1993-05-20 SP
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QUEENSBURY PLANNING BOARD
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 20TH. 1993
INDEX
MEETING
SEQRA Review
Site Plan No. 20-93
Site Plan No. 22-93
Site Plan No. 23-93
Andrea Gray
2.
Gerald & Wanda Bulger
3.
Lucas S. Wilson
5.
Eddy Enterprises. Inc.
18.
Subdivision No. 11-1993
PRELIMINARY STAGE
FLR Partnership
21.
THESE ARE NOT OFFICIALLY ADOPTED MINUTES AND ARE SUBJECT TO BOARD
AND STAFF REVISIONS. REVISIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING MONTHS
MINUTES (IF ANY) AND WILL STATE SUCH APPROVAL OF SAID MINUTES.
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QUEENS BURY PLANNING BOARD MEETING
SPECIAL MEETING
MAY 20TH. 1993
1:00 P.M.
MEMBERS PRESENT
TIMOTHY BREWER, CHAIRMAN
CORINNE TARANA, SECRETARY
CRAIG MACEWAN
GEORGE RYAN
CAROL PULVER
EDWARD LAPOINT
MEMBERS ABSENT
ROGER RUEL
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR-JAMES MARTIN
PLANNER-SCOTT HARLICKER
STENOGRAPHER-MARIA GAGLIARDI
MR. BREWER-I have just a couple of announcements about the agenda.
American Equity is off the agenda. Stewarts is off the agenda.
McCollister's off. and David and Suzanne Barnes is off the agenda,
but we are going to open the public hearing and take any comments.
and we'll leave it open. if there's anybody here for that
application. Okay. Then we can start right in with the first
item.
MR. MARTIN-Tim, Mark has a request for a special meeting for
American Equity, if you'd like to entertain that.
MR. BREWER-I talked to Scott today about.
MARK SCHACHNER
MR. SCHACHNER-Actually, what we were wondering is if, some of the
information was submitted very recently. We'd like a special
meeting sometime in the near future.
MR. BREWER-When's convenient for you?
MR. SCHACHNER-There's a lot of constraints. not of ours, and not
really of yours. but because of this room and this building. I
think next week is bad.
MR. BREWER-Well, we can do it in the Conference Room, can't we.
downstairs?
MR. MARTIN-Yes. You're better off down there. There's a better
chance of getting it.
MR. SCHACHNER-Yes. That's a good idea. There's one element that's
still missing, and that's the traffic study, and that's probably
not going to be done for a week to ten days. I think when Scott
and I spoke earlier today, we talked about. I believe, some time
during the week of June 2nd.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. the second week in June.
MR. SCHACHNER-Although, I wasn't sure what was wrong with Thursday,
June 3rd?
MR. MARTIN-We have meetings that night, that's the Route 254/Route
9 public meetings.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
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MR. MARTIN-And the second is a ZBA meeting.
MRS. PULVER-What about June 1st?
MR. BREWER-No. I can't do it.
MR. MARTIN-I think we ought to give time for them to complete their
traffic study.
MR. SCHACHNER-res. and that makes sense from our standpoint. too.
We don't really have a problem. The week of June 7th. if there's
a night that's good for you all. we're comfortable with that.
MRS. TARANA-The tenth?
MR. BREWER-That's fine with me.
MRS. PULVER-Craig, the tenth?
MR. MACEWAN-Yes. that's fine.
MR. MARTIN-June 10th?
MRS. CORINNE-Seven o'clock.
MRS. PULVER-Yes. seven o'clock.
MR. MARTIN-And we'll do a media release.
MR. BREWER-And, Mark, any information that you have that we should
have, you'll get to us a few days ahead of time?
MR. SCHACHNER-Definitely.
MR. HARLICKER-You've got everything that we've received from them
so far. We got a fax from them yesterday, and that's included in
your packets.
MR. BREWER-Right. Okay. I guess that's fine. June 10th at seven
o'clock.
MR. SCHACHNER-Thank you very much.
MR. BREWER-You're welcome.
CORRECTION OF MINUTES
April 13th, 1993: NONE
April 20th, 1993: NONE
MOTION TO APPROVE THE MINUTES OF APRIL 13TH. THE SPECIAL MEETING.
AND APRIL 20TH. THE FIRST REGULAR MEETING, Introduced by Corinne
Tarana who moved for its adoption, seconded by Craig MacEwan:
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the fOllowing vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver. Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. LaPoint, Mr. Ruel
MR. BREWER-Okay. Now we can get into the agenda.
SEORA REVIEW:
SEQRA REVIEW ANDREA GRAY SITE PLAN REVIEW APPLICATION.
RESOLUTION OF INTENT OF THE PLANNING BOARD TO BE LEAD AGENT.
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RESOLUTION OF INTENT OF PLANNING BOARD OF THE TOWN OF QUEENS BURY TO
BE LEAD AGENT IN THE REVIEW OF Site Plan for Andrea Gray
RESOLUTION NO.: 8 of 1993
INTRODUCED BY: Carol Pulver
WHO MOVED ITS ADOPTION
SECONDED BY: Craig MacEwan
WHEREAS, Andrea Grav has submitted an application for a site
plan in connection with a project known as or described as
construction of a 26' x 48' barn, and
WHEREAS, the Town of Queensbury Planning Board desires to
commence a coordinated review process as provided under the DEC
Regulations adopted in accordance with the State Environmental
Quality Review Act (SEQRA).
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED, that the Town of Queensbury Planning Board hereby
determines that the action proposed by the applicant constitutes a
Type I action under SEQRA, and
BE IT FURTHER,
RESOLVED. that the Town of Queensbury Planning Board hereby
indicates its desire to be lead agent for purposes of the SEQRA
review process and hereby authorizes and directs the Executive
Director to notify other involved agencies that: 1) an
application has been made by Andrea Gray for a site plan; 2) a
coordinated SEQRA Review is desired; 3) a lead agency for
purposes of SEQRA Review must therefore be agreed to among the
involved agencies within 30 days; and 4) the Town of Queensbury
Planning Board desires to be the lead agent for purposes of SEQRA
review, and
BE IT FURTHER,
RESOLVED, that when notifying the other involved agencies, the
Executive Director shall also mail a letter of explanation,
together with copies of this resolution, the application, and the
EAF with Part I completed by the project sponsor, or where
appropriate, the Draft EIS.
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver, Mr. MacEwan. Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. LaPoint, Mr. Ruel
NEW BUSINESS:
SITE PLAN NO. 20-93 TYPE II WR-1A GERALD & WANDA BULGER OWNER:
SAME AS ABOVE C.E.A. GLEN LK. RD.. 300 YDS. EAST OF QUEENSBURY
PARK. JUST EAST OF GLENMORE LODGE. REQUEST IS TO CONSTRUCT A
HANDICAP RAMP FOR SEASONAL CAMP. CROSS REFERENCE: AV 172-1992
(WARREN COUNTY PLANNING - 5/12/93) TAX MAP NUMBER 38-4-12 LOT
SIZE: .151 ACRES SECTION: 179-79 E
TIM BULGER, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
MR. BREWER-Okay. Scott. we have no notes?
MR. HARLICKER-No. There was nothing really in site plan review
that pertains to this. All they're really doing is putting up a
handicap ramp for access to the house.
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MR. BREWER-Okay, and from Warren County. "No County Impact".
MR. HARLICKER-The reason this is before you is because it's
considered a site plan because it's in a Critical Environmental
Area. That's the only reason that it's here.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. BULGER-My name's Tim Bulger. I'm the son of Wanda and Gerald.
MR. BREWER-Okay. I'd just like to ask one question. We looked for
that and could not find it. Where is the Glenmore Lodge?
MR. BULGER-Right next to it.
MR. MARTIN-Glenmore Lodge is just down from.
MR. BREWER-Sullivan's, what used to be Sullivan's?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-Actually, it's closer to the Docksider, isn't it?
MR. MARTIN-Yes, that's what I mean.
MR. MACEWAN-Just up on the hill.
MR. BREWER-Not that I have a problem with you bUilding a ramp. We
just couldn't find the.
MR. BULGER-Right next to the Glenmore Lodge.
MR. BREWER-I couldn't even find the Glemore Lodge.
MRS. PULVER-We just weren't familiar with the area.
MR. MARTIN-Do you remember going down Glen Lake Road and there was
like a white picket fence. and there was lamps on light posts, and
there was parking across the street from the lake, in a parking
lot?
MRS. TARANA-We went all around the area.
Lodge?
Does it say Glenmore
MR. MARTIN-It's hidden, but it's there.
MRS. PULVER-My only question is, do we have a diagram of it?
MR. BREWER-That's what I have on my notes, here.
drawing.
I don't have a
MRS. PULVER-I mean, I never had a drawing or a diagram or anything.
MR. MARTIN-It's in the application.
MR. HARLICKER-It's in the application, the back two pages.
MRS. PULVER-Well, I don't have the application.
problem.
That's the
MR. BREWER-Okay. Does anybody have any questions? Okay. I'll
open the public hearing. Is there anybody here from the public
who'd like to comment on this?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
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MR. MARTIN-This is a Type II action. There's no SEQRA.
MR. BREWER-No SEQRA? Okay. I guess then we just make a motion.
Why would he have to come to us because he's in a Critical
Environmental Area and not do a SEQRA?
MR. MARTIN-Because I think expansion of a nonconforming use in a
Critical Environmental Area warrants site plan review, right?
MR. BREWER-And no SEQRA?
MR. MARTIN-It's replacement of a use in kind.
MRS. TARANA-Isn't that considered repairs and maintenance
he's just replacing it? I just wanted to ask one thing,
application, again, isn't signed. Is it just this copy?
isn't. you just want to make sure he does sign it.
then. if
Jim. My
If yours
MR. HARLICKER-The one we have is signed.
MR. BREWER-Would somebody care to make a motion?
MOTION TO APPROVE SITE PLAN NO. 20-93 GERALD & WANDA BULGER.
Introduced by Corinne Tarana who moved for its adoption. seconded
by Carol Pulver:
To construct a handicapped ramp for their seasonal camp.
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Stark. Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. LaPoint, Mr. Ruel
SITE PLAN NO. 22-93 TYPE: UNLISTED MR-5 LUCAS S. WILSON OWNER:
SAME AS ABOVE LOCATION: END OF WALKER LN. OFF BAY ROAD PROPOSAL
IS TO CONSTRUCT A 4-UNIT APARTMENT BUILDING. TAX MAP NO. 60-7-14.1
LOT SIZE: 1.461 AC SECTION 179-18 D (1)
GARY HUGHES. REPRESENTING APPLICANT. PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Site Plan No. 22-93, Lucas Wilson. Meeting Date:
May 20, 1993 "Pro;ect DescriPtion: The applicant is proposing to
construct a 4 unit apartment building on 1.47 acre lot located at
the end of Walker Lane. The project will be connected to municipal
water and will utilize an on-site septic system. A drive will be
extended from the end of Walker Lane to provide access to the site.
Pro; ect Anal vsis: The project was compared to the following
standards found in Section 179-38 E of the Zoning Code: 1. The
location, arrangement. size, design and general site compatibility
of buildings, lighting and signs; The property is currently vacant
so compatibility is not a significant problem. However, the
elevations submitted with the application seem to indicate that the
building will only be finished on the front side; further
information is needed regarding the appearance of the bUilding.
The siding and shutters should not be limited to the front of the
building. The way that the building sits on the site. the fact
that there is a main entrance on the back side and the probability
that more buildings will be built on the property support the
notion that all the sides will be equally attractive. 2. The
adequacy of vehicular traffic access and circulation, including
intersections, road widths, pavement surfaces, dividers and traffic
controls; Vehicular access and circulation is adequate. 3. The
location, arrangement, appearance and sufficiency of off-street
parking and loading; The applicant is providing the required 8
spaces including one handicapped space. 4. The adequacy and
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arrangement of pedestrian traffic access and circulation, walkway
structures. control of intersections with vehicular traffic and
overall pedestrian convenience; Pedestrian access is adequate. 5.
The adequacy of stormwater drainage facilities; Staff recommends
that the plan be reviewed by Rist-Frost for adequacy. 6. The
adequacy of water supply and sewage disposal facilities; The
project will be serviced by municipal water and on-site septic
system. The sewage disposal system should be reviewed by Rist-
Frost for adequacy. 7. The adequacy, type and arrangement of
trees, shrubs and other suitable plantings landscaping and
screening constituting a visual andlor noise buffer between the
ap~licant's and adjoining lands, including the maximum retention of
eXlsting vegetation and maintenance, including replacement of dead
plants; Staff believes that a hedge should be provided between the
drive/parking area and the adjacent property. Consideration should
be given to planting some trees in the area between the apartment
and the access drive. A landscaped buffer should also be provided
between the buildings and the adjacent property line. 8. The
adequacy of fire lanes and other emergency zones and provision of
fire hydrants; The fire and emergency access are adequate. 9.
The adequacy and impact of structures, roadways and landscaping in
areas with susceptibility to ponding, flooding andlor erosion.
There does not appear to be areas that area prone to flooding,
ponding or erosion. Summary and Recommendation: Since the
potential exists for further development of the site, it can
accommodate up to 12 dwelling units, future plans for development
should be explained. The approval should be conditioned on Rist-
Frost approval of the drainage and stormwater management plan and
sewage disposal system."
MR. BREWER-Okay. We do have someone here for the applicant.
MR. HUGHES-Yes. I'm Gary Hughes, representing Luke Wilson.
MR. BREWER-Could I ask you please just to put up a drawing. if you
have one with you. Would you care to address any of the notes that
Staff has made?
MR. HUGHES-Did you want me just to go down through them?
MR. LAPOINT-Yes. I mean, for example, the finishing of one side.
You're obviously going to finish all three sides, or all four
sides?
MR. HUGHES-Yes. They will all be sided.
MR. HARLICKER-Sided with shutters and.
MR. HUGHES-I can make note of that. yes. We don't show that on the
drawings at this point, but we can do that.
MR. HARLICKER-Fine.
MR. BREWER-Are there going to be more buildings built on the
property?
MR. HUGHES-There is potential. At this point, there wouldn't be,
but if there is, we would be before the Planning Board for future
expansion. At this point. we're just looking at getting this
building in.
MR. LAPOINT-Did Rist-Frost have time to go over this?
MR. HARLICKER-No, they haven't. They just went out today. So
that's why Staff is recommending that any approvals be conditioned
on their review.
MR. MACEWAN-Would it be beneficial if we tabled this. give him
plenty of time to respond to all these answers, and give time for
Rist-Frost to get back to us?
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MR. LAPOINT-Well, there really isn't, other than Rist-Frost,
there's nothing else here. Is there?
MR. HARLICKER-Not really, nothing that can't be discussed tonight.
MR. LAPOINT-I mean, that's it, right, just the stormwater
management plan?
MR. HUGHES-That part of the project has been taken care of, at this
point, by a licensed engineer, and there is a sealed drawing. It's
all been taken care of. It just has to be okayed by Rist-Frost.
They haven't seen it yet, but we've had our work done for quite
some time. There should be about 14 pages. It's sealed by a
licensed engineer for stormwater management, also for the septic.
The plot plan should be sealed by a licensed engineer for the
septic system, again.
MR. LAPOINT-Did we get any other comments from Rist-Frost or
anybody else on the meeting tonight?
MR. HARLICKER-No. Due to, there was an oversight, and this did not
go out with the rest of the, we thought it did, but it didn't.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. So, it's an internal Town type mishap.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes, no fault of the applicant.
MR. BREWER-Okay. There is some question about maybe some trees
along these borders, and some shrubs, or a hedge.
MR. HUGHES-Between the existing neighbor, the Pinchuk property,
and.
MR. HARLICKER-Well, along both of them.
MR. BREWER-Between the apartment and the access drive, between the
building and the adjacent property line also.
MR. HUGHES-Right.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. You don't show anything in that big front yard
area there. It would be just nice, maybe put some trees along the
drive or something like that, maybe to highlight the drive in the
property, or something to dress it up a little bit.
MR. HUGHES-Okay. We've shown a couple of maples. If you think
that we should have a couple more. or a few more along the front.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes, something to make the property a little more
attractive, as you're looking at it.
MR. HUGHES-We have no problem with that.
MRS. PULVER-Did this go to the Beautification Committee? Normally,
they would make a recommendation on that.
MR. HUGHES-I don't believe we had to do that.
MR. MACEWAN-Would you have a problem if we sent this on to the
Beautification Committee. with any suggestions, comments that they
would make, that you would follow them?
MR. HUGHES-Lucas wants to be a good neighbor. He would not have a
problem with doing more landscaping.
MR. MACEWAN-Okay. We'll send it on to them, and let them make
their recommendation.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Does anybody else have any other questions? I'll
open the public hearing.
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PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
WILLIAM COOK
MR. COOK-My name is William Cook. I'm just wondering what the
overall height of the building is, and what size the apartments
are, and what kind of tenants are expected to be housed here?
MR. HUGHES-The initial plans. the building itself is going to be 25
feet, standard two story wood construction building. Here's a
front elevation of the building. What we're looking for, tenants.
obviously, he's thinking along the lines, we've checked with real
estate people, that the rent would be roughly $600 to $650 a month.
He's looking to get long term renters. In other words, retired
people, older professional people, but obviously, we can determine
who's going to be there or what's going to be there, but that's
what he's looking to for the property.
MR. COOK-The potential future bUildings will be similar in design?
MR. HUGHES-Yes. The property. right now, has the potential of, I
believe, 13 units. This has four in there, and again, what we
would do is we propose to put this building up, and if he decides
to sell it, or go on to develop it. or whatever he decides to do,
he needs to corne back before the Planning Board for approval again.
MR. MACEWAN-As each phase of his expansion goes. you will all be
notified of it, because he'd have to come back for site plan
review, for every step of the way. Correct?
MR. BREWER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-So you will all be notified.
MR. COOK-What is the potential width of the driveway into this?
There's a hydrant there, at the end of Walker Lane. and then
there's the entranceway to the home that's off to the right.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. The access on the site plan is 20 feet wide.
MR. COOK-That will mean that the hydrant stays in place?
MR. HARLICKER-Right.
MR. HUGHES-There's an apple tree that would have to come down.
MR. HARLICKER-Probably.
MR. COOK-Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Is there anyone else?
ESTHER DANSKY
MRS. DANSKY-My name is Esther Dansky, and I live on DorIon Drive,
part of the Baybridge, Queensbury /Baybridge Homeowners Association.
Could you explain to us, it's very difficult to see the diagram,
coming in Walker Lane, where would this building be, in
relationship, your building would be going straight up from Walker
Lane?
MR. HUGHES-Yes.
MRS. DANSKY-Where would this building be? Would it be seen from
Walker Lane?
MR. HUGHES-Again, Walker Lane is right here. It comes up, and the
building is going to be up, it would be off the right as you're
corning up the road. okay, and this is quite covered, here, with
trees, foliage, whatever, up through this area, and then this was
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apparently a meadow at one time.
MRS. DANSKY-Right.
MR. HUGHES-There's quite a bit of eXisting brush, undergrowth, up
in here, which we would leave, and what we want to do is we just
want to clear, obviously for the sake of cost at this point, is to
keep the basic project right here at this point some place. In
other words. we don't want to disturb any of this, because
obviously the more we disturb. the more we have to fix, replace,
blacktop, seed, tree, whatever.
MRS. DANSKY-Are there garages?
MR. HUGHES-No.
MRS. DANSKY-No garages?
MR. HUGHES-No. There's eight parking spots, which is what is
required for the building. and one handicapped.
MRS. DANSKY-Any facilities for children, a play area, what have
you?
MR. HUGHES-Well, what we have is, basically, out in
meadow. which is not, right at this point, we're not
anything with it, as far as any type of clearing.
leave it, clear as little as possible.
here we have a
planning to do
We'd want to
MRS. DANSKY-Could you give us a projected or anticipated rental
price for these units?
MR. HUGHES-Again, he is looking at around $600 to $650, and he has
checked with real estate people. He's bought the property through
a real estate agent, and these are the numbers that they're
throwing at him right now. and again. he'd like to get the long
term renter. He doesn't want to have a lot of vacancies. He'd
like to get older professional people, preferably retired people,
who might be living there five, six, seven, eight years.
MRS. DANSKY-Okay. Thank you.
MRS. PULVER-Do you want to just point out, while you're up there,
where the BaybridgelDorlon Drive comes out. so you can get a better
idea.
MR. HUGHES-Right here.
MRS. PULVER-It's right there.
not looking at the building.
left.
So it's the end of the road. You're
The building would be off more to the
MR. HUGHES-This is Walker, and then you take the left.
MRS. DANSKY-Okay.
PATRICIA DECKER
MRS. DECKER-My name is Patricia Decker. I live on Walker Lane.
You would be my view, instead of the mountains, if you build this.
My comment is that I would be, right now I'm very opposed to this.
Naturally. I like looking at the Vermont mountains from my kitchen
window. I am a member of the Queensbury/Baybridge Homeowners
Association, and I'm also a Board member, and we have very
stringent regulations. People aren't allowed to have motorcycles
parked outside and campers parked outside. They aren't allowed to
a have decks, and this is to keep the value of our property up. In
my observations, renters don't take as good care of the properties
as owners, and I can see that in Baybridge. and that's not always
true, and it seems to me. if there aren't going to be any garages,
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I will be disturbed if I have to look out at a camper or
snowmobiles or motorcycles and I guess that's why we were all
notified so we could just voice our concerns, and it is a concern
of mine. I would prefer that if something were going to be put
there. it would be permanent houses that people could own, in my
mind.
MR. HUGHES-What I have here, and what I've done for Lucas, is I've
taken a design very similar to one that my father and brother have
in the Village of Hudson Falls. They have four unit apartment
buildings, two of them together, on the Boulevard. I don't know if
any of you.
MR. DECKER-I will go look at that tomorrow.
MR. HUGHES-I wish you would. It's down on the Boulevard, okay.
Again, they rent to young professional people, again. not
discriminating against anyone. There's police officers that live
there. nurses, a young lawyer lives in there. They have nice cars.
The only toys they might have is maybe they have a boat on the
lake. My brother doesn't allow any trailers, snowmobiles, any of
that type of thing. All there are are the nice cars parked along
the sides of the buildings, and again, we didn't have the parking
in the front. We kind of put it on the sides. It's nicely
landscaped. The buildings are, not fancy. They're very simple
buildings. They're pretty. They're well kept. The lawns are
maintained. The shrubs are maintained, and basically, I've taken
this and done it along the same lines, and we're going to try to
attract the same type of people, and I really wish that you would
go down to the Boulevard and look.
MRS. DECKER-I will, tomorrow.
MR. HUGHES-They're very, very pretty buildings, and you won't see,
they don't even look like apartment buildings.
MRS. DECKER-Now, this is one point four acres. How many could be
built there, approximately?
MR. BREWER-Potentially 13 units.
MR. HUGHES-Potentially 13.
MRS. DECKER-Thirteen? On that small plot of land?
MR. HUGHES-Thirteen apartment units, three buildings like this.
MR. HARLICKER-Three buildings.
MR. HUGHES-Total, could be. At this point, Lucas Wilson is not in
the position to do anything like that. and again, if he did, we
would have to come again before the Board.
MRS. DECKER-Well, I thank you for listening.
MR. HUGHES-Thank you very much.
ARNOLD DANSKY
MR. DANSKY-My name is Arnold Dansky, and I'm Co-Chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Queensbury/Baybridge Town homes. I'm
curious, if you build thirteen units there, where are you going to
put your septic system, and would it be large enough to accommodate
13 units? That's clay. It's very difficult to drain.
MR. HUGHES-A couple of things. First of all, we're here tonight to
discuss one building. This building here. There's nothing on here
for any other buildings, and again, that would have to be at the
discretion of another meeting. To be perfectly honest with you,
this land will handle it, and it is, the undersoil is sand,
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according to Rist-Frost percolation tests, and septics, there is
enough room, there is enough permeable space, and all the Codes
would be met in an MR-5 area.
MR. DANSKY-Do you realize that next door to that is Baybridge Town
Home leachfield.
MR. HUGHES-Next door, which way, down here?
MR. DANSKY-It would be to the south of your building.
MR. HUGHES-Right.
MR. BREWER-Everything that he puts in there would be on his
property.
MR. HUGHES-Right.
MR. DANSKY-Yes, but I'm saying. does he realize that he's right
next to our leachfield.
MRS. PULVER-But he's not going to be disturbing it.
MR. DANSKY-No. I don't think he would. but it might be disturbing
to the people living in those apartments.
MR. LAPOINT-Well, there's nothing leaching out on the ground there?
MR. DANSKY-No. There's nothing leaching at this point.
MR. LAPOINT-We're on Town water here, correct?
MR. HUGHES-Yes.
MR. LAPOINT-And nobody's drinking the?
MR. DANSKY-No.
MR. MARTIN-It was also proposed, over time, that this be put on the
sewer. at some point in time.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. Well, I just was just concerned, the word
"disturb", I wanted to be sure I understood what you meant by that.
by the leachfield disturbing somebody.
MR. DANSKY-Well. I thought if there was any leach, the odor might
be disturbing.
MR. HUGHES-Well, we have a design system, right now, that we're
working with.
MR. DANSKY-Okay.
building?
What type of siding is proposed to be on this
MR. HUGHES-Vinyl siding. maintenance free siding.
building will be maintenance free.
The whole
MR. DANSKY-Will there be any restrictions on what people can park
outside the apartment building?
MR. HUGHES-Again, right at this point, there are no restrictions,
as far as I'm concerned, and again, what I'd like to say is that
it's design, and he's going to run it as the ones in Hudson Falls,
at which point. there are no, again. no Winnebagos. no boats.
They're just not allowed there. The boats would have to be paid to
be stored up in Lake George, or wherever, like most other people
do. Trailers, things like that, it's just not going to be there.
MRS. PULVER-He will probably have a lease agreement with whoever he
has rent.
- 11 -
MR. HUGHES-Absolutely.
MRS. PULVER-So it would probably be in the lease agreement that
there would be no appliances.
MR. HUGHES-Right, and as far as the lease agreements, basically
that's what my father and my brother do. They do the same things.
and they have, they want to keep a nice looking building. and they
want to be one of the best in the neighborhood, and that's where
they're coming from.
MR. DANSKY-And I would assume that each apartment would have two
parking spots?
MR. HUGHES-Yes, and we have one available to handicap, which we
have to have by law.
MR. DANSKY-Thank you very much.
MR. HUGHES-Thank you. sir.
MR. BREWER-Thank you. Is there anyone else?
JOAN BOVEE
MRS. BOVEE-My name is Joan Bovee. I live at 60 Walker Lane. I
don't live in the Townhouses. I live off to the right, on 2.01
acres of land, which, I'm more concerned, I mean, I'm concerned
about this building, but I'm concerned about future bUildings that
they can build. I think that's a very narrow parcel, and I think
the buildings that they do in the future build are going to be
facing my land. I mean, I can't foresee that they're going to
build a four unit, facing the same way that that one's facing.
They're going to be facing either Country Club Road, or my
property.
MRS. TARANA-Could you show us where you are, on the map?
MR. HUGHES-She's right up here to the right.
MRS. BOVEE-You may have it showing only as Steve Pinchuk, but it's
two owners.
MRS. TARANA-You're that same property? Okay.
MR. HUGHES-And the home is up here.
MR. BREWER-That's your driveway coming in here?
MRS. BOVEE-On the right, yes, and our pool is over there. I mean.
there's bushes and everything, but, in the future, if they build
three more units, how are they going to face?
MR. BREWER-Well, we are here tonight to talk about this building.
and I'm sure you have a right to ask him that. If he wants to
answer you, fine. but there's no way that we can tell you that
right now.
MR. HUGHES-There's probably a couple of different ways they could
go. One could go here. There's enough room for setbacks and
requirements, and then one could go back here, sideways.
MRS. BOVEE-Okay. Now what are the setbacks?
MR. HUGHES-The setbacks, right now, we have 74 feet from the
building, which only 12 is required. On the side, we have 20. On
the left side, we have 76, and from the front we have 60, right at
this point.
MRS. BOVEE-What do they have to be, you say the front, from the
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~,.----
front, the front from the property. what does it have to be?
MR. HUGHES-They're well over.
MRS. PULVER-Mr. Director¡ what does it have to be from the road, 40
feet from the road, the setback?
MR. HARLICKER-No, I don't think so.
MR. MARTIN-What's that. MR-5?
MRS. PULVER-Yes, from the road. We're talking from the from the
road.
MR. HARLICKER-Thirty feet on the front, ten feet on the side, and
ten feet on the rear.
MRS. PULVER-Okay.
MR. HUGHES-And right now we're at 60.
MRS. PULVER-So. from the road he only has to be 30 feet back, he's
60. From the property line. he only has to be 10, and he's 20.
MR. BREWER-On one side, and he's seventy-six on the other.
MR. HUGHES-And again, the way it was set up was for your
consideration. In other words. we put the parking over here, okay,
so that you would be more inclined to see the building, itself, as
opposed to parking, which this over here is vacant land, as you
know, and down here.
MRS. BOVEE-Now there's a pond over, some place on the left, on
Country Club Road. Well. I think it's behind a residence on
Country Club Road.
MR. HUGHES-That would be, where, over here? Country Club is where.
over here?
MRS. BOVEE-I don't think that far, well, no. It's on the other
side of the parcel, more up a little bit maybe. north a little bit.
There's a pond over there.
MR. BREWER-Doesn't Country Club run from the back, like that?
MR. HUGHES-Country Club is over here.
MRS. BOVEE-It runs parallel to Bay.
MR. HUGHES-It runs parallel to Bay.
MRS. BOVEE-Would there be any seepage like from a leachfield or
anything to that pond? I'm not sure where the pond is, or who owns
it.
MR. HUGHES-No. Again, it's been designed by a licensed engineer.
MRS. BOVEE-Now, how wide is that parcel that goes out? There used
to be a right-of-way, I think.
MR. HUGHES-This one is 99 feet across this way. and it's 505 feet
deep this way.
MRS. BOVEE-Okay. Now this building you're building, how wide is
it?
MR. HUGHES-How wide? Twenty-eight feet wide. and sixty-eight feet
long.
MRS. BOVEE-Okay. So if you wanted to put one of those same type
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buildings about the same way, you could do that, right?
MR. HUGHES-Could, yes.
MRS. BOVEE-Okay. Three of them up there, up there, up along, if he
wanted to.
MR. HUGHES-But, again, it's not if he wants to without. again,
approval.
MRS. BOVEE-Right. Okay. That's 99 wide. you said.
MR. HUGHES-This here, yes.
MRS. BOVEE-The parcel.
MR. HUGHES-Yes, and here it's at 170 across this section here.
MRS. BOVEE-Okay. Thank you.
MR. HUGHES-Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Is there anyone else?
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. BREWER-Okay. Does anybody on the Board have any questions?
MR. STARK-The four units. they're all the same, two bedrooms, three
bedrooms?
MR. HUGHES-They're two bedroom, yes, each one, and one is a little
bit different, just because of the fact that the doors have to be
three feet inside, as opposed to two foot six, like the bedrooms
and baths, and also the bathroom is a little bit larger, which
makes one of the bedrooms smaller, for handicapped access. Other
than that, the four are the same, yes. and there is a hallway in
the center, which makes everything accessible, and there's no,
obviously for reasons of weather. snow, things like that.
MR. STARK-Why did you put a, on the lot, I mean, just out of
curiosity?
MR. HUGHES-When I first talked to Lucas, he wanted to be facing, he
thought that that would be the best view for the people that were
living there. It looks down over the Townhouses across the way,
which is, it's a nice view.
MR. MACEWAN-I've got a comment, maybe a thought to help appease
some of the neighbors up there, is to really strive for some sort
of buffer plantings up there, with planting trees that will be
mature, very large trees, to kind of give it a nice natural buffer
between your parcel and the neighboring neighbors up there,
Townhouses and the private property owners up there.
MR. HUGHES-What I've done at this point is I've shown some hemlocks
back here which, again, are green year round. If you take white
pines and things like that, the needles drop off. So they're a
problem, but things like hemlocks are excellent coverage year
round, and I'm sure that, right at this point, Lucas would not have
a problem with. especially with the Bovee property, of planting
hemlocks around there. Again, they grow pretty fast, they grow
fast. and they're green year round, and they would form a nice
barrier. I'm sure that some people have seen the ones that full
and they make like a hedgerow, and they're eight or ten feet high.
That's a definite possibility, and I'm sure that Luke wouldn't have
a problem with that at all.
MRS. PULVER-My
approving this
only comment is that
pro j ect without having
I don't feel
the, having
comfortable
Rist-Frost's
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comments. Now, I realize that it was an internal problem and not
the applicant's problem. We are going to be meeting for a Workshop
Session. Could we just table this until then, which is only about
a week and a half, and we will have their comments, and then vote
on it? I mean, the rest of the Board certainly would have to agree
on that, but that's my own opinion about it.
MRS. CORINNE-I agree with Carol. I'm not comfortable doing that.
I think it's irresponsible to do that.
MR. LAPOINT-I think it's unfortunate that we didn't do our job. I
always hate to, in effect, put the applicant back because we didn't
do our part. That aggravates me.
MRS. TARANA-But it's better to error on the side of knowing that
you do something correctly.
MRS. PULVER-Well, I know that you've had an engineer look at this,
and it's been stamped by two engineers. The reason that Rist-Frost
looks at it is to see that everything is done according to the Town
standards, which are different town, by town, by town, by town, and
to give you approval conditional upon their comments, and you're
going to, I don't know what their comments are going to be, and
maybe it is something that we should discuss, in front of the full
Board, and rather than having it just be left up in the air. So,
again, I hate to hold the applicants up, but I don't feel
comfortable about doing it.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. Lets give them some marching orders. I think we
want some more trees. Maybe he can pencil those in for us. get
them on the Workshop Session, and we'd leave the public hearing
open until then, do SEQRA now, or what?
MR. HARLICKER-I would suggest you probably leave the hearing open,
if you're going to do the actual voting and stuff next week.
MR. BREWER-And then we could do the SEQRA next week.
MR. HARLICKER-It's an unlisted action, so it's a Short Form.
MR. BREWER-So, it shouldn't take any time.
MR. LAPOINT-So. I just want to be clear, that we don't make another
mistake, that, who will have to notice the people to make sure that
they have an opportunity to be there? Is that our responsibility
or his?
MR. HARLICKER-No more notices are sent out, if the public hearing
is left open.
MR. BREWER-We can tell them right now.
MR. LAPOINT-Well, yes. I don't want the circumstance where, all of
a sudden we have a little Workshop Session which is not normally
open to the public, and we try to close out an issue. and then that
becomes a problem for us. I just want to make sure. procedurally,
they have the opportunity to be there.
MR. HARLICKER-They would.
MR. BREWER-It's a public meeting.
MR. LAPOINT-All right. Fine.
MR. BREWER-So, can we reopen the public hearing?
MR. HARLICKER-You just leave it open. You don't close it.
MR. BREWER-I already closed it.
- 15 -
---.
MR. HARLICKER-Then I would reopen it.
MR. BREWER-I'll reopen it.
MRS. TARANA-I have another question. When will the Beautification
Committee be meeting?
MR. MARTIN-I think it's the first Monday of the month.
MR. HARLICKER-The first Monday? So they'll be meeting probably
Tuesday, since Monday the 31st is Memorial Day. It would probably
be the following Monday. which is the 7th.
MRS. TARANA-So they'll meet before we meet?
MR. HARLICKER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-Is there any chance of getting that to them, so that
they can give it some input for our meeting on the 10th?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay, I just want to jump in there with one comment,
because normally people don't produce nice elevations like this,
and I'm not going to penalize someone for doing this for us. Okay.
So, again. it can't hold us up because this applicant's already
corne in with an elevation like this for us.
MR. BREWER-Beautification Committee can't hold us up anyway. I
don't think.
MR. LAPOINT-Good.
MR. MACEWAN-It's just recommendation only.
MR. LAPOINT-Right, but this is what we've been asking for all
along, as a Board, and the first time we get one.
MR. MACEWAN-I'm more looking for ideas in plantings and such.
MRS. TARANA-I think we should direct the Beautification Committee
to really look at this not just, not for the sake of aesthetics,
but also for blocking, buffering.
MR. HARLICKER-Well, you guys could make your own recommendations as
to what you feel would be proper. It's within your purview to do
that.
MRS. TARANA-But don't they get into all those different kinds of
trees and shrubs and things?
MR. MARTIN-Yes. They do get into the specific types.
MRS. TARANA-As I'm sitting here, I'm just having some thoughts. I
guess I'll look at it again, since we're going to discuss it. but
I just wonder, Scott, did you consider lighting? Is it going to
have any outdoor lighting that could effect neighbors?
MR. HARLICKER-They have two lights, one by each sidewalk, by the
front sidewalk. and the other one is to the rear of the property,
behind the apartment units. They didn't appear to effect
neighboring properties, because there really isn't anything
directly adjacent to it.
MRS. TARANA-Yes. The parking lot will not have lights?
MR. HUGHES-That's correct. We have a lamppost here and one down
here. and one at this end of the building, which, again, is away
from this property because that's where the residents are. We
tried to keep that in mind, when we thought this over and we
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designed it out. We tried keep the neighbors in mind, because,
again. Luke wants to be a good neighbor, and he doesn't want to
have problems with people, and he wants to have good tenants. and
he wants to do a nice project so that he can attract good tenants
that are going to be good paying tenants and live there for a long
time, be peaceful and quiet, and respects his property, and that's
the way he wants to be. That's where he's coming from.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
until the 10th?
So you don't have a problem if we table this
MR. HUGHES-I don't, but I don't know about my client.
MRS. PULVER-Well. you weren't going to start digging in two weeks.
were you?
MR. HUGHES-He's excited about getting started. He's really
itching. He was hoping to have them available by September 1st.
So. again, and he's got, his financing and so on is all in place,
and he's using his money, and he really sees that as part of his
plan to get it ready by.
MR. BREWER-I guess the consensus of this Board is to table this
until the 10th, and we have to have your.
MR. LAPOINT-Well, I mean, think this through one more time.
Engineering Comments by Rist-Frost. if we were to be holding this
up for, we have no engineering comments, that's quite a bit of a
burden, okay. Now, he's got to abide by their comments, correct?
No matter what they are. We're supposedly not engineers on this
Board, and they handle that type of thing, and if he's got this
properly engineered, and he's got no comments, we've just added two
weeks on.
MR. MACEWAN-Yes, but we also want recommendations from the
Beautification Committee, too, which is not going to be until the
first of the month.
MR. BREWER-I understand where you're coming from, Ed, but if he
does come back, and he does have comments, then they're going to
have to come back anyway, right?
MR. MACEWAN-That's right.
MR. LAPOINT-Not necessarily. He's going to meet engineering
comments. as far as the approval, correct?
MR. HARLICKER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-I'm not in favor of pushing this through too quickly.
I'd rather here Rist-Frost' s comments before I voted on this.
That's my opinion.
MRS. PULVER-I guess I feel the same way, only because I think that
public has a right to know what the comments are as well, and,
again, it's unfortunate. It's not their fault. I hate holding
them up.
MRS. TARANA-My feeling is. as a Board, to make a decision, you're
supposed to get input from everyone who's supposed to give you
input, and that includes Rist-Frost, which is why we hire them, and
it includes the Beautification Committee, and I feel that if
they're supposed to give the input, then we should have it.
MR. LAPOINT-Well, the applicant pays, don't they usually, for Rist-
Frost?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. LAPOINT-So the applicant is actually paying for, now, three
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engineers to go over this, three.
MR. MACEWAN-I don't understand what you mean by that, Ed? I mean,
any applicant who comes in here is going to pay for it anyway.
MR. LAPOINT-Correct. Well, I'm just contradicting Corinne's point
that we are paying for the input.
MRS. TARANA-I'm sorry. I made an incorrect statement.
MR. BREWER-Well, I think the consensus is to table.
MRS. TARANA-Take a vote.
MR. BREWER-Do we have to get his agreement to table, or can we just
table it?
MR. MARTIN-It's nice to have it. You don't need it.
MR. HUGHES-I'm not going to force the issue.
MR. BREWER-Would somebody care to make a motion?
MOTION TO TABLE SITE PLAN NO. 22-93 LUCAS S. WILSON, Introduced by
Craig MacEwan who moved for its adoption, seconded by Carol Pulver:
Until our June 10th meeting, pending further information from Rist-
Frost, and recommendations from the Queensbury Beautification
Committee.
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mrs. Tarana. Mrs. Pulver, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Stark, Mr. Brewer
NOES: Mr. LaPoint
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
MRS. PULVER-Is there any way that we could do it the week before?
MR. BREWER-I was just going to suggest that. If we get Rist-
Frost's comments back, in a couple of days you say?
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. He said he'd probably get them back the first
of next week.
MR. BREWER-I, personally, don't have a problem with coming up here
for 15 minutes, to go over them.
MRS. PULVER-Next Thursday?
MR. BREWER-But then it leaves, you have to notify the neighbors.
MRS. PULVER-No. They're only notified once, but we can tell them
right now what the date is, and they can corne back.
MR. MACEWAN-Tim, you still have the Beautification Committee who's
not going to meet until the first of the month?
MRS. TARANA-What is the rush?
MR. BREWER-June 10th, seven o'clock.
SITE PLAN NO. 23-93 TYPE: UNLISTED SR-1A EDDY ENTERPRISES. INC.
OWNER: BARBARA BRASSEL LOCATION: ROCKWELL RD. FOR CONSTRUCTION
OF A 24' X 32' POLE BARN. TAX MAP NO. 54-5-19 LOT SIZE: 3.012
ACRES SECTION: 119-20 D(3)
ROGER & BARBARA BRASSEL, PRESENT
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STAFE' INPUT
Notes from Staff, Site Plan No. 23-93, Eddy Enterprises, Meeting
Date: May 20, 1993 "Pro;ect DescriPtion: The applicant is
proposing to construct a 768 square foot barn. The property is
located on Rockwell Road and is zoned SR-1A. The lot is currently
vacant and used as a hay field. Pro;ect DescriPtion: The project
was compared to the fOllowing standards and found in Section 179-38
E. of the Zoning Code: 1. The location, arrangement, size, design
and general site compatibility of buildings, lighting and signs;
This is not an issue. 2. The adequacy and arrangement of
vehicular traffic access and circulation, including intersections,
road widths, pavement surfaces, dividers and traffic controls;
This is not an issue. 3. The location, arrangement, appearance
and sUfficiency of off-street parking and loading; This is not an
issue. 4. The adequacy and arrangement of pedestrian traffic
access and circulation, walkway structures, control of
intersections with vehicular traffic and overall pedestrian
convenience; This is not an issue. 5. The adequacy of stormwater
drainage facilities; This is not an issue. 6. The adequacy of
water supply and sewage disposal facilities; This is not an issue.
7. The adequacy, type and arrangement of trees, shrubs and other
suitable plantings. landscaping and screening constituting a visual
and/or noise buffer between the applicant's and adjoining lands,
including the maximum retention of existing vegetation and
maintenance, including replacement of dead plants; This is not an
issue. 8. Adequacy of fire lanes and other emergency zones and
the provision of fire hydrants; This is not an issue. 9. The
adequacy and impact of structures, roadways and landscaping in
areas with susceptibility to ponding, flooding and/or erosion.
This is not an issue. Recommendation: Planning Staff can
recommend approval of this site plan."
MR. BREWER-The only thing I had a question on was, there's no real
picture of it. It's just a little square on the, not the land. the
barn, the building.
DR. BRASSEL-It's a pretty simple design. This would be the gable
end, showing this open area, and this would be the area of the
interior.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MRS. PULVER-Are you going to board horses?
MRS BRASSEL-One horse.
MRS. PULVER-We have one horse, but we board him, because we didn't
want to go through all that for one horse.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Any questions?
MR. STARK-What's the floor in there going to be in there?
DR. BRASSEL-The design best for horse arenas and areas I've
researched on, and according to Horse Magazine and things that I'm
abridged with, you have to put in a Number Three stone, and take
out all of the, down to about a 12 inch to 18 inch area, put in a
Number Three stone, a Number Two stone. and then sand, clay
topping, floor, 758 foot.
MR. STARK-What's the size of the building?
DR. BRASSEL-It's a pole barn construction, which. is anybody
familiar with pole barns?
MR. STARK-Yes. I have one. Mine's metal on the outside. What's
yours going to be?
MR. BRASSEL-This is board and batten.
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MR. STARK-Board and batten. Okay.
DR. BRASSEL-To match the residence, structure that's there.
MR. STARK-I just wondered. You're going to have power going to
this, right. for lights and like that?
DR. BRASSEL-Correct.
MR. STARK-That's all.
DR. BRASSEL-We'll, we're going to have water.
MRS. PULVER-Water, too.
DR. BRASSEL-Water and power.
MRS. PULVER-You do have to feed them and give them something to
drink every now and then.
MR. STARK-I was just wondering.
MR. BREWER-I'll open the public hearing. Is there anyone here to
comment on this?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. BREWER-Okay.
RESOLUTION WHEN DETERMINATION OF NO SIGNIFICANCE IS MADE
RESOLUTION NO. 23-93, Introduced by Edward LaPoint who moved for
its adoption, seconded by Carol Pulver: EDDY ENTERPRISES. for the
construction of a pole barn, and
WHEREAS, there is presently before the Planning Board an
application for:
WHEREAS, this Planning Board has determined that the proposed
project and Planning Board action is subject to review under the
State Environmental Quality Review Act,
NOW. THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED:
1. No federal agency appears to be involved.
2. The following agencies are involved:
NONE
3. The proposed action considered by this Board is unlisted in
the Department of Environmental Conservation Regulations
implementing the State Environmental Quality Review Act and
the regulations of the Town of Queensbury.
4. An Environmental Assessment Form has been completed by the
applicant.
5. Having considered and thoroughly analyzed the relevant areas
of environmental concern and having considered the criteria
for determining whether a project has a significant
environmental impact as the same is set forth in Section
617.11 of the Official Compilation of Codes, Rules and
Regulations for the State of New York. this Board finds that
the action about to be undertaken by this Board will have no
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.--
significant environmental effect and the Chairman of
Planning Board is hereby authorized to execute and sign
file as may be necessary a statement of non-significance
negative declaration that may be required by law.
the
and
or a
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. LaPoint, Mr. Stark. Mrs. Pulver, Mrs. Tarana,
Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
MR. BREWER-Okay. Would somebody care to make a motion?
MOTION TO APPROVE SITE PLAN NO. 23-93 EDDY ENTERPRISES. INC.,
Introduced by Edward LaPoint who moved for its adoption, seconded
by Carol Pulver:
For the construction of a pole barn.
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver, Mr. MacEwan,
Mr. LaPoint. Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
SUBDIVISION NO. 11-1993 PRELIMINARY STAGE TYPE: UNLISTED LI-1A
FLR PARTNERSHIP OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE LOCATION: 53 LUZERNE ROAD
SUBDIVISION OF A +.56 ACRE PARCEL FROM THE FLR PARTNERSHIP
PROPERTY. CROSS REFERENCE: AV #40-1993 TAX MAP NO. 118-1-5 LOT
SIZE: 2.69 ACRES SECTION: SUBDIVISION REGULATIONS
MICHAEL CUSACK, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Subdivision No. 11-1993, FLR Partnership
Preliminary Stage, Meeting Date: May 20, 1993 "pro;ect
DescriPtion: The applicant is proposing to subdivide a 2.7 acre
lot into two lots. The lots will be 1.3 and 1.4 acres in size.
The property is located on Luzerne Road and is zoned Light
Industrial One Acre. The 1.3 acre parcel will be to the rear of
the 1.4 acre lot and will have no road frontage, it also has less
than the required lot width. The applicant received variances for
these on 5/19/93. The rear parcel contains a DEC identified area
of contamination. The area to be subdivided is currently vacant.
The remaining lot is to be combined with the adjacent property to
the west. The property involved is presently the site of AMG
Industries. The applicant is requesting a waiver to Section A183-9
of the subdivision ordinance regarding layout. construction,
landscape, clearing. grading and drainage, and contour
requirements. Pro;ect Analysis: The proposal does not involve the
construction of any new streets or utilities. The rear lot is
unbuildable because of the contamination and no new construction is
possible on the remaining lot. The property is serviced by
municipal water and an on-site septic system. The applicant should
provide a more detailed description regarding the environmental
impact of the contaminated area, it's relation to the proposed
subdivision and the future. Recommendation: There does not appear
to be any significant problems. other than a more detailed
explanation of the contaminated area, if the Board is satisfied
wi th the information provided, staff can recommend preliminary
subdivision approval."
MR. BREWER-Okay.
Scott, I have a question.
How can we let them
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create a nonconforming lot?
MR. HARLICKER-Well, you can waive the requirements of the
Subdivision Reg's, and they received a variance to the zoning code
last night.
MR. BREWER-To create that lot?
MR. HARLICKER-Right, for no road frontage, the 40 feet road
frontage.
MR. MARTIN-That's what gives you the ability to do that.
MRS. PULVER-The fact that they've got the variance?
MR. MARTIN-Right.
MR. HARLICKER-Right.
MRS. TARANA-Would you just clarify for me. On our agenda it said
a .56 acre parcel, but then on the Project Description we're
talking about 2.7 acres?
MR. HARLICKER-I see where she got that. On the part of the EAF,
under the part of Description of Action, the subdivision is listed
as subdivision of a +/ .56 parcel of land from the FLR Partnership
property. That's where that description came from.
MRS. TARANA-So, what is that talking about?
MR. LAPOINT-They're divesting themselves of a New York State Super
Fund location, is that what you're doing? You're splitting this up
to isolate the hot spot?
MR. CUSACK-That's part of what's going on. Correct.
MR. LAPOINT-That's part of what's going on.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. Do you know that there's a hot spot in the back
of the property? There's a PCB contaminated site in the back part
of the property, okay. It looks to me like they're splitting this
off. and that hot spot will remain with AMG?
MR. CUSACK-FLR.
MR. LAPOINT-FLR, and you folks, you represent the people who want
the front part, uncontaminated part of the property. correct?
MR. CUSACK-No. That's not correct.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. You're FLR, and you're subdividing?
MR. CUSACK-We're FLR. We own the land.
business that leases the land.
AMG Industries is the
MR. LAPOINT-Right. Okay. You're splitting it up. Now who are you
giving the front half to?
MR. CUSACK-It's going to stay with FLR. If I explained, perhaps
you'd be able to get some understanding. My name's Mike Cusack.
With me is Fred Alexy, the "F" in the FLR Partnership. Leo Monahan
is the "L", and Bob Gay is the "R". and essentially what we're
trying to do here. by way of introduction. is that there's no
changes in or disturbance of the existing land here. We have to
make a change on paper, merely to create a financable lot. This
relates to bank financing more than anything else. We can't easily
finance a piece of property where there is a hot spot, as you refer
to it, and for many. many years of work and effort, Mr. Alexy and
his partners have come to an agreement with DEC, and that's why
that letter is attached to the application, which isolates that hot
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spot to the rear 300 feet. Now we're talking about it as if it's
a hot spot. I guess some history here would help. Essentially, in
1979, pretty much right around the time the Super Fund Legislation
became effective, DEC came and took over that hot spot. and they
constructed a cell immediately to the east, that's on the right
hand side of your drawing, right next door is a cell, and what they
did was unload the contamination from that area into that cell.
It's their cell, right next door.
MRS. PULVER-Where it says, Chemical Waste Landfill. that mound is?
MR. CUSACK-That's correct.
MRS. PULVER-Okay. They just moved it from one to the other.
MR. CUSACK-Moved it from one to the other. It's built to their
standards and everything else. This cell eventually filled up.
DEC did whatever they did to the hot spot, as you were referring to
it, and filled it in, capped it, came back a year or so later and
capped it again, and the worst thing. environmentally, that could
happen here, would be if we were coming here telling you we we're
going to disturb that. I mean. we're not. We're not disturbing
what's been done to date. It's been that way for over 10 years.
It's been undisturbed since 1980. Essentially, that's your history
of the land right there, but because it's identified as an inactive
hazardous waste site, it's not a DEC listing. It has the effect of
rendering the entire property valueless. We can't do anything with
it. I f we were to just go out, right now. and say to the bank,
we'll give you a lien on everything but this back corner. that
would hit the County Clerk's Office. then it would hit Real
Property Tax Services, and then you'd get a notice that we just
made an illegal subdivision of the land. and to do things properly
and legal, we have to redraw the line on paper, and really it is a
change on paper. When we were reviewing it, when I was reviewing
it with DEC, the DEC people that I talked to with respect to SEQRA
and things like that, and things like that, I was referring to Dick
Wild, who's up at Region 5, and he's the Specialist up there. It
really is. It doesn't get anymore complicated than that. It's
just a change on paper that's necessary so that we can do what we
have to do.
MR. BREWER-What's going to, ultimately, happen with this piece of
property?
MR. CUSACK-It'll be. in terms of, the 300 foot?
MR. BREWER-No. the .56.
MR. HARLICKER-The contaminated area.
MRS. PULVER-The hot spot area.
MR. BREWER-What I'm thinking is. they end up letting it go for
taxes, and then Warren County owns it.
MR. LAPOINT-Never.
MR. CUSACK-That doesn't avoid the situation.
MRS. PULVER-No.
MR. CUSACK-The situation is the same. The owners are the owners.
MR. BREWER-If you
property, and you
you're going to do
to the property.
subdivide it, then you own that piece of
didn't pay the taxes on it. I'm not saying
that. I'm just wondering what's going to happen
FRED ALEXY
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MR. ALEXY-Let me say that the chain of events that probably would
take place. as I see it, this, we're asking that it be subdivided,
and then, assuming that that was successful, we would then. then
the property. I guess, would have to be reassessed for tax
purposes. and somebody would assess the value on the property. and
we would claim that we don't pay any taxes on it, because it has an
inverted value. In order to clean this thing up, it would cost
millions of dollars. and it certainly wouldn't be in anybody's
interest for us to have to pay taxes on it, on something, I don't
think you'd want us to do that. What we're trying to do is take
what we can take out of the property that originally was purchased
wi th the best intentions in mind, improving the property, and
continue the worthwhi Ie marketing of the piece of property, and
we're trying to maintain that status. So we're taking the best of
what we can get, and trying to spin this thing off. After having
worked a number of years for the State, to agree to the boundary
lines of the contaminated area.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Thank you. Does anybody else have any questions?
I'll open the public hearing. Does anybody care to speak on this
item?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
NO COMMENT
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. BREWER-Okay. Do you want to go through SEQRA?
RESOLUTION WHEN DETERMINATION OF NO SIGNIFICANCE IS MADE
RESOLUTION NO. 11-1993, Introduced by Edward LaPoint who moved for
its adoption, seconded by Carol Pulver:
WHEREAS, there is presently before the Planning Board an
application for: FLR PARTNERSHIP. to subdivide a subdivision of a
.56 acre parcel from the FLR Partnership property, and
WHEREAS, this Planning Board has determined that the proposed
project and Planning Board action is subject to review under the
State Environmental Quality Review Act,
NOW. THEREFORE. BE IT
RESOLVED:
1. No federal agency appears to be involved.
2. The following agencies are involved:
Department of Environmental Conservation may be involved
3. The proposed action considered by this Board is unlisted in
the Department of Environmental Conservation Regulations
implementing the State Environmental Quality Review Act and
the regulations of the Town of Queensbury.
4. An Environmental Assessment Form has been completed by the
applicant.
5. Having considered and thoroughly analyzed the relevant areas
of environmental concern and having considered the criteria
for determining whether a project has a significant
environmental impact as the same is set forth in Section
617.11 of the Official Compilation of Codes, Rules and
Regulations for the State of New York. this Board finds that
the action about to be undertaken by this Board will have no
significant environmental effect and the Chairman of the
Planning Board is hereby authorized to execute and sign and
file as may be necessary a statement of non-significance or a
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negative declaration that may be required by law.
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993. by the fOllowing vote:
MRS. TARANA-Does DEC occasionally come in and monitor the waste
site, the contained area, as well as the other, the open area?
MR. ALEXY-Most of the adjoining area they monitor.
MRS. TARANA-They have checked all the rest of that property and
they have found no PCB's on it?
MR. ALEXY-We've gone through the process of making borings, three
different time tables. There were no contaminants there.
MRS. PULVER-But DEC currently has this property on the inactive
list. isn't that correct?
MR. ALEXY-They currently have it.
AYES: Mr. LaPoint, Mr. Stark. Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver.
Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
MOTION TO APPROVE PRELIMINARY STAGE
PARTNERSHIP, Introduced by Edward
adoption, seconded by Carol Pulver:
SUBDIVISION NO. 11-1993
LaPoint who moved for
FLR
its
For the subdivision of a .56 acre parcel from the FLR Partnership
property.
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver, Mr. MacEwan,
Mr. LaPoint, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
MR. CUSACK-In preparation for final plan, the final application,
with respect to 183-12 in the book, we'd like to give the surveyors
directions as to what requirements will be necessary, and which
ones will not, and at this time make an application for a waiver.
In the interest of time, can we possibly discuss the elimination of
Item B. which has to do with sewer and water, and the elimination
of Item C, which deals with planning and drainage, there' s no
structures here, the elimination of Item D and E, which relates to
homeowners association and recreation and open spaces, because in
this case you're really dealing with marking off the property from
the surveying point of view, and not really getting into any.
MR. BREWER-We can grant those waivers at final.
MR. MARTIN-Some of those are a given, really.
MR. LAPOINT-Yes. Just remind us in our motion, and we'll make
sure, in the final motion. I skipped that. I could have just
added that in by giving a waiver to Section A183. We'll do it at
final.
MR. CUSACK-Okay. Thanks.
MR. BREWER-Okay. I've got one other item.
drafted. Has everybody got a copy?
This letter that I
MRS. PULVER-Yes. I read it.
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MRS. TARANA-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Charles Diehl. Did you get a copy of it, Ed?
MR. LAPOINT-Yes. I'm reading it right now. That sounds good, Tim.
I don't know if I want to do it, but it sounds good. I mean, these
are the facts.
MR. BREWER-That's the truth.
MRS. PULVER-Now, the only thing I would suggest is that instead of.
say. from the Planning Board. but at the bottom. I would just as
soon, I'd have my name on it. I want my name on it, as a person,
not a Board.
MR. BREWER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-I think it should go from the Board. We all voted on
it as a Board, it should go as a Board.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. I think if you got a resolution or something, it
would be helpful.
MRS. PULVER-Yes, but I think our names should be attached to it,
not just the Planning Board.
MR. BREWER-Right. Well, we can all sign it.
MRS. PULVER-Yes.
MR. BREWER-But I think it should corne from the Planning Board, not
as five individuals.
MRS. PULVER-No, no. I agree with you. I agree with that.
MR. MACEWAN-That's why we have a Chairman. Let him sign it and
send it off. If we vote on it and say that's what we want, let him
sign it and send it off.
MRS. TARANA-They do want a resolution?
MR. MARTIN-Yes. I think it would be better.
sign it. authorizing the Chairman to sign it.
That way he could
MR. LAPOINT-Procedurally, what fact of rule does this have? This
is going to go to the Zoning Board and they're going to read it,
and they're going to go, do we have a choice now?
MR. MARTIN-They do, yes.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay.
MR. MARTIN-This'll be like a public comment.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. So, in other words, we haven't hemmed any other
Board's action in?
MR. MARTIN-No.
MR. LAPOINT-Good.
MR. MARTIN-They have the power to grant variance.
MR. LAPOINT-Good.
MOTION TO HAVE THE LETTER THAT TIM HAS DRAFTED TYPED. SIGNED BY HIM
AS CHAIRMAN. IN REGARD TO AREA VARIANCE NO. 33-1993 CHARLES DIEHL.
TO REPRESENT THE ENTIRE PLANNING BOARD, Introduced by Corinne
Tarana who moved for its adoption, seconded by Craig MacEwan:
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Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mrs. Tarana, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. LaPoint,
Mrs. Pulver, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
MRS. PULVER-Now, I'll tell you my reason for my no. I really feel
that it should come from Planning Board members and we should have
our names on it. Roger is not here. Maybe he objects to it.
MR. MACEWAN-Carol, I mean, if a member's absent from this Board.
and we conduct business, through a.
MRS. PULVER-You just said it's a Planning Board. You want it to
corne from the Planning Board. That's what you just said to me.
MR. MACEWAN-Signed by the Chairman of the Planning Board, voted on
as a majority of the Planning Board, yes, as the Board.
MRS. PULVER-Well, then I'm sorry. I misunderstood.
MR. LAPOINT-Hey, Jim. Lets do some planning. two minutes on
planning. It will probably be our only opportunity all year. I
want to know, well, in advance. I'm speaking for myself. Maybe
everybody else, when those people come in front of us for the old
Kentucky Fried Chicken. what are their names? Who is it?
MR. MARTIN-The Olive Garden?
MR. LAPOINT-Right there in the center of town, where the old
Kentucky Fried Chicken was.
MRS. PULVER-Queensbury Plaza.
MR. LAPOINT-What are their names?
MR. MARTIN-Howard Carr, Queensbury Plaza.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. You know what I'm talking about, where the
original mall in Queensbury?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. LAPOINT-As far as planning goes. and I have bent over backwards
for these guys for four years, getting them through steps of this.
as planners, lets get that chicken shack torn down.
MR. MARTIN-It is.
MR. LAPOINT-When did it go down?
MR. MARTIN-It's coming down. That was part of our approval, Ed.
Okay. because I knew we were heading in that direction, but it just
aggravates me every time.
MR. MARTIN-They're in for their building permit for The Olive
Garden. and as part of that, they have to tear down the old
Moynihan Liquor Store and the Kentucky Fried Chicken store. and
they're going to establish, as part of their site plan they had on
there a center access way through the parking lot, in from the
light there in front of Grand Union. Everything. I think. would be
west and north of that center access, the whole parking lot's going
to be redone, re-Iandscaped, according to the site plan, and then
I told them that the next future store that comes in to occupy
that. the rest has to be done.
MR. LAPOINT-Good. Thanks.
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MR. MARTIN-And all the stormwater management, remember we had a
list of 11 County concerns where we just concurred with them? They
were all met.
MR. LAPOINT-Yes. I mean, that was a long time ago.
MR. MARTIN-The big thing is, that plaza now has on-site stormwater
management, and they are on the sewer system.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. Good.
MR. STARK-Jim, does the Town have any plans on dOing a traffic
study on Bay Road/Meadowbrook area at all, that you know of?
MR. MARTIN-No, but I think the discussion held the other night, and
the conclusion of the Board, was right on the money, and I'd like
to do that. You've got to understand. We've got two studies going
right now. We've got the Route 149 Corridor and we've got the
Route 9/254 Intersection study going.
MR. STARK-Well, that's all built up right now, but what about Bay
Road? Can we make a request of the Town Board to do that?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-We can, and that's what I wanted to talk about, right
along his topic.
MR. STARK-We do need that, though.
MR. MACEWAN-I thought that was an excellent idea. and I wasn't
saying it the other night strictly to throw it back into the
applicant's, and have them foot the bill.
MR. STARK-Can we make a resolution requesting the Town Board to go
ahead with this?
MR. MARTIN-Asking them to do so, yes.
MR. MACEWAN-Asking them to do it. asking them to spend the money to
have an independent study done.
MR. STARK-That we need it, we need this traffic study. for the
future of this.
MR. MARTIN-We're in an ideal situation here, because like I said
the other night, that whole area from Hiland Park, just about
south, we now know all projects are approved, or in the planning
stages. You've got Hiland Park. You've got the College. You've
got Hughes property on both sides of the road is all done,
Canterbury Woods, Passarelli, Valenti, and Bay Meadows, what was
just in the other night. That's the whole area.
MR. BREWER-We know right now that there is a study being done by
Ace. Why don't we see if we can contact them.
MR. MACEWAN-They already did. and they told us no.
MR. BREWER-It's not done.
MR. MARTIN-It wasn't done. and it was a private study.
MR. BREWER-It's being done, so there's no sense in doing the same
thing over again, if they are going to have it done.
MRS. TARANA-That's for the traffic light.
MR. MARTIN-That was more, I talked to them, and it was more
oriented towards accident rates and things at that main entrance to
ACC.
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MRS. TARANA-It's for their southern driveway.
MR. BREWER-No, but they're doing a study of Bay Road. Bay Road is
Bay Road.
MRS. TARANA-They're not doing a study of.
MOTION TO MAKE A RECOMMENDATION TO THE TOWN BOARD TO INSTITUTE A
TRAFFIC STUDY ON THE BAY ROAD AND MEADOWBROOK CORRIDOR, Introduced
by Craig MacEwan who moved for its adoption, seconded by Corinne
Tarana:
Duly adopted this 20th day of May, 1993, by the following vote:
MR. LAPOINT-I'm obviously going to vote no, but as long as we're
going to waste money, and I'll make a suggestion, lets get a local.
lets pour our money down a local toilet, and get a local, why are
we going to Rochester? Why are we going to?
MRS. PULVER-That's the Town Board's prerogative.
MR. LAPOINT-Right, but $70,000 leaves the community, people can
count cars just as well as anybody else, and there's people in Town
who do it.
MR. BREWER-I agree with you, Ed.
MR. LAPOINT-Get them local.
federal money we've got
ridiculous.
I mean, $70.000 going to Rochester. of
to do that Corridor Study? That's
MR. MARTIN-It didn't go to Rochester. It went to Clifton Park, Ed.
MR. LAPOINT-They're in Clifton Park with a branch in Rochester,
right?
MR. MARTIN-No, no. They're just a small firm out of Clifton Park.
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mrs. Tarana, Mrs. Pulver, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Brewer
NOES: Mr. LaPoint
ABSENT: Mr. Ruel
MR. MARTIN-Just to appease you a little bit, Ed, I had a list drawn
up for this Route 9/254 Corridor business, and I had all local
firms, and I had one of the local firms tell me, I will not bid on
this, and the reason I'm not going to is because I don't feel
qualified to do it. and to be quite frank with you, there's nobody
in this area who's qualified to do it. You need a big firm out of
Albany, Rochester, or Syracuse to do this.
MR. LAPOINT-Just read what they come up with, and tell me that.
again, I studied this in college. It's ridiculous.
MR. MARTIN-No. I agree with you about traffic engineering, and
that's why, and the problem with it. it falls short. All you get
are these gobbledy gook bunch of statistics and numbers and junk
like that, and nobody knows what it means. What I want out of that
is I want to take it to the next step. Don't leave it to me to
interpret that. I want you to tell me, now, where do I put the
roads. Where do I put the curb cuts. where do I put the signals,
and that's what we'll do.
MR. LAPOINT-Okay, but that's obvious. Like we had somebody from
Warren County Planning Board sit out here and say. I mean, $70,000.
and you could have cut a strip on County property, south on Route
9. for the price of a damn cut.
MR. MARTIN-Less than the price of the cut.
Do you want to know
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what that study did on the Route 9/Million Dollar Half Mile? They
show an access road going through the intersection of Exit 20,
behind the stores, and connecting into Route 149. They did not
ever talk to one property owner over which the road has to sit, and
they did not take into consideration the topography over which the
road is shown.
MR. LAPOINT-Now here's my point. What have you done with that
money?
MR. MARTIN-That was dead on arrival. That idea is dead on arrival.
MRS. TARANA-Yes, and I think the other point is. too. that they do
the traffic studies, now, they project it with their little
figures, their little manipulations, and they tell us that the
level of service of these roads is going to be okay, but we have
seen level of service roads that are not okay, but they still meet
their criteria, and I don't want to put words into your mouth, but
what I would like to see is. not a traffic study that these
engineers do, but somebody, I mean, even us, sitting down and
talking about, what can we do, or bring in some experts with
solutions, not telling us level of service of roads.
MR. MARTIN-My problem with it is. it's foolhardy to think that
traffic engineering is such an exact science that you can define it
within a project area, or the area within two tenths of a mile or
half a mile, like the intersection of Route 9/254. There are so
many factors that influence the capacity of that intersection, for
10, 20. 30 miles around this area, that you have no way of
forecasting.
MRS. PULVER-Right, and you have no control over that.
MR. MARTIN-I mean, if Hudson Falls does something down there, it's
going to effect that intersection.
MRS. TARANA-Absolutely.
MR. MARTIN-And that's why it's unfair to hold one individual
project. it's inaccurate.
MR. BREWER-So why don't we not have a traffic study done.
have some company look at it as a planning.
Lets
MR. MARTIN-That's exactly what I'm trying to do with Route 9/254.
What I want to come out of that study is I want an assumed rate of
growth, and to accommodate that rate of growth. you put curb cuts
here. You put streets here. You put signals here.
MR. BREWER-So, could we reword that motion to indicate that. and
not a traffic study, so we know how many cars are going down Bay
Road?
MR. MARTIN-That's what I was going to interpret that ~o mean. A
traffic study which incorporates planning.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Fine. Anything else?
MRS. PULVER-One thing, Maria. Since I misunderstood that our names
are going to accompany that motion, I will withdraw my no vote, and
make it a yes vote.
MR. MACEWAN-Ed, why did you fly off the handle tonight, when we
wanted to table that thing?
MR. LAPOINT-Okay. How many people corne before Planning Boards? I
mean, now. when you go to finance a house, and I'm building a new
house right now. or getting ready to build a new house. It's
absolutely critical when you get your money, okay. Now, people are
out there to work and to build and to create jobs, okay. An
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applicant comes in front of us, and the first wrong was made. The
second wrong, and I disagree, everybody thinks we're compounding it
by approving it. We're compounding it by disapproving it. because
he's the one effected. None of us. We're all going to go home
tonight, and that man, Mr. Lucas, whoever he is, he doesn't have
his approval now. He can't move ahead.
MR. MACEWAN-The only comment I can make to that. you're comparing
apples and oranges. You're comparing someone who's going to go out
and build a house on a lot, who doesn't require them to go through
the site plan review. Any applicant comes walking through that
door and signs that paper and pays that fee knows that he could
potentially be into a long process to get approval. It's our job,
as planners, to make sure we have all the facts, and all the
information, before we make a decision.
MR. LAPOINT-We owe these guys a timely review of their project.
MRS. TARANA-But, wait, Craig, do you remember the State Council
telling us there are no contingency approvals?
MR. MACEWAN-Yes.
MRS. TARANA-You cannot do it. You cannot do it.
MR. MACEWAN-I would reiterate that again. real loud, so people hear
you.
MRS. TARANA-Well. no one did.
MR. MACEWAN-The Officer of Rural Affairs, when we went to the
Satellite Conference.
MRS. TARANA-But you should be aware that there is not such a thing
as a contingency approval. There absolutely is not.
On motion meeting was adjourned.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Timothy Brewer, Chairman
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