Flynn v. Bloomfield Inld. Wetl./wtrcrs., No. Cv 37 13 63 (Aug. 21, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7193
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1991
DocketNo. CV 37 13 63
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7193 (Flynn v. Bloomfield Inld. Wetl./wtrcrs., No. Cv 37 13 63 (Aug. 21, 1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flynn v. Bloomfield Inld. Wetl./wtrcrs., No. Cv 37 13 63 (Aug. 21, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7193 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an appeal from the decision of the Bloomfield Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Commission (hereinafter the "Commission") granting a conditional permit to Landforms, Inc. for the construction of a watercourse crossing and a six-lot subdivision in an inland wetlands area. CT Page 7194

A review of the entire record discloses the following germane facts. The subject parcel of land consists of approximately 34.76 acres located on the west side of Duncaster Road, approximately 1200 feet south of the intersection with Wadhams Road; the parcel contains approximately thirteen acres of regulated inland wetlands and watercourses. The subject property is bisected by a seasonal watercourse which divides the parcel into eastern and western halves; there currently exists on the property a farm crossing which traverses the seasonal watercourse. The western portion of the property is bordered by Griffin Brook which flows in a northerly direction and forms the headwaters for an inland wetland and watercourse system known as "The Great Drain". The permit, as granted by the Commission, allows a six-lot subdivision consisting of four houses on the eastern half and two on the western half.1 Access to the homes would be by means of a new road entering from Duncaster Road and utilization of the existing farm crossing across the easterly wetlands corridor to the two lots on the western half; Landforms proposed using the farm crossing with a drainage pipe already in place, paving to sixteen feet, and adding two feet of fill on either side of the crossing. The permit, as granted, is subject to ten conditions set out by the Commission, including a conservation easement "subject to the Wetlands Commission approval."

Landforms' proposal first came to the attention of the Commission in late 1988 and early 1989. The initial application proposed nine homes, four on the easterly half, and five on the westerly tract, with a fifty foot right of way crossing the easterly wetlands, twenty-six feet of which would be paved. After a public hearing, the first application was denied without prejudice by the Commission on February 21, 1989, there having been concerns raised regarding the number of homes on the westerly tract and the magnitude of the proposed crossing (with corresponding disruption) of the easterly wetlands.

Landforms submitted the second (present) application on October 2, 1989, which proposed three homes, rather than five, on the westerly half, and the sixteen foot paving of the existing farm crossing (which would result in a disturbed area of approximately 2340 sq. ft., as opposed to 8960 sq. ft. under the 1988 application).2

Landforms' second application is dated October 2, 1989, and is inscribed as received at the Bloomfield Town Hall on that date. The official date of receipt by the Commission is shown as October 16, 1989, and the application was "scheduled for review by the [Commission] on October 16, 1989." Notice of the October 16, hearing was published on October 6 and October CT Page 7195 13, 1989, as required by General Statutes Section 22a-42a(c). The applicant was notified by certified mail, and the Commission also notified abutting owners by letter dated October 4, 1989.3 The hearing went forward on October 16, 1989, and further hearings were conducted on November 16 and November 20, 1989; on the latter date, after hearing substantial evidence and extensive comment, the Commission granted the application, subject, as stated, to ten conditions.

At the commencement of the October 16 hearing, counsel for the plaintiffs/intervenors4 objected to going forward on the merits, referring to Section 22a-42a(c) (and, also, Section 6.4 of the Bloomfield regulations), asserting that a public hearing could not be scheduled until the application was first "received" by the Commission. Counsel's objection was duly noted and overruled by the Commission at that time, the Chairman stating that the Commission had the right to have a public hearing on the date it "received" an application, that it regularly delegated to staff the scheduling of a hearing when an application was clearly a public hearing matter, and that to do otherwise would simply result in "essentially a wasted meeting", putting "things off for too long". The Chairman pointed out that the intervenors would not be deprived of sufficient time to prepare as the hearing on this application would not be completed on October 16, but would require one or more adjourned hearings to finalize the presentation. Thus, the hearing proceeded on the merits, the intervenors preserving their rights with respect to this procedural question.

On October 16, counsel for the applicant, Landforms, offered its evidence. Most of that presentation involved the testimony of Mr. Ed Lally, a licensed professional engineer and land surveyor; on behalf of Landforms, Mr. Lally presented extensive information regarding the second proposal and, specifically, the claimed less intrusive crossing of the easterly wetlands corridor. Additionally, the applicant's field biologist, Mr. David M. Darnell, of Environmental Planning Services, testified regarding the nature and quality of both the eastern and western wetland areas, observing generally that, in his view, the higher quality wetland was the western portion along Griffin Brook; the expert concurred with Michael Klein, Environmental Planning Services' principal, that the eastern area was a lower quality wildlife habitat of much more limited wetland value than the acreage to the west. With regard to the westerly corridor, the Klein report stated that the applicant's three lot proposal would have no direct adverse impact on Griffin Brook, and merely a negligible indirect impact; similarly, Mr. Darnell testified that the development of the three lots to the west would only minimally impact on the wetland, and have no significant impact on the wildlife habitat. CT Page 7196 Members of the Commission, and the intervenors' counsel, questioned Mr. Lally, Mr. Darnell, and also Mr. Hixon, a principal in the applicant corporation, thoroughly and at considerable length.

On November 6, 1989, Mr. Darnell completed his presentation; there was further questioning, and, thereafter, the intervenor's presented their position in opposition to the application. Counsel for the intervenors contended that the October application was "nothing more than a cut and paste job" of the earlier one, the westerly reduction from five lots to three was minimal in terms of environmental impact, the statutory requirement of no feasible and prudent alternative had not been addressed, that in spite of the proposed conservation easement there "still remained significant gaps and questions" (particularly with regard to the impact resulting from human habitation and the difficulty in enforcement of easement terms), and, although properly a question for the Town Planning Zoning Commission, the subdivision reflected "false frontages" in that the frontage on the exterior roadways was entirely wetland which provided no ingress or egress to and from the buildable portions of the lots. The intervenors presented their expert, Virginia Burkhardt, Burkhardt Environmental, Inc., who voiced great concern over the long-term impact of residential habitation on the regulated portion of the tract. However, while recognizing that the intervenors took the position that no development should be permitted on the western portion, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-bloomfield-inld-wetlwtrcrs-no-cv-37-13-63-aug-21-1991-connsuperct-1991.