Genereux v. Bruce

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 4, 2011
DocketC.A. Nos. PC 09-7295, PC 09-7296, PC 09-7297, PC 10-0926, PC 10-3045 CONSOLIDATED
StatusPublished

This text of Genereux v. Bruce (Genereux v. Bruce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Genereux v. Bruce, (R.I. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
Before this Court are consolidated appeals brought by Appellant Ronald Genereux (Appellant or Genereux). The instant matters arise out of a proposed development (Proposed Development) of a new 12,900 square foot CVS Pharmacy with drive-thru in the City *Page 3 of Woonsocket (City or Woonsocket). Genereux seeks (1) reversal of the Woonsocket Zoning Board of Review sitting as the Board of Appeal's (Board of Appeal) affirmation of the Woonsocket Planning Board's (Planning Board) denial of his motion to dismiss based on administrative finality and approval of CVS's second master plan application; (2) invalidation of the Woonsocket City Council's (City Council) amendment to the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Woonsocket (Zoning Ordinance) changing the zone from R-2 to MU-1; (3) reversal of the Woonsocket Zoning Board of Review's (Zoning Board) decision to grant CVS's dimensional variances for the Proposed Development; and (4) reversal of the Board of Appeal's affirmation of the Planning Board's decision to approve CVS's Preliminary Plan application.

I
Facts and Travel
Master Plan Approval
In 2008, CVS filed a Major Subdivision/Major Land Development Application with the Woonsocket Planning Board wherein it formally submitted the specifications for the Proposed Development. Pursuant to G.L. 1956 §§ 45-23-39(b) and 45-23-40 of the Rhode Island Land Development and Subdivision Review Enabling Act of 1992 (Development Review Act), CVS submitted its original master plan application (Master Plan I Application) to Jane Talbot (Talbot), Woonsocket's City Planner, for review and approval by the Planning Board.1See City of Woonsocket Subdivision and Land Development Regulations §§ 6.1-6.2. Following a hearing on December 10, 2008, the Planning Board denied CVS's application. The Planning Board's decision stated in pertinent part:

"The Planning Board finds that:

*Page 4

"1. The proposed development is not consistent with the City of Woonsocket Comprehensive Plan and therefore cannot be approved. The application is denied because the proposed development does not satisfactorily achieve a residential scale and character as is envisioned for properties in the MU-1 zone and specifically along Mendon Road." See December 10, 2008 Planning Board Decision at 7.

Following the denial, Joel Matthews (Matthews), Woonsocket's Planning and Development Director, wrote a letter to CVS outlining his recommendations for revisions to the project and held discussions with officials from CVS and their design and legal consultants. Id.

Subsequently, CVS submitted a new master plan application (Master Plan II Application). The Master Plan II Application specifies that CVS's Proposed Development "is located at the northwest corner of Mendon Road and Cass Avenue." See October 6, 2009 Administrative Officer Report to the Planning Board at 1. As described by Talbot in her report, 2 the site of the Proposed Development

"is comprised of a parking lot for Kay's Restaurant (which sits across the street), a one-story convenience store with a gravel lot to its rear, two residentially zoned house lots and a portion of a third residentially zoned house lot. The total site acreage equals 98,934 square feet and has significant frontage along both Cass Avenue and Mendon Road, both of which are public streets. The site is currently zoned both MU-1 (Mixed-use Commercial/Residential) and R-2 (Low-density Single-family Residential)." Id.

Specifically, Master Plan II Application proposed

"the development of a new CVS Pharmacy and an expanded area for the Kay's parking lot. Parcel A would contain 77,496 square feet of land and would contain the proposed new 12,900-square-foot CVS store with drive-through window. Access to Parcel A would be from either Mendon Road or from Cass Avenue. Parcel B would contain 21,438 square feet of land and would contain the *Page 5 parking lot for Kay's. Access to Parcel B would be from either Dana Street or from Cass Avenue. The Cass Avenue driveway is proposed to serve both lots and is intended to reduce the amount of curb cuts along the roadway. The remainder parcel to the north is 63,901 square feet in area and includes an existing medical office with residential unit above." Id.

In the fall of 2009, public informational hearings were held in connection with CVS's Master Plan II Application. On October 6, 2009, Genereux requested that the Planning Board dismiss the Master Plan II Application based on the doctrine of administrative finality. See October 6, 2010 Planning Board Meeting Minutes. After hearing Genereux's motion, the Planning Board voted to temporarily table the matter until it had heard CVS's new application. Id. at 4.

Having tabled Genereux's motion, the Planning Board heard testimony from CVS's witnesses. David Hogue (Hogue), a civil engineer with Bryant Associates, testified regarding the site plan layout, parking spaces, grading/retaining walls, location of dumpsters, Kay's parking lot, curb cuts, drainage, utility plan, and truck access. Id. at 5-8. According to Hogue, from a site design and civil engineering standpoint, the Proposed Development was well designed to: (1) fit in with the natural conditions of the area; (2) protect the health, safety, and welfare of the community; (3) promote high quality and appropriate design and construction; (4) mitigate any land use impact; (5) provide safer access to the parcels; (6) improve the curb cuts; and (7) reduce the amount of runoff that would be entering the infiltration system. Id. at 8-9.

When asked about the differences between the two master plan applications, Hogue testified that CVS modified the site plan in response to concerns from the Planning Board. Id. at 9. In particular, the Proposed Development was made "more user-friendly" by: (1) replacing the sidewalk along Mendon Road and Cass Avenue; (2) making handicap accessible ramps available; (3) adding sidewalks connecting Cass Avenue to the sidewalk in front of the store; (4) *Page 6 incorporating a sidewalk along the Mendon Road driveway connecting to the main sidewalk; (5) significantly increasing landscaping along the back areas and along the residential neighborhood to mitigate the noise and accommodate concerns from residential abutters; and (6) upgrading the landscaping plan to accommodate concerns raised by the residential abutters. Id.

Diane Soule (Soule), an expert witness in the field of landscape architecture, explained that CVS's proposed landscaping buffer plan consisted of: (1) a tall arborvitae hedge to provide a complete visual screen between the Proposed Development and adjacent residential properties; (2) several arborvitaes to screen the opposite corner of the site; and (3) a mixture of spruce, fir, cedar, and cypress trees along the back area. Id. at 10. According to Soule, the proposed landscaping would create "an effective buffer between the [P]roposed [D]evelopment and the adjacent residential properties." Id.

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Genereux v. Bruce, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genereux-v-bruce-risuperct-2011.