be torn down because it's
been closed.
MR. STONE-Could you show us on this map?
MR. KARPELES-Where you are. These are the two lots in question.
MRS. CLAPPER-This is Luzerne Road. This is the big one there.
Okay. This must be the other abandoned lot, and then this one is
mine.
MR. KARPELES-Okay. So you're right in here?
MRS. CLAPPER-Yes, and then this is our neighbor Mr. Barry, who's
back here.
MR. KARPELES-Okay.
MRS. CLAPPER-And like I had mentioned, the Town Board is supposed
to be talking about closing down the building next to us because
it's no longer an actual home. It's a shack with an old washed out
foundation and stuff.
MR. STONE-On your side of the street?
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
MRS. CLAPPER-There's only houses on one side, across the street we
have the trailer park, and I was scratched by a stray cat and had
to go through rabies shots, and was ill for a month and stuff, but
my thing is, if these people get approved for a variance, if
someone else wants to come in, and there is a problem going on with
this property next door to me right now, those people wanted to get
a mobile home put on that property, and they were told
automatically, no, off the bat. That was what we had heard. I
have no written proof of that.
MR. GREEN-I mean, the answer is no, but then you come and ask for
a variance. I mean, maybe the other people just didn't decide to
do that.
MRS. CLAPPER-My only opinion is that I really feel that it would,
it'll be like living in the middle of a trailer park, and that if
we ever did decide to, you know, we've come in and this was a
handyman special, and we've tried to do a lot of work. It's far
from finished, by any stretch of the imagination, but we've put a
lot of blood, sweat and tears and money into our home not to live
in the middle of a trailer park. There's an empty trailer park lot
right across the street from us. There's an empty trailer park lot
in the trailer park across the street. I don' t want to cause
anybody any problems. It's a beautiful lot to put a modular home
on or something to that, but otherwise, I really feel it's going to
decrease our property value.
MR. THOMAS-Any questions for Mrs. Clapper? Thank you.
MRS. CLAPPER-Thank you.
MR. THOMAS-Anyone else wishing to speak opposed?
RICK BARRY
MR. BARRY-My name's Rick Barry. I live next door to that lot, and
I feel pretty much the same as my other neighbors, as opposed.
MR. THOMAS-Okay.
MR. STONE-Now, you live between Mrs. Clapper and these two others?
MR. BARRY-I live right next door, the next lot.
MR. THOMAS-3.1.
MR. STONE-You're 3.1.
MR. BARRY-Right.
MR. THOMAS-Yes.
You're on the other side.
MR. BARRY-I don't know if the real estate agent talked to other
people over there, and he's leading them to believe they could put
a trailer in there. I own three other lots in that area. I don't
think that trailer would be appropriate there.
MR. THOMAS-Are these other lots that you own, are they on this map?
Do they border on West Drive?
MR. BARRY-One's on West and another one's on East.
MR. THOMAS-Do you know which one's they are? Is it the one right
to the north of you, one of the lots?
MR. BARRY-That's mine, this one, and then this one back here.
MR. THOMAS-That one there, and this one here, 3.2 and 2, the one
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
any financial information showing that it can't be used for
permitted uses, I have no other choice.
MR. THOMAS-Before we go on, I'd like to add that this also requires
approval from the Town Board for a mobile home outside the Mobile
Home Overlay Zone.
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MR. THOMAS-Town Board approval is required.
MR. STONE-That's another thing I am concerned by. We do have the
Overlay Zone. If you go outside it, then the next person says,
will you go outside it, and eventually people can argue it's right
next to a mobile home. So it becomes a cr~eping situation.
MR. THOMAS-Bill?
MR. GREEN-Is a modular still considered a mobile?
MR. GORALSKI-No.
MR. THOMAS-No, if it sits on a foundation.
MR. GREEN-Is a double wide considered a mobile?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes.
MR. GREEN-Okay. I don't have a problem with putting a house on
this lot. I think it's, I know Chris is trying to protect ourself
here with the competent financial data, but I think that the second
one, you know, the uniqueness of this piece of property, relative
to the area, I don't think I have a problem getting around the idea
of a home versus Light Industrial. I do have a problem with a
trailer on that lot. I'd just like to keep the trailers in the
Mobile Home Overlay Zone, and that's what they're set up and
designed for, and I'm conscious of the neighbors not wanting more
trailers on their street, but a home I don't have a problem with.
I just don't like the idea of the trailer.
MR. THOMAS-Bob?
MR. KARPELES-I agree with Bill 100%. He expressed it very well.
That's just the way I feel.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Bonnie?
MRS. LAPHAM-Well, that's the way Å feel, except with reservations,
and the reservations are that I just am sympathetic to the
neighbor's complaints, but I just cannot believe that anyone in
that residential area would rather, if they have a choice, of
having a radio tower or a restaurant or heavy equipment sales, as
opposed to a home, or even a mobile home, but I do think that it
will be harder the next time someone comes with a mobile home that
isn't going to be in the Overlay Zone, if we start granting these.
MR. THOMAS-I agree with the other Board members. Even though the
Woods were misquoted by the Town that this was in the Overlay Zone,
ahead of time, that doesn't preclude the fact that it still isn't
in the Mobile Home Overlay Zone. There's been court cases on this
that building permits have been given and then building permits
revoked and buildings taken down. We have one right here right in
the Town right now going on. I feel sorry that the Woods were
mislead, but I still can't see putting a mobile home on this lot
when something else such as a modular home or a stick built home
could be put here and fit on this lot. I do concede the fact that
there are a lot of these uses that are in the Light Industrial One
Acre zones that can't go in there because of the size of the lot,
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
directly to the north and the one directly to the west.
MR. STONE-Okay. So that whole square he owns, from east to west.
MR. BARRY-Three separate lots.
MR. STONE-Right.
MR. BARRY-Right.
MR. THOMAS-3.2, 2, and 3.1.
Barry from the Board? Okay.
All right. Any questions for Mr.
Anyone else wishing to speak opposed?
MRS. CLAPPER-I just wanted to say one last thing. I just wanted to
apologize to you. We aren't doing this to be, you know, mean in
any sort of way.
MRS. WOOD-Well, that's a lie, because you're talking about your
property. Well, how about somebody that can't afford to get a
modular, that's discrimination.
MRS. CLAPPER-It's not discrimination, though, because it was zoned
so that trailers couldn't be put there.
MR. THOMAS-I can't have this going on, because of the record. If
you want to talk about it outside, that's fine.
MRS. CLAPPER-I was just trying to be polite.
MR. THOMAS-I understand that, but it's not going that way. So, I'm
going to cut it off right there. Anymore questions for Mr. Barry?
Anyone else wishing to speak opposed? Any correspondence?
MRS. LAPHAM-I don't think so. A letter from Lorraine Troy. Use
Variance 109-1996, Zoning Board of Appeals, November 18, 1996 "Upon
review of Application No. 109-1996 for Variance in the name of Mary
and Robert Wood for lots on East Drive. I, Lorraine D. Troy, have
no objection to the plan. I feel it would improve the area of East
Drive. As far as a trailer the large numbers in the Park across
the street from East Drive would blend in nicely. Very truly
yours, Lorraine D. Troy"
MR. THOMAS-Does it have a tax map number on there or anything, to
define where she lives, a house number?
MRS. LAPHAM-No, and her address is 471 Big Bay.
MR. BARRY-They just rent the home on the end of the street. They
don't even live there.
MRS. LAPHAM-So they own a home on the street they use for rental.
MR. BARRY-For rental.
MR. THOMAS-Okay, by the turn around there. Okay. I'll close the
public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
\
MR. THOMAS-Lou, what do you think?
MR. STONE-Well, I am also, even though I didn't go through what
most of the Board went through with the Mooring Post, I am
sensitized to the fact that, if this requires a Use Variance, then
we need some kind of reasonable return information. I recognize
the difficulty. This is obviously a small lot. I'm not sure if
the zoning is correct for this area, but that is the zoning, and it
is has been determine? that it requires a Use Variance. Without
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(Queensbury ZBA Meeting 11/21/96)
but the fact is that anyone of those could go in there, for
example the passenger limousine service could fit on there. I
don't know what kind of building they would have to put up there or
could put up there for a passenger limousine service, but I imagine
they could put a garage up there if they wanted to, to house these
limousines, but then again, too, it wouldn' t have a principal
residence, but then again a principal residence isn't required in
a Light Industrial One Acre zone. So I would have to say no to
this variance. Having said that, would anyone care to make a
motion?
,
MOTION TO DENY USE VARIANCE NO. 109-1996 ROBERT J. & MARY E. WOOD,
Introduced by Louis Stone who moved for its adoption, seconded by
Robert Karpeles:
The applicant is proposing the placement of a mobile home in a
Light Industrial zone, LI-1A. Mobile homes are not a permitted use
within the LI-1A zone. In addition, the applicant is seeking
relief to place a mobile home on a piece of property that is not
within a Mobile Home Overlay Zone. Relief is being requested from
the allowed uses in the LI-1A zone, Section 179-26, and Section
179-29, which outlines which areas in Queensbury are in Mobile Home
Overlay Zones. This being a Use Variance, a no answer to anyone
of the review criteria makes it mandatory to deny the Use Variance,
and no information was given, visa vee a reasonable return if the
land is used as zoned. Is the alleged hardship relating to this
property unique or does it apply to a substantial portion of the
district? It appears that these two lots have the same development
potential and restrictions as other lots along East Drive. Is
there an adverse effect on the essential character of the
neighborhood? In what we heard tonight from the public, the public
believes it would have an adverse effect on the surrounding
neighborhood. Is this the minimum variance necessary to address
the unnecessary hardship proven by the applicant? The applicant
did not show unnecessary hardship.
Duly adopted this 21st day of November, 1996, by the following
vote:
AYES: Mr. Green, Mr. Karpeles, Mr. Stone, Mr. Thomas
NOES: Mrs. Lapham
ABSENT: Mr. O'Leary
MR. THOMAS-Four to one, the variance is denied. You do have
recourse through an Article 78 provision of the law to go take us
to court to overturn our decision. Okay. If you have any
questions like that, you can call John and he can give you the
particulars on it.
MR. WOOD-Thank you all very much for your time.
MR. THOMAS-Okay. Sorry about that. All right. Does anybody else
have any business for the good of the Board? If not, I'll make a
motion to close.
On motion meeting was adjourned.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Christian Thomas, Chairman
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