Margaret Pratt Assisted Living

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJune 21, 2016
Docket111-8-14 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Margaret Pratt Assisted Living (Margaret Pratt Assisted Living) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret Pratt Assisted Living, (Vt. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Environmental Division Docket No. 111-8-14 Vtec Docket No. 112-8-14 Vtec Docket No. 13-2-15 Vtec Docket No. 100-8-15 Vtec

Margaret Pratt Assisted Living Site Plan, Conditional Use and Act 250 Approvals DECISION ON THE MERITS

Applicant Enhanced Living, Inc. proposes to build a 48-bed assisted living facility on a 3.5-acre site in the Plateau Acres subdivision in Bradford, Vermont (“the Project”). Applicant has received conditional use approval, site plan approval, and an amended site plan approval from the Town of Bradford (“Town”), and Act 250 approval from the District #3 Environmental Commission (“District Commission”). A group of residents of the Plateau Acres subdivision (“Neighbors”) have appealed1 all four approvals to this Court. The conditional use approval is the subject of Docket No. 112-8-14 Vtec. The appeal of the original site plan approval is Docket No. 111-8-14 Vtec, and the amended site plan approval appeal is Docket No. 13-2-15 Vtec. The Act 250 appeal is Docket No. 100-8-15 Vtec. Applicant originally obtained conditional use approval and site plan approval in the summer of 2014. Applicant then revised its site plans in December 2014 and sought a revised site plan approval from the Town of Bradford Planning Commission (“Planning Commission”) for the amended site plans. Applicant moved to stay the conditional use appeal pending this second site plan approval, and the Court granted its motion. Applicant then received approval for its revised site plan on January 2015, and Neighbors appealed the revised approval to this Court.

1 Neighbors Christine Brown, Stephen Johnson, Elizabeth Reader, Henry Sienkewicz, Robert Sweet, and Sylvia Sweet are all Appellants in this matter. Other neighbors—Jean Young, Dwight Young, and Pamela Wilcox— are Interested Parties.

-1- Applicant submitted an Act 250 application in February 2015, and the District Commission issued Act 250 approval for the Project in August 2015. Neighbors appealed that decision to this Court as well. Once the Neighbors had filed their appeal of the Act 250 permit determination, and at the parties’ request, the Court lifted the stay on the conditional use appeal. The Court then coordinated all four matters—the conditional use appeal, the original site plan appeal, the revised site plan appeal, and the Act 250 appeal—and conducted a single site visit and merits trial for the four appeals. The site visit took place on September 23, 2015, followed by a two- day merits hearing in the Orange County Courthouse in Chelsea, Vermont. Neighbors were self- represented; one Appellant, Christine Brown, served as primary spokesperson for all Neighbors. Applicant was represented by attorney Andrea Gallitano. Applicant’s evidence at trial represents the most current version of its plans for the Project—the same plans it submitted in its revised site plan application to the Planning Commission. Based on the evidence admitted at trial, which was put into context by the site visit, the Court renders the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

Findings of Fact 1. Applicant proposes to build an assisted living facility on Plateau Acres Road in Bradford, Vermont. The facility will have 32 rooms and 48 beds. 2. Although Enhanced Living, Inc. is designing the Project and applying for the necessary permits, a different entity—Grand Senior Living—will operate the facility once it is constructed.

I. The Neighborhood 3. Plateau Acres is a residential subdivision with twenty-six single-family homes. 4. Plateau Acres is in the Town’s Residential District. 5. As the name suggests, Plateau Acres sits on top of a plateau. The plateau lies to the east of I-91 and the west of U.S. Route 5. Vermont Route 25 lies to the south. 6. Views from the plateau include views of the Connecticut River Valley to the south and east and I-91 to the west. A distant rock quarry is visible from the plateau. 7. There are currently no business developments in the subdivision. Though the subdivision is only a thousand feet, as the crow flies, from some commercial development near

-2- Route 5, the commercial development lies below the plateau and cannot be seen from the houses in the subdivision. 8. The only access road to the subdivision (and to the proposed facility) is Plateau Acres Road. Plateau Acres Road spurs off of Old Creamery Road near Old Creamery Road’s junction with Route 25. 9. All homes in the subdivision are single-story capes or ranches. In the loop of houses closest to the Project, there are nine homes. These houses contain an average of 1,178 square feet in interior space. 10. The building site for the Project was donated to Applicants by the Pratt family. Applicant did explore other potential build sites before the Pratt family donated the Plateau Acre site for the Project.

II. Project Site 11. The facility will be built as a two-story building 287 feet long and up to 35 feet high, with a total of 34,800 square feet of interior space. 12. The average size for an assisted living facility in Vermont is 64 beds. This 48-bed facility is as small as is economically feasible for such a facility. 13. The lot for the proposed Project is 3.5± acres. The lot is roughly kidney shaped, curving from the east to the south. The proposed facility will cover less than a third of the lot. 14. The lot lies on the eastern side of Plateau Acres Road and south of all the houses in the subdivision. Two residential parcels border the lot to the north. The residential parcels are owned by Dwight Young and Pamela Wilcox, who are both interested parties in this appeal. 15. In the original site plan for the Project (submitted as Exhibit 2) Applicant proposed to site the building in the eastern portion of the lot. In response to some of the Neighbors’ concerns, Applicant agreed to move the building to the southern corner of the lot (depicted in Exhibit 3). To make the building fit in the new location, the building had to be reflected or “flipped” along a north-south access. 16. The new building site is farther from the Young and the Wilcox residences to the north, and the new site plan has the shorter edge of the building facing the residential parcels, which preserves some of the off-site views from those parcels. The re-sited position makes the

-3- Project significantly more visible from Plateau Acres Road. This re-siting added roughly 1 to 2% to the overall cost of the Project.

III. Project Aesthetics 17. The general shape of the building is a long rectangle, with the long axis running northeast/southwest. There is a perpendicular wing running from the center of the building to the northwest. The main entrance is in the northern corner made by the main building and the northwest wing. There is also a separate entrance to the memory care unit in the southern corner of the main building and the northwest wing. Applicant’s site plan can be found at Applicant’s Exhibit 3. 18. The Project will be clearly visible from the southern portion of Plateau Acres subdivision, where nine of the Neighbors’ homes are located. From the northern portion of the Plateau Acres subdivision, the Project will be below the horizon and largely not visible from these homes. 19. Headed south on Plateau Acres Road, both the northeastern portion of the main building and the northwest wing will be visible, as will the main entrance between the two. 20. The Project is designed to mimic the appearance of single-family homes in the area by dividing the main portion of the building into different segments. Each segment will be a different color and have a different roofline height. Each segment’s roof will be pitched. 21. The northwest wing does not have a varied roofline. The primary view from Plateau Acres Road, which encompasses the northwest wing, will not benefit much from the varied roofline design.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Margaret Pratt Assisted Living, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margaret-pratt-assisted-living-vtsuperct-2016.