1994-05-26
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QlJEENSBURY PLANNING BOARD MEETING
SECOND REGULAR MEETING
MAY 26TH, 1994
INDEX
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Subdivision No. 1-1994
FINAL STAGE
Subdivision No. 3-1994
FINAL STAGE
Subdivision No. 5-1994
PRELIMINARY STACE
Site Plan No. 17-94
Subdivision No. 4-1994
PRELIMINARY STAGE
Site Plan No. 14-94
Site Plan No. 35-92
DISCUSSION ITEM
Andrea Gray 1 .
L. Rae Gillis 2.
Joseph & Maria Leuci 4.
Steven So I iman to 11.
Guido Passarelli 36.
Gary Cardinale 64.
Howard Carr
The Howard Croup Management, Co. Inc. 73.
Proposed Site Plan for Native Textiles 74.
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 PLANNING BOARD MEETING
SECOND REGULAR MEETING
MAY 26TH t 1994
7:00 P.M.
MEMBERS PRESENT
TIMOTHY BREWER, CHAIRMAN
GEORGE STARK, SECRETARY
ROGER RUEL
CRAIG MACEWAN
JAMES OBERMAYER
ROBERT PALING
MEMBERS ABSENT
CATHERINE LABOMBARD
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR-JAMES MARTIN
PLANNER-SCOTT HARLICKER
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PLANNING BOARD ATTORNEY-MARK SCHACHNER
STENOGRAPHER-MARIA GAGLIARDI
OLD BUSINESS:
SUBDIVISION NO. 1-1994 FINAL STAGE TYPE: UNLISTED ANDREA GRAY
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE ZONE: SFR-IA LOCATION: 563 BAY ROAD
SUBDIVISION OF A 10.65 ACRE PARCEL INTO 3 LOTS - LOT 1 WILL BE
1.041 ACRES, LOT 2 WILL BE 4.948 ACRES, LOT 3 WILL BE 4.664 ACRES.
TAX MAP NO. 60-1-12 LOT SIZE: 10.65 ACRES SECTION: SUBDIVISION
REGULATIONS
ANDREA GRAY, PRESENT
MR. BREWER-Okay. Scott, we have no notes?
MR. HARLICKER-Yes.
Preliminary review
problems involved,
subdivision.
Well, the
I as t week,
and Staff
only comment
there weren't
can recommend
is that, during
any significant
approval of the
MR. BREWER-Okay, and we had the public hearing, opened and closed.
Any questions from anybody on the Board?
MR. OBERMAYER-The two, the lots, the way you're subdividing, do you
plan on developing those?
MR. GRAY-Not me, no sir, just to sell them.
MR. OBERMAYER-Okay, just to sell them. Would they have a common
driveway?
MR. GRAY-Well, the map indicates there's two. Right now, there's
one driveway.
MR. OBERMAYER-There is one driveway existing.
MR. GRAY-Yes, and it could be, the intent is that both people could
use the same driveway, but if they don't like the idea, they
certainly can put their own driveway in, because each one would own
Bay Road frontage. I did that just based on the Town regulations.
MR. BREWER-On the 40 foot?
MR. GRAY-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Is anybody prepared to do a motion? There is one
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already made.
MOTION TO APPROVE FINAL STAGE SUBDIVISION NO. 1-1994
Introduced by Roger Ruel who moved for its adoption,
Robert Paling:
ANDREA GRAY,
seconded by
As written.
Whereas, the Town Planning Department is in receipt of final
subdivision application, file # 1-1994, to subdivide a 10.65 acre
parcel into 3 lots - lot 1 will be 1.041 acres, lot 2 will be 4.948
acres, lot 3 will be 4.664 acres;
Whereas, the above referenced final subdivision application,
dated 4/27/94 consists of the following: 1. Sheet 1, Map of
survey of lands of Andrea Gray, dated 3/28/94; and
Whereas,
documentation:
the
1.
above file is supported with
Staff notes, dated 5/26/94
the
following
Whereas, the proposed subdivision has been submitted to the
appropriate town departments and outside agencies for their review
and conmlent; and
Whereas, any modification and terms contained in the
preliminary subdivision approval have been complied with.
Therefore, Be It Resolved, as follows:
The Town Planlling Board, after considering the above, hereby
move to approve final subdivision plat for Andrea Gray, file # 1-
1994.
Let it be further resolved:
1. That prior to the signing of the plat by the Chairman of
the Planning Board all appropriate fees shall be paid and that
within 60 days of the date of this resolution the applicant
shall have the signed plat filed in the Office of the Clerk of
Warren County.
2. The applicant agrees to the conditions set forth in this
resolution.
3. The conditions shall be noted on the map.
4. The issuance of permi ts is condi tioned upon compl iance and
continued compliance with the Zoning Ordinance and subdivision
regulations.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel,
Mr. Paling, Mr. Brewer
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NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
SUBDIVISION NO. 3-1994 FINAL STAGE TYPE: UNLISTED L. RAE GILLIS
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE ZONE: RR-5A LOCATION: EAST SIDE LOCKHART
MT. RD. PROPOSAL IS FOR A TWO LOT SUBDIVISION. ADIRONDACK PARK
AGENCY TAX MAP NO. 23-1-29.1, 29.21 LOT SIZE: + 23 ACRES
SECTION: SUBDIVISION REGULATIONS
RICK MEATH, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Subdiv.ision No. 3-1994, L. Rae Gillis, Meeting
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Date: May 26, 1994 "PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant is
proposing to subdivide a 8.7 acre parcel from a 23 acre parcel.
The property is zoned RR-5A and is located on Lockhart Mountain
Road. The 8.7 acre lot will be vacant and the remaining property
has a house and two chicken coops on it. PROJECT ANALYSIS: During
preliminary review there was found to be no significant problems
with this subdivision and staff can recommend final approval of
this subdivision."
MR. BREWER-Okay.
Any questions from anybody on the Board?
MR. MACEWAN-Yes.
the question was,
I think where we left off on that last week was
was there a variance in effect on that land?
MR. BREWER-I think, in previous notes, that there was.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-It was going to be looked into to confirm if it was.
MR. MEATH-My name is Rick Meath, on behalf of the applicant. We
checked our client, and he did obtain a variance he said,
approximately, three years ago. So, according to our client, he
does have a zoning variance.
MR. BREWER-Okay, and we can just add that as a condition, if the
var iance was granted, we can recommend approval, if that's what you
want to do. Anybody else? Would somebody care to offer the
resolution? -
MOTION TO APPROVE FINAL STAGE SUBDIVISION NO. 3-1994 L. RAE
GILLIS, Introduced by Roger Ruel who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Craig MacEwan:
As written, with the condition that the ~ariance was applied for
and granted on the trailer shop that's currently th~re.
Whereas, the Town Planning Department is in receipt of final
subdivision application, file # 3-1994, to subdivide a 8.7 acre lot
from a 23 acre parcel; and
Whereas, the above referenced final subdivision application,
dated 4/5/94 consists of the following:
1. Sheet 1, Map of survey of lands of L. Rae Gillis, revised
3/11/94, and
Whereas, the above file is supported wi th the following
documentation:
1. Staff notes, dated 5/26/94
Whereas, the proposed subdivision has been submitted to the
appropriate town departments and outside agencies for their review
and conmlent; and
Whereas, any modification and terms contained in the
preliminary subdivision approval have been complied with.
Therefore, Be It Resolved, as follows:
The Town Planning Board, after considering the above, hereby
move to approve final subdivision plat for L. Rae Gillis, file # 3-
1994.
Let it be further resolved,
1. That prior to the signing of the plat by the Chairman of
the Planning Board all appropriate fees shall be paid and that
within 60 days of the date of this resolution the applicant
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shall have the signed plat filed in the Office of the Clerk of
Warren County.
2. The applicant agrees to the conditions set forth in this
resolution.
3. The conditions shall be noted on the map.
4. The issuance of permits is conditioned upon compliance and
continued compliance with the Zoning Ordinance and subdivision
regulations.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling,
Mr. Stark, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
NEW BUSINESS:
SUBDIVISION NO. 5-1994 PRELIMINARY STAGE TYPE: UNLISTED JOSEPH
&: MAR I A LEUC I OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE ZONE: SR -1 A LOCA T I ON : WEST
SIDE OF WEST MT. RD. REQUEST IS FOR A 2 LOT SUBDIVISION.
ADIRONDACK PARK AGENCY TAX MAP NO. 123-1-10, 11.2 LOT SIZE: + 9
ACRES SECTION: SUBDIVISION REGULATIONS
LEON STEVES, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Subdivision No. 5-1994 Preliminary Stage, Joseph
& Maria Leuci, Meeting Date: May 26, 1994 "PROJECT ANALYSIS: The
applicant is proposing to subdivide a 10.2 acre parcel into two
lots of 9.19 acres and 1.01 acres. The property is zoned SR-IA and
is located on West Mountain Road. PROJECT ANALYSIS: The proposed
subdivision line would not meet the setback requirements for the
existing sheds. The proposed lot would have a very odd shape to it
and because of the setback requirements almost half of the lot is
unusable.. A reconfigured lot 1 could allow for more usable area.
It appears that the driveway will service 4 houses. Each of the
lots has the required 40 feet of road frontage; however this width
is not extended in from the road for any distance and results in a
disjointed lot configuration. This project also involves a lot
line adjustment. The .67 acre parcel with the house on it was a
square landlocked parcel. The lot line adjustment gives it
frontageMon the road but also places the property line too close to
the existing sheds."
MR. BREWER-Mr. Steves.
MR. STEVES-Good evening. As Scott has alluded to, the property now
is really two parcels. Parcel 10 and parcel 11.2 are the tax map
parcels. Lot 10 is the parcel of 100 by 150. What we're trying to
do is enlarge that. That's the house lot. We tried to avoid, if
you wi 11, the need of coming here to the Board. One of the
problems was the need (lost word), so that necess'i tated the two lot
subdivision coming before you. We have no problems at all
including that shed.
MR. HARLICKER-Are they movable?
meet the setback requirements?
Could you move them, so they could
However you want to deal with it.
MR. BREWER-Well, how big of a shed is it, Scott?
MR. STEVES-You're talking about that shed in the back?
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MR. HARLICKER-The one in the back.
MR. STEVES-We'll put the property line around there.
problem with that.
We have no
MR. HARLICKER-Okay. The one in the front, on the side there.
MR. STEVES-It meets it.
MR. HARLICKER-Does it? Okay.
MR. STEVES-On the plan that I have resubmitted to you, Monday, I
have drawn in the setback requirement lines. Is that on that map?
MR. HARLICKER-No.
MR. STEVES-Okay. It is on the final map, and it has, that meets
the requirements, but we will be glad to reconfigure that lot, .67,
to include the shed lot.
MR. BREWER-How do they get to that house right now?
MR. STEVES-There's a driveway. You can see it on that plan. It
comes right in off of West Mountain Road. That's what we want to
use for all three lots, in the future.
MR. BREWER-So it would be this, lot 2, lot 1, lot 3?
MR. STEVES-Yes. This is the driveway right here, right now, okay.
That's used by the house (lost word). It will be used by lot 1 and
lot 2. There's a driveway right here, and that'll be used, in the
future, by this lot and this lot.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Who owns the house that's on there~now?
MR. STEVES-The applicant.
MR. BREWER-The applicant. Why wouldn't he make that lot line, the
line where the shed is, why wouldn't he make that straight back?
It's just a question. Why would he make that go back like that?
MR. STEVES-To make an acre on this lot.
MR. BREWER-You can't meet an acre here?
MR. STEVES-No.
MR. BREWER-Okay. So there's never going to be another curb cut on
the front of this?
MR. STEVES-No.
MR. BREWER-You wouldn't mind if we put that as a condition?
MR. STEVES-No.
MR. BREWER-That this garage, this 40 foot path will service all
lots. Okay. Anybody else?
MR.OBE.RMAYER-Yes. Can you tell me where the septic system is for
the house? That's not illustrated on the drawing at all.
MR. STEVES-Right to the north.
MR. OBERMAYER-How far off of the new lot line does that sit, do you
know? You don't show it on the drawing, is what I'm getting at.
Is it on lot number one?
MR. BREWER-Well, if it's right behind the house, I would say he's
got plenty.
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MR. OBERMAYER-Is it right there?
MR. STEVES-Yes.
MR. BREWER-lIe , got to be 75 foot from that line in the back
s
anyway, I would say.
MR. OBERMAYER-It would be nice to see it on the drawing. Can you
mark it on the drawing for us, so we could see exactly what the
setback is of that?
MR. STEVES-Sure.
MR. OBERMAYER-Also the water. Are you on well water there?
JOSEPH LEUCI
MR. LEUCI-We have a well.
MR. STEVES-There's Town water right in front.
MR. OBERMAYER-That should probably be indicated on here, too, where
the well is, and telephone lines. Do you have overhead telephone
lines, I guess, or are they buried? They're underground? Those
should also be indicated on the drawing.
MR. STEVES-There's a little square shown on the plan that is the
transformer, right in the front there.
MR. BREWER-Why have the telephone lines got to be on here?
MR. OBERMAYER-Well, according to the zoning requirement for a
Preliminary subdivision, all the utilities are supposed to be shown
on the drawing. They ask for them.
MR. STEVES-They ask for them. It's not always shown, because
they're talking about a proposed subdivision.
MR. BREWER-What's the relevance?
MR. STEVES-There's none, really. You've got to take it to Niagara
Mohawk, when you get your subdivision approval, and ask them to
design y~ur underground, and they can do that. They won't do it
before you get approval.
MR. OBERMAYER-That's fine, then.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. RUEL-I have a question for Scott.
Analysis, you indicate four houses?
Scott, under Project
MR. HARLICKER-Well, the one that's up, adjacent to West Mountain,
I believe, will also be serviced by this driveway, right?
MR. RUEL-That's someone else's land.
MR. HARtICKER-Right. Don't they use this?
MR. STEVES-They park their car in there, but there is no legal
reason for it.
MR. HARLICKER-All right. Will they still be allowed to access that
residence through this driveway?
MR. STEVES-Informally, but not legally.
MR. HARLICKER-Okay.
MR. RUEL-So it's three houses?
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MR. HARLICKER-I guess so.
MR. RUEL-Okay. Thank you.
MR. PALING-The eighty foot frontage, or forty and forty, quickly
becomes less than half of that. Does that meet the emergency
vehicle requirement after the frontage, do we know?
MR. STEVES-The reason we did that is, the requirement of the Code
is to have fo~ty foot frontage. You're using a common driveway,
rather than to use or encourage three curb cuts, we're trying to
keep it to one, and that's the reason for it.
MR. PALING-As long as it meets the emergency vehicle requirements,
I don't see anything wrong with it. It's a question I'm asking.
MR. STEVES-I hear your question. I imagine it meets it now. The
house is there. The'drive is there.
MR. BREWER-How wide is the driveway, Leon?
MR. STEVES-The driveway, I believe, is about 12 feet wide, now, 16
feet wide.
MR. BREWER-Are there trees on either side of it?
MR. MACEWAN-There is on one side.
MR. BREWER-I think the requirement, don't quote me, but I think
it's, like, 12 foot.
MR. PALING-Well, the total width of the two scales, a little over
31 feet. So if it's twelve, then you're, double twelve is twenty-
four. You're meeting it, but I don't know what the rules, and I
couldn't find it in the book.
MR. HARLICKER-I think, generally, what they look for is a cleared
accessway of about twenty-four feet. It doesn't have to be paved,
but at least to get back in there.
MR. PALING-Well, if it stays that way, they've got 31, between the
two.
MR. RUEL-It's okay then.
MR. BREWER-Twenty-four feet it has to be cleared for a fire truck
to get through there?
MR. HARLICKER-If I remember right, yes. It came up cin a project a
while back, private access to multiple lots like this. Generally,
a twelve foot paved drive, but then room to pull off and maneuver
stuff around. It's about twenty-four feet.
MR. BREWER-Maybe that's where I got the 12 foot from.
MR. PALING-All I could find is a reference to 40 foot, in there,
which they meet.
MR. BREWER-You don't happen to know where that is do you, Leon, in
the Ordinance?
MR. STEVES-I don't.
MR. SCHACHNER-The forty foot is in 179-70.
MR. BREWER-I'm looking for the width of the access, Mark.
MR. HARLICKER-That was done in a letter from the Fire Marshall, is
how I asked him for it, because it came up in another four lot
subdivision. I think it was the Cardinale subdivision, off of
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Peggy Ann there.
MR. PALING-Okay.
It's not in here.
MR. HARLICKER-No.
I don't believe it is.
MR. BREWER-It's not in the Subdivision design standards?
MR. HARLICKER-I don't think so.
MR. STEVES--Tom (Nace) just told me that, in the past, the
application has been t2 feet wide and 20 foot clear.
MR. BREWER-And that's not a problem on this?
MR. STEVES-No.
MR. BREWER-Because you have 31 feet.
MR. STEVES-Yes.
MR. BREWER --Okay.
MR. RUEL-I just want to confirm one thing.
lot 3?
You will reconfigure
MR. STEVES-The .67 acre lot, reconfigure that to include the shed.
MR. RUEL-To meet the setback requirements?
MR. STEVES-Yes.
MR. RUEL-Okay. Thank you.
see a number on it.
That's lot three, isn't it?
I don't
MR. STEVES-Not really. No, because it's an existing lot and we're
reconfiguring it by boundary line adjustment.
MR. BREWER-So that doesn't have to meet the one acre. Okay. I'll
open the pub Ii c hear i ng . Is ther e anyone her e to commen t on th is?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
PAUL REYNOLDS
MR. REYNOLDS-My name is Paul Reynolds, and own the property
directly across the street from this property, and I notice here in
the notice of request for subdivision, there's no reason given.
There's no reason given for dividing up the property into three
lots. The reason I have is about a year ago, this property, there
was an attempt to use this property as a business, to sell used
car. There was a sign that was directly in front of the property
for a short time, which was since removed, and I believe there was
business conducted on the property, residential property. So I
have a very obvious reason for understanding what's happening to
that property. 1'm not sure that the business has stopped
completely. We've had people come to my house looking for
directions for someone who wants to sell a used car, and that's my
concern.
MR. MACEWAN-Are they selling just a single automobile, or are they
selling numerous automobiles?
MR. REYNOLDS-Numerous, to the best of my knowledge. When you erect
a sign indicating the name of your company in front of the
property, as a used car lot, you obviously are selling more than
one. Now I'm not sure that that has been corrected. The sign has
been removed.
MR. HARLICKER-Have there been cars out front, or any cars on the
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property, or anything?
MR. REYNOLDS-It's a very large setback, and there's an unusual
amount of traffic going back and forth.
MR. BREWER-Well, wasn't there a variance or something applied for
for that? I remember conversation, or maybe it was just asked if
that could happen there.
MR. LEUCI-Well, we'r~ just asking to just, the reason that we're
subdividing is· so that we can build our own house. My name is Joe
Leuci and I'm the owner of the property, and to answer your
question, the reason we're doing it is to build our own house on
the other lot that we're subdividing, our own, personal house.
MR. REYNOLDS-There's no intent, then, to make this a business?
MR. LEUCI-No.
MR. BREWER-Is that it, sir? Thank you.
to conunen t?
Is there anyone else here
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. BREWER-Okay. We have to do a Short Form on this.
RESOLUTION WHEN DETERMINATION OF NO SIGNIFICANCE IS MADE
RESOLUTION NO. 5-19~~, Introduced by Craig MacEwan who moved for
its adoption, seconded by Roger Ruel:
WHEREAS, there
application for:
is presently before the
.JOSEPH &. MAR IA LEUCI, and
Planning
Board
an
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
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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 signifi.cant
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
negative declaration that may be required by law.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel,
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Mr. Paling, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
MR. BREWER-All right, before we make a motion, lets get all the
things that we want done, Leon. We want the setback of the septic,
well location, and we've got to get a letter about waivers. We
h a vet 0 g ran t tho s e , a Iso. Wed 0 n 't h a vet 0 dot h em ton i g h t .
Would you rather tonight or at final?
MR. STEVES-It doesn't matter to me.
MR. BREWER-Well, if we're going to grant them, I'd just as soon do
it tonight and not have to worry about remembering.
MR. RUEL-What's that for?
MR. BREWER-The contour requirement, drainage, and the grading. So,
if somebody would care to offer that, we can add that in.
MOTION TO APPROVE PRELIMINARY STAGE SUBDIVI S ION NO. 5-1994 JOSEPH
&. MARIA LEUCI, Introduced by Roger Ruel who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Robert Paling:
As written.
Whereas, the Town Planning Department is in receipt of
preliminary subdivision application, file # 5-1994, to subdivide a
+ 10 acre parcel into two lots of 9+ acres and 1+ acres; and
Whereas, the above referenced preliminary subdivision
application, dated 4/26/94 consists of the following:
1. Sheet 1, Map of survey made for Joseph and Mar ia Leuci,
dated 4/26/94; and
Whereas, the above file is supported with the following
documentation:
1. Staff notes, dated 5/26/94
2. Letter from Leon Steves, agent, requesting waivers, dated
4/27/94; and
Whereas, a public hearing was held on 5/26/94 concerning the
above subdivision; and
Whereas, the proposed subdivision has been submitted to the
appropriate town departments and outside agencies for their review
and comment; and
Whereas, the requirements of the State Environmental Quality
Review Act have been considered; and
Whereas, the proposed subdivision is subject to the following
modifications and terms of the plat in final form:
With the modification to reconfigure the .67 acre lot to meet
setback requirements for the shed, and also we grant a request for
the waiver for contour requirement, drainage, and grading.
Therefore, Be It Resolved, as follows:
The Town Planning Board, after considering the above, hereby
move to approve with modifications preliminary stage
subdivision Joseph & Maria Leuci, file # 5-1994.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
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AYES: Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling,
Mr. Stark, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
SITE PLAN NO. 17-94 TYPE: UNLISTED STEVEN SOLIMANTO OWNER:
TORRINGTON CONSTRUCTION ZONE: IIC-IA, SR-IA LOCATION: RT. 149,
EAST TO RT. 91., LOCATED ON THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF RT. 149 AND 91..
PREPARATION OF' LAND FOR A FARMER'S MARKET ON A 3 ACRE PORTION OF A
+ 25 ACRE PARCEL.
STEVEN SOLIMANTO AND PATRICIA SOLIMANTO, PRESENT
MR. BREWER-Okay.
presume you have all the answers we want.
MR. SOLIMANTO-Steve Solimanto and Patricia Solimanto.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Would you kind of briefly tell us what you're
going to do? After our discussion last week, we wanted.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-The parking lot got changed a little, because you
wanted the two way entrance onto Ridge.
MR. BREWER-So you've kept your entrance on 149.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Strictly in.
MR. BREWER-How does that flow work?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Well, I've spoken to Herb Steffens, on several
occasions, and talked to Jim Martin, and we have it 50 feet from
the entrance of Stewarts, heading toward the Queensbury Golf
Course, and it's strictly an in entrance.
MR. BREWER-You have it 50 feet from, where?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Fifty feet away from Stewarts' entrance.
MR. BREWER-Okay. So that puts you right in front of Walkers.
MR. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. BREWER-And your exits are where?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Strictly on Ridge, and all the vendors will be
required to enter on Ridge only. After we closed, we would chain
off the access to get into 149 in the evening, and we wouldn't open
it until morning.
MR. BREWER-Wait a minute.
I'm confused here.
MR. PALING-There's one entrance on Ridge Road which is in/out,
right?
MRS. SOLIMANTO,-Yes. That's what you wanted.
MR. PALING-Okay, and then on Route 149, what is t11is, out only?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-No, strictly in.
MR. PALING-This is in only.
MR. RUEL-One way in.
MR. BREWER-I don't see the entrance/exit on Ridge.
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MR. OBERMAYER-Right up here, Ridge Road entrance.
MR. RUEL-Okay.
I see.
MR. BREWER-All right, way down here.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I tried to make that in as much detail as possible.
MR. PALING-I've got it now. So you're in here, and this is in/out.
MR. BREWER-All right. I guess I have a question. We talked about,
last week you were going to have your vendors tear everything down,
every night, and remove it, and then bring it back in the morning?
That's the case. So there'l1 be nothing left there at night?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-If we have someone that would like to, like, do you
know what arbors, what arbors are, like a square arbor? If they
want to use something like that for hanging their plants or things
like that, that would be okay, but that is only on the condition
that they're going to be there for a while.
MR. MACEWAN-So then you're going to be operating seven days a week
until the 10th of September.
MR. BREWER-Change from seven to seven, to nine to nine.
d
MR. PALING-How far does your property go beyond the 250 foot
distance you've got here?
MR. SOLIMANTO-Twenty-five acres.
MR. PALING-Twenty-five acres?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. PALING-Okay, and this is where you're going to put an office,
now, which you didn't show before, right?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-That's for the bathroom facilities.
MR. PALING-Okay, bathroom and office.
about it.
Okay. We don't know much
MR. OBERMAYER-Will the bathroom be a tank? Is that what it's going
to be? I mean, what is the bathroom going to drain into? I was
just curious.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-} have done my homework.
MR. HARLICKER-Well, what did you decide on for the septic system?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We were going to go, rather than going with the
holding tank that has the elaborate alarm system.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. You'd have to get a variance to do that, also.
So that's good.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We' would rather go with the septic with the
leachfield.
MR. HARLICKER-Okay, and the question also came up, what about
water?
MRS. SOLIMANTO--We're having A-I Water Wagon from Schenectady bring
in a 500 gallon holding tank that's been New York State Safety
approved.
MR. HARLICKER-I can't answer that, if that's acceptable or not.
MR. RUEL-Isn't this parking area going to be nothing but mud in
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certain months of the year?
way to December, right?
Because you're going to run all the
.
MR. BREWER-No, September 10th.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I have to go over another part with you. I talked
to Rus sO' Connor. He's go i ng to be do i lìg the exca va t i ng and Hie
gravel, for the parking lots, the driveway. It's going to be
Number Two Stone with the dust.
MR. HARLICKER-Number Four, Number Two, with the dust stuff on top.
MR. BREWER-I guess something that confuses me a little bit, you
have vendors lined up?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-No.
MR. BREWER-Then how can you put on here what's going to be where?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Because this is what I want and this is how I'd like
to have it done, and being that the last time you asked me the size
of the building, I figured I better show you where they're going to
be set up.
MR. BREWER-Okay. just was curious. If you don't have any
vendors, I don't know how you're going to say that silver and gold
is going to be here, and herbs and health food are going to be over
here.
MR. RUEL-It's called optimism.
MR. BREWER-Okay. There's nothing wrong with that.
MR. OBERMAYER-That's right. Are you going to have a generator? Do
you have any electrical services on this site, so the office will
be?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We're going to bring in electricity, at some point,
for the 0 f f ice. We' reg 0 i n g to h a v e . Rig h t now we h a v e soma n y
things to jump on all at once. Trying to find a water tank was
unreal.
MR. OßERMAYER·-Yes. You're going to have hot water, you'll need
electricity or a generator, or something.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-But we will do everything to Code.
MR. RUEL-There'll be no lights in this area, right, in the vendor
area?
MRS. SOLIMANTO--I don't think it will be necessary.
daylight hours, in the summer.
These are
MR. RUEL-As SOOIì as it gets dark, that's it.
MR. BREWER-Well, in September it's not going to be real light out
at nine o'clock at night.
MR. RUEL-No.
.
MR. BREWER-The earlier it gets dark, the earlier you're going to
shut down, I presume?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-That's why I wanted to bring up with you, in the off
season, our opening days will be cut back and the hours will be cut
back, and what I'd rather do is come back to you, in August, and
say, this is what I'd like to have.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
approved, anyway
I would like to revisit it after awhile, if it is
just to see how things do work, conditional
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approval that they come back before the Board to revisit in August,
or they offered August as a date.
MR. STARK-Okay.
MR. OBERMAYER-Are you going to show 'us any details on the septic
system or what you plan for the water?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We're working everything out with Dave.
Dave wants, that's what we're going to do.
Whatever
MR. HARLICKER-Dave Hatin, of the Building and Codes Department.
MR. MACEWAN-Well, as part of their site plan approval. They would
need to have a septic configuration for us, wouldn't they?
MR. HARLICKER-Well, getting into the specifics, it's kind of hard
to show w.here it will be.
MR. MACEWAN-Well, you need to know the approximation, where it's
going to be located, yes.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-It's very hard to reach Dave.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. It doesn't appear that because of the size of
the site, that there would be any problems siting the septic system
on it.
MR. BREWER-I think if we make some kind of a, as long as it meets
the standards of the Town.
MR. HARLICKER-Standards, yes.
the Building Department.
They have to get a permit through
MR. BREWER-I think that would be appropriate.
else?
Okay.
Anything
MR. RUEL-I still have another question about the driveways. I see
on Route 149, in and out for customers, right?
MR. MACEWAN-No.
In only.
MR. RUEL-One way, just in for customers, and over on Ridge Road,
you have in and out for vendors and customers. I see.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We want all the vendors to come in onto Ridge.
MR. RUEL-But when a customer comes in on Ridge Road, travels the
full length of that, they reach the end over there, and then it
says one way, doesn't it? It says, out.
MR. OBERMAYER-Four by eight sign.
MR. MACEWAN-It's two way traffic here.
MR. RUEL--Yes. Okay. You come down here and it says, out, right?
MR. MACEWAN-Well, that's for people coming out of the parking lot,
so that they don't go out that way.
MR. OBERMAYER-How wide, is this an existing gravel road?
MR. -IARLICKER-No. There's nothing there right now.
MR. OBERMAYER-There's nothing there right now.
road going to be?
How wide is that
MRS. SOLIMANTO-The one coming in?
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MR. OBERMAYER-The one that's two way, in and out.
MR. HARLICKER-One square is ten feet. It looks like it's twenty
feet wide.
MR. RUEL-This is all saying one way.
MR. BREWER-One way in, Roger, one way in at 149. Okay. Are you
all set with that question, Roger? ~
MR. RUEL-Yes. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-All right. Jim?
MR. OBERMAYER-I wonder if you could tell me how wide this in and
out driveway will be, the one coming off of Ridge.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-That's a preexisting so, it's up to Code.
MR. OBERMAYER-The curb cut is already there?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-It's preexisting.
MR. BREWER-I went by it today, it's a pretty good sized driveway.
Trucks go in there and dump.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We will have to upgrade it a little.
MR. BREWER-And you're going to have to level that fill that's in
there now, anyway.
MR. OBERMAYER-Well, Russ O'Connor does good work.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Anything else?
MR. PALING-We had quite a laundry list of items last time, and we
don't have a copy of that list now.
MR. MACEWAN-I do.
MR. PALING-You do.
their time or ours.
Good. Then lets do it now,
Have they met everything?
so we don't waste
MR. MACEWAN-Hours and days of operation they've answered.
control has been answered. Access has been answered. Most all
buffering has been answered. Vegetation's been answered,
bathroom facilities has been answered.
Dust
the
and
MR. PALING-Good. No.
I don't have anymore questions.
MR. MACEWAN-I have two questions. What's the width of the buffer
on Ridge Road?
MRS. SOLIMANTO--That I wanted to discuss with you.
guardrail. What is the requirement?
There is a
MR. BREWER-I don't think it abuts any other zone, so I don't think
there li a requirement.
MR. HARLICKER-Not so much a buffer zone, but a setback up there.
MR. RUEL-It's 50 on 149.
MR. HARLICKER-Highway Commercial, you've got to be 50 feet off the
property line. ~
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Okay, then it would come in 50.
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MR. RUEL-Fifty?
MR. HARLICKER-Fifty feet.
MR. RUEL-The same as 149.
MR. BREWER-Yes. You've got this marked as a buffer, and it doesn't
necessarily have to be a buffer. It has to be a setback, not a
buffer. There's a big difference. If it's a buffer, you're going
to have to provide a buffer. If it's a setback, you've just got to
be back that far. If you want to provide a buffer, that's fine.
MR. MACEWAN-Well, what I was getting at and driving at, I mean,
she's talking about, they're going to seed wildflowers on the 149
side, was that your intent, doing something along that, on the
Ridge Road side?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Instead of leaving it all funny looking.
MR. MACEWAN-Because that's the way I remember it being now, is
there's some kind of vegetation in there, wild weeds, and all that
sort of stuff. I don't have a problem with leaving it that way.
That's illY opinion, but when you were saying buffer, I was trying to .
get from you what you're intending on doing.
MR. BREWER-I think she just got confused a little bit.
MRS. SOL IMANTO-We I I , I think you called it a buffer, did you not?
That's why I used that word.
MR. BREWER-I think we talked about a buffer over on the side where
John Bowman, he was concerned about a buffer where his property
adjoins it.
MR. MACEWAN-Right.
MR. BREWER-And that will have a buffer.
MR. MACEWAN-Right.
width on there.
On the parking area, you have a forty foot
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-Cars are going to be parked diagonally as you show it
here. Is that going to be enough room for cars to park on both
sides, with a drive lane in the middle? Figure the average car is
twenty foot long.
MR. BREWER-How big does the parking space have to be?
MR. HARLICKER-Nine by twenty.
MR. BREWER-Nine by twenty. So you haven't got enough room.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I haven't got enough room? It's got to be wider?
MR. BREWER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-You park your cars, you're not going to be able to get
them out.
MR. BREWER-Well, if a parking space has to be nine by twenty.
MR. HARLICKER-Each parkil1g space needs to be twenty feet long and
nine feet wide.
MR. BREWER-Arc we getting into something that we should?
MR. SCHACHNER-Yes, it's fair game.
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MR. BREWER-I mean, because if they are, then they're going to have
to mark the parking spaces.
MR. SCHACHNER-You don't have to require they be marked.
MR. HARLICKER-You just have to show that there's room.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. SCHACHNER-Let me also say, for the record, I meant to say this.
If you ask me a~y questions, my firm has represented the Solimantos
in the past, on completely unrelated matters, but I wanted to point
that out for the record, if for any reason anybody wants me not to
advise the Board on this. I have no problem doing that, and I
don't imagine the Solimantos do either, but if they·'do, I would
certainly respect that.
MR. BREWER-Well, it seems, 250 feet back. How far is it from YOllr
parking here to this?
MR. HARLICKER-Well, it's 620 feet across the front. So you're 400
feet.
MR. BREWER-So you're 400 feet. So you've got, just make it wider.
That's all.
MR. RUEL-It has to be about 55 to 60 feet.
MR. MACEWAN-Sixty feet would be ample.
MR. RUEL-Right. Sixty would be fine.
MR. MACEWAN-With a twenty foot drive lane.
MR. HARLICKER-Twenty feet for each parking aisle, and a twenty foot
access road in the middle.
MR. MACEWAN-My last question I have for you, how mobile is your
mobile office? What is it?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-It's going to be picked up and moved after the
season's allover.
MR. MACEWAN-I mean, is it an RV? Is it a holiday trailer? What is
it? Like a construction trailer mobile office, that type of thing?
MR. SOLIMANTO-Yes, set in the back, way in the back. Once you set
into the septic system, it will be set there.
MR. MACEWAN-And the rest room facilities will be in that trailer?
MR. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-And that will be for vendors only?
MR. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. ßREWER--Okay.
MR. MACEWAN-It will not be used by the general public?
MR. SOLIMANTO-No.
MR. BREWER-I can't imagine the general public having to be there
any longer than they would be at.
MR. MACEWAN-If they're getting a tattoo, they'll be there a while.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-No, not those kind.
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MR. MACEWAN-Rub ons.
MR. OBER!)ð.AYER--You' ve got rub on tattoos.
MR. BREWER-You go to LARAC and there's no bathrooms there.
MR. RUEL-Tim, I have a question. What is
buffer zone? What must it contain? Here
wildflowers, right?
the definition of a
we're going to have
MR. BREWER-It's not a buffer, Roger. That's the confusion.
a setback requirement, not a buffer.
It's
MR.IIARLICKER-Yes. A buffer's not required along there. The
buffer would be required between them and the residential property
to the east.
MR. RUEL-I see. Okay.
MR. BREWER-Right here is what a buffer zone is. Unpaved natural
area without buildings designed to reduce possibility of adverse
impact on land or water quality and/or conflicts of land use
between two or more areas. No parking or storage of vehicles of .
any kind or objects associated with the use of this property is
permitted. When not inhibited with natural wooded plants, i.e.
trees and shFubs, sufficient to visually screen adjoining uses or
such zones, such buffer areas shall be planted, regraded, and/or
fenced. That's what a buffer zone is.
MR. RUEL-Okay. Thanks.
MR. MACEWAN-If you are approved, how soon do you think you would be
up and running?
MR. SOLIMANTO-Probably we'd be looking towards, at least the end of
June.
MR. RUEL-The end of June.
MR. MACEWAN-You feel you'd be in operation, then, by the fourth of
July holiday?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I hope.
MR. BREWER-Hopefully before then.
MR. SOLIMANTO-Yes, hopefully before then.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Anybody else on the Board? Okay. I'll re-open
the public hearing. Is there anybody here to conment?
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
JOHN BOWMAN
MR. BOWMAN-I '01 John Bowman. I'm a neighbor to the west of the
proposed farmers market. I have a question to do with the mobile
office, and also, :from 149 south, the 250 feet. It seems the 200
foot buffer between the proposed business and our property, but
then if you go beyond the 250 feet, from north·to south, is this
taking ur more than the three acres they propose to use?
MR. MACEWAN-I don't think so.
MR. BOWMAN-Okay. The second question. I notice the mobile office
is taking up half of the 200 foot buffer.
MR. BREWER-What do you mean half of 250?
mean?
Way in the back, you
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MR. BOWMAN-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Well, the buffer, legally, only has to be 50 foot.
MR. BOWMAN-Well, then, what they said last week doesn't mean
anything.
MR. BREWER-Your property is where on this? This is 149.
property here, right here?
Is your
MR. BOWMAN-Wel'l, if you're looking at the map, it would be to your
right, unless you've got yours upside down, or I have mine, I don't
know.
MR. BREWER-This is 149, right here.
MR. BOWMAN-If you put it one way, the bottom half is right side up.
If you turn it over.
MR. HARLICKER-Look on the end where the Q is on there, that side of
the map.
-
MR. BOWMAN·-It's very confusing because the paper's upside down.
Everything is then drawn that way. Anyway, if you're looking at
149.
MR. BREWER-I'm looking right at 149 on the top of the map. Put 149
on the top of the map. Now we're looking at the map the same way.
MR. BOWMAN-Yes, but everything else is upside down.
MR. BREWER-Well, it doesn't make any difference. We're just using
this as 149.
MR. BOWMAN--And then it would be to your lef t.
MR. BREWER-To your left. They've just eliminated 20 feet of that
buffer they were going to provide between where their parking was
last week and your land.
MR. BOWMAN-So it's not 20, 1 ike they said.
MR. BREWER-It's 180.
Is that sufficient buffer for you?
MR. BOWMAN-Yes,
suppose.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. BOWMAN-I hope so, and why is the mobile home even less than
that, the mobile office?
MR. BREWER-We can have them move it over.
It's not a problem.
MR. BOWMAN-This is my question.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. OBERMAYER-Why can't you just move the mobile office on this
field right here?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Because we would like to situate it in between the
trees, so it's not so visible. We're trying to keep that natural
field look, as much as possible, and the trailer is only 10 by 40.
MR. BREWER-Ten by forty?
MR. OBERMAYER-That's pretty good size.
MR. BREWER-That is pretty good size.
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MRS. SOLIMANTO-That's the only size they have (lost word).
MR. BOWMAN-That's where the bathroom's going to be?
MR. BREWER-For the vendors only, not for patrons. There's going to
be a holding tank full of water, and there's going to be a septic
system that goes into the ground.
MR. BOWMAN-Okay. That's all I have. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Thank you.
Is there anyone else?
ROBERT MARTINDALE
MR. MARTINDALE-I'm Robert Martindale. How many parking spots are
there total?
MR. BREWER-Last week there was, 60.
MR. MARTINDALE-Sixty parking spots?
MR. IIARL I CKER--They , showing the here, 43.
re on new map,
MR. BREWER-So they , cut that down.
ve
MR. MART I NDALE--How many, to ta I ?
MR. BREWER-Forty-three.
MR. OBERMAYER-It says, 43.
MR. MARTI NDAL E - So i f you h a v e 60 v end 0 r s, wit h t r u c k s, t r a i I e r s ,
maybe two people, where are they parking?
MR. BREWER-Good point.
MR. RUEL-There's a vendor parking area.
MR. MARTINDALE-And if you figure maybe two cars per spot, could it
be, two cars per vendor, somebody coming off the road? That means
you should have at least 120 parking spots.
MR. BREWER-They're only showing 27 vendors on here, Robert, well,
three rows of nine.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Plus the sides.
MR. BREWER-Plus the sides. Four rows of nine.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Some of the vendors will be bringing in an RV. A
lot of vendors are bringing in RV's, and they sellon the perimeter
around the RV. They would not be allowed to (lost word). That is
one of the rules. I have another separate set of rules for.RV's.
MR. BREWER-I would like to see all the rules, because you said last
week everybody's going to pick everything up every night, and
that's your regulation, not mine.
..
MRS. SOLIMANTO-This is my rough draft, if you'd like to look at my
rough draft, but I need this back. I couldn:t finish it fast
enough.
MR. BREWER-I just don't want to go by there at night and have a
mobile home park there.
MR. OBERMAYER-Are
electrical outlets
any of the vendors
or anything like that?
going
to
require
any
MRS. SOLIMAN TO-I hope not.
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MR. BREWER-Okay.
Let Mr. Martindale continue with his question.
MR. MARTINDALE-So how many, there's only, what, 43 parking spots?
MR. BREWER-For patrons.
MR. MARTINDALE-For patrons, but what happens if there's one patron
for each vendor, then you don't have enough parking spots.
MR. MACEWAN-There's a separate area for vendors to park in.
MR. MARTINDALE-No, that's not my question. I got the vendor part.
They're going to park in the back, or wherever, but if there's 43
parking spots, total, and you have 60 vendors, isn't it possible
that maybe one car will come in for each vendor, and there's not
enough parking.
MR. BREWER-That's every business' hope, to fill up the parking lot,
all the time.
MR. MARTINDALE-Yes,
thought.
know, but that's what planning's about,
MR. BREWER-Well, it is, but.
.
MR. MARTINDALE-That's only reasonable.
MR. BREWER-I understand, but if there's a parking requirement, does
the parking requirement apply to this, Jim? If there's potentially
60 vendors, does the parking requirement apply to this?
MR. MARTIN-The parking requirement from the standpoint of?
MR. SCHACIINER--These are the proposed vendors, there are 60 proposed
vendors, and the question is, is the question, is there a parking
requirement?
MR. BREWER-Yes.
MR. MARTIN-What's happened, historically, in the past, is when a
use is proposed that's not identified in our use schedule, like a
recent one that comes to mind is a video store, for example,
there's no use in our parking schedule for that. It's been the
Board's discretion to arrive at an adequate parking standard, and
there's nothing in a requirement of the Ordinance, no.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. MARTIN-I would say, in this case, you're talking about,
essentially, retail sales, which is the most intensive use, in
terms of parking, that we have in our schedule. I think it's one
per hundred square feet. So, using that, maybe, as a standard,
that might be helpful. How many square feet are individual booths?
MR. SOLIMANTO-They're 200.
MR. MARTIN-So it may be two spaces per booth, or something like
that, would be.
MR. MARTINDALE-That's 120 parking spots.
MR. RUEL-We're talking about customer and vendor.
MR. MARTIN-Right. The retai I standard is set to accorrunodate both
the employee of the establishment as well as.
MR. RUEL-The one per one hundred square feet.
MR. MARTIN-Right, as well as the customer.
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MR. BREWER-All right. So you're talking 120.
for patrons, this makes it more complicated.
So if he's got 43
MR . STARK - Tim, J i nllny jus t s aid t hat you 0 n I y nee d 0 n e per
because one is for the vendor, and they've already got
parking, and then one would be for the customer.
thing,
vendor
MR. BREWER-So all he has to have, Jim, is 60, for patrons?
MR. MARTI N -- No. The s tan d a r din r eta i lis 0 n e per
feet, and that takes into account both patrons
operator, or the employee.
hundred
and the
square
vendor
MR. BREWER-I guess what I'm confused about is he's got two separate
parking areas. This is for vendors only. This is for patrons.
He's got 43 shown here. So if he was to put 60 over here, and 60
over here for the, you know, I understand what you're saying, and
I appreciate it, but there's no ~uarantee there's going to be 60
vendors.
MR. MARTINDALE-Yes, but there's no guarantee there might be 120 at
one time, too.
MR. BREWER-There won't be 120. They haven't got room for 120.
MR. MARTINDALE-All right. Then where are the people park? Are
they going to park along the road, if there's no room to get in, if
they want to stop? I mean, you're not going to be able to police
that. There's no way you're going to be able to police that.
MR. HARLICKER-Could you enlarge the area that you have dedicated
for patron parking?
MRS. SOL IMANTO-When I ta I ked to Mr. 0' Connor, Rus sO' Connor,
asked him, if this does take off, if it does do well, 180 foot
buffer zone, we would expand it a little, but we would do up to
Code.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. You can show X amount of parking, provided you
show space that's reserved for future parking, if needed. You've
done that before, also.
MR. BREWER-So I guess what we have to decide is, well, we don't
h a vet 0 de c ide, be c a use it' s are qui r em en t . He has to h a vel 20 ,
right?
MR. MARTIN-Well, it's not a firm requirement. I'm just saying,
ma y bet hat's ago 0 d g u ide 1 i n e , i nth i sin s tan c e, w her ewe don' t
have a specific use in the parking schedule. This is retail sales,
and retail sales is that one per hundred. That might be a good
gauge in trying to set a parking standard, because you really don't
have an Ordinance guide to go by.
MR. STARK-Tim, we ought to require at least 20 more, anyway.
MR. MARTINDALE-So if they have a 200 foot area that they're
selling, and they need two spots, one for the vendor, and one for
somebody else.
MR. MARTIN-Well, no.
for somebody else.
It's not dictated by one før the vendor,
It's dictated by the square footage.
one
MR. MARTINDALE-Right.
feet.
They said it's 10 by 20, that's 200 square
MR. MARTIN-Right.
So that would be two spaces.
MR. MARTINDALE-Two spaces, and that is for, one for the vendor,
possibly, or none for the vendor and two for patrons.
- 22 -
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MR. OBERMAYER-It's just total, square footage.
.
MR. MARTIN-Right.
MR . MARTI NDAL E - Tot a I, sot hen the y s h 0 u I don I y nee d 60, be c a use
they've got separate parking for the vendors.
MR. BREWER-Okay. So we can make that 20 foot wider. Now it's down
to 160, Mr. Bowman.
MR. OBERMAYER-No, they have enough.
MR. BREWER-How can they have enough?
MR. OBERMAYER-Because they have 43 for the patrons, and then they
have the parking for the vendors. Right, you need 60 for the
patrons.
MR. BREWER-You've got to make that 20 foot wider.
MR. OBERMAYER-I mean, you could make this a zone for future, YOll
know, make the 20 feet, if they have a problem, they can always
hang on to it, right?
MR. BREWER-Yes, we can do that.
MR. OBERMAYER-We can do that, and that way, see how business is.
You might only ten people in there.
MR. BREWER-Then that way it doesn't make them, it makes them put
the 43 in, then if need be, they've got room to go the extra 20.
MR. OBERMAYER-Right.
think that's a fair way to do it.
MR. MARTINDALE-It's just that I travel 149, and I don't want to see
cars parked along side of the road.
MR. BREWER-I understand.
MR. MARTINDALE-The next thing is, bathrooms for the public, there's
none.
MR. BREWER--None.
MR. MARTINDALE-What happens to somebody that's riding for an hour
and they haven't had a bathroom, and they see this spot they want
to stop, and the little kid's got to go to the bathroom? What are
you going to do?
MR. BREWER-They don't stop. They go to Len and Peg's, or go, what
if it wasn't there, what would they do?
MR. MARTINDALE-They wouldn't stop, but now they stop for 15, 20
minutes.
MR. OBERMAYER-Well,
have other places.
site.
they've got Stewarts across the road. They
I mean, you can't, specifically, pick on this
MR. BREWER-Do you have a bathroom at your place where you sell
vegetables?
MR. MARTINDALE-Yes.
MR. BREWER-For patrons?
MR. MARTINDALE-No.
MR. BREWER-I rest my case.
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MR. MARTINDALE-We don't have 60 vendors there either, Tim.
MR. BREWER-I understand.
MR. MARTINDALE--And they aren't there for a half an hour looking
around, either.
MR. BREWER-I understand that, lets get off of that. All right.
MR. MARTI NDAL E - A I I rig h t, 1 4 9 en t ran c e . W hat hap pen s to, i s t his
an entrance that people come in for both sides, east and west, or
is it just from the, say the Golf Course going towards Fort Ann?
Can they come in from, say, coming back from the other way?
MR. MACEWAN-In only, east bound.
MR. HARLICKER-There's no way to regulate. They could come in from
either direction.
MR. BREWER-Either direction.
MR. HARLICKER-What happens if somebody comes through the light, and
tries to get in, and the traffic's coming this way, and stops, and
they can't get in, and the traffic backs way past the light?
MR. BREWER-Then it backs up. I understand your concern.
concern about it myself.
I have a
MR. MARTINDALE-Okay, and I don't want to dictate what the name is,
but I don't see this as a farmer's market. I see it as a flea
market or something like that. It's very misleading to be calling
it a farmer's market, where most farmers aren't selling gold and
silver and cut glass and all this other stuff. You probably have
nothing to say about, but I think that's very misleading to the
public, and people corning by. That's all I have to say.
MR. BREWER--Okay. Thank you.
MR. MARTINDALE-One other thing. Excuse me. At
the meeting last week, they went over impacts
everything like this, and they said that this
traffic impact on Route 149. Is that correct?
just kind of summarizing what was going on?
the beginning of
on the road and
would not be a
In your reading,
MR. HARLICKER-¥es, significant. It will have an impact, but I'd
say, to generate, do they need a traffic study for this.
MR. MARTINDALE-What I'm getting at is, we are going for a proposed,
something happening on our property, which is on 149, not even near
a light, and it was supposed to cause severe traffic impact, and we
only have just us as ourselves, where we've got 60 vendors in here,
and you say it's not going to be a traffic impact. I don't see how
that's justified.
MR. HARLICKER-There'll be an impact on the traffic. I didn't say
there wasn't going to be. I said it's a quantifiable thing.
MR. MARTINDALE- I'd I ike to start at the beginning and read that
again, so we can see exactly what it did say, if that's possible.
MR. BREWER-Read what?
MR. MARTINDALE-At the beginning of the meeting last week, you went
o v e r, jus t summa r y 0 f .
MR. BREWER-The SEQRA review?
MR. MARTINDALE-I don't know what it was called, where the traffic
impact, is there going to be a traffic impact or not, and they
said, minimum traffic impact.
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MR. BREWER-All right. You're talking about Staff Notes.
MR. MARTINDALE-Yes.
MR. HARLICKER-Yes. What is was, it says, access to the site will
be from a curb cut to be placed opposite the existing entrance to
Stewarts. Applicant has indicated that this is a preferred
location by DOT. A letter from DOT confirming this has not been
received as of this date.
,;
MR. MARTINDALE-That's not what I was asking.
MR. BREWER-What were you asking?
MR. MARTINDALE-About the traffic impacts.
MR. HARLICKER-Okay. The other thing here says that there was found
to be no significant impact on the road system.
MR. MARTINDALE-No significant impact, but yet we're not that far
away, and ours was supposed to be a severe impact?
MR. STARK-We're not talking about.
MR. OBERMAYER-That's not what the discussion is tonight.
MR. BREWER-Yes, we're not talking about your specific location.
MR. MARTINDALE-Yes, but I'm just getting into saying, well, why can
you say there it is not, where, on ours it was?
MR. MACEWAN-Probably because of the fact that there was a light
there at that intersection which would help regulate the traffic,
and make it flow even better.
MR. MARTINDALE-Not when the traffic is backed up.
trying to pull in, like I said earlier.
If they're
MR. BREWER-Okay. You made your point.
would like to comment?
Is there anyone else who
JOHN WALKER
MR. WALKER-My name is John Walker. I'm directly across from the
proposed site. You're talking about traffic impact, I would invite
anyone to come out and sit at my place one day, and you watch the
traffic, without their business, you watch what the traffic is
today. You watch the tractor trailers going through there. You
watch the number of tractor trailers that are running that traffic
light. I don't mean caution light. I mean an out and out red
light, and there's been some good accidents there already, and
you're going to have traffic turning on and off from 149 in and
e a s t e r I y and i n awe s t e r I y d ire c t ion. It' s not v e r y far, ma y be
three, four car lengths, from where they're going to be turning to
the light, and you back traffic up into that light.
MR. BREWER-I was up there today, John, just to let you know, it's
four cars and a tractor trailer, right to your door. I sat there
and watched it myself today, and I had a concern, last week, about
the exit and the entrance on 149, and it was mY. sentiment that it
should be an entrance and an exit on 9L, which is Ridge, that's
what 1 would prefer. That's just illY opinion. I don't know about
the rest of the Board.
MR. WALKER-It's a bad intersection.
It's a bad spot.
MR. BREWER-It is, and I agree with you.
-
MR. WALKER-I hold my breath. I hear tractor trailers hitting their
air horns in front of my place, and you know inunediately that this
25
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guy has no intention of stopping, from both directions. I mean,
it's not a good place to have an on and off right there, believe
me. I wasn't here last week. There's several questions. Maybe
they've been answered already. What are the hours of operation?
MR. BREWER-Nine to nine.
MR. WALKER-Nine Lo nine. Okay. You've got traffic from a westerly
direction. This guy is coming from the west. He wants to pull in
here. !-Ie's going to have to cut across traffic, and the same
thing, th,is guy corning easterly, he's (lost traffic), but coming
from a westerly direction, you've got to cut across a lane of
traffic, and you get people coming down through there, and all of
a sudden, they're not familiar, gee, there's a nice place to stop,
and they hit the brakes and try to go across, or they hi t the
brakes and there's no room to go across, and I don't know if you've
been out there. I've been on that highway nine years now. I've
seen some bad accidents at that intersection, and I can tell you,
truthfully, how they drive that highway. It is unreal how they
drive that highway. If the State Police, if the County Sheriff's
Department, both Warren and Washington, were to enforce some speed
limits on that highway, it would not be as treacherous, but it is
very, very treacherous. El ectr ic. You're going to be open from
nine to nine. You're going to have people tearing down at night,
after nine o'clock. What are you going to provide for lighting
here, and how late at night is this going to take place? I mean,
we were made all kinds of promises by Stewarts, when they put that
place in there, and Stewarts has broken every promise they ever
ma de. We h a v e , the y , I' eon I y sup p 0 sed to ma ked e 1 i v e r i e s bet wee n
eight and five, and that's a joke. We have tankers in there after
those hours at night in the early morning, the middle of the night.
We have lights on. They weren't supposed to be open, only until
eleven o'clock at night, and now some nights you have lights on all
night long, so on and so forth. You said you ~ going to provide
electricity. If this thing gets approved, I would like ~ much
to see a stipulation put in there that no generators be run on the
property. Generators can create much noise there.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-We have no plans for anything.
MR. WALKER-Well, that's no plans. I'd like to see something put in
stone. Caste in stone. Well, we can make that part of the motion.
Are you going to work seven days a week?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I work seventy hours a week in the sumner.
MR. WALKER-I'm asking, are you going to run this thing seven days
a week.
MR. BREWER-Yes.
They are.
MR. WALKER-Okay.
MR. BREWER-As time goes on, and business drops off, they're going
to cut back, as well as the with the hours. When it starts getting
dark at eight o'clock, they're going to back off to seven o'clock,
six o'clock.
MR. WALKER-And it comes from when in the spring, until when in the
fall?
MR. BREWER-It says here, May through September 10th.
that's th~ beginning of May, providing the weather.
presume
MR. WALKER-And the other thing, this gentleman said people can go
into Stewarts. I'd invite you to watch the operation at Stewarts,
too, and see how many people use the outside of Stewarts' building,
not the inside of Stewarts' building.
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes, I imagine they do.
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MR. WALKER-There's no imagine. Stewarts, if you happen to walk in,
they have one rest room. You cannot see a sign that says rest
room, because it's covered with a sign about like this. Stewarts
does not advocate going in and using their rest rooms. That's why
the outside of their building gets used frequently, daily. That's
about all I've got.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Thank you.
Is there anyone else?
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. BREWER-Okay,
going to do.
fellas,
I guess
we've got to decide what
,
we re
MR. MACEWAN-I have a couple of more questions I'd like to ask.
Last week, when you spoke to us about the vendor area, you said
that you wanted to keep it uniform, that there were going to be
tarp tent type structures, and I noticed that in your rules you
said that everyone's got to have a white tarp so that everything is
matching and doesn't look obtrusive, but you just made a statement
that you said some of the folks may come in RV's, and they have
awnings they pull down off the side of their RV's ·and sellout
their RV's. Which is it going to be?
MR. SOLIMANTO-We wouldn't be able to control it, if they came up in
an RV.
MR. MACEWAN-Well, you would have to, because if your vendor areas
that you told us are twenty by twenty, an RV's bigger than twenty
foot.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Some vendors (lost word).
MR. MACEWAN-But I guess your rules and regulations are saying that
you want, and what you told our Board was that, you want to have it
set up so that everyone has either an arbor type, or the portable
pop up sun tents, you know, with the tent structure, that can pop
and take down every night, but you're also saying, now, that RV's
are going to be parking in that spot as well.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I had brought up at the last meeting, I believe, I
don't have the minutes. They said they wouldn't be ready until
this morning, but I believe that we would allow RV's to come in,
like the double lot or triple lot, and they can park their RV, and,
yes, they can put up their white tarp. Now, if somebody is staying
for quite a while, if they want to build an arbor type display,
that's fine, and they want to put up a white tarp to reflect the
sun, to be cooler, to be more attractive, but I would imagine, I'm
going to try to keep it as much whi te as possible. To me, that is
a nice look.
MR. MACEWAN-I'm trying to envision this with numerous white tents
or tarps in there, with every other one with a big RV sticking up
above everything.
MR S. SOL I MAN TO - Well, t his i s w her ewe h a vet h eve n d 0 r par k in g () v e r
here. I don't know how many RV's are going to park in here, and I
tried to, when I gave you that grey piece of paper up there, tried
to position the RV's so they're not that noticeable from the road.
I tried to take that into consideration.
MR. BREWER-Make the RV's back in the back, that's all. If there's
going to be RV's there, require them to be in the back.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Whatever recommendations you make, we'll follow.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Anything else?
MR. RUEL-Yes.
vendor parking
Your
area.
plan, does not show the dimensions
Do you know what they are?
of
the
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MRS. SOLIMANTO-What is it, nine by twenty.
MR. RUEL-What, each slot is?
mean, the total area.
.,
MR. SOLIMANTO-'You mean from one end to the other end?
MR. RUEL-Yes.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I don't know.
MR. BREWER-It's about 400 feet.
MR. RUEL-And what's the width?
MR. MACEWAN·-Nine foot.
MR. RUEL-Nine?
MR. BREWER-They have to be, Roger. They have to be nine by twenty.
That's about 400 feet.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Three hundred and fifty feet.
MR. RUEL-Yes. So they will be parking parallel to the road, right?
MR. SOLIMANTO-No, that's ill the back. That's not on 149. That's
in the back.
MR. RUEL-I know. I '01 talking about the back.
your road, the gravel road, the driveway.
parallel to that, right?
I'm talking about
They'll be parking
MR. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. RUEL-Okay. Thanks. So you have twenty parking spaces there,
right?
MR. BREWER-He's got more than sufficient room for parking there.
MR. OBERMAYER-How do you plan on controlling the parking? This is
going to kind of be wide open space, right? Are there going to be
any control measures, or are people just going to park wherever?
MR. SOLIMANTO-I was going to mark the parking spots. Did you ever
see, in a football field, how they put the powder down, the lines,
that's how.
MR. OBERMAYER-Okay. That answered that question.
MR. BREWER-Okay. ßob, do you have any questions?
MR. PALING-In the May 19th summary they talked about a letter from
DOT confirming their recommendation for a curb cut. Has that
letter ever been received?
MR. HARLICKER-We haven't heard anything from them, no.
MR. MARTIN-I would say, the Town went to a lot of trouble and
effort to prepare the Corridor Study, and the reconunendations of
that are~to keep curb cuts to a minimum, and where possible, have
access off of alternate routes, especially at the intersections.
I mean, I think, if we're going to go to the trouble of preparing
these plans, they should be adhered to once the concepts are out
there. Otherwise, it's just folly to do that.
MR. MACEWAN-Are you in favor of having no access from 149?
MR . MAR TIN - Yes, t hat's w hat I' m say i n g .
I mean, it's a rare
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instance in the Town where we have a specific corridor study just
recently done, and those are the recomrnendations from it, and I
think they should be adhered to.
MR. ßREWER-I wholeheartedly agree.
MR. OBERMAYER-Me, too.
MR. SOLIMANTO-This isn't the curb cut. We talked to DOT. There is
no curb there.
MR. MARTIN-I mean, access point.
MR. MACEWAN-That's all it means.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I-Ie explained to me, okay, lets suppose we don't get,
Herb Steffens explained to me, suppose we don't succeed. The next
person that walks in might set up four big massive stores there,
and you're going to have four driveways. Okay.
MR. BREWER-Not necessarily.
any.
If we don't allow it, there won't be
MRS. SOLIMANTO-This is zoned commercially. It's on a State road,
and he said that we are entitled to it, and this is where he said,
try to negotiate with them, and I'm trying to negotiate, and this
is why I said just to let me please have an in, and I explained to
him. I went over this with him. If people are going down 149,
this is 621 feet of frontage. If they keep travelling down this
road, and they're looking and looking and looking, h~w do I get i
here? They're not watching the road. They're looking for the
entrance. Now there is no entrance. Now they're going to turn
around in Mr. Wal ker' s, or they're going to turn around in the
other gentleman's house property, or they're going to turn around
in the next person's piece of property, and they're going to back
out onto 149, to come back down, to find the entrance. I think
that will cause much more traffic.
MR. MACEWAN-If signage is used wisely, you'd probably alleviate
most all of that problem.
MR. SOLIMANTO-Well, we couldn't put a sign east of our property.
MR. MACEWAN-Do you own this property?
the property?
I thought you were leasing
MR. SOLIMANTO-We are leasing the property.
MR. OBERMAYER-Has DOT agreed to putting in a curb cut at this
location?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-He said he would give us a temporary access, which
is an in.
MR. OBERMAYER-Will he give that to you in writing?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes. He was supposed to have called Jim.
MR. MARTIN-I do have a call from him.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-He's supposed to call you back again.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. lie did call me back.
wasn't there when the call came in.
I didn't talk to him.
MRS. SOL IMANTO-And the temporary access,
s u c c e ed, the n w hen we mo v e 0 u t , the n e x t
cannot use that driveway for conID1ercial.
he said
person
if we do
that walks
not
in
MR. BREWER-There is no driveway there, right now.
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MRS. SOLIMANTO-In other words, if we're given temporary access.
MR. STARK-And they're going to put a driveway in. Russ is going to
put one in, but it's only going to be a temporary.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Sorneone else cannot claim that this is already a
driveway. It's a temporary driveway.
MR. MACEWAN-But it's part of the site plan review, if this Board
feels that that driveway access would not be safe to the public, we
have every right to deny it, that aspect of it.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I think it would (lost word). It's like a lot of
these other people who are on 149 have a business. We need an
access off of 149. I mean, if the State wants to put a sign
saying, please slow down, or 11Ionitor the roads better, by all
means, I agr ee .
MR . STARK - Tim, can you en vis ion, I i k e , S t e war t s not h a v i n g an
access onto 149? You'd have to enter through Ridge Road. I mean,
it would be very inconvenient.
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes.
If DOT doesn't have a problem with it.
MR. BREWER-Well, we don't know that. I'm not calling anybody a
liar, but I would like to see something in writing.
MR. SOLIMANTO-We wouldn't be able to put an entrance there if DOT
didn't give us permission.
MR. BREWER-You're right. What do we want to do? Do you want to
move on?
MR. RUEL--I think that there are an awful lot: of conditions attached
to this, and also, I know you did your best on the plan, but it
needs a lot of work, and because of modi f ications made this
evening, it should be reflected in the plan. We have a lot of
changes here, and we had a lot of questions because the plan wasn't
too clear, in many cases, and this could be clarified with a better
plan. That's illY. thinking, and also I think we have an awful lot of
conditions that should, to approve something like this, with that
many con d i t ion s, I don' t f a v 0 r t hat a t a II .
MR. PALING-Yes, I'd be inclined to go along with Roger. I don't
like to do it, but it's still a little hazy because of the way it's
laid out and the conditions we've set for approval. I think it can
still be done, but I'd like to see it a little bit more clearly
defined, and I'd also like to see, to combine with Jim's remark,
what DOT has to say about this, because we really don't know.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Well, that 's not really fair to me. I have laid out
a lot of money. I've got a lot of people waiting to start work,
okay. My season's very shor t. It's no t my fau 1 t tha t Herb
Steffens did not reach Jim Martin. His secretary in the office
knows how many times ~ called.
MR. BREWER-But is it fair to us, ma'am, to make us sit here,
without a complete plan?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-If I was to bring in a letter tomorrow, because I
asked Herb if I could come up there tomorrow.
MR. SOLIMANTO-What is the question?
MR. BREWER-I guess what Roger stated, and I kind of agree with him,
and Bob kind of agrees wi th him so far, that we've got so many
things to condition on this plan.
MR. RUEL-I'll just mention a few, all right, move the mobile office
east, widen the parking lot, provide 50 foot setbacks on Ridge and
- 30 -
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149, provide 180 foot buffer on west side of the parking area.
MR. BREWER-No. I don't think you have to provide that buffer.
think it exists. Is that correct?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Show vendor parking area width. Vendors should be out
by dusk. No electric generators, and you should add, as Item 15 on
your Rules and Regulations, that there be no electric generators.
There's probably more items. That's all l caught.
MR. BREWER-No overnight lodging. I mean, you've got two sets of
rules. You've got this set you gave us tonight. This set you had
made up for RV's. I don't think you have a plan as to where the
RV's are going to be on here.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Well, you just asked that I put them in the back,
and I will put them in the back. If you want to make conditions,
and set them down on a piece of paper.
MR. BREWER-I guess what we're saying, ma'an¡, is too many
conditions. If you come back with a plan that says RV's will be
here, okay. The parking lot is widened. The setback is made here,
on Ridge, okay, outlined on 149 not a problem, a letter from DOT
stating what they feel about the curb cut on 149. Tho~e are things
we're talking about. I mean, if we give you an approval tonight
with those conditions, we never see this plan again. It's up to
Jim to go through our notes and the minutes tonight, and figure out
what conditions we made, and have they been met.
MR. MACEWAN-I agree with everybody else.
MR. OBERMAYER-I agree with you guys, too.
MR. STARK-Well, you said you would give a conditional, provisional
okay, and that would be reviewed in August. Okay. Review
everything in August. If it's up and running, you can see that the
RV's are, on a site visit, you go up and you see that the RV's are
back.
MR. BREWER --And if they' r e no t .
MR. STARK-Then you give a conditional okay until site visit in
August, or whenever.
MR. OBERMAYER-Why couldn't we just, I know you're not going to be
happy with this, but why couldn't we table it again until they meet
all the conditions and give us more detail on the revisions that we
have tonight, because we do have a lot of questions.
MR. BREWER-I still would like a letter from DOT, and I think last
week we i nd i ca ted t ha t we wan t ed a comp let e p I an when you come back
tonight. As far as 1 can see it's not a complete plan.
MR. STARK-Tim, isn't there a meeting the first week in June?
MR. BREWER-It's the 21st.
MR. STARK-No, no, but wasn't there somebody who requested a
meeting?
MR. BREWER-They requested it, but I denied it.
MR. STARK-Okay. I was going to say they could come the first week
in June, to that meeting there, because what you're doing, in
essence, if you make them come back the 21st of June, that's the
season, it's allover.
MR. OBERMAYER--We're going to ruin their season.
That's a good
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point.
MR. BREWER-But is it our fault they didn't have a complete plan,
George?
MR. STARK-No, it's not, but everything we ve said she agreed to.
MR. BREWER-She agreed to it, but I've said it over and over again.
MR. MACEWAN-I agree with Tim.
MR. BREWER-I've laid out conditions for other people and they don't
~et met, and then we end up, a year down the road or two years down
the road, and they never get met, George, and I'm tired of getting
bur n 1. T h a I: 's my 0 pin ion.
MR. STARK-Well, in this case, you have a chance to condition an
approval on a review in August.
MR. BREWER-You guys can do what you want, but I won't. That's my
stand. It's going to be my stand in the future that any plan that
comes before us, if the conditions aren't met, no CO w.ill be
granted, not even a temporary. That's just my little shtick.
MR. RUEL-Tim, would this be a permanent approval, or is there a
time I imi t?
MR. BREWER-We were going to give them an approval, and they would
corne back and we would re-review it in August, she asked. You guys
can make a motion if you want to, but I've told you how I feel.
MR. OBERMAYER-We have a lot of people that come up in front of us,
and we do require them to give us, you know, more detail than this.
I understand, you probably did this yourself, right?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-The hardest part was overcoming the bathroom. I
spent a lot of time on that. You made it a very main issue. If
you want me to move the mobile office east, that's fine. I'll do
it. The reason why I put it there is I figured if I had put it
east, that you would ask for it to be moved in the trees, and
that's why I moved it in the trees.
MR. BREWER-To me, I don't even see any trees on this.
know that there's trees there?
How can I
MRS. SOLIMANTO-There's trees there.
MR. BREWER-I believe you, but looking at this map, I can't tell if
there's trees there, or a wall there.
MR. STARK-The trees are indicated.
MR. OBERMAYER-Right here, where the office is, see these little,
these are trees.
MR. STARK-The trees are indicated.
MR. PALING-The trees are drawn there.
MR. MACEWAN--Your last conversation that you had with DOT, did they
.§..ª-y they were going to send you a letter confirming what their
feelings were on a curb cut?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-He said tomorrow morning they will issue me a
permit.
MR. MACEWAN-Tomorrow morning meaning after you are approved?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
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MR. MACEWAN-I would like to see a letter from them first. That's
what 1 would like to see.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Well, I could have gone there today, but, this is
where he asked me to negotiate with you. I'm trying not to argue
with you.
MR. BREWER-How about, if we had a Special Meeting for you the 7th,
and you had all this stuff done, would that still give you time to
open? You could open the 8th, prov ided you got the approval, if
you come back ~ith a complete plan, and a letter from DOT, stating
they have no objection to a curb cut, not saying you're going to
get it, but.
MR. STARK-Tim, they couldn't open the 8th if you gave them the okay
on the 7th, because Russ has site preparation, but why don't you
make a recommendation, see Leon Steves, or something, to have him
draw up a plan, and so on and so forth.
MR. MACEWAN-Well, I don't think they have to go to the expense of
having to have it surveyed. I mean, they need to have more detail
than what they've got.
MR. BREWER-Is that sufficient time for you to do that?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-In other words, you want me to have the gravel done?
MR. BREWER-No, no, no. I want you to come back with a complete
plan showing the RV's, where they're going to be, the parking for
the RV's, the setbacks on Ridge Road.
w
MR. MARTIN-Tim, could I make a suggestion to help? Why don't we
set a date for them to submit this to the Planning Office, and you,
tonight, enumerate the things you want to see on that map, and set
the date in such a manner that it gives them a few days, if it's
not all met, that we can tell them that and give them a couple of
more days to make sure that it is met.
MR. BREWER-We'll give them until the sixth to meet all of the
requirements, and we can have a meeting Wednesday the eighth.
MR. MARTIN-Well, I'm saying maybe even like the second, and then
that gives them six days cushion, should something not be right
even s till.
MR. BREWER-No, the second's not a good idea. I would say at least
until the sixth.
MR. MARTIN-All right.
MR. BREWER-Only because of the holiday, Monday.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-I can have it done by the second.
MR. BREWER-That's totally up to you.
MR. STARK-Okay. List all the concerns, though, Tim, so she can
write them down.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Roger's got a nice list of them over there, and
we'll table it and have a Special Meeting.
MR. OBERMAYER-Show the new widths of the parking lot, remember they
increased it 60 foot.
MR. BREWER-Yes. All right, Roger, do you want to go down the list
for them, 0 r ma k e them a cop y 0 f you r lis t, and we'll add to it.
Say what you've got.
MR. STARK-Tim, when's the meeting?
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MR. BREWER-We'll have the meeting the seventh.
MR. STARK-The seventh. Where?
MR. BREWER-Downstairs in the Conference Room.
MR. STARK-Seven o'clock. Okay.
MR. BREWER-Give them the list.
MR. RUEL-Do you want to hear it?
MR. BREWER-Do you want to write it down as he reads it?
MR. RUEL-Increase size of customer parking lot to 60 feet. Parking
areas can be 9 by 20. I think you had indicated 10 here. They can
be nine. Show the location of RV's in the existing field.
Indicate the vendor parking area width. Add to your rules and
regulations that vendors should be out by dusk, before dark, since
there won't be any lighting, and then it will vary, depending on
the time of year. Add also to your rules and regulations, no
electric generators permitted. Is there a need for moving the
mobile office east, as we had discussed?
MR. STARK-It would be better in the trees.
MR. OBERMAYER·-Yes.
MR. RUEL-In order to maintain the buffer of 200 feet.
MR. BREWER-I think it's better in the trees. If it's in the trees,
why not leave it hidden in the trees.
MR. RUEL-Leave it where it is.
MR. BREWER-It's almost even with the end of the parking anyway.
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. RUEL-Provide DOT letter on curb cut, 149.
MR. BREWER-I would suggest that you combine this list onto this
lis t .
MR. RUEL-What is that list you re holding?
MRS. SOL~MANTO-That's that one I didn't finish off.
MR. RUEL-Okay.
MR. BREWER·-I.f you're going to do this, could you just flip it
around?
MR. RUEL-North up, not down.
MR. BREWER-All right. Is there anything else that we missed?
You've got no overnight lodging on there, correct?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. BREWER-You've got it on there, though?
MR S. SOL I MAN TO - Well, t hat's go i n g to be i n add i t ion tot h e (1 0 s t
wo r d) .
MR. BREWER-All right. Okay. So then if we table this tonight, you
have until the second to compile all the information, bring it to
Jim, and then we'll have our meeting the 7th.
MR. OBERMAYER-June 7th.
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MR. BREWER-The seventh at seven, and I'm just going to take one
more comment.
MR. MARTINDALE-For sit
certain size drawing?
plan review, don't you have to have a
MR. MACEWAN-No.
MR. MARTINDALE-You don' ?
MR. MACEWAN-No.
MR. MARTINDALE-Don't yo have to have it on a big sheet of paper?
We had to go through when we went through site plan review, had
so many copies of a sc led drawing.
MR. MARTIN-It's not so uch the size.
It has to be to scale.
MR. BREWER-This is to scale, Bob. There is a scale here.
MR. MARTINDALE-We had t have a piece of paper this big, so people
can see, and make it ea y, so everything's not just on there. The
o the r t h i n g is, i f the co u 1 d pie a s e c h an get his w hit e to ma y be
green or something like that, because white is going to reflect the
sun, and that could com right in people's eyes as they're driving
by. The same with the tain glass, the mirrors out there. That's
going to blinding peopl . That happened right up on, where the Log
Jam, not right on the orner, right where Dexter was, or whatever
that. They had mirror out there. People turning, the sun would
hit you right in the eye. The white awnings and stuff might
reflect the sun, where if they had green, it would absorb it.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
Is t
it?
MR. MARTINDALE-That's It.
MR. BREWER-All right. The public hearing's over now.
anything else that we I issed from you guys?
Is there
~
MR. OBERMAYER--No. t1 ink t ha t 's fine.
MR. BREWER-All right. Have you got everything?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. SCHACHNER-Tim, jus so you know, I probably can-' t be here on
Tuesday nigh t the sevel th. I assume it's not impor tant?
MR. BREWER-It's no pro
MR. OBERMAYER-No.
after we get you?
So ou' 11 meet wi th us on the seventh, then,
MRS. SOLIMANTO-After I et this all done, could I have Mr O'Connor
come in next time?
MR. OBERMAYER-It's you call. I don't think it's necessary. It's
up to you.
MR. BREWER-I mean, if he's going to provide you with a gravel
driveway and the parki g, I don't, as long as it's met to size,
that's the only thing e wanted done.
have to come.
MR. OBERMAYER-No, Russ
MR. BREWER-Okay. We n
consent to table? Have we got it?
MRS. SOLIMANTO-Yes.
MR. BREWER-And, Jim,
f the y get t his s t u f fin tot h em 0 nth e
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second, you'll get it to us by Friday?
you wit h the i n for ma ti 0 n by the s e con d .
fifth.
They' r e go i ng to come to
You'll get it to us by the
MR. MARTIN-I'll get it to you as soon as we've had a chance to look
it over for all your conditions, and you'll have it as soon as
we're done with that.
MR. OBERMAYER-Rlght.
MR. BREWER-Not the night of the meeting.
MR. MARTIN-No, in advance, so you'll have time to look it over.
MR. BREWER-Okay. We need a motion.
MOTION TO TABLE SITE PLAN NO. 17-94 STEVEN SOLIMANTO,
by Roger Ruel who moved for its adoption, seconded
Pall ng :
Introduced
by Robert
So that modifications discussed at
imp I emen t ed and so r ecor ded on the
Planning Staff on June 2nd, 1994, for
Board on June 7th.
the May 26th meeting be
new p I an s u bm i t t e d tot h e
review, and to the Planning
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel,
Mr. Paling, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
SUBDIVISION NO. 4-1994 PRELIMINARY STAGE TYPE GUIDO PASSARELLI
OWNER: SAME AS ABOVE ZONE: HC-IA, RR-3A, WR-3A, LOCATION: RT.
9 & ROUND POND RD. PROPOSAL IS FOR A THREE LOT SUBDIVISION. PLANS
ARE TO SELL ONE OF THE COMMERCIAL LOTS AND RETAIN OWNERSHIP OF THE
REMAINDER. SEQRA REVIEW: 5/26/94 TAX MAP NO. 67-2-1 LOT SIZE:
69 ACRES SECTION: SUBDIVISION REGULATIONS
TOM NACE;- REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
MR. BREWER-Okay. Scott, do we have a couple of notes?
MR. HARLICKER-Really what the notes that we have are engineering
notes, and Bill MacNamara is here to address those. This is the
first time I've seen the revised plans. So it looks like they're
providing a 75 foot buffer, or planted buffer.
BILL MACNAMARA
MR. MACNAMARA-Good evening. Not reading everything word for word,
but essentially most of the conmlents based around either the
boundaries or the size of the acreages shown or some of the
sediment and erosion control issues, and I'll touch on each point.
The average distance between lot lines. I'm not sure how you
calculate the average distance between lot lines in your Code, but
150 feet narrows down to 100 feet, average of that is less than 150
feet, just a note, as far as the lot size. The'boundaries of lot
three, for the remaining lands of the subdivision, weren't clearly
labelled, as far as adding up the total acreages, and when I say
the total acreages, I was comparing it to the acres that are shown
on the environmental report. I just couldn't add them all up
together and get the same number. I'm not sure if I just wasn't
looking at the right map. There was a manhole shown along the east
side of Route 9. It just didn't have a label, function,
designation, what kind of utility manhole it was for. Typically,
when there's stormwater trenches and drywells included in site
plans, there's some type of a calculation that shows the basis for
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the sizing. That's pre ty standard on a site plan. Specific perc
test information, groun water information is not shown. That goes
to the first comment -bout sizing trenches and drywells. Next
note, when there is adjo'ning property with utilities, you normally
show how far away those utilities are from the lot line, so you can
check to see if the utilities you're providing give you the right
distances. These are all pretty basic, minor comments, by the way.
The next note on the pi n, on the site plan, had indicated any area
steeper than a three n one, we assumed that you meant three
horizontal, one vertic I, any areas steeper than that would be
brought to a three on 0 e or less, and it looked like those amounts
of areas were more than would have been indicated on the plan, and
whatever areas were goi g to be mowed, this is basically a safety
note, four on one is a little closer to being safe than three on
one is, f or s tan d a r d ow i n g p r act ice s , but t hat's rea II y mo r e
geared toward the sedinl nt and erosion control measures on the last
notes. Additional sediment control fence should be shown, and
basically there's guide ines in the manual which reference, as far
as, when you're dealin with slopes, there's a certain length of
fence you can use for a ertain slope, and that was on fencing. As
far as infiltration tr -¡ches that are shown along Route 9, during
construction, you need to show some notes that'll say you'll
prevent any sediment fr m getting into those trenches when they're
being built, because t at's the most important time to keep the
sediment out of them, 0 they'll work afterwards. Another note
about sedimentation an erosion control has to do with straw bale
dikes and the steepness of the trenches that were shown. That same
manual for erosion and sediment control talks about possibly some
alternative measures tlat may be more effective, and that simply
lists a couple of them in that note. The same subsurface drains,
typically twenty-four inches for cover, is looked for, where
possible. As far as eseeding and mulching of the bare earth
areas, and it looked Ii e the amount of excavation, there would be
some pretty decent siz bare earth areas. Had some pretty decent
slopes, simply listed time frame that's suggested for when you
remulch, and the last 0 e there is the landscaping plan that looks
like some of the wordin was left out on the site plan. That's it.
MR. BREWER-Okay. We d have a letter from Glens Falls Urban Area
Transportation Counsel.
MR. MARTIN-Do you want that read into the record, Ti~?
MR. BREWER-Would you please?
MR. MARTIN--Yes. Th s is to Jim Martin, Regarding Guido
Passarelli's subdivisiol and Oral Health Care Associates Site Plan
US Route 9, Warren C unty, "Dear Jim: After reviewing the
subdivision applicatio s from Guido Passarelli for the parcel at
the corner of Route 9 a d Round Pond Road and the site plan for the
Oral Health Care Associ tes for the smaller of the subdivided lots,
I would like to make t e following comments: 1. This proposed
subdivision and site d velopment of one of the lots is located on
Route 9 between its in ersection with Route 254 and the Million
Dollar Half Mile and as such is one of the more congested corridors
in the Town of Queensb ry. The Town's Planning Board should be
reviewing all applicat ons in this corridor as an opportunity to
apply access management techniques. 2. I feel strongly that only
one access from Route should be allowed for the entire parcel,
and that the proposed two lots resulting from the subdivision
should share this entra ceo A second access to both properties off
Round Pond Road as fa from Route 9 as possible could also be
allowed. The access fr m Route 9 could be developed now as either
two 12 foot lanes or 12 foot lane entering and two 12 foot.
lanes exiting the site Although the applicant for the proposed
subdivision is not rea y to provide a site plan for the northern
lot, he should be able 0 provide the Towl)'s Planning Board with a
concept plan of access or the entire parcel. A plan provided now
by the subdivider and pproved by the Town Planning Board would
give a future develope a predictable response to work with when
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the site plan for the second lot is developed. 3. The proposed
subdivision is located near the Warren County Bike Path. Any
cOlm1ercial or professional development of this site should provide
bike racks or lockers to encourage non-motorized traffic. These
applications, together with my conunents, will be transferred \:0
Mark Kennedy, the NYSDOT Permit Engineer. He will be sending his
comments to you separately. Thank you for the opportunity \:0
conunent on this proposed subdivision and site plan. I am available
to answer questions. Please feel free to call. Sincerely, Joanna
M. Brunso Staff Director"
MR. BREWER-Okay. Did we receive a letter from DOT?
MR . MAR TIN -- No, but I t a I ked toM ark Ken n e d y , and hew a sin
concurrence with the comment about one access point.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. MARTIN-And we have the Warren County Department of Public
Works. This is to Clark Wilkinson at Haanen Engineering. "Dear
Mr. Wilkinson: The Warren County Department of Public Works
reviewed the proposed drainage improvements on the above referred
to project and below, listed, are the relevant comments: A. We'
will require a profile of the existing ground and the proposed dry
well system. B. We will also require one extra dry well in the
existing low area on the south side of Round Pond Road. C. No
drainage will be allowed to flow north of proposed dry well # 1
from the driveway entrance into the Oral Health Care Center. (We
suggest you construct a berm north of proposed dry well #1 to keep
the storm water from entering dry well ff 5). As soon as the above
comments are addressed, please send us a revised print for our
review. If you have any questions regarding the above, please
advise. Very truly yours, Roger Gebo Dep. Superintendent"
MR. BREWER-Okay. Mr. Nace.
MR. NACE-·Okay. For the record, my name is Tom Nace of Haanen
Engineer¡ng, representing Mr. Passarelli. I guess the first thing,
start with engineering conm1ents. I-laving reviewed the connnents, I
don't think there's anything there that, as we rework the plans a
little bit to take care of some of the Board's concerns, that we
can't easily take care of. I will beef up the erosion control a
little bit. In general, the soils on site are not very erodible.
They're sands, medium to fine sands. There's very little silt. So
generally, with the permeability of the soils, if there is any
steep slope erosion, that sediment falls out before the water
travels very far, and all the water does stay on site. There's a
little place down at the corner of Round Pond and Route 9 that has
been a problem, even before this site was disturbed, and one of the
things we're doing, in working with Roger Gebo, is to try to
address that complete problem. So it's addressing the problems at
our site that existed before our site was disturbed, and also
addressing any additional runoff that our site being disturbed has
added. I think, the other issue was the boundary of the lots. We
are not aware that the 150 foot average distance was interpreted
the way it is, and what we intend to do, as you see the front of
the lot is chopped off so that the actual frontage width on the
road is about 100 feet. What we will do is add a proportionate
width to the back of the lot, so that it will make the average 150.
So that will be modified and can easily be done'without affecting
the usability of either lot. The other items are fairly minor
items. I have no trouble meeting the requests of Bill, and I'll
rev~ew those with him to make sure that they meet with him. The
second item, major item, is the access to the site. Since we got
this letter, we have spent considerable time at the drafting board
trying to see how we can make single access work for the site.
There's essentially two major problems. One is that Round Pond
Road is separated from the site, from the usable portion of the
site, by a fairly high bluff. The distance, if you come back far
enough on Round Pond Road, to be ab I e to pu tin an en trance tha t
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would safely clear cars away from the Route 9 intersection, you're
faced with about a 50 foot rise that's very, very steep, and it
would just be impossible to put it without totally clearing that
whole hill away that's now the remaining buffer, wooded buffer,
there. It would be impossible to bring a driveway in off of Round
Pond Road. We have worked, there's an existing curb cut here that
we've proposed to use for this lot, the smaller lot. We've worked
to try to see if there is any way to be able to grade the site, so
that we can use that as a single entrance for both sites. What
happens is this site is, the whole thing is graded from, or the
existing ground, is graded from Route 9 back, coming up, and is
also, along Route 9, it's graded from Round Pond Road up to the top
of the hill near Sutton's, or top of the rise near Sutton's. As
. such, this site, to be usable, needs to be graded off, leveled off,
a b 0 uti 0 fee t below the e xis tin g g r ad e b a c kin her e , to ma k e a
building site, but it will still be about 15 feet above where this
site will be graded off to.
MR. BREWER -Okay. Can you s top one second.
ma k e an en t ran c e fur the r nor t h , and run a
road, right there, come in, and then build a
then go up to service that. Essentially,
thing.
What if you were to
road along the other
road to the right, and
it wou ld be the same
MR. NACE-Well, the problem is, we went to, to get this building
site leveled off, we've got to be back a ways from the road. If
we're right out at the road, it's going to create a huge bank in
back that I don't think anybody wants. So we've got, the building
site is really back up on top, here, a little ways. To get to
that, we could use this entrance, come along the frontage here, and
then back up, but what's going to happen is tl1at this buffer that
everybody seems to want to buffer the sites from Route 9.
MR. BREWER-You couldn't make that inside the buffer, or not?
MR. NACE-Well, take a road that's 24 foot width, plus a little
extra, you don't want the trees right up to the end of the road.
So you're probably 35 feet, clear, and we have now agreed to a 75
foot buffer that's going to eat up most of it, better than half, or
just half, I guess.
MR. RUEL-Maybe we could allow a 50 foot buffer in that area, and
have the road on the other side.
MR. NACE-We're certainly willing to work to try to attain that,
okay. I'm just, from the grading that we've tried to do so far, it
looks, I guess if we could compromise a little bit o~ this buffer
up here, we might be able to work it.
MR. BREWER-To compromise the buffer where the road would be going
to that second lot, I'll call it.
MR. NACE-What we would do is bring the main entrance in here, okay,
and whatever's put in here will probably be set batk fairly far
with parking up front. So we'd take a ring road, in essence, off
of that parking, and bring that ring road on up to access tills
site, but it will cut into that buffer up on the higher portion of
the site.
MR. RUEL-Your original buffer was, what, 50 feet, right?
MR. NACE-Original buffer we had proposed was 50. After hearing
some of the comments, we've come back and said, we'll go ahead and,
for the time being, at least plant that 75 foot buffer.
MR. MARTIN-Well, just to get the correct terminology, here, now,
that's a setback along the front, no~ a buffer.
MR. NACE-The 50 foot is a setback. We have, to accommodate your
concerns about the openness of the site, we've agreed that that is
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going to be planted as at least a temporary buffer from the open
portion of the site, and I don't want to say buffer from the
developed site, because we're going to come back sometime with a
site plan for that.
MR. MAR TIN - I jus t wan t
setback along the front
to ma k e sur e , you k now, it' s a
there, as the Code requirement.
75
foot
MR. RUEL-You're not talking about a buffer with trees, etc.
MR. BREWER-We asked for that.
MR. MARTIN-That's not a requirement.
for, given the conditions that are
just saying, the Code requirement
buffer.
That may be something you ask
present there today, but I'm
is a 75 foot setback, not a
MR. NACE-Fifty foot setback, Jim.
Right?
MR. MARTIN-Seventy-five foot on a highway corridor.
MR. NACE-Yes, you're right. You're right.
MR. RUEL-And then I :think the road owns are, what, 12 feet there,
so there would be 87 feet.
MR. NACE-There's about 12 feet from the curb line to the property
line.
MR. RUEL-::,Yes.
It could be 87 feet back from the road.
MR. BREWER-But if we reduced the, so to speak, from, I don't know
the amount of feet, from where that drIveway would be, going to the
right, to get to that sIte. If we reduced the proposed buffer from
75 to 50 feet, then it would still keep that within that 75 foot
are a . The are ago i n g nor t h, the y w 0 u 1 d con tin u e to ma i n t a i nth e 7 5
foot buffer.
MR. RUEL-Yes. That's what 1 recommend there.
MR. BREWER-If that's workable.
MR. NACE-Yes. I will try to work the grading out and see If that
works. I can't promise you it will. I don't know.
MR. RUEL-So now you'd have one access road for three lots.
MR. NACE-For two lots. What we're really doing in the subdivision,
this is zoned, the whole back portion is zoned RR-3A, okay. This
up front is zoned Highway Commercial One Acre, okay. We're trying
separate off the resIdential, and also create the two lots up here
for Highway COlmnercial.
MR. BREWER-Yes. There's WR-3 in there, too, Tom.
MR. NACE-That's back, yes. This whole parcel bends back around and
includes the area back around Round Pond.
MR. RUEL-Looking at the plans, I saw the grading and drainage map
in here. We really need a new contour, drainage, and grading,
because that, apparently, represents what's there now, not what the
future will have.
MR. NACE-Well, that, yes, okay. That represents what was there,
and our initial understanding of what people wanted to see was some
of the steep slopes knocked down, but the rest of the site pretty
much remaining as is. After we've had a chance to talk with people
and get some input, we've recognized that you really wanted to see
the site graded off a little better, overall, to really flatten out
some of the slopes, get more toward what the final grading will be,
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when the site's developed, and then we can treat this, what we're
doing on the site as a little more permanent. I have, I haven't
submitted it to you, obviously, because it's new information, but
I have worked out a grading sketch which, this is new, okay, and I
just show it to you for your information, not for your review, that
what we're doing is.
MR. RUEL-You have the old one in the background.
MR. NACE-The old's in the background, okay. What we re doing is
filling in thÍs area that's down in here, up to the point where
it's almost level with, lets say, two thirds of the way up this
slope over here.
MR. RUEL-Did you say this was about 50 feet off of that road?
MR. NACE-This is, if you come up here to the top,
feet down to Round Pond Road. That's all wooded,
don't want to disturb that.
it's abou t 50
and we really
MR. RUEL-And then this is the grading here?
MR. NACE-Yes. This is what I'm talking about. This site is going
to be graded off up here, still about 10 or 12 feet above Route 9.
MR. RUEL-But level with this property?
MR. NACE-Down a little from this property. It's actually down from
this property, where you can see the bank in here. It's about six
feet, six or eight feet down.
MR. RUEL-What's over here, a motel?
MR. NACE-That's the motel, and there's an office up front, yes.
MR. RUEL-Now the access would be somewhere around here?
MR. NACE-Right here.
MR. RUEL-Here, and you could go around this way?
MR. NACE-Well, that's what we'd have to work out. See, in this
grading plan, I tried to provide a little buffer, a little berm in
here, that would hide from traffic coming down Route 9, would tend
to create an additional, beyond landscaping, create an additional
buffer for whatever is done in here. That, obviously. we'd have to
c omp rom i s e , be c a use tog e t up tot his sit e , I' ve got to, now,
figure out some way to get my road back up througll here.
MR. MACEWAN-Why couldn't you just come right around this way, and
right up that way?
MR. NACE-Because of the slope. That's real steep. okay. I've got
to use as much, this is, well, here's 440. This site> 460. This
is 20 feet above this.
MR. BREWER-I'm talking about down here. You come into here, it's
only, what, I'm talking the grade from here to here.
MR. NACE-Yes, this is only about two or fpur feet.
MR. BREWER-So you're talking six feet, maximum, to cut in there.
MR. NACE-Right. Yes, what I would do is bring the access in here,
and then if I could come along this frontage with still some
buffer, but not the 75 feet. Then I've got a lot in length. I
can't guarantee you I can make the grading work with one curb cut.
I can try. I've talked to Herb Steffens at length. He doesn't see
a problem with two curb cuts. Now, I don't know how it's going to
fallout between Herb Steffens and Mark Kennedy. I've worked with
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Mark before. I-Ie's fairly reasonable. If I can't make the grading
work, I'm fairly confident I can sit down with Mark and show him it
won't work, and he'll give us two curb cuts.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. NACE-I don't have anything in writing. I can't guarantee you
that, but that's my previous experience with Mark.
MR. STARK-I'm kind of in favor of two curb cuts, and the reason why
is, with the grade there, going up to the dentist's office, that
would look better just grass and so 011. You're going to have two
separate lots, one here for the dentist office, one for the other
commercial development. I look at Sutton's, okay, can you picture
Sutton's, and this has more road frontage, with one entrance and
one ex it? I mean, you know, peop Ie wou 1 d be r unn i ng over each
other, inside the parking lot. I look at Martha's Ice Cream. Can
you picture Martha's Ice Cream, with a lot less road frontage, with
only one entrance? If you look at Agway, across the street from
Sutton's, it's got 150 feet of road frontage, and half of that is
entrance and exits.
MR. BREWER-I can understand that point, but on the other hand, .
you're talking about a dentist office, potentially, going to be
there, and that's not going to have any kind of traffic like
Sutton's: I don't think you can compare a dentist office to
Sutton's or Martha's, by any means comparing them.
MR. STARK-I think you're missing my point.
MR. BREWER-I understand exactly what you're saying, but to compare
a dentist's office to Martha's is absurd.
MR. STARK-No, no. I'm not comparing it. I'm saying it would be
better with two curb cuts, not one. You want one so the guys can
go into one curb cut halfway down the hill, and then come up to the
dentist's office, okay. You're not talking, how many people go to
the dentist's office a day, twenty, thirty?
MR. BREWER-Maybe. That's what I'm saying. If you had a curb cut
down here, it would be less curb cuts. Less chance for in and out
traffic on Route 9. The dentist's office people can come in down
here, go up to the dentist's office. Then if there's another
attraction, or whatever, he's going to put down in the other part
of it, that entrance wi 11 substantially take care of that one
thing.
MR. STARK-Well, you know yourself, the dentist office is going to
sit up here, and the other grade is going to be down here. It's
going to be a steep going up. Tomny said he might make it work.
I think it's going to cut into that setback requirement. Right?
MR. RUEL-George, he already agreed on one, right?
MR. BREWER-He said he would try to make it work. He didn't say he
agreed.
MR. MARTIN-Just to give the Board, it's clearly the Staff's
position that there be one curb cut, for whatever that's worth.
MR. RUEL-You'd like to see one, wouldn't you, from a safety
standpoint.
MR. MACEWAN-That's worth a lot.
MR. MARTIN-I think that's an overriding consideration here.
Barring any physical reason that you can't do that, Staff's
position is it should be one curb cut.
MR. MACEWAN-I think what we also have to understand here, too, is
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the comparisons that you're making for those other businesses along
that road, are already existing businesses that have been there for
years. If they were in the same scenario here, coming in front of
us for this subdivision or site plan, I think it would be fair to
say that they would be asked to have one curb cut as well.
MR. MARTIN-I just got today, and the Board will be seeing it, the
access management section for the Route 9/254 Transportation Plan.
It's just been done. It came over the fax machine today. It said
in that sectio~, it was written by DOT, that you can achieve up to
30 percent reduction 'in capacity problems on roads with wise access
management.
MR. OBERMAYER-Well, I think before we sit here and debate all this,
we have to see whether it's going to work or not.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
I agree with that.
MR. NACE-Yes. That's one issue. Safety, let me just address a
couple of things you've said here and thrown out. Safety, as far
as access from the curb cuts proposed, if we get two, I think it's
not that much of an issue, because you've got your large parcel
that will probably be somewhat more of a high traffic generator.
I don't know what's going to be there yet for sure, but chances are
that it could be a much higher traffic generator. The dentist's
office is a fairly low traffic generator. I do, however, have to
agree strongly with George I have a much better chance of making
some good buffers work, grading wise, if I could have two
entrances. I don't have a circulation road out close that I've got
to worry about buffering, or try to buffer, and I have a chance to,
where you're driving down the hill, looking off to your right, and
the lands falling away, but you've got the land rising back to your
right, I have a chance to put a fairly good mound in there, to sort
of help hide whatever is put on the larger parcel, to help buffer
that.
MR. RUEL-Tom, you're going to cover that ditch, right, with a pipe?
MR. NACE-That ditch will have a
we have addressed, in sketch
That'll all be graded right out
There'll be a very shallow soil
pipe. We're working to, in fact,
form, all of Roger's comments.
to the road. There'll be inlets.
just behind the curb line.
MR. RUEL-Right, and you're going to have drywells all the way down.
MR. NACE-That's correct.
MR. RUEL--Now, the drywells will be able to absorb any amount of
water coming down, so there'll be no water going around Round Pond?
MR. NACE-The drywells are, at this point, so far over designed,
we've ended up, in order to meet some of the criteria that Roger
had, as far as grade of perforated pipe and trench, we ended up
with seven drywells in there, which will take ten times the amount
of.
MR. RUEL-Another question.
Is that pipe on your property?
MR. NACE-That pipe will actually, yes.
sketch there.
think it shows on the
'"
MR. RUEL-On here?
MR. NACE-Yes.
entirety of it
The pipe is
is now on our
right, you
property.
can
see
it
here.
The
MR. RUEL-It's right on the edge, then?
MR. NACE-That's correct.
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MR. RUEL-Yes. Okay. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Can we move on?
MR. PALING-I've got just one more question. If you were allowed
two curb cuts, would you have access between the dentist's office
and the rest of this development?
MR. NACE-No.
MR. MACEWAN-Does the owner plan on retaining both parcels, or is he
selling one?
MR. NACE--No. I believe the dentist's office will be sold, parcel
will be sold.
MR. BREWER-I think that's the object of a subdivision. Okay.
MR. MARTIN-I just want to remind the Board, I'm sure you're aware,
but I want to have it said on the record, that your first and
foremost consideration really has to be the waiver request on the
five year restriction, in order for you to proceed further.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. NACE-Can I just do one more thing, here? One of the other
things you requested is to beef up the landscaping a little, and,
again, I'm submitting this just for your information, and not for
review.
MR. OBERMAYER-I think it would be a lot more attractive a site if
you did have two accesses, instead of having a road come up, along
here, parallel to Route 9. I mean, I've got to believe that~ and
leave the buffers.
MR . STARK - It' s no l go i n g t 0 bet hat III u c h s a fer .
office gets thirty, forty cars a day.
The dentist's
MR. OBERMAYER-The dentist's office is not going to be a high
traffic area, and actually the traffic area is going to be two
different times, two different time periods. This will be during
the day, and this will be at night.
MR. BREWER--We don't know tha t. Nothing is for sure.
there's no plan in front of us for anything here. So you
plan for, who knows. That may be a K-Mart, or Wal-Mart.
they'll want to stay with the dentist. I mean, you don't
I mean,
have to
Maybe
know.
MR. OBERMAYER-Then why are we even talking about it?
MR. BREWER-Because we have, because in our comprehensive planning.
Even in our Ordinance, it says to consider connections of
driveways, and that's what we're doing.
MR. NACE-If it's practical. Here you've got two separate and
opposing criteria that you're trying to address, and one is
buffering the site, and the other is access. I will, when I come
in here, I can guarantee you that because, we have a driveway that
climbs pretty rapidly here, and then I've got to make up an
additional 10 feet down there, 10 or, when I get down to here,
probably 14 or 15 feet. So I've got to make up that additional 15
feet, and the only way to do it is up front here where I've got the
length to do it.
MR. STARK-You're going to need a Land Rover to get in to the
dentist's office.
MR. BREWER-If you come in straight, here, you're going to have to
go up the same slope.
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MR. STARK-No, no. You won't have that (lost word).
MR. NACE-Now I've got the slope from here down to here, which is
another 15 foot of elevation. I can work up the plans and show you
what, if it's possible, and what it means, if it's possible, okay,
but my gut feeling is that a lot of this is going to be lost.
MR. BREWER-How many trees do you have in here?
MR. NACE-We have now 30 spade transplanted trees, okay.
MR. BREWER-Caliper?
MR. NACE-Three to eight inches. We've got 62 Eastern White Pine,
of different calipers, or different size. We've got eight surface
berries, and a couple of nursery, two nursery ten oak, and two
nursery maple.
MR. STARK-He's got a lot of trees there.
MR. BREWER-So we went from 54 trees to 105. Okay. We can listen
to public comment before we decide on whether to grant the waiver
or not, right?
MR. MAR TIN .- Yes .
MR. BREWER- I guess we'll open
public hearing is open. Does
project?
the public comment period.
anybody wish to comment on
The
this
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
JOHN LEMERY
MR. LEMERY-My name is John Lemery. 1'm an attorney in Glens Falls,
and I'm here on behalf of The Great Escape, and Charles R. Wood.
We wanted to go on record, make it clear to the Planning Board that
whatever development might end up on this site, obviously, comes
after the development of The Creat Escape Theme Park, and so we
wanted to make it clear that whatever plans are developed here, and
whatever uses they are going to put this site to, if and when they
get a right to develop it, or subdivide it, Mr. Wood wanted the
Planning Board to be aware that The Great Escape may come in for
further development, at some point. There is additional acreage
there that may be developed, and so whatever traffic impacts you
look at on Round Pond Road, we want you to be mindful of the fact
that The Great Escape is there. There's additional acreage to be
de vel 0 p e d . The roll e r co a s t e r i s go i n g on 1 i n e . The r e mB y be
additional traffic in the area. We don't want to come in here, at
some point in the future, and ask for the further development of
The Creat Escape Theme Park, with additional parking at the
Bavarian Palace or other areas, and tllen find that there's a huge
traffic problem because of what may develop at the site. So we
want you to be mindful of the fact that whatever you do at the
site, and whatever you do with traffic on Round Pond koad, or curb
cuts on Route 9, if you recall at the time The Great Escape was
attempting to site the roller coaster, there was a lot of concern
about traffic impacts on Route 9.
MR. BREWER-As I recall, your traffic study said, what, there wasn't
a problem on Route 9?
MR. LEMERY-We don't think there's a traffic impact, but we want you
to be mindful that there could be a traffic impact at some point on
Round Pond Road, or at least at that Tee intersection. So we just
don't want to have to be in a position, later, when the Park comes
back here with respect to further development, having to say, well,
we're going to turn down any further development because of
problems that have been created as a result of the development of
this parcel. The other reason I'm here is that, we told our
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client, Charles Wood, that if he clear cutted his parcel of land on
Aviation Road that he couldn't develop it for five years, and so he
was mindful of that, and even though the project that he proposed
for that site didn't get permitted, that site has not been clear
cut because he is mindful of the Town regulations and assumes that
the Town will abide by those regulations. I'm reminded of the
young man who shoots his mother and father, and then he's brought
into the courthouse and he's standing before the Judge, and the
Judge says, well, your honor, I'd like you to have mercy on me
because I'm an orphan. If the rationale is going to be, once a
site is clear cut, now we're in a position that we have to do
something and allow the development of that site, and waive the
clear cutting regulation because it looks unsightly, then what
you're doing is you're saying, go ahead and clear cut a parcel of
land, without regard to the implications of our Town laws,
ordinances, rules and regulations, and then because it looks so
bad, we need to come in and clean it up and do something with it.
So we'll permit you to develop it. One of the problems in this
Town has been consistency of approaches and consistency of
treatment of different projects that have come before the Board.
So, we just wanted to know, that if you were going to waive the
clear cutting requirement, here, that presumably will stand for
others who want to clear cut their land, and then come in for
subdivision approval, and I was asked to make that point to you.
So I hopè that in your deliberations, here, you'll consider both
the impacts for other parcels in the Town, with respect to this
one, and that particularly you would be mindful of The Great Escape
Theme Park, and the development of this site, and the fact that The
Great Escape Theme Park is not yet completed, in terms of its
future development. There is additional acreage there that will be
developed. We may be coming back to you in the future, and we
don't want to be impacted by whatever happens at this site. Thank
you.
MR. BREWER-Thank you.
COIl1ffien t?
I s there anyone else that would I ike to
MARIANNE MCDONOUGH
MRS. MCDONOUGH-My name is Marianne McDonough. I reside at 28
Twicwood Lane. I'm the co-owner of the GreyCourt Motel. My
husband's law offices are right next door to Mr. Passarelli's
property. As an adjacent landowner, I would request the Planning
Board to give every consideration to Mr. Passarelli's proposal to
construct a dental office, which, as I understand it, will be
attractively designed and landscaped. This land in it's present
state is a detraction and an eyesore to the surrounding properties,
as well as the Town of Queensbury. I can appreciate the objections
to cutting trees, but the damage has been done. I don't think you
should let the objections become part of the problem. I think it's
the Planning Board's duty to remedy the situation, and to move
forward on this project. We live there. We have a business there
and a law office there, and it looks unsightly, and to hold this up
for five years, doesn't make sense. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Thank you.
comment?
Is there anyone else who would care to
MR. LEMERY-You have another remedy, I presume, rather than allowing
for the development, ask them to re-foliate the· property, and put
it back in the position that it was in, before coming back to this
Board and asking for a subdivision. That, then, requires everyone
to be treated fairly. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
Is there anyone else?
MR. MARTIN-Tim, we do have one letter that was just passed out to
the Board. Do you want me to read it in?
MR. BREWER-Yes, please.
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MR. MARTIN~"Dear Queensbury Town Planning Board Members: Due to a
previous commitment we are unable to attend the public"hearing this
evening regarding subdivision of the Passarelli property. We
strongly believe that all Town Committees, landowners and residents
have a responsibility to adhere to town laws, ordinances, policies
etc. and not attempt to circumvent them for financial gain. If Mr.
Passarelli indeed wanted to subdivide his property we believe that
with proper presentation of plans it could have been accomplished
prior to his strip clearing it. It is our understanding that once
a lot has been.strip cleared, as this property has, there is a five
year waiting period before one can apply for a permit to subdivide.
We feel strongly that Mr. Passarelli must be held to the rules. If
he had applied prior to clearing, the town committees might have
placed some restrictions or stipulations about where and what
clearing could be done. It seems that Mr. Passarelli wanted to
avoid any such restrictions so he cleared his property (his right)
and now wants a variance to subdivide, thus circumventing the
Planning Board and other Conunittees ability to provide subdivision
while keeping a positive visual quality to the property. The Town
has backed down before. It is our understanding that the RV sales
business on Route 9 had to keep trees up as part of their agreement
to locate there. After establishing the business they cut down the
trees in violation of their agreement and the Town has never done
anything. If you allow one person to strip clear property to avoid
restrictions and stipulations then give him/her a variance to
subdivide then you place yourselves in a position where you have to
treat everyone in a similar manner. Why have rules and policies to
protect and enhance our community and ignore them? Mr. Passarelli
is not new to the area. He has been a landowner an businessman in
the area for many years. He must be aware of the many, many hours
town planners have spent developing laws, policies and guidelines
to allow growth in our community and at the same time protect and
preserve the beauty of our area. If Mr. Passarell i claims a
hardship he has created his own. Had he followed the accepted path
he would most likely already have his subdivision and the town
would not have the eyesore that sits at Route 9 and Round Pond Road
now. We feel strongly that the Town of Queensbury elected and
appointed Officials owes it to all residents and landowners to
follow the rules and keep control over a managed aesthetically
positive growth of our community. C.R. Coughlin, III Martha I-I.
Coughlin Residents and homeowners in the Town of Queensbury for 29
years" And I will look into the restriction on the RV sales.
That's the first I've heard of it today. I'll look into that and
see if that was a violation.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Tom, would you care to comment again?
MR. NACE-Do you want to close the public hearing?
MR. BREWER-Is there anyone else who would like to comment?
MR. NACE-I'll be glad to address the issues. Clear cutting seems
to be the prominent issue. I think Jim will hold me out and put
all this in perspective. Mr. Passarelli came to the Town Planning
Department before he did the clearing, said that eventually he
wanted to develop the piece of property, the conmlercial portion of
the property, didn't know exactly what he wanted to do with it,
yet, but he had time and materials available to do some grading
that he knew would eventually be required, and ask the Planning
Department, ask Jim if there were permits required. At that time,
he had no intention of subdividing, and he decided to go ahead and
clear it, and right, wrong, or indifferent, that's where we are
today. I think, from an overall town perspective, the clear
cutting reg, as it stands in the Subdivision section of your
Ordinance is a very unclear objective as to what it's trying to do.
The Town needs and should implement, I think, I strongly think, an
overall clear cutting regulation that applies to all lands, under
some sort of a permit process, so that this type of situation
doesn't occur. Quite frankly, it was my personal opinion, after
having dealt with the Town reg's for half a dozen years, that the
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issue with the clear cutting under the Subdivision Regulations was
s p e c i f i call y aim e d a t h a v i n gad eve lop e r com e i n f q r are sid e n t i a I
development, having already cleared out the roads, and said, well,
I've already cleared the road. It has to go there. Therefore, you
better approve it there. I think that there needs to be a
regulation for cLear cutting. I think it's an issue that needs to
be dealt with. Right now, I think the Town has a piece of property
they need to deal with. Whether the clearing of it was, as I said
before, right, wrong or indifferent, I think that moving ahead and
dealing with it the way we're dealing with it now is probably the
most effective way of remedying the existing situation.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Anyone else?
MR. LEMERY-What he is suggesting is that you remedy the existing
situation, which was caused by violating the Ordinance, by allowing
the subdivision.
MR. BREWER-Now, lets back up.
the subdIvision regulations.
It's not in the Ordinance.
It's in
MR. LEMERY-Subdivision Reg's. Well, if you've cleared the
property, in order to subdivide that property and utilize it now, .
you'd have to waive the regulation. If someone wants to change the
regulation, they should go to the legislative body, and ask for the
regulation to be changed, and that it poses a problem with the way
the ex i s tin g reg u I a t ion i sse t for t h . I t hi n k you ma k e a v e r y ,
very bad decision to say to someone, go ahead and violate the
regulations, then come in, and because it looks so bad, we'll let
you fix it. If those are the rules, fine. Then everybody gets the
right to play by those rules, but those aren't the rules that you
promulgated, and you'd be making a mistake to do otherwise.
MR. BREWER-So what you're suggesting is.
MR. LEMERY-I'm suggesting that you tell this gentleman that he
should re-foliate his property, put plantings back so that it is
not the eyesore that it is, and that simply because it's an eyesore
is not grounds for waiving the regulations. Otherwise, you send a
message to everybody in town, go ahead, clear cut. As bad as it
look, the worse it gets, the worse it looks, the be t ter you are,
because when it looks so bad that the town can't take it, the town
will allow you to subdivide. I mean, that's the message you're
getting at.
MR. BREWER-On the other hand, though,
for a site plan for that dentist's
subdivision or not. He can still come
dentist's office.
John, he can still come in
of f i ce, whether he has a
in for the site plan for the
MR. LEMERY-If someone's asking for a waiver, I think you're setting
a bad precedent.
MR. BREWER-I understand exactly what you re saying. I've thought
about it for a long time, every since we got the plans, and I was
kind of upset when we got the plan, and I came into the office and
I said, they can't do this, because of the subdivision regulation,
and I talked to Jim about it, and we talked a little while, and you
can look at it two ways. You can look and say, well, he broke the
regulation, so we should look at that thing for five years. Okay.
No trees are going to grow back in five years. We all know that.
Or you can look at it to the aspect that, we can let him subdivide
it, provided he does this, he puts that 75 foot buffer in. I mean,
you're going to punish him by not letting him do it, and punish the
whole town by having everybody look at it. Okay. That's just illY.
opinion, and on the other hand, the Town is working on it, a clear
cutting law, right as we speak. I don't condone him going in there
and cutting it. I think it's the ugliest in Town. I told Mr.
Passarelli that. I'm not afraid to tell him that, because that's
what I think.
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MR. LEMERY-Ugly then works, because then if it's ugly enough, come
in, and we'll fix it.
MR. BREWER--Well, yes, but, John, I think rules were made to be
changed. I mean, I don't think every rule that's in this Ordinance
is right.
MR. LEMERY-I'm not suggesting that at all.
MR. BREWER-So ·we shouldn't change some?
some.
think we should change
MR. LEMERY-Yes, maybe you should, but you don't change it after
someone violates it, and the reason that you change it is because
it's so bad that it has to be fixed becau~e now someone's creating
an eyesore in the community.
MR. BREWER-I mean, you can look at it and fight the point forever.
I mean, we can sit here until midnight tonight and fight th"" point,
but I just think.
MR. LEMERY-I'm not here to fight it. I just want to know what the
rules are, so then can advise my clients.
MR. BREWER-He can go clear cut it tomorrow, if he wants.
MR . L EM E R Y -- I'm not s u g g est i n g t hat t hat's any t h i n g t hat C h a rl e s
Wood would do. He wouldn't do it, because he wouldn't treat the
Tow nth a t way, but the r e ma y be 0 the r s who w 0 u I d do it, and s 0
therefore you've got four or five sites allover the town that look
awful. I can see that you're inclined to do so. So, thank you for
your time.
MR. BREWER-Well, not necessarily. I agree with you on one hand,
and not the other, but that's just my opinion.
MRS. MCDONOUGH-Marianne McDonough. The question I have is. If Mr.
Passarelli went to the Planning Department and asked if he could
clear cut, they're now penalizing him for something that he was
granted permission to do. They're actually accusing him of doing
something devious, which mayor may not be the case. If he wanted
to sell the property, and to clear cut it, brought in a seller, or
purchaser, and now he wants to subdivide and is being told, he did
this under.
MR. BREWER--I think Mr. Passarelli was aware of the regulation a1
the time he went in and cut it.
MRS. MCDONOUGH-That you couldn't clear cut? Well, why wasn't he
told that?
MR. BREWER-I think he was.
MRS. MCDONOUGH-He was told he couldn't clear cut?
MR. MARTIN-He was told about the five year restriction.
MR. BREWER-I don't think anybody can tell him that he can't ¿Lear
cut. There's not a law that says you can't clear cut.
MR. MARTIN-He came to my office in November and asked if there was
a permit required to do so. I looked thoroughly and could not find
any. The only thing I found was the five year restriction. At
that time, I said, Guido, there's no permit required. However,
there is a five year restriction on subdivision, should you want to
subdivide this after clear cutting.
MRS. MCDONOUGH-So if he didn't subdivide this, he could do whatever
he wanted now on this clear cut land?
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MR. MARTIN-Yes. He could come in with a site plan for this parcel,
without a subdivision, and that site plan would be considered.
MRS. MCDONOUGH-Okay. That answers my question.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Sir, you had something?
GEORGE GORE
MR. GORE-Yes. Good evening. My name is George Gore. I 'm a
resident of the Town of Queensbury. I noted that Mr. Lemery stated
that the site was unsightly. Yet, I heard the adjacent landowner
mention that it was unsightly before, and it looks much better now
than it couLd ever be, in addition to the plans that we see here
that Mr. Passarelli's going to undertake. It's certainly going to
improve that property from even what the next door neighbors think.
So, as far as it being unsightly, at this point in time, I guess
it's a matter of opinion. It also seems to me that there has been
an implied indication that Mr. Passarelli underhandedly undertook
this clear cutting and then is trying to circumvent the law. I,
personally, don't see that. It sounded, to me, that Mr. Passarelli
clear cut with specific plans on owning the property singularly,
and was approached subsequently by this dentist, whoever that may
be, for a subdivision, and is asking for this Board's approval on
that. That's the way I perceived it. Thank you for your time.
MR. BREWER-Thank you.
MR. STARK-Tim, Mr. Passarelli clear cut before the dentist got the
money to bail out of the lease. I mean, he didn't have that in
mind before he did it.
MR. BREWER-No.
I think that's the case.
MR. MACEWAN-Why don't you get him up here and have him explain why
he did it?
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes.
MR. MACEWAN-That would be an excellent idea.
MR. BREWER-Would you care to give us an explanation, Mr.
Passarelli, why you cut the land? I mean, everybody's hearing,
back and forth. Lets here it right from the horse's mouth.
GUIDO PASSARELLI
MR. PASSARELLI-My name is Guido Passarelli. I never intended to
subdivide the property. I wanted to build it as one parcel. After
the property is cleared, the dentist comes along and wants to buy
a piece of the property. So I ask permission to subdivide the
property. That's the only reason.
MR. BREWER-Okay. You had intentions of developing it yourself?
MR. PASSARELLI-Yes.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Any questions from anybody? Okay. Now we have
to decide. Shall we or shan't we? Is there anyone else who'd like
to comment?
LEON STEVES
MR. STEVES-I don't know whether to say it or not. By the way, my
name is L~on Steves, for the record. If a plan was brought before
you, with the raw land, as it was existing two years ago, a grading
plan would bring it back, pretty much, to what it is today. So it
isn't what we're talking about, the intent is, I guess the basis of
what we're talking about, not what would happen to the property.
It's going to be cleared. It would have to be cleared. Any
...
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grading plan would necessitate that.
land. Thank you.
It isn't a flat parcel of
MR. BREWER-Thank you. Okay. One last time, anybody?
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
MR. BREWER-Now it's up to us. We can either make a motion to grant
the waiver, or deny the waiver.
MR. RUEL-Did you want to make it part of
motion?
the mo t ion,
overall
.
MR. BREWER--No.
MR. STARK-No.
MR. BREWER-Two separate issues.
MR. RUEL-All right.
MR. BREWER-Is everybody happy with the buffer, 75 feet?
MR . MART I N - Well, I t h ink you co u 1 d , i f yo u wan t to do i t as two
separate issues, Tim, then you would consider that under your
subdivision consideration.
MR. BREWER-Is everybody happy with the amount of trees? We have to
take everything into consideration, what we're going to do.
MR. MACEWAN-No you don't. You grant the waiver or you don't grant
the waiver.
MR. BREWER-I would like to make a condition, if we grant the
waiver, make a condition that specifically that amount, or more or
less trees be planted.
MR. RUEL-Yes. The type and size, etc.
MR. MACEWAN-Tie that
subdivision.
in with Preliminary approval on the
MR. OBERMAYER-Or with the waiver, even.
MR. BREWER-With the waiver.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. You could do it with the waiver. Yes.
MR. OBERMAYER-If we waive it, this is what they've got to do.
MR. RUEL-There are two waivers, right?
MR. NACE-Yes.
MR. BREWER-What was the other one?
MR. NACE-Schematic, or sketch plan.
MR . MAR TIN - S k e t c h P I an ph a s e , the fir s t 0 f the t h r e est e p s . We
have a two lot subdivision before us. The Board typically waives
the Sketch Plan phase.
MR. PALING-I guess I'm getting a little bit more specific. We've
got to clarify the single versus double access.
MR. BREWER-In the subdivision.
MR. OBERMAYER-That's in the subdivision.
MR. PALING-Yes. Okay.
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MR. MACEWAN-For my opinion, I would rather do the waiver
separately, and individually, if it gets approved or if it gets
denied, because in my mind, I don't want to tie it into any
plantings that are existing on the subdivision, because you're
tying them in to a potential approval, if it is approved, and in my
mind, I don't think he's got enough there to satisfy me for
plantings to restore the site.
MR. BREWER-What would satisfy you?
MR. MACEWAN-More.
MR. BREWER-How many more?
MR. MACEWAN-I'd have to give that some thought.
MR. NACE-May I suggest that in your waiver you at least reference
the steps that are being taken to mitigate clear cutting.
MR. OBERMAYER-Why do you want more trees, Craig?
MR. MACEWAN-Because I think what his plans are right now, for the
kinds of trees that he's going to put there, and the size of the
trees, and the way that that lot is situated, you're still going to
see a good portion of bare spots on that lot. I think he needs to
go higher up the hill.
MR. BREWER-What do you mean, higher up the hill?
MR. MACEWAN-Because the slope of that property and the elevation of
that property, even with the size trees that he's going to plant
there, you'11 still see a good portion of bare spots on that
property. It won't buffer it from the road.
MR. NACE-Those trees that are being transplanted are from a mature
forest.
MR. MACEWAN-How many of them, though? I mean, you're talking a lot
of new ones, too.
MR. OBERMAYER-Sixty something.
MR. NACE-Thirty of them are three to eight inch caliper. Okay.
MR. MACEWAN-Which is what in height?
MR. NACE-Three inch caliper is about 20 feet in height.
MR. MARTIN-I've just got one other suggestion, before you get too,
I know we don't usually do this, but in this particular instance,
I'd like to have it, if the trees die, that they be replaced,
especially given the fact, I know we're dealing with transplanting,
and that's great. I mean, we're getting a little bit more maturity
there, but in this particular instance, I would like to see.
MR. RUEL-Which way do you want to go, here?
MR. BREWER-MY preference would be, if we're going to grant the
waiver or deny the waiver, to do that first.
MR. RUEL-Yes. Okay.
MR. BREWER-If someone makes a motion to approve, I would make the
motion to approve with conditions.
MR. RUEL-All the conditions that were mentioned this evening?
~
MR. BREWER-Specifically.
MR. RUEL-One access point, buffer zones.
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MR. BREWER-That would be the subdivision, Roger. Specifically, for
the waiver, I would say, the buffer.
MR. RUEL-Yes, 75 foot buffer, with 100 or more trees, the type and
the size.
MR. BREWER-The amount of trees.
MR. RUEL-Ri gh t . Meet all engineering comments?
MR. BREWER-No. That would be for the subdivision.
MR. RUEL-Okay.
MR. BREWER-I guess we should throw in something about, if the trees
were to die, they would have to be.
-
MR. RUEL-How do you word dying trees?
MR. OBERMAYER-No. This buffer is just a temporary buffer until you
bring in your site plan for your subdivision.
MR. BREWER-No. Permanent.
MR. NACE-This is permanent. This is a buffer to mitigate the way
the site looks now. Okay.
MR. NACE-When we come in with a site plan, then that site plan is
up for your approval, and I would hope that, at that point, you
would consider what your zoning regulations are, and I don't know
whether the 75 feet works in every little piece of the site or not.
Okay. There may be some place where you might want to reduce it
down to 65 feet.
MR. BREWER-No, I won't go for that. I'm sorry. If I was to even
vote yes on this, I would say that that buffer is going to be
permanent. If you haven't got, can't go back, how deep is that
property, Tom?
MR. NACE-If you want us to go back 75 feet, what about your
circulation road, if we end up with a single entrance?
MR. BREWER-That can vary.
MR. OBERMAYER-To me, I'd rather see two exits, really.
MR. NACE-I'm simply trying to point out, what's the difference
between violating that?
MR. BREWER-I don't want to see a development come in here, and then
have all those trees taken out of there.
MR. NACE-Well, at that point, you have the right to reject that
plan. You have the total right to reject that plan.
MR. BREWER-You're right. Okay.
MR. NACE-All I'm saying is, keep an open mind, at that point.
MR. BREWER-Boy, I'd like to see them stay there.
MR. NACE-And we probably will. I'm just saying, without knowing
exactly what's going to go on the site.
MR. BREWER-If I have my way, you will.
MR. MACEWAN-There was a comment that was made during our site visit
last night that these trees, for the most part, weren't going to be
able to be planted until the final grading was all done and the
site plan was established.
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MR. NACE-No.
..,
MR. OBERMAYER-Until the grading was done. That was mentioned.
MR. NACE-Yes. We were going to do the grading. The grading will
be part of the.
MR. BREWER-You have to do the grading before you put the trees in.
There's no question about that.
MR. RUEL-Tim, can we ask for a landscape plan on the buffer zone?
MR. BREWER-You've got it, right there, and that will be complete
for final.
MR. RUEL-That's not the plan. I mean, you've got to have a listing
of the trees.
MR. OBERMAYER-He's got a listing.
MR. BREWER-If we grant this waiver, and he goes on to final stage
of subdivision, he'll have to have that complete plan to us for
final, which will be next month.
MR. NACE-For your review.
MR. OBERMAYER--And you can ei ther
incorporate it into your subdivision
approve it or disapprove it.
incorporate those, or not
plan, but we'll be able to
MR. RUEL-That's the only open item.
What else is there?
MR. BREWER-I want to see the trees left there, myself. If I was to
make a motion, I would say that the trees stay there.
MR. STARK-But not on the waiver part.
MR. BREWER-On the waiver. I mean, that's the purpose of making
th~n put the buffer there, because we're granting them the waiver,
if we do. So we're going to tell him, if he comes back in in two
months, and he wants to put a building there, he can cut the trees
down?
MR. STARK-No, no. Tim, you're talking about making a motion just
for the wai ver, and then when we make a mot ion to approve the
Preliminary, we can throw it in then.
MR. MACEWAN-What would be the purpose of giving you this waiver and
giving you a buffer, to have you say that you want to come back at
site plan and take some of those trees out?
MR. NACE-The purpose of the buffer is to mitigate the way the site
looks now;
MR. MACEWAN-That's right.
MR. NACE-When we develop the site, and do a complete landscaping
plan for whatever is going on that site, okay, then you have the
approval process, in which you either accept or reject that. Okay.
All I'm saying is that when we develop the si te (-lost word) there's
a lot mo r e pia n n i n g t hat go e sin, to ma k e the sit e I 00 k n ice.
Okay, and if it turns out, just from the layout of the site, that
we need to violate that 75 foot buffer, in a few places, then I
would at least like you to keep an open mind.
MR. MACEWAN-On that topic, to go back, with the amount of grad.ing
that has to be done on the site now, in order to plant this buffer
and to fill in some of the deeper ravines up there, why can't you
take into cons i der a t i on, r i gh t now, and make a sing I e acces sin
there? There's a couple of other places up along Route 9 that have
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a lot steeper access into their places than this one here. What's
the name of the Motel up there in Lake George, just before you get
to Lake George, it used to be the George Washington?
MR. RUEL-The Travel Lodge.
MR. MACEWAN-I'm talking something with that kind of approach,
that's a lot steeper grade, and it's a lot higher elevation than
we're talking about here. They've accomplished it. You should be
able to accom~lish it.
MR. NACE-I've already said that we will try. Okay.
MR. BREWER-How deep is the lot, Tom, from the 75 foot?
MR. NACE-From the 75 foot.
MR. MACEWAN-Three twenty-five, Guido?
MR. BREWER-So if you, 300 feet, to meet your back setback is what,
50? So you could put a 250 foot building.
MR. NACE-That's a complete buffer. That's not a building setback.
"
MR. BREWER-I understand.
MR. NACE-That's a real buffer.
MR. BREWER-Is there a setback from that, b~ilding?
MR. NACE-No.
MR. BREWER-All right. So you've got.
MR. NACE-You typically don't put your building right, especially
c ormne r cia I .
MR. BREWER-How deep of a building could you put there?
MR. NACE-I don't know. Well, we don't know what kind of building.
We don't know what the parking requirements are. I'm just saying
that there are enough unknowns, at this point, and if you're going
to have the review process over what's finally done, that the
purpose of the 75 foot buffer is to buffer this unfinished site,
okay. Now when the site's finished, it's going to look a whole lot
different, and maybe that 75 foot buffer is not necessary, at that
point, in places.
MR. OBERMAYER-Why do we want to lock ourselves in to that 75 feet?
MR. STARK-Tim, he's going to have to get a roadway through there,
whether it's one inch or two inch. He's going to have to have a
roadway through those trees, and we're going to have the ~pproval
on it anyway, when he comes to us.
MR. BREWER-What I'm saying, George, is if he builds, say this is
the 75 foot. This is the road out here. This is the 75 foot or 50
foot or whatever, okay. He comes in to go to the dentist office
and he builds his road here. Okay. Why couldn't he just come in,
he's got to come to that intersection anyway, he could go that way
with it, or this way, instead. All right. I'll go along with a
minimum of 50 foot cut off.
.MR. STARK-You're saying have the road inside the 75 foot?
MR. BREWER-Exactly.
MR. STARK-Well, you don't need that to make a waiver right now.
MR. BREWER-I would want that as a condition of it, inside at least
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minimum 50 foot.
MR. OBERMAYER-I think the 75 foot buffer is good, but I mean, why
can't we be flexible enough so that in the landscaping plan.
MR. MACEWAN·-We are being flexible.
MR. STARK-No. He means like, when he comes for a site plan.
MR. OBERMAYER-Then we can revise it.
MR. NACE-I'll tell you what, make it a permanent 60 foot buffer,
with a 75 foot buffer, planted buffer now, but a 60 foot permanent
buffer.
MR. BREWER-I can live with that.
MR. PALING-Are you saying you can live with that, if you're limited
to a single access?
MR. STARK-No, we're not talking a single access.
MR. NACE-No. Access is a totally separate issue. If we're forced'
to single access, then you're going to have to compromise on that
buffer. That's just a practicality. There's no way around that.
MR. PALING-Yes.
MR. BREWER-You just gave us the numbers, Tom. You said 60 feet,
permanent.
MR. NACE-For everything except that access up to the other parcel.
MR. BREWER-Exactly.
MR. NACE-We'll live with that.
MR. BREWER-Still maintaining the same amount of trees.
MR. NACE-That's correct.
MR. PALING-We just gave him 15 foot of buffer.
don't like that.
MR. BREWER-No, permanent, Bob.
MR. NACE-I'm saying that now we'll plant back to 75 feet. Okay,
but we will stipulate that when our final site plan comes through
that we will maintain a permanent 60 foot buffer.
MR. BREWER-For the north parcel.
MR. NACE-For the north parcel.
...
MR. PAL I NG-On I y to be mod i f i ed becaus e 0 f an acces s, the acces s
road.
MR. NACE-The only place that that buffer would be compromised would
be if we have to move, and I'll sit down and review the grading
with you, so you can prove to yourself that we'd have to, for the
single access.
MR. PALING-That has nothing to do wi th the buffer on the north
side, of the access?
MR. BREWER-No. That would still be planted 75 foot now.
MR. RUEL-You keep talking about a permanent buffer versus, what,
temporary?
MR. PALING-Well, this is only for the access.
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MR. NACE-What I'm proposing is that right now we will plant back to
the 75 foot line, okay, but that we will agree that whatever site
plan comes in here will not encroach, or will not, whatever site
plan comes, we will a permanent 60 foot buffer.
MR. RUEL-Isn't the 75 permanent?
MR. BREWER-No. Seventy-five is temporary. If he ever has to make
any provisions to get into the northern parcel, that he can't get
in there with9ut cutting some of those trees, the most he could
ever cut out of there is 15 feet.
MR. PASSARELLI-Only if I can get a second access. If I can't, I'll
give you the 75 foot buffer. I'll leave that permanent.
MR. NACE-Why don't you make it a 60 foot buffer, period, and we'll
li ve with that.
MR . STARK - The fur the rea sty 0 u goo nth a t pro per 1 y, 0 k a y , e a s t ,
with a permanent buffer, the steeper the grade goes going to
dentist office site, okay, and the harder it becomes to put a road
in there.
MR. BREWER-No. We compromised on that side, George. On the south
side of the property we said he didn't have to be 75 feet. He
could be back as far as 50. So he could cut the road in there to
make the single access.
MR. NACE-I don't know, until I grade it out, I don't know what it
has to be to get that single access out, okay. What~I was saying
is 75 foot, until the site's developed. Once the site's developed,
60, okay, but that if we're forced into single access, until I work
the grading plan out, I don't know how close we're going to have to
be with that road. Grade that as a driveway where it crosses a
buffer, if you will.
MR. OBERMAYER-There's 650 foot of frontage there. I don't see what
their big deal is about one access or two accesses.
MR. BREWER-That's just, you want two. We want one. Why don't you
want one? You're asking us why we don't want two.
MR. STARK-It would be more attractive with two.
MR. OBERMAYER-I think it'll be a better landscaping.
MR. BREWER-I don't think so. That's mY opinion. You've got your
opinion.
MR. NACE-Okay. Give us the opportunity to work out the single
versus double access with DOT, okay, have that worked out by the
time we come back to you, and however that effects the buffer, let
us, we'll try to mitigate or to minimize whatever effect that has
on the buffer. Lets deal, now, just with the buffer, however you
want.
MR. STARK-Lets deal with the waiver.
MR. BREWER-Lets deal with it, then. I still say it should be 75
foot. We started with 50. We went up to 75, now we're down to 60.
MR. PASSARELLI-We'll give you 75, if I can get double entrance.
MR. BREWER-What if you only get a one entrance?
MR. PASSARELLI-Then I don't know (lost word).
MR. RUEL-Why don't we make the 75 permanent.
MR. BREWER-I mean, on the south side, we said we'd work with you 50
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feet.
MR. RUEL-Yes, for their driveway.
MR. BREWER-For the driveway. Then maybe we should find out if it
works before we make any motions, to approve or disapprove.
MR. OBERMAYER-Before we make a waiver.
MR. BREWER--Yes.
MR. RUEL-To find out what?
MR. BREWER-Lets find out if it works, if he can put the driveway in
there. If he can't, then we're talking a whole new plan.
MR. MACEWAN-You have a lot of soil to move around up there, in your
grading. I would think that you'd be able to acconml0date the land
in such a way that you could make access via one curb cut.
MR. PASSARELLI-I'm going to try my best.
MR. NACE-We will do our best.
to look 1 i ke exac t 1 y . I can't
to be able to maintain 50 feet
70 feet.
We just don't know what it's going
tell you, here, whether we re going
doing that, 40 feet, or 60 feet, or
MR. BREWER-I would say a minimum of 50 on the south side, Tom, 75
on the nor t h sid e . T hat's jus t my 0 pin ion. I don' t k now how
everybody else feels.
MR. NACE-Lets go with that.
MR. BREWER-But now I'm kind of in awe, what if you come back and
say, fellas, it can't work? Then what do we do, rescind the motion
to give the waiver, because it doesn't work?
MR. NACE-No.
MR. BREWER-I think you have to Inake it work.
MR. NACE-Well, back up. If it doesn't work, and DOT says, you re
right, it doesn't work, we'll give you two accesses, then we
provide you 75 foot buffer overall.
MR. RUEL-You can't go wrong.
.~
MR. OBERMAYER-I would agree to that.
MR. BREWER-In writing.
can't be done.
They've got to say, it doesn't work, it
MR. NACE-And they've got to say
accesses, because the single access
that we will grant
is impractical.
you
two
MR. RUEL-Why not? This thing's got to fly sometime.
MR. BREWER-It hasn't gQi to.
MR. RUEL-No. We've got to get past the waiver.
MR. BREWER-Well, somebody make a motion.
MR. RUEL-All right.
MOTION TO GRANT WAIVERS FOR PRELIMINARY STAGE SUBDIVISION NO. 4-
1994 GUIDO PASSARELLI, I ntroduced by Roger Ruel who moved for its
adoption, seconded by George Stark:
Waivers from AI83-2, and Article III, Section 183-5A of the Code,
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with the stipulation that a 75 foot buffer zone in lieu of the 50
foot one shown, be landscaped per plan, with 100 plus trees,
showing the type and the size. Trees to be replaced when dead,
wit h i n a two yea r per i 0 d . The sou t h sid e 0 f the b u f fer ma y be
reduced to accommodate the driveway. Landscaping of the complete
75 foot buffer zone to be completed on or before August 1st, 1994,
and in no event shall any certificate of occupancy be issued prior
to completion of that plan.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
MR. SCHACHNER-You also might want to clarify,
what Roger meant by showing type and size.
require certain types and sizes, don't you?
I didn't understand
thought you want to
MR. BREWER-Yes.
MR. RUEL-Wait a minute.
I'm not finished.
MR. PALING-Roger, could we add something to your motion, to the
effect that the applicant provide a guarantee that the trees will
be planted by such a date, and they will be maintained for a two
year period, in the event of death?
MR. BREWER-We've never granted this waiver, before. I won't say
it's never been granted, but I've never been on the Board when .i t' s
been granted. I would say that they have to be planted in such a
time that, I don't know, how long do you need to plant them?
MR. NACE-I think what you were talking about before was plans, have
the plans as shown completed prior to any CO being issued for
either parcel, the dentist office in particular.
MR. RUEL-Landscaped plans to be completed prior to CO, landscaping
to be completed.
MR. BREWER-If you do your grading, just throwing these~numbers out.
If you do your grading, it takes you a month to do your grading.
I'm going on the high side. How much longer is it going to take to
put the trees in?
MR. PASSARELLI-About two weeks after that.
MR. BREWER-So you cou I dn 't have someone s irnu I tan eo us I y pu t the
trees in and do the dentist?
MR. PASSARELLI-That's exactly (lost word) at the same time.
MR. BREWER-So I would say that the, then, after the grading is
done, two weeks or three weeks, the trees should be planted.
MR. OBERMAYER-Right.
MR. BREWER-If you get an approval, I don't want to say that we're
going to grant you a waiver, and then have you go in there to grade
it, build the dentist office, and then put the trees in. That's
not what 1 envisioned.
MR. SCHACHNER--Tim, you're talking about no issuance of the
Certificate of Occupancy until the plan is complete, as I
understand it, and Jim Martin, before he had to leave, anticipating
this discussion, told me to mention to you his input into this
issue, and his input is, that his recomrnendation is that the
planting plan be completed, not just prior to issuance of
Certificate of Occupancy, but prior to your final action on any
site plan review application. That's a very significant
difference, obviously, in timing.
MR . PAS S AR ELL I - I h a v e a d e a d li n e , the den tis t has to be 0 u t 0 f
there by the October 31st, he has to be out. That's why, I spent
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several hundred thousand dollars for the building. Nobody's going
to leave a building, several hundred thousand dollars, unoccupied,
because the trees are not planted.
MR. BREWER-I think what we're doing is we're granting a waiver for
something, and then it's going to take second seat to the dentist,
Guido.
MR. PASSARELLI-It's not taking second seat to the dentist. The
dentist will not move in until those trees are in.
MR. BREWER-So what difference does it make if you put the trees are
in first or last?
MR. PASSARELLI-It's going to take a month to grade the property,
and I will do exactly, after the grading the trees will be done.
In the meantime, (lost word) dentist office. I can order the steel
and stuff like that. There's a lot of stuff.
MR. OBERMAYER-He's saying he wants to go ahead with the site plan.
MR. BREWER-But I think it could be done simultaneously.
MR. OBERMAYER-I think so, too.
MR. NACE-Sure.
MR. OBERMAYER-I think tying it to the grading, like you said.
MR. BREWER-But then we don't have any specific dates.
MR. OBERMAYER-Give us a date.
MR. STARK-Say August 1st, the trees are in by 60 days.
MR. BREWER-August 1st. Okay. Now I guess, what can happen if
August 1 comes and goes and it's not completed, what can we do?
MR. SCHACHNER-Well, for starters, I would suggest that you at least
still include your previous suggestion about Certificate of
Occupancy . So t hat, i not her w 0 r d s , as s um i n g I' m foil ow i n g your
reasoninj, you don't want this all to occur, and if the applicant
is able to have things happen very quickly, arguably, the applicant
could be applying for a Certificate of Occupancy even before August
1st, and even before the planting is completed. So I guess, if I'm
following your rationale, you should at least include that as an
additional condition, as well.
MR. BREWER-I don't want anybody in the building before the
landscaping is done.
MR. SCHACHNER-Right, and there is a risk of that.
MR. BREWER-He could potentially go in there tomorrow and start
grading and build the building, and have the dentist in before he
puts a tree in the ground, George.
MR. STARK-No.
plan.
)-Ie's got to come to us for the dent i s t for site
MR. BREWER-So why can't we do it now? He agreed to do it. Tie it
in with the CO not being issued until the landscaping is done.
MR. RUEL-Do you want to tie it in with CO, because you mentioned,
you said prior to final site plan approval?
MR. SCHACHNER-Well, that's what Jim Martin said. Whoever said, a
minute ago, said it right, said that, no CO, it has to be done, if
I'm understanding your intent, it would be codified by suggesting
that the planting plan or landscaping plan, whatever you want to
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call it, has to be fully implemented by August 1st and in no event
shall any Certificate of Occupancy be issued prior to completion of
that plan.
MR. BREWER-Exactly.
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mr. Obermayer, Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling, Mr. Brewer
NOES: Mr. MacEwan
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
MR. NACE-Now you have to act on SEQRA and you have to act on
Preliminary.
MR. SCHACHNER-Just to make this clear, you certainly don't have to.
MR. NACE-I'm sorry.
I used the wrong term.
MR. BREWER-Now we can move on to subdivision. Now we've got to go
through SEQRA.
MR. HARLICKER-They've got a Long Form EAF that they filled out.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Go ahead, Craig.
RESOLUTION WHEN DETERMINATION OF NO SIGNIFICANCE IS MADE
RESOLUTION NO. 4-1994, Introduced by Craig MacEwan who moved for
its adoption, seconded by Roger Ruel:
WHEREAS, there
application for:
is presently before
GUIDO PASSARELLI, and
the
Planning
Board
an
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
env i ronmental 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
negative declaration that may be required by law.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling,
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Mr. Stark, Mr.
Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
MR. BREWER-Okay. We can move on. Now we can make a motion for the
subdivision.
MOTION TO APPROVE PRELIMINARY STAGE SUBDIVISION NO. 4-1994 GUIDO
PASSARELLI, Introduced by Roger Ruel who moved for its adoption,
seconded by Robert Paling:
At the Route 9 and Round Pond Road, for a three lot subdivision,
with the condition that Rist-Frost notes are adhered to.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
MR. BREWER-We have to consider our conditions, whether we want to
make him make this, before final, come back with a plan that works
for the driveway, one curb cut, or are we going to ask him to have
t~o curb cuts? We had discussion about that.
MR. MACEWAN- I'm in favor of one curb cut.
MR. BREWER-That would be illY.. favor.
MR. STARK-Well, suppose i t doesn't work?
MR. BREWER-Then it doesn't work. I think we can make a condition
that if it doesn't ~ork, per DOT, then they'll grant him two curb
cuts. Then we have to go along with it.
MR. STARK-They would grant him two curb cuts now, based on his.
MR. BREWER-Tom says that if he can't make it work, he'll get a
letter from DOT stating that it won't work.
MR. RUEL-Okay. Then I'll make it a condition that it be one curb
cut.
MR. BREWER-Provided it works. I don't want to make him make the
one curb cut if it doesn't work.
MR. STARK-Why even put that in now. For final you would have the
information.
MR. OBERMAYER-We're just subdividing the property right now.
MR. BREWER-All right. Fine, but final it has to happen.
you're going to come back wi th a plan to see if it
regardless of whether we put that ill there or not?
I mean,
works,
MR. NACE-I'm going to come back with a final plan that shows you
either one access, if it works, or two accesses, plus a letter from
DOT.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. PALING-And we can act on it accordingly at ~hat time.
AYES: Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling, Mr. Stark,
Mr. Obermayer, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
MR. NACE-Okay. Can I ask two questions? First, we discussed out
at the site the other day that the Board would like to see some
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progress as far as
site into shape.
Preliminary's been
tomorrow?
grading off the steep slopes and getting the
Now that the waiver's been granted, and
approved, can we go start grading out there
MR. BREWER-It doesn't bother me. It's not subdivided yet. He owns
the land. He can do whatever he wants.
MR. SCHACHNER-But wait a minute. The Town assumes no
responsibility whatsoever for any such work that's undertaken, and
the Planning Board members may be saying, yes, it's fine with them,
but you just heard the Planning Board Chairman say that the fact
that Preliminary subdivision's been granted doesn't mean that the
land's been subdivided.
MR. NACE-That's correct.
MR. SCHACHNER-So there's no, I mean, the Planning Board members can
say, yes, they're not offended by that, but that should not be
in terpr eted, in any way, form, shape or manner as any Town
endorsement of that work.
MR. BREWER-That that's an approval of the dentist's office and/or
the final.
MR. SCHACHNER-Or any other work being undertaken by the applicant.
MR. NACE-Right. We realize that.
MR. SCHACHNER-All right.
record.
just wanted to make that clear on the
MR. NACE-The work is undertaken at our own risk.
MR. SCHACHNER-And there's 110 Town approval or endorsement of that
work.
MR. NACE-Because none's required.
MR. SCHACHNER-That's fine. I just want to make that clear for the
record.
MR. PASSARELLI-The reason why I ask that question was there will be
may b e a few c a II sin S co t t 's 0 f f ice on c e the y see t hat ma chi n e
going.
MR. SCHACHNER-And there may still be. I '01 not quarreling anybody.
I'm just making sure that the record indicates that although the
Town Planning Board members may have said they don't have a problem
with that, that should not be interpreted by anYÞody as any
official endorsement or approval by the Town of Queensb~ry. That's
all.
MR. NACE-The other question iSt yesterday was submittal date for
June. Because of the time frames, and where we're at with this
meeting, is it possible for me to submit final plans? The site
plan for the dentist's office is already submitted. That has been
put off until June. Is it possible for me to submit final plans
for the subdivision by next Wednesday, and have that into your
process?
MR. BREWER-When's your Staff meeting?
MR. HARLICKER-Tuesday or Wednesday.
MR. BREWER-How about Tuesday?
MR. NACE-Okay.
that point.
I pro b a b I y won' t h a v e fin a 1 a p pro val from DOT at
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MR. BREWER-As long as you have that for the meeting.
MR. NACE-I may have that at the meeting. I have to work through
the engineers to get their concurrence with what I'm doing.
MR. BREWER-Okay. That's fine.
MR. NACE-Okay. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Do we have to make a motion to indicate that, Mark?
MR. SCHACHNER-It doesn't matter.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Just do it.
MR. NACE-Okay. Thank you.
MR. BREWER-Thank you.
SITE PLAN NO. 14-94 TYPE: UNLISTED GARY CARDINALE OWNER:
EARLTOWN CORPORATION ZONE: HC-IA, LI-IA LOCATION: EAST QUAKER
SERVICE RD. OPPOSITE GARDEN TIME. PROPOSAL IS FOR CONSTRUCTION OF
A 11,880 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH ASSOCIATED PARKING TO HOUSE
SPORTLINE HONDA/KAWASAKI. ALL LAND USES IN THE HC &: LI ZONES ARE
SUBJECT TO SITE PLAN REVIEW. BEAUTIFICATION COMM. - 5/9/94 WARREN
CO. P LANN I NG - 5/ 11 /94 TAX MAP NO. 1 1 0 - 1 - 2 . 63 LOT S I Z E : 2 . 03
ACRE S SECT I ON 1 7 9 .- 2 3 , 1 79 - 26
JOHN GORALSKI, JON LAPPER, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
..
STAFF INPUT
Notes from Staff, Site Plan No. 14-94, Gary Cardinale, Meeting
Date: May 26, 1994 "PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant is
proposing to construct a 12,000 square foot sport vehicle sales and
service center. The project includes 56 parking spaces. PROJECT
ANALYSIS: In accordance with Section 179-38 A., the project is in
compliance with the other requirements of this chapter, including
the dimensional regulations of the zoning district in which it is
to be located. In accordance with Section 179-38 B., the project
was reviewed in order to determine if it is in harmony with the
general purpose or intent of this chapter, and it was found to be
compatible with the zone in which it is to be located and should
not be a burden on supporting public services. In accordance with
Section 179-38 C., the proposal was reviewed regarding its impact
on the highways. There was found to be no significant impact on
the r 0 ads y stem. I n a c cor d a n c e wit h S e c t ion 1 79- 38 D., the pro j e c t
was compared to the relevant factors outlined in Section 179-39.
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 project is compatible with the
area. The 12,000 square foot building will fit well on the 2 acre
site. The lighting should not negatively impact adjacent
properties. A freestanding sign is proposed for the front and will
be subject to a separate permit. 2. The adequacy and arrangement
of vehicular traffic access and circulation, including
intersections, road widths, pavement surfaces, dividers and traffic
controls; The proposal includes two access drives. The
elimination of the eastern access would help in future access
management and not decrease accessibility of the site. The
entrance could be relocated towards the center of the lot so that
It lines up with the access drive on the west side of the building.
Provision for interconnection with adjacent properties needs to be
shown at the rear of the lot. 3. The location, arrangement,
appearance and sufficiency of off-street parking and loading;
There is sufficient parking provided with area for 31 spaces
reserved for future use. In order to allow for landscaping and
some green area along the road, the proposed parking spaces facing
the road could be relocated along the west property line and the
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building shifted to the east so that there is room for them.
Access to the rear of the building would be via the gravel access
on the west side of the building. 4. The adequacy and 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 s tormwa ter drai nage fac i lit i es ; S tormwa ter dra i nage
will be reviewed by Rist-Frost. 6. The adequacy of water supply
and sewage disposal facilities; The site is serviced by municipal
water. The sewage disposal system will be reviewed by Rist-Frost.
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; The applicant
does not show any landscaping on the west side of the lot and any
comments from the Beautification Committee need to be addressed.
8. The adequacy of fire lanes and other emergency zones and the
provision of fire hydrants; The nearest fire hydrant is 275 feet
to .the west and emergency access is adequate. 9. The adequacy and
impact of structures, roadways, and landscaping in areas wi th
susceptibility to ponding, flooding and/or erosion. Erosion
control measures shall be in place during construction and until
the site has been stabilized. RECOMMENDATION: The site could be
adequately accessed by one driveway located just to the east of the
proposed location. The proposed parking that fronts the road could
be relocated to the west side of the lot thereby increasing the
amount of green space in the front yard. The relocated spaces
would still be close to the entrance of the building. The building
could be moved to the east to allow room for the parking and a 24
f 00 t wid e d r i ve w 0 u 1 d pro v ide a c c e s s tot her ear s tor ag ear ea. The
gravel drive on the east side of the building could be eliminated
without hindering access to the storage area."
MR. HARLICKER-Warren County approved, "With the
the Army Corps. of Engineers permit is needed,
it." Rist-Frost, Bill has some comments, but I
Engineering comments have been addressed.
condition that if
they wi II obtain
think most of the
MR. MACNAMARA-Well, to sununarize, basically, tl1ere were some minor
comments on stormwater. There were some comments on the septic
system, and there were comments on parking, but because we did this
early enough, the applicant has already submitted responses to all
the conunents which were acceptable, and we have no further
engineering comments. If you care to, we could go over each and
every item, but they have been addressed.
MR. BREWER-Not if they've been met, no. Okay.
approved, did you already mention that, "With the
the Army Corps. of Engineers permit is needed,
it." Is that a fact or a fiction?
Warren County
condition that if
they wi II obtain
MR. GORALSKI-Well, we don't have a choice.
.
MR. BREWER-I mean, have you contacted them?
MR. GORALSKI-We don't believe there is one. We will contact them.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Would you care to address Scott's comments?
MR. LAPPER-Mr. Chairman, for the record, my name is Jon Lapper,
from Lemery & Reid. I'm here with John Goralski, from Richard
Jones Associates. Just to give you a real quick overview, we think
that this is really a very straightforward project, especially in
comparison to a lot of things that have happened tonight. Gary
Cardinale has an existing business on Route 9 that he's proposing
to relocate. This will enable him to own the site and to just
create a site that can be permanent for him, that's much more
nicely landscaped than where he is now. This site was part of the
former Earltown Subdivision. The first project that'll go in is
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the Earltown Subdivision. There's a service road which is called
East Quaker Service Road, which does a lot to alleviate any traffic
concern because there's a controlled access on it, and one single
access onto that portion of Quaker Road, and future uses that will
be built adjacent to this will also use the Service Road. We've
worked with Earltown, in terms of negotiating a contract. They had
the right to review the landscaping plan, which they did. We added
an earth berm in the back, that Earltown requested, to protect
future development, and they reviewed all that in the planting
plan, and we discussed it with the Beautification Committee, and
the Beautification Comnittee liked it as well.
MR. BREWER-This lot is already an approved lot?
MR. LAPPER-It's an approved subdivision, and John can address the
specific concerns raised by Scott.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. GORALSKI--Thank you. The main issue that Scott raises is
eliminating one of these road cuts, and having only one access to
the site. First of all, because this is on the Service Road that
we've all seen. It's been sitting there for, I don't know,
probably six or seven years now, everyone's been waiting saying,
when they develop that, that won't be like the Million Dollar Half
Mile so we didn't think it was going to be an issue, but the main
reason that we have two road cuts is because of the building code.
We met with Dave Hatin. This is going to be a wood frame building.
In order for us to construct a building of over 11,000 square feet,
we need accessibility on the four sides of the building.
Accessibility, in the Building Code, is defined as a 50 foot
cleared area along the entire length of that side.
MR. BREWER-What does that have to do with being built out of wood?
MR. GORALSKI-Because of the fire hazard, because it's built out of
wood. They need accessibility on all four sides. Now, the other
part of Accessibility in the Building Code is that you have to be,
the entire side has to be within 500 feet of a fire hydrant.
Actually, the closes.t fire hydrant.
MR. OBERMAYER-I'm sorry.
facility?
Is it going to be sprinkled, the
MR. GORALSKI-No, it's not. Actually, the closest fire hydrant is
actually~180 feet to the east. There's also one 275 feet to the
west. In order to have accessibility, that 500 feet has to be the
driving lane of the fire truck. In other words, you can't measure
from the hydrant to this corner and say, that's 500 feet. It has
to be the actual way that the truck would drive. In order to get
that 500 foot distance, we had to have two road cuts. If we put
the road cut over here, I believe here is where Scott suggested, we
couldn't get that 500 feet on all four sides of the building. So,
I mean, it's just a Building Code issue. In order to build this
building, we need to do that.
MR. BREWER-How much of an expense is a hydrant?
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes. Why don't you put a hydrant in?
MR. GORALSKI-Put a hydrant in? I'm not sure what you mean.
MR. BREWER-Put a hydrant in.
MR. OBERMAYER-Put a fire hydrant in.
MR. GORALSKI-Out on the road, on the Town's right-of-way?
MR. BREWER-That's where they put them.
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MR. GORALSKI-Well, I mean, I don't know.
MR. BREWER-Do you have any idea how much of an expense that is?
MR. OBERMAYER-It's not that expensive.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, I guess, let me.
is, to be honest wi th you.
I don't know what the expense
MR. LAPPER-Mr.' Chairman, we also have a site design issue, why we
think that two curb cuts are necessary, and not going to be an
impact on the Service Road. The one that you can see on the bottom
there is where they would get their deliveries, and that's another
reason why it's, why the roadway goes along the side, so that we
can separate where the delivery trucks are going to come in, versus
where the customers are going to come in. This is not a high
traffic use at all. It's an existing business, and you can just go
up there now and see what it is.
MR. BREWER-Go up there in a couple of weeks and see if it's busy.
MR. LAPPER-They do have their season, but the difference between
one curb cut and two, in terms of any stacking, if it's two or if
it's one, any stacking that would take place on the site. We don't
think that there's going to be an impact issue, and the two curb
cuts just let it work better for the site, to separate deliveries
from customers.
MR. MACEWAN-Is it your intention to designate the curb cuts as one
deliveries only, one customers only?
MR. GORALSKI-It was not necessarily.
MR. STARK-The entrance is on the one side.
MR. GORALSKI-I guess the point I want to make is that this is not
going out onto Quaker Road, okay. This is going on t~ the Service
Road. The whole idea of building the Service Road was so that you
would control access onto Quaker Road. The only people that are
going to be using this Service Road are the lots that are on here.
If I can go back to the Million Dollar Half Mile scenario, everyone
said , well , the way we' II sol v e the pro b I em i s to b u i 1 d s e r v ice
roads. Well, you've already got a service road.
MR. RUEL-You're talking about the service road.
distance between the service road and Quaker?
What is the
MR. GORALSKI-The distance between the southern side of the pavement
of East Quaker Service Road and Quaker Road itself is, I'm not
sure, probably 50 feet. Fred, do you know what it is?
FRED TROELSTRA
MR. TROELSTRA-It's about 75 feet.
MR. GORALSKI-Seventy-five feet, of actual grass area.
MR. BREWER-The hydrants, John, are they on the Service Road?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. They're on the Service Road. There's a water
line that runs, all the services are in the Service Road.
MR. BREWER-So, initially, you won't be cutting any, so to speak,
holes in the road on Quaker Road to come in. There'd just be one
curb cut to come in to the Service Road, and then go in from the
Service Road.
MR. GORALSKI-The Service Road is already built.
MR. BREWER-I understand that, but you're not going to do any.
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MR. GORALSKI-Construction on Quaker Road at all.
MR. BREWER--So then two curb cuts on the Service Road, don't
think, is, it's not an issue. misunderstood you. I'm sorry.
MR. OBERMAYER-No.
I don't think it's a problem either.
MR. LAPPER-And we'd be happy to designate one and say, deliveries,
so that the drivers know that, if the Board would like.
MR. BREWER-I don't think it's necessary.
MR. OBERMAYER-I think it would be nice to see a fire hydrant there,
though, if he owned, for safety.
MR. GORALSKI-Well, see, the thing is, these fire hydrants were
placed per the Town standards. I just think adding another fire
hydrant is, I don't think there's any need for it. Basically, the
reason the Building Code requires the 500 foot length is because
your standard pumper carries 500 feet of five inch hose on it,
which is what they lay from the hydrant to the seat. That's where
they get the 500 foot distance from. So, the fire trucks are
equipped for that distance.
MR. STARK-You have two entrances here, right?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes.
MR. STARK-And they're both on the west side?
MR. GORALSKI-Correct.
MR. STARK-So if I was going to the place, I wouldn't drive in over
here and then, it would be logical to come in over here.
MR. GORALSKI-Right. As John said, this is primarily going to be
for service. The service area, I don't have an actual floor plan
of the building, but the service area is in this back area here, so
that the UPS trucks can come in here and drop off parts and stuff
like that, and not congest this parking area, the customer area.
MR. BREWËR-Okay. We can go on.
MR. LAPPER-John, a couple of other issues. Moving the building,
the reason why we can't.
MR. GORALSKI-Okay. Well, that was the same with the 50 foot. We
have a 50 foot setback right here. If we move the building to the
east, we lose that accessibility.
MR. LAPPER-And the plantings along the west.
MR. GORALSKI-We spoke with the Beautification Cormnittee, the idea
being that this was a commercial subdivision and there were going
to be conIDlercial uses all along here. We provided a grassed area,
which is part of our stormwater management area along the side of
there. It will be maintained grass area, and we also provided some
trees out by the street, and a foundation type planting, with some
flowering crabs, to soften the scale of the building up front. As
I said, we discussed it with the Beautification Conm1Ïttee, and they
felt that it was a good plan. There were no real con~ents on it.
MR. MACEWAN-What kind of trees were you planning on putting in out
there at the island in front of the building, along the road?
MR. GORALSKI-Along the road will be maples.
MR. MACEWAN-They are maples? Great.
MR. GORALSKI-And as I said, there would be flowering crab apples by
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the building, and some spruce along the east property line.
MR. BREWER-Do you have any kind of an idea, a picture, or plan of
anything, what the building's going to look like?
MR. LAPPER-We've got an elevation.
It's not colored up.
MR. STARK-What's the height, 10 foot ceilings inside?
MR. OBERMAYER-No, probably higher than that.
MR. LAPPER-Gary tried to have this designed so that it looks (lost
word) metal building. It's going to have a drive in facade up on
the front.
MR. GORALSKI-I'm not exactly sure what it is, but I know it's not
higher than 20 feet.
MR. PALING-Where is your mechanical equipment going to go?
MR. GORALSK I -Mechan i ca I
ventilating?
equipment
as
far
as
heating
and
MR. PALING-Yes.
MR. GORALSKI-That would all be inside.
MR. PALING-Are you going to air condition the building? There is
no air conditioning? Okay. So you'll have, everything will be
within the building.
MR. GORALSKI-Right.
MR. BREWER-Is it going to be a wood sided building?
MR. GORALSKI-No. It'll be a metal sided building, with a stow or
drive in on the front end of the building.
GARY CARDINALE
MR. CARDINALE-In an effort to enhance the look of the building, the
Earltown Corporation, who does have final say in the looks of the
building, we're totally satisfied with the total met~l look. So
there'll be a metal range coating, if you will, down the front of
the building, and half way down the side, anything that the public
is exposed to. Above that, it gets the stowed, stucco look. The
gabled end of the building that faces the road would get that same
stucco. The entrance, it's a corner entrance building, by the way.
That gable entrance would get stuccoed, and so would the gabled
entrance to the Service Department, halfway down the west side of
the building. They made me trade almost, and in fact it isn't even
on that part of the road yet, but that as it may.
MR. BREWER-Okay. Is there any other questions from anybody on the
Board?
MR. MACEWAN--"They" being Earltown?
MR. CARDINALE-Yes.
MR. RUEL-What color?
MR. CARDINALE-It's probably going to be a two tone beige or a two
tone grey, something very neutral. This will be a very natural,
earthy look.
MR. MACEWAN-And what about a display area outside?
MR. GORALSKI-He's got this covered porch here, which is where he
does most of his displays now, and that'll be a similar situation
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back here. There's also a fenced in outdoor storage area where
some excess stock will be stored, and there's also, under here,
there is another fenced in area that will be where he's storing
stuff. So everything will be contained in here, either behind the
building or within this area here, except for the new stock, it's
brought out in the morning and then brought in at night.
MR. MACEWAN-Okay, then nothing will be ever displayed out in the
designated parking areas, then?
MR. CARDINALE-I didn't realize I had to agree to that. There's
nothing anticipated at this moment, but I wouldn't like to be
denied that, down the road, if I decided to do it. Hopefully,
everyone has passed by our facility where it is on Route 9, and I
don't think we've ever done anything that's in poor taste.
MR. STARK - He' s got s t u f f d i s p I aye d the r e, but he t a k e sit i n eve r y
night.
MR. MACEWAN-I just asked a question. That's all.
MR. OBERMAYER-Did you mention you're going to have a service
corridor on the east part of the building?
MR. GORALSKI-There's a door on that side for, like, a UPS, and that
type of thing.
MR. OBERMAYER-There is? Okay. What is this door going to be used,
is this going to be a door over here, or what?
MR. STARK-On the west side, hair way in.
MR. GORALSKI-On the west side, this door here is for people who
bring in~their vehicles for service, and that type of thing, can
bring them in here.
MR. OBERMAYER-Okay.
Is this a loading dock or something?
MR. GORALSKI-No. There's a little ramp here because this covered
porch has a curve, but that's just a door going in here to the
service area.
MR. OBERMAYER-Okay, and the elevation of this is equal to the
ground elevation, right?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. The finished floor is six inches above the
finished grade of the porch.
MR. OBERMAYER-And you're going to pour a continuous footing on
here, right?
MR. GORALSKI-For the building?
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes, for the building.
MR. STARK-You've got frost walls down first.
MR. GORALSKI-Yes.
It'll be a slab on grade.
MR. OBERMAYER-It will be a slab on grade? Ther"e's no frost wall
running around the exterior?
MR. GORALSKI-Yes. There will be a frost wall there. Well, no, not
exactly, see this building is what's called a Morton Building. I'm
not sure if you're familiar wi1h them. They're wood framed, and
six by six timbers. So they'll have footings for their timbers.
MR. OBERMAYER-It's like a pole barn.
pole barn.
That's what it is.
It's a
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MR. GORALSKI-The actual framing
is similar to a pole barn.
MR. OBERMAYER-Six by sixes?
MR. CARDINALE-Seven feet on center.
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes, it's a pole barn. All right.
MR. PALING-We skipped by the Army Corps. of Engineers I comment
there. What's, the status wi th you and them?
MR. LAPPER-Some of the other Earltown property is wet. This is a
high point, which is why Gary picked this lot, I mean, this is a
hill, and we don't anticipate that there's any issue. The County
just raised that without, they just asked that as a question, which
is just stating the law, that if the Army Corps. permit is issued,
we would get one, and of course, if one was, we would.
MR. BREWER-Have you contacted them?
MR. LAPPER-We haven't. John will.
MR. BREWER-So a condition of approval would be that correspondence
between the two parties be undertaken.
MR. LAPPER-That's fine, and the same thing the County said, that if
a permit is required, we will get one.
MR. BREWER-But if you never contact them, you'll never know.
MR. LAPPER-We will correspond with them and we will submit that to
Jim.
MR. BREWER-Okay.
MR. MACEWAN-Seeing that we have a representative from Gardentime
here, what will happen with all the sheds on display in front of
your proposed site?
MR. TROELSTRA-They're going to remain right there.
MR. MACEWAN-They're going to remain right there.
MR. GORALSKI-I don't believe it's on their lot.
MR. MACEWAN-It would obstruct the view,
ways, of your property.
would think, in some
MR. LAPPER-It's an adjacent lot.
MR. BREWER-Well, we can get to that issue afterwards, because we
did have an issue with that. There is an issue with that, and I
don't think it's the proper time to discuss that, but we can
discuss it afterwards. Okay. I'll open the public hearing.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
FRED TROELSTRA
MR. TROELSTRA-I 'm Fred Troelstra, from Gardentime, a business owner
in Queensbury. I just want to make the comment that I think Gary's
proposal for a building and business on the south end of Queensbury
is going to be a positive impact on the Town. I, personally, don't
see any pro b I em wit h w hat he' s got pro p 0 sed her e, and I g u e s s ,
since the issue's been raised, as Tim says, I guess we'll table the
issue of the buildings that we have, in agreement with Earltown,
currently.
PUBLIC HEARING CLOSED
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MR. BREWER-Now we can do the SEQRA.
RESOLUTION WHEN DETERMINATION OF NO SIGNIFICANCE IS MADE
RESOLUTION NO. 14--94, Introduced by Craig MacEwan who moved for its
adop ti on, second ed by Rog er Rue 1 :
WHEREAS, ther e
application for:
is presently before
GARY CARDINALE, and
the
Planning
Board
an
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 J;;.nvironmental 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
negative declaration that may be required by law.
Duly adopteg this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling,
Mr. Stark, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
MR. BREWER-Okay. Would somebody care to make a motion?
MOTION TO APPROVE SITE PLAN NO. 14-94 GARY CARDINALE, Introduced
by Craig MacEwan who moved for its adoption, seconded by Robert
Paling:
For a proposal for construction of an 11,880 sq. ft. building and
associated parking to house Sportline Honda/Kàwasaki, that the
possible open item with the Corp of Engineers be resolved, with
correspondence to Jim Martin.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Ruel, Mr. Paling, Mr. Stark, Mr. Obermayer,
Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
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ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
MR. BREWER-Mr. Lapper, can I just address you with one other issue?
MR. LAPPER-Yes.
MR. BREWER--Nothing to do with this. Queensbury Plaza is on our
agenda for next month, hopefully. Hopefully the driveway in the
back will be blocked off.
MR. LAPPER-+loward Carr and I had a long meeting with Jim Martin
yesterday. The work was going to start on Tuesday morning at nine
o'clock.
MR. BREWER-I was told today that it was going to start tomorrow.
I was told two weeks ago that it was going to start Monday.
MR. LAPPER-The work is going to start Tuesday morning.
MR. BREWER-I hope that it's done, before you come back here and
expect to get any kind of consideration from this Board.
MR. LAPPER-Absolutely. Howard is a man of his word, and we've had
some delays, but it's all going to get done. It's going to get
cleaned up, and you're going to be real happy.
MR. BREWER-Before Red Lobster comes back?
MR. LAPPER-Yes, by the end of the month, before we're back.
MR. BREWER-Thank you.
MR. HARLICKER-Did Pam mention that we advertised, at least) for the
Howard Carr? You should make a motion to table that, but open the
public hearing first, since it's already been advertised.
MR. BREWER-All right.
a matter of seconds.
table it. That's all
Can we just do that real quick. It'll take
We've just got to open a public hearing and
we've got to do, no SEQRA or anything.
SITE PLAN NO. 35-92 TYPE I MODIFICATION HOWARD CARR THE HOWARD
GROUP MANAGEMENT CO., I NC. OWNER: I LENE FLAUM ZONE: PC-l A
LOCATION: QUEENSBURY PLAZA MODIFICATION OF A PREVIOUSLY APPROVED
SITE PLAN TO ADD A FREESTANDING RESTAURANT AND ADDITIONAL PARKING
WHICH WILL RESULT IN A NET DECREASE OF 9,325 SQ. FT. OF GLA.
BEAUTIFICATION COMM. - 5/9/94 WARREN CO. PLANNING - 5/11/94 TAX
MAP NO. 103-1-1 LOT SIZE: 13.67 ACRES SECTION 179-22
MR. BREWER-Okay. All we've got to do is just open the public
hearing, leave it open.
PUBLIC HEARING OPENED
MR. BREWER-Now would somebody care to make a motion to table?
-
MOTION TO TABLE SITE PLAN NO. 3.5-92 HOWARD CARR, Introduced by
Craig MacEwan who moved for its adoption, seconded by Roger Rue!:
At the applicant's request.
Duly adopted this 26th day of May, 1994, by the following vote:
AYES: Mr. Stark, Mr. Obermayer, Mr. MacEwan, Mr. Ruel,
Mr. Paling, Mr. Brewer
NOES: NONE
ABSENT: Mrs. LaBombard
DISCUSSION ITEM:
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PROPOSED SITE PLAN FOR NATIVE TEXTILES
RI01ARD ROSEN, REPRESENTING APPLICANT, PRESENT
MR. BREWER-This is just a quick discussion with the people that
hope to build Native Textiles.
MR. ROSEN-Good evening. My name is Richard Rosen. I'm with
Columbia Development. I'm the applicant and also the potential
landlord. I'm here tonight discussing the proposed Native Textile
project. I'm sure a lot of you are familiar with it, the proposal
for the project. It's located off of Carey Road. Right now, the
Town is proposing to build a road to access our site. We're in
negotiations with the Town to make those provisions. They have to
design it yet, and build it, but we've been given the assurance
that this road's going to be built this sun~er, and hopefully in
time for us to have our facility up and running.
MR. PALING-Excuse me. I'm kind of a newcomer.
Carey Road is.
don't know where
MR. ROSEN-It's off Corinth Road.
MR. BREWER-Remember the Logger's Equipment faci 1 i ty?
across from that.
Directly
MR. PALING-Okay. Yes. Thank you.
MR. ROSEN-Okay. What we have, there's a loop, and we're going to
come off that loop and connect, potentially, to this property, and
what we have proposed is a new knitting facility. It will be
1 1 6 , 000 s qua ref e e t , r 0 ugh I y ,of ma n u f act u r i n g . The r e ' 11 be
knitting going on inside, moving and storage of products. The
products that they use are nylon and polyester. Basically what
they do is they knit fabric. They (lost word) synthetic fiber, and
they sell them to companies such as Nike, Hanes Sportswear,
undergarment things, things that use their product. So they roll
up the material and then they ship it out. They ship it to other
processing places, located in Glens Falls. Just as a quick
reassurance, no chemicals are involved in the process. There's no
hazardous waste produced by what's going to be going on at this
facility. It'll be a single story metal building, and I'll just
show you quickly, here. Nothing fancy. Typical for this
application, for overhead doors, for receiving and shipping out
goods. They're going to have roughly 100 employees working at this
facility. They're going to do it in shifts. There'll be
approximately 30, as many as possibly 40 people on a shift. They
will have three shifts a day. Any other questions? I mean, we
submitted our application a while ago. I don't know if the Board
members have had an opportunity, yet, to review it.
MR. BREWER-No. We haven't had a chance. That's the reason for the
letter. We had no plans. We looked at nothing. We had no idea
what it looked like. That's the reason for the.
MR. OBERMAYER-We haven't seen any drawings on it.
MR. BREWER-Just to save time, we're going to get our plans and
everything, and we'll treat this just like another application. I
don't mind discussing it, but we've got tö do a 'site visit, go out
there and see what it is. The quest.ions that 1 had, has the
contract been signed with the Town, with the QEDC, and then with
you? All these issues about that, and then the road being built I
think have to be taken care of before we do a site plan on it, I
would think.
JOHN LEMERY
MR. LEMERY -Maybe I cou I d answer that. I'm Couns e I to Na t i ve
Textiles, which is the tenant. This is a piece of land, just for
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background, if there's anybody who's unfamiliar with it, that is
currently owned by the Town. It was zoned Light Industrial. It
was purchased several years ago, apparently for the Town Landfill.
There's a huge ravine in there. During the days ~here people
thought you could take it and dump it in the big ravine is when the
Town bought the land and expected to use it as a landfi II. There
was a site selection process that occurred over the last several
months, and finally this site was deemed to be a good site, located
near Exit 18, adjacent to the Carey Park, and negotiations started
to take p I ace. be tween the Town and Co I umb i a, and cons equent I y
Native Textiles for the site. The Town, when it sold the land to
Carey, or rather the Town, when Carey developed the Carey
Industrial Park there reserved a right-of-way into its piece of
land, a 50 foot right-of-way, from Carey Road, which is now a Town
road. The Town reserved a 50 foot right-of-way into the site. The
contract was held up because there had to be located another
easement for the Town to get back into another parcel of land the
Town owns, between Hudson River and this site, and so the engineers
had to work out the specifics with respect to that piece of land
that Rich is pointing to now, that basically gives the Town access
to the parcel behind the piece that is going to be dedicated to
Native. That has finally been done. The contract should be kind
of signed within the next couple of days. That was the only
impediment to the signing, between the Town and the QEDC. The QEDC
then will sign the contract with Columbia, and the site will be the
116,000 square foot factory for Native Textiles. It's about a 34
acre piece. The factory will take up approximately, at this point,
10 acres. There is planned on the site for the future, a potential
warehouse, an 85,000 square foot warehouse, but Native, right now,
is locked into a lease for another couple of years. So that plan
is not presently one that is likely to be put into effect before
the next year or so. The plan now is to try and get the factory
started as quickly as possible, because Native has notified its
workforce in Pennsylvania, where it owns another factory, that
they're going to be consolidating their manufacturing operations up
here, closing the factories in Dallas, Pennsylvania, and moving the
factory up here. So that's what this site will be used for, for
the knitting mill, which was formerly located down in down in
Pennsylvania, been doing a lot of negotiations, negotiating with
the utility to try to get power through (lost word) and work out
the power rates in a more effective fashion than the industrial
customers now pay the Niagara Mohawk business part of the economic
development zone, and if the economic development zone is passed in
the Town, is passed by the legislature, this portion of the Town is
in that zone, and this particular parcel is in that zone, and that
would result in additional favorable impact on the factory. So
that's where it is.
MR. BREWER--And you anticipate construction when?
MR. ROSEN-Well, we'd like to start construction as soon as
possible, obviously.
MR. BREWER-But you have to wait for the Town to build the road.
MR. ROSEN-I don't have to wait for the Town to build the road to
build the building. I'll need the Town road constructed to get a
Certificate of Occupancy.
MR. LEMERY-Well, the Town has given the Company permission now,
already, to go and clear cut the area for the road. So that will
get started right away, and they'll need to put enough dirt on it,
I guess, so they can get on the site, and then they'll start
clearing the site.
MR. MACEWAN-Is that clear cut a chosen word to use?
MR. LEMERY-Well, they're going to move those trees. There's some
big trees that Guido's marked down there, so we're going to move
those up to his site.
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MR. ROSEN-Yes. For construction purposes, we'l1 be using this as
our access to the site also, and when the t.ime comes, wit.h
construction going on back here, and the road being built, there'll
be some coordination.
MR. BREWER-Yes, but how can you go in there and start cutting trees
and putting roads in start building? You haven't even got a site
plan yet. You can't just go in there and start cutting now, until
at least the end of next month.
MR. LEMERY-We've got permission from the Town to go on the site.
MR. BREWER-The Town, you can go on the site, but the Town can't
give you permission that we can give you permission to do. Can
they? They can't. override us in a site plan.
MR. SCHACHNER-If you're looking at me, Mr. Lemery is the attorney
for Native Textiles.
MR. LEMERY-We're not coming here to override anything.
MR. BREWER-No. I understand that.
don't care if you go on the site.
I'm not arguing the point.
MR. LEMERY-We're going to try to get a site plan approved by the
end of June, so that we can get this financing started.
MR. BREWER-But you would start then.
MR. LEMERY-Yes.
MR. OBERMAYER-You would start clear cutting then.
MR. LEMERY-Yes. Right now they've got to get the road open so they
can get on the site. The environmental (lost word) and they're
going in and doing the borings, to make sure that there's no.
MR. BREWER-Should that be done before we have a site plan?
MR. SCHACHNER-As I was trying to say a minute ago, I take it you're
looking at me for advice on this. Mr. Lemery is an attorney for
Native Textiles. I'm a frequent a,ttorney for Columbia Development.
So I really can't Counsel the Board on this. I mean, I'll answer
this question, but I have to tell you, I am an attorney for
Columbia Development often, and I am actually a proponent of this
project, although not officially, but, you know, just as Mr.
Passarelli did not require any type of Town permit or authorization
for clear cutting his property, and I would take a very, I would
use a very different term than the one that Native Textiles Counsel
would use.
MR. LEMERY-Excuse me. What we're going to do is go on the site.
We're going to do the test borings on the site. We're going to do
what we have to do to mark the site. We're going to get the trees
down on the road so they can get access to the site on the Town
highway, and that's what they're going to do.
MR. BREWER-Nobody has a problem with that, John. I'm asking, do
the borings, do the perc tests and all that, don't they have to be
done before you submit a site plan?
MR. LEMERY-The borings and all that has to be done before they're
going to acquire the site. So, while it's still on (lost word).
MR. ROSEN-Everyone keeps talking about bor ings. The only soi I
investigation that I have to do on this site is to find the bearing
capacity of the sand to design my foundation. As far and
stormwater, obviously, we're going to have to do a percolation test
that'll have to be satisfied by the Department of Health to design
and construct our septic field, but as far as other borings are
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concerned, we're not going to go back there and start digging huge
holes.
MR. BREWER-I guess that's what my question is. Does that have, the
septic and everything has to be designed before you can submit a
plan for a site plan approval.
MR. ROSEN-Well, we've done preliminary investigation,-I mean, it's
a typical soil. The soil up there is not really a mystery to
anybody.
MR. BREWER-You're missing the question.
MR. LEMERY-The answer is, yes.
site plan.
He's got to come in with a full
MR. BREWER-Okay, but he's already got that done.
MR. ROSEN-Right.
MR. BREWER-So that's in your application now.
MR. ROSEN-Correct, the design and everything for the septic system,
yes.
MR. BREWER-That's all I wanted to know.
MR. ROSEN-Right. I mean, the Department of Health will require us
to be on site to do their own percolation, matters like that, but.
MR. BREWER-That's the only thing I wanted to know.
MR. ROSEN-Okay.
MR. BREWER-If all that stuff was done in your application now.
MR. ROSEN-Yes.
MR. BREWER-I presume that, I misunderstood you. You said you were
talking about having things done. I thought you were going to do
them after the fact that the application has already been
submitted.
MR. ROSEN-No.
MR. LEMERY -The ques t i on was, ar e they go i ng on the site to do
borings. Yes. They're going to do borings b~cause the tenant has
ordered a limited phase two audit, which means that we want to make
sure there's nothing of an environmentally hazardous nature on the
site. So we've ordered a limited phase two audit. There is a junk
car out there and some other things. The Town is removing those
now.
MR. MACEWAN-This is just basically to ensure that the property is
safe for use to purchase.
MR. LEMERY-Exactly, and we've got to go on the site to do that.
There's been an agreement between the Town and the Company, that
provides for the Town to be indemnified until such time as the
parcel's transferred from the Town to the QEDC, and from the QEDC
to Columbia. Native is not involved in the site plan, other than
to say that we've asked Columbia to try to get the site plan
approved by the end of June, so that the financing can take place
and the factory can start. Once the lease is signed, Columbia is
under a time frame within which to complete the building or pay a
penalty, and the reason is that they've notified theWworkforce in
Pennsylvania that they're shutting the plant down, so they have to
get the plant built. The site's zoned Light Industrial. The site
plan should not be a problem.
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MR. STARK-Is there a Preliminary and a Final on this, John?
MR. BREWER-Just one site plan.
MR. MACEWAN-A site plan, a one step process.
MR. STARK-And you're on for the first meeting in June.
MR. LEMERY-I don't know if they've scheduled or not yet.
MR. HARLICKER-The agenda hasn't been set yet.
"
MR. MACEWAN-Where will this building sit? Do you have a drawing of
where this building sits in respect to the entire Carey Industrial
Park?
MR. ROSEN-Yes. We have a location map, a small scale, on the front
page of our first site plan, I mean, the typical part of the site
plan application.
MR. MACEWAN-I'd be curious to see where it sits within the Park.
MR. STARK-Which road do you go in, the west or the east Carey Road? -
MR. MACEWAN-And this is the access road that you're talking about
building?
MR. ROSEN-Yes. See the darkened in shade? That would be the road
that the Town has agreed to put in.
MR. MACEWAN-Okay. Thanks. I just wasn't sure where it was
actually sitting within the Park.
MR. OBERMAYER-Where's Columbia from?
MR. ROSEN-We're an Albany based firm. I mean, we have our
application in. We know we have to run do process. We're not
asking for any favors, but we want you to know where we're coming
from, our situation, and if there's anything you can do that's
within reason that can help us out to accelerate this process,
fine. If something comes up, and you have a question, we'll be
fully prepared to go back and do our homework and answer it.
MR. STARK-You had a request to be on the first one in June.
there is a question, we can always get it done by the
meeting in June.
So if
second
MR. ROSEN-Right, and guess in the meantime, you're going to
review the application and the environmental assessment form, the
long form we filled out, and then I'd request that during the do
process, you guys go out and visit the site. We schedule our
public hearing, and we go from there. It would be to my advantage
to push very hard, without trying to be obnoxious, but by the end
of June, it would be very beneficial for us to have site plan
approval. I mean, that's our goal. Then if something comes up
along the way, we're willing to deal with it. We want to work with
the Town, with the Planning Board, and that's basically where we're
coming from. That's why we had the discussion for tonight.
MR. MACEWAN--It was stated that you guys are going' to start clearing
through the access road to get into the site, to start work in
there, do some tests and stuff, will that be taken care of by the
15th of next month, do you know, that you'll have access?
MR. STARK-He's saying so we can go in.
MR. MACEWAN-That we can get in there, as well, and see it?
MR. ROSEN-Absolutely. Yes. We have an agreement. We have an
actual, ~ don't know if you could call it for technical things. I
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don't want to get these guys involved, because they'll just make us
stay here longer. It's a contract, or it's an agreement, it's an
official legal document that states that we can go on the property,
and posted a bond for the work we're going to do, and there's
insurance on the property that holds everybody that's involved, and
hopefully next week we're going to go out there and get our
surveyor going and clear the road, so we can at least get out there
and start doing some preliminary things. We wouldn't go and start
digging, obviously, for a building, yet.
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MR. STARK-So we can get out there for site reviews on the 15th?
MR. BREWER-Yes. We'll be able to drive right out there.
MR. ROSEN-Okay. When's the next meeting?
MR. MACEWAN-The 21st.
MR. BREWER-June 21st.
MR. ROSEN-June 21st. So we can get on the agenda for that?
MR. BREWER-Yes. You've already subn1itted your application.
MR. ROSEN-·Okay.
MR. MACEWAN-There's no reason why we can't accommodate them, and
put them on the first meeting. If something that is awry that
needs to be addressed before final approval is made, that we can do
it before the second meeting.
MR. OBERMAYER-Yes.
MR. LEMERY-If you're having a special meeting for the other
applicant, could we get on that meeting?
MR. MACEWAN-We won't have seen the site.
MR. BREWER-We're not going to the site visits, John, until the
15th.
MR. MACEWAN-It shouldn't be a problem. In mY opinion, from what
I'm seeing, and what I know of it, I don't see a problem, that it
wouldn't be approved. That's mY opinion.
MR. ROSEN-Okay. That's it, and I'd just like to do one things.
have actual calculations for the stormwater report. Can I submit
them her e? S h 0 u I d I ma i I them in, 0 r co u I d I jus t h and them i n
tonight?
MR. HARLICKER-If you ve got them, I'll take them.
MR. BREWER-Give them to Scott. Are we supposed to discuss these
two items, Potvin property and Passarelli property?
MR. HARLICKER-I don't know anything about them.
MR. BREWER-So we're not supposed to discuss them, land dedication
for recreation purposes.
MR. STARK-That's the first I've heard about.
about it. Scott doesn't even know about it.
from?
Nobody else knows
Where'd you get it
MR. MACEWAN-It was in our packets.
MR. BREWER-It was in our packet.
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MR. MACEWAN-Site visits are on the 15th, at four o'clock
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On motion meeting was adjourned.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
Timothy Brewer, Chairman
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