Opinion
ROBINSON, J.
The plaintiff, Eureka V, LLC, appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court sustaining, in part, the plaintiffs appeal from the decisions of the defendant planning and zoning commission of the town of Ridgefield1 on the plaintiffs affordable housing applications, which sought amendments to the town’s zoning regulations and zoning map. On appeal, the plaintiff [259]*259claims that the court improperly upheld that portion of the defendant’s decision that imposed conditions effectively banning development of affordable housing on a portion of the plaintiffs property located within a public water supply watershed area, including prohibiting the extension of municipal sewer lines into or through the watershed area. Because we conclude that the defendant failed to meet its statutory burden of establishing that the restrictions it imposed were necessary to protect a substantial public health or safety interest; see General Statutes § 8-30g (g) (1) (A);2 we reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand the matter for further proceedings.
The record reveals the following relevant facts and procedural history. The plaintiff is the owner of a 153 acre parcel of property located at 616 Bennett’s Farm Road in Ridgefield (subject property). Sixty-seven acres of the subject property are located within the watershed for the Saugatuck Reservoir, a source of public drinking water. In April, 2007, the plaintiff filed applications with the defendant pursuant to § 8-30g that sought the [260]*260approval of amendments to the town’s zoning map and zoning regulations.3 At the time the plaintiff filed the applications, the subject property was zoned as a corporate development district, which permitted various types of commercial use but not residential development. The plaintiff proposed to amend the town’s zoning regulations to create a new housing opportunity development zone and to amend the town’s zoning map to reflect a rezoning of the subject property from a corporate development district to the newly created housing opportunity development zone. Along with its applications, the plaintiff submitted a conceptual site plan that illustrated the potential future development of the subject property as a site for residential housing. The conceptual site plan, as originally submitted, envisioned 509 residential units, divided roughly in half between three bedroom town homes and one and two bedroom apartments, approximately 30 percent of which would be affordable housing. The plaintiff was not seeking formal site plan approval of the conceptual site plan.
On November 13, 2007, after several days of public hearings, the defendant rendered its decision on the plaintiff’s applications. The defendant adopted much of the plaintiff’s proposed zoning regulation amendments with some significant modifications. For example, rather than amending the zoning regulations to create a new housing opportunity development zone as proposed by the plaintiff, the defendant instead modified the town’s existing housing opportunity development provisions so that they could be applied as an overlay zone to designated properties, including the subject property. In light of the overlay provisions, the defendant denied the plaintiff’s application to amend the [261]*261zoning map to indicate a rezoning of the subject property.4
Although the new zoning provisions adopted by the defendant permitted the development of affordable housing on the subject property, the regulations limited development to a lot density of 1.9 dwelling units per gross acre of land, which was substantially less than the fourteen units per acre density initially sought by the plaintiff. The newly adopted provisions also provided that all housing opportunity development dwelling units must be served by the municipal water and sewer system, and that no sewer line could be extended into or cross through the Saugatuck Reservoir public water supply watershed area, effectively prohibiting development of any residential units on the sixty-seven acres located in the watershed area. The defendant also made modifications to the regulations submitted by the plaintiff as to the required percentage of age restricted units, the number of allowable bedrooms per unit and the size of lot setbacks.
The defendant stated in its decision that the modifications it had made to the plaintiffs applications were necessary to protect the public’s interest in maintaining a safe and healthy public water supply, and that such public interests “clearly outweigh the need for affordable housing at the density and in the locations proposed by the [plaintiff] while still permitting a development under § 8-30g which is the largest affordable housing development ever considered in the [t]own of Ridgefield . . . .” The defendant further stated that its decision was supported by the strong opinions opposing the proposed development as expressed in letters from the state’s department of public health and from the [262]*262Aquarion Water Company (Aquaiion), which owned and operated the Saugatuck Reservoir.
Rather than immediately appeal from the defendant’s November 13, 2007 decision, the plaintiff submitted a modified application in accordance with § 8-30g (h).5 One proposed revision was to allow residential units to be connected either to the municipal sewer system or to private septic systems. Another proposed revision was to limit development on the watershed portion of the subject property to a lot density of one unit per acre, thus resulting in a proposed 2.6 units per acre density for the overall site. Along with the modified application, the plaintiff submitted a new conceptual site plan that reflected a reduction in the total number of proposed units on the subject property in accordance with its proposed revisions from 509 to 389 total units, which included a marked reduction in the number of units proposed for the watershed area.
After a public hearing on the plaintiffs modified application, the defendant issued a February 12, 2008 decision that accepted in part and rejected in part the plaintiffs proposed modifications. The defendant [263]*263refused to adopt the proposal to permit the use of private septic systems, maintaining its ban on any development on the sixty-seven acres located within the watershed area. The defendant also denied the proposal to increase the maximum lot density on the subject property from 1.9 to 2.6 units per acre, although it agreed to a more modest increase in lot density to two units per acre in order to accommodate the construction of some additional residential units on the nonwa-tershed portion of the subject property.
On April 17,2008, the plaintiff filed an appeal with the Superior Court challenging portions of the defendant’s November 13, 2007 and February 12, 2008 decisions. Specifically, the plaintiff challenged the two unit per acre lot density, the complete restriction of development on the sixty-seven watershed acres, the requirement that residential units connect to the town’s sewer system as well as the provisions establishing the percentage of age restricted units, the number of allowable bedrooms per unit and the size of side and rear yard setbacks.
On October 20, 2010, the court issued a decision that, in large part, sustained the plaintiffs appeal.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Opinion
ROBINSON, J.
The plaintiff, Eureka V, LLC, appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court sustaining, in part, the plaintiffs appeal from the decisions of the defendant planning and zoning commission of the town of Ridgefield1 on the plaintiffs affordable housing applications, which sought amendments to the town’s zoning regulations and zoning map. On appeal, the plaintiff [259]*259claims that the court improperly upheld that portion of the defendant’s decision that imposed conditions effectively banning development of affordable housing on a portion of the plaintiffs property located within a public water supply watershed area, including prohibiting the extension of municipal sewer lines into or through the watershed area. Because we conclude that the defendant failed to meet its statutory burden of establishing that the restrictions it imposed were necessary to protect a substantial public health or safety interest; see General Statutes § 8-30g (g) (1) (A);2 we reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand the matter for further proceedings.
The record reveals the following relevant facts and procedural history. The plaintiff is the owner of a 153 acre parcel of property located at 616 Bennett’s Farm Road in Ridgefield (subject property). Sixty-seven acres of the subject property are located within the watershed for the Saugatuck Reservoir, a source of public drinking water. In April, 2007, the plaintiff filed applications with the defendant pursuant to § 8-30g that sought the [260]*260approval of amendments to the town’s zoning map and zoning regulations.3 At the time the plaintiff filed the applications, the subject property was zoned as a corporate development district, which permitted various types of commercial use but not residential development. The plaintiff proposed to amend the town’s zoning regulations to create a new housing opportunity development zone and to amend the town’s zoning map to reflect a rezoning of the subject property from a corporate development district to the newly created housing opportunity development zone. Along with its applications, the plaintiff submitted a conceptual site plan that illustrated the potential future development of the subject property as a site for residential housing. The conceptual site plan, as originally submitted, envisioned 509 residential units, divided roughly in half between three bedroom town homes and one and two bedroom apartments, approximately 30 percent of which would be affordable housing. The plaintiff was not seeking formal site plan approval of the conceptual site plan.
On November 13, 2007, after several days of public hearings, the defendant rendered its decision on the plaintiff’s applications. The defendant adopted much of the plaintiff’s proposed zoning regulation amendments with some significant modifications. For example, rather than amending the zoning regulations to create a new housing opportunity development zone as proposed by the plaintiff, the defendant instead modified the town’s existing housing opportunity development provisions so that they could be applied as an overlay zone to designated properties, including the subject property. In light of the overlay provisions, the defendant denied the plaintiff’s application to amend the [261]*261zoning map to indicate a rezoning of the subject property.4
Although the new zoning provisions adopted by the defendant permitted the development of affordable housing on the subject property, the regulations limited development to a lot density of 1.9 dwelling units per gross acre of land, which was substantially less than the fourteen units per acre density initially sought by the plaintiff. The newly adopted provisions also provided that all housing opportunity development dwelling units must be served by the municipal water and sewer system, and that no sewer line could be extended into or cross through the Saugatuck Reservoir public water supply watershed area, effectively prohibiting development of any residential units on the sixty-seven acres located in the watershed area. The defendant also made modifications to the regulations submitted by the plaintiff as to the required percentage of age restricted units, the number of allowable bedrooms per unit and the size of lot setbacks.
The defendant stated in its decision that the modifications it had made to the plaintiffs applications were necessary to protect the public’s interest in maintaining a safe and healthy public water supply, and that such public interests “clearly outweigh the need for affordable housing at the density and in the locations proposed by the [plaintiff] while still permitting a development under § 8-30g which is the largest affordable housing development ever considered in the [t]own of Ridgefield . . . .” The defendant further stated that its decision was supported by the strong opinions opposing the proposed development as expressed in letters from the state’s department of public health and from the [262]*262Aquarion Water Company (Aquaiion), which owned and operated the Saugatuck Reservoir.
Rather than immediately appeal from the defendant’s November 13, 2007 decision, the plaintiff submitted a modified application in accordance with § 8-30g (h).5 One proposed revision was to allow residential units to be connected either to the municipal sewer system or to private septic systems. Another proposed revision was to limit development on the watershed portion of the subject property to a lot density of one unit per acre, thus resulting in a proposed 2.6 units per acre density for the overall site. Along with the modified application, the plaintiff submitted a new conceptual site plan that reflected a reduction in the total number of proposed units on the subject property in accordance with its proposed revisions from 509 to 389 total units, which included a marked reduction in the number of units proposed for the watershed area.
After a public hearing on the plaintiffs modified application, the defendant issued a February 12, 2008 decision that accepted in part and rejected in part the plaintiffs proposed modifications. The defendant [263]*263refused to adopt the proposal to permit the use of private septic systems, maintaining its ban on any development on the sixty-seven acres located within the watershed area. The defendant also denied the proposal to increase the maximum lot density on the subject property from 1.9 to 2.6 units per acre, although it agreed to a more modest increase in lot density to two units per acre in order to accommodate the construction of some additional residential units on the nonwa-tershed portion of the subject property.
On April 17,2008, the plaintiff filed an appeal with the Superior Court challenging portions of the defendant’s November 13, 2007 and February 12, 2008 decisions. Specifically, the plaintiff challenged the two unit per acre lot density, the complete restriction of development on the sixty-seven watershed acres, the requirement that residential units connect to the town’s sewer system as well as the provisions establishing the percentage of age restricted units, the number of allowable bedrooms per unit and the size of side and rear yard setbacks.
On October 20, 2010, the court issued a decision that, in large part, sustained the plaintiffs appeal. The court concluded that the defendant’s decision to limit lot density to two units per acre on the nonwatershed portion of the subject property was arbitrary and that the defendant had failed to meet its burden to show that such a restriction was necessary to protect a public health and safety interest. The court similarly concluded that it could not uphold the defendant’s decision regarding the sewering requirements for the nonwatershed portion of the subject property because the defendant had failed to cite any substantial public interest that would be harmed by allowing sewering in the nonwatershed area either ft-om a neighboring city or by private septic systems. The court also determined that the defendant had failed to meet its burden of establishing that the adopted [264]*264restrictions in the regulations regarding age of occupants, allowable number of bedrooms per unit and setback size were necessary to address a public health and safety concern or other substantial public interest.
With regard to the watershed portion of the subject property, the court concluded that the “weight of the evidence” supported the defendant’s decision not to permit the development of affordable housing because such a ban was necessary to protect the public’s substantial interest in maintaining a safe public drinking water supply. The court also upheld the defendant’s decision not to allow sewer lines to enter the watershed area or to permit private septic systems on watershed lands, again concluding that the possible degradation of the public water supply provided a sound basis for such a decision.
The court remanded the matter to the defendant with direction to approve the plaintiffs modified application under reasonably justified terms and conditions with regard to the nonwatershed portion of the subject property. The plaintiff filed this appeal challenging that portion of the court’s decision concluding that the defendant had “sufficiently demonstrated that precluding development of housing or sewer within the Sauga-tuck watershed land is necessary to protect a substantial public interest.”6
We first address the legal framework that governs our consideration of the plaintiffs appeal. Section 8-30g sets forth the procedures and guidelines applicable [265]*265to an affordable housing appeal. Section 8-30g (f) provides in relevant part: “Any person whose affordable housing application is denied or is approved with restrictions which have a substantial adverse impact on the viability of the affordable housing development or the degree of affordability of the affordable dwelling units in a set-aside development, may appeal such decision pursuant to the procedures of this section. . . .” (Emphasis added.) As previously noted, § 8-30g (g) provides in relevant part: “Upon an appeal taken under subsection (f) of this section, the burden shall be on the commission to prove, based upon the evidence in the record compiled before such commission that the decision from which such appeal is taken and the reasons cited for such decision are supported by sufficient evidence in the record. The commission shall also have the burden to prove, based upon the evidence in the record compiled before such commission, that (1) (A) the decision is necessary to protect substantial public interests in health, safety, or other matters which the commission may legally consider; (B) such public interests clearly outweigh the need for affordable housing; and (C) such public interests cannot be protected by reasonable changes to the affordable housing development .... If the commission does not satisfy its burden of proof under this subsection, the court shall wholly or partly revise, modify, remand or reverse the decision from which the appeal was taken in a manner consistent with the evidence in the record before it.”7
In considering whether a decision that is the subject of a § 8-30g appeal is supported by sufficient evidence [266]*266in the record to satisfy the requirement set forth in the first sentence of § 8-30g (g), our Supreme Court has instructed that “the court must determine whether the record establishes that there is more than a mere theoretical possibility, but not necessarily a likelihood, of a specific harm to the public interest if the application is granted. If the court finds that such sufficient evidence exists, then it must conduct a plenary review of the record and determine independently whether the commission’s decision was necessary to protect substantial interests in health, safety or other matters that the commission legally may consider, whether the risk of such harm to such public interests clearly outweighs the need for affordable housing, and whether the public interest can be protected by reasonable changes to the affordable housing development.” River Bend Associates, Inc. v. Zoning Commission, 271 Conn. 1, 26, 856 A.2d 973 (2004). The foregoing determinations present “mixed factual and legal determinations, the legal components of which are subject to plenary review. . . . [T]he planning and zoning commission remains the finder of fact and any facts found are subject to the ‘sufficient evidence’ standard of judicial review.” (Citations omitted.) Id., 24. “Because the plaintiff[’s] appeal to the trial court is based solely on the record, the scope of the trial court’s review of the [commission’s] decision and the scope of [an appellate court’s] review of that decision are the same.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 26 n.15.
I
Before turning to the merits of the appeal, we first briefly discuss the issue of aggrievement. Aggrievement is a threshold matter that implicates subject matter jurisdiction, and, therefore, whether raised by the parties or by the court sua sponte, it must be resolved before addressing claims raised on appeal. See PHH Mortgage Corp. v. Cameron, 130 Conn. App. 238, 241, [267]*26722 A.3d 1282 (2011), and cases cited therein. It is axiomatic that “[t]here is no absolute right of appeal to the courts from a decision of a [planning and zoning commission]. . . . Appeals to the court from [commissions] exist only under statutory authority .... Appellate jurisdiction is derived from the . . . statutory provisions by which it is created, and can be acquired and exercised only in the manner prescribed.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Warner v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 120 Conn. App. 50, 61, 990 A.2d 1243, cert. denied, 297 Conn. 901, 994 A.2d 1289 (2010). Section 8-30g (f) provides that an affordable housing appeal may be brought by any person whose affordable housing application either “is denied or is approved with restrictions which have a substantial adverse impact on the viability of the affordable housing development or the degree of affordability of the affordable dwelling units in a set-aside development . . . .’’(Emphasis added.) In the present case, the plaintiff s affordable housing applications as modified were not denied outright; rather, they were approved with restrictions. Accordingly, to satisfy the statutory provisions in § 8-30g (f) that confer standing to bring an affordable housing appeal, it was incumbent on the plaintiff to establish before the Superior Court that the defendant’s decisions created a substantial adverse impact either on the viability of the planned affordable housing development or on the degree of affordability of the planned affordable dwelling units. See Christian Activities Council, Congregational v. Town Council, 249 Conn. 566, 575-76, 735 A.2d 231 (1999) (where town grants application without imposing restrictions having substantial adverse impact on viability or affordability of affordable housing development no appeal lies pursuant to what is now § 8-30g (f), although traditional zoning appeal not precluded).
In its decisions on the plaintiffs affordable housing applications, the defendant repeatedly stated that [268]*268“[t]here has been no evidence submitted by the [plaintiff] to establish that the [defendant’s decision] has had a substantial adverse impact on the viability of the affordable housing development or the degree of affordability of the affordable dwelling units.” The plaintiff nevertheless alleged in its appeal to the Superior Court that “[the defendant]’s resolution approving the [housing opportunity development] amendment with substantial modifications . . . substantially reduces or destroys the viability and affordability of the proposed plan.” In its decision on the merits, the Superior Court disposed of the threshold issue of aggrievement by stating that the plaintiff was aggrieved on the basis of its ownership of the subject property, although that fact alone would not be sufficient to establish statutory aggrievement under the previously stated provision of § 8-30g (f). Given the defendant’s finding that the plaintiff had not presented evidence necessary to establish aggrievement under § 8-30g, and because the plaintiff initially did not provide this court with transcripts of the proceedings before the Superior Court, our review of the record left us with some concern as to whether the court properly had exercised jurisdiction over the present appeal.
We asked the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing the issue of statutory aggrievement pursuant to § 8-30g and whether, if absent, the Superior Court nevertheless had the authority to consider the plaintiffs appeal pursuant to its authority to adjudicate zoning appeals pursuant to General Statutes § 8-8 (b).8 As part of its response to our supplemental briefing order, the [269]*269plaintiff filed that portion of the transcript before the Superior Court in which the plaintiff had endeavored to present its aggrievement evidence to the court. Having now reviewed that transcript, in which counsel for the defendant did not object to the assertion of the plaintiffs fact witness that the restrictions imposed by the defendant would, in fact, substantially and adversely affect the viability of the plaintiffs project,9 we conclude that the plaintiff met its burden, albeit minimally, of presenting evidence sufficient to establish aggrievement to bring the present affordable housing appeal.10 We turn, therefore, to the merits of the appeal.
[270]*270II
As indicated, the decisions under review are not an outright denial of the plaintiffs applications. Rather, the defendant accepted with modifications the zoning changes sought by the plaintiff, thereby setting the stage for the future development of the subject property as a site for affordable housing while, at the same time, attempting to protect a source of public drinking water by concentrating any development to the nonwatershed portion of the property. The defendant reasoned that allowing development on the watershed portion of the property, at least at the density proposed by the plaintiff, could present more than a theoretical possibility of harm to the Saugatuck Reservoir public water supply watershed area.
The plaintiff cannot, and does not, dispute that the protection of public drinking water supplies is a legitimate public health and safety concern that the defendant properly considered in evaluating the plaintiffs [271]*271applications. Any substantial risk to the public’s legitimate interest in maintaining safe and healthy drinking water certainly could outweigh the need for affordable housing. In this regard, the state legislature has provided that local zoning commissions, in enacting zoning regulations and local conservation and development plans, should give reasonable consideration toward “the protection of existing and potential public surface and ground drinking water supplies.” General Statutes §§ 8-2 (a) and 8-23 (d). It is among the water resources policies of this state “(1) [t]o preserve and protect water supply watershed lands and prevent degradation of surface water and groundwaters; (2) to protect groundwater recharge areas critical to existing and potential drinking water supplies; (3) to make water resources conservation a priority in all decisions ... (5) to prevent contamination of water supply sources or reduction in the availability of future water supplies . . . .” General Statutes § 22a-380.
Our review of the record reveals that the defendant was presented with conflicting evidence regarding the potential impact that development of the subject property would have on the safety of the public drinking water supply. John Block and Peter Galant addressed the defendant on behalf of the plaintiff. Galant is the vice president of Tighe and Bond, Inc., the engineering and environmental consulting company hired by the plaintiff to analyze the means of providing water and sewer service to the subject property, and Block is a registered professional engineer employed by Tighe and Bond, Inc. Block spoke regarding sewer options and on-site storm water management, and Galant spoke about the watershed and watershed protection. Block opined that “there [would be] no increase in public [272]*272health and safety issues associated with sewage, as well as with storm water management elements related to the zoning change.” He indicated that the plaintiff intended to construct an on-site wastewater treatment facility outside of the watershed area to handle stormwater runoff and that the plaintiff was committed to employing good engineering principles, best management practices and state-of-the-art technology in preparing its water and sewage management plans. Block acknowledged that more detailed plans would be revealed during the formal site plan approval process.
Galant noted that the subject property currently was zoned for commercial use, which, in his opinion, had the potential of exposing the subject property to uses that could present a far higher risk of harm to the public water supply than the residential use proposed in the plaintiffs applications. He also explained and illustrated by use of a map that the subject property was located in the “far reaches” of the Saugatuck Reservoir watershed, and comprised only .2 percent of the entire watershed area, so that there would be ample opportunity for renovation and dilution of any potentially contaminated water from the proposed site.
In setting forth the reasons why it chose not to adopt the applications as submitted, however, the defendant chose not to credit the opinions offered by Galant and Block. Instead, the defendant based its decision on the opinions expressed in letters from the state’s department of public health and Aquarion, both of which opposed the plaintiffs applications as submitted. See Kaufman v. Zoning Commission, 232 Conn. 122, 156-57, 653 A.2d 798 (1995) (within province of commission to decide whether to give credence to expert opinions).
The June 15,2007 Aquarion letter was signed by Brian T. Roach, a senior environmental analyst for Aquarion. [273]*273Roach stated that any high density residential development on the watershed, such as that proposed by the plaintiff, had been shown “to create significantly more adverse effects to water quality than those associated with less intensive, large-lot residential development.” Roach also attempted to counter the argument that effects on the water supply would be minimized by the remote location of the subject property with respect to the reservoir and the small size of the watershed area at issue when compared to the entire watershed. He explained that the defendant must also consider the potential cumulative impacts on water quality, noting: “A specific development may not in itself have a deleterious impact on a water supply reservoir. However, the cumulative impact of a number of discrete projects may result in negative impact on water quality.”
In support of his position, Roach cited favorably to the state’s department of environmental protection publication, “Protecting Connecticut’s Water-Supply Watersheds: A Guide for Local Officials,” a copy of which was part of the record before the defendant. He noted that the report contains an indication that “a maximum density of [one] dwelling per [two] acres will provide adequate protection of water quality” provided that reasonable pollution control measures are followed. Roach also indicated that the proposal to permit the running of sewer lines through the watershed portion of the subject property was “the most alarming aspect” of the plaintiffs plan given that sewer system failures are commonplace and well documented. Aquarion made clear its belief that permitting the pumping of sewage through the watershed “would create an unacceptable risk of pollution to the [Saugatuck] Reservoir,” although it provided no quantitative assessments of the potential level of harm to the watershed or of the probability that the harm actually would occur if the plaintiff’s applications were granted.
[274]*274The letter from the department of public health was signed by Lori Mathieu, supervisor of the department’s source water protection unit. According to Mathieu, the zoning changes as proposed in the plaintiffs initial applications were inconsistent with the state’s conservation and development plan, which recommended that intensive development be guided away from water supply watersheds. In reference to the applications being considered by the defendant, Mathieu stated that the proposed zoning changes had “the potential to increase the risk to public health due to the high density residential land use.” Mathieu also stated that “direct harm to the public will be realized by allowing for intensive land use that is inconsistent with long standing” state water source protection policies and that developments of the size and density proposed “have not been allowed within the state’s public water supply watershed areas due to [those policies].” The letter concluded: “Finally, consistent with the [state’s conservation and development policies], when public drinking water supply watershed and groundwater recharge area land is developed, low density residential development is the least impacting and most preferable land use from a public health perspective. Use of minimum sustainable lot sizes of two or more acres should adequately protect public drinking water supplies while allowing community growth.”
On the basis of our plenary review of the record and the reasons cited by the defendant for its decisions, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence before the defendant to support its initial determination that the granting of the plaintiffs applications as submitted would present more than a mere theoretical possibility of a specific harm to the public’s substantial interest in maintaining a safe and healthy drinking water supply. Accordingly, the defendant was justified in making modifications to the applications. Nevertheless, the [275]*275defendant failed to meet the additional burden imposed by § 8-30g to prove that the modifications that it chose to adopt were necessary to protect that public interest.
Neither of the letters discussed previously in this opinion, both of which the defendant cited as the reason for its modifications to the plaintiffs applications, recommended a complete ban on residential development on the watershed portion of the subject property. The Aquarion letter advised only that “high density” residential development should be avoided. The letter cited agreement with the state’s guidelines that “adequate protection of water quality” could be achieved by allowing density of one dwelling unit per two acres. The department of public health letter similarly concluded that two acre lots “should adequately protect public drinking water supplies while allowing community growth.” Thus, the evidence before the defendant was that development of the size and density proposed by the plaintiff should not be permitted on the watershed portion of the subject property because such development would pose a substantial risk to the public drinking water supply. The evidence supported limiting development on the watershed portion of the subject property to a density of not more than one dwelling unit per two acres; it did not support an outright ban. Although the defendant’s ultimate choice, clearly made out of an abundance of caution, to ban all development on the watershed area and to increase development on the nonwatershed portion of the subject property as an offset may have been a reasonable solution, the test we must apply under § 8-30g is not whether the defendant’s decision was reasonable, but whether the decision was necessary. Because the evidence in the record shows that allowing development at a lower density than that sought by the plaintiff could have adequately protected the public’s interest in safe drinking water, the outright ban was not a necessary precaution.
[276]*276Finally, the plaintiff claims that the defendant’s decision to prohibit extension of public sewers through the watershed portion of the subject property for the purpose of serving affordable housing is not supported by the record, is based on generalized fears and “guidance documents” and is inconsistent with the defendant’s treatment of all other watershed property in Ridgefield. We agree that, as with the outright ban on development in the watershed area, the defendant has failed its evidentiary burden of showing that a ban on sewering within the watershed area is necessary to protect the public’s interest in safe drinking water.
In Kaufman v. Zoning Commission, supra, 232 Conn. 154-56, our Supreme Court rejected a defendant commission’s citing of potential harm to the Lake Keno-sia watershed as the basis for denying an application for a zone change necessary to accommodate the development of affordable housing on the plaintiffs property. In discussing the commission’s burden of showing a reasonable basis in the record for concluding that its decision was necessary to protect substantial public interests, the court explained that the record needed to “contain evidence concerning the potential harm that would result if the zone were changed . . . and concerning the probability that such harm in fact would occur.” (Emphasis added.) Id., 156. The Supreme Court determined that the record before the commission contained no evidence that either quantified the potential level of harm to the watershed or estimated the probability that such harm would actually occur if the commission granted the requested zone change. Id., 162. Here, as in Kaufman, the defendant made its decision to ban all sewering in the watershed portion of the subject property solely on the basis of generalized evidence of the potential for harm to watersheds from sewer line breaks and other potential avenues for contamination, without any evidence of the likelihood that [277]*277such harm actually might occur on the subject property or establishing the level of harm that might result. Without such evidence, the defendant could not determine that its decision was necessary to protect the public’s interest vis-a-vis the watershed or that the harm clearly outweighed the town’s need for affordable housing.
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded with direction to sustain the plaintiffs appeal as to the density and sewering restrictions imposed by the defendant with regard to the watershed portion of the subject property and to remand the matter to the defendant with direction to approve the plaintiffs applications under reasonably justified terms and conditions with regard to the watershed portion of the subject property in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.