Norooz v. Woodbury Inland Wetlands Agency, No. 095703 (Mar. 22, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2648
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1991
DocketNo. 095703
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2648 (Norooz v. Woodbury Inland Wetlands Agency, No. 095703 (Mar. 22, 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
Norooz v. Woodbury Inland Wetlands Agency, No. 095703 (Mar. 22, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2648 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This proceeding arises out of a denial of a permit to develop a subdivision in an inland-wetland.

From a review of the record, the following factual picture is presented: The plaintiffs, Sedigheh Norooz and Pouram Aleali (hereinafter the Owners) are the owners of thirty-one and thirty-eighth (31.38) acres of undeveloped property located in the Town of Woodbury. Access to the subject property is by way of a fifty foot right of way from Churchill Road.

The owners desire to subdivide the property into eight lots suitable for single home residential development. However, the development necessitates the construction of approximately nine hundred (900) feet of roadway. In the process of said construction, one non-contiguous wetland would be filled in, portions of the road would be located within one hundred foot setback from existing wetlands, and two driveways would be placed over a water course to service two of the proposed subdivision lots.

The defendant, Woodbury Inland Wetlands Agency (hereinafter the Agency), is the duly designated Woodbury Agency entrusted with the enforcement of the Inland Wetlands and Water Courses Act General Statutes Sections 22a-28 to 22a-45. In order to proceed with the proposed subdivision, it was necessary for the owners to obtain a permit from the Agency, among other things, to locate the road near the wetlands, to fill in a portion of the wetlands, and to place driveways over a water course.

Accordingly, March 7, 1989 the owners filed an application with the Agency seeking a permit to perform the aforementioned construction that would impact on the inland-wetlands. The owners had filed three previous applications involving the subject property with the Agency since April, 1988. Two of the CT Page 2649 applications were withdrawn and the third application was denied.

Thereafter the Agency set the matter down for public hearings and public hearings were held on January 8, 1990, January 22, 1990 and February 13, 1990 respectively. At the January 8, 1990 hearing, counsel for the owners submitted the following three letters from land use experts, 1) Northeast Soils, Inc. by Bruce C. Lasky, Soil Scientist to Environmental Planning Services of New Hartford, Connecticut dated November 30, 1989, 2) Environmental Planning Services of New Hartford Connecticut to Mr. Torres of Torres Engineering by Michael Klein dated January, 1990, 3) Environmental Planning Services to the owners by Michael Klein dated January 3, 1990. At this hearing, Mr. Ozzie Torres from Torres Engineering appeared and testified as an expert witness. At this time, The plans that were submitted were somewhat different from plans that had been submitted with the prior applications. Some of the changes were that the detention basin was moved outside the stream bed located on the property, the plans expanded upon the roadways and the swail, the plans expanded upon the sequence of construction and discharge of the sediment basin, two driveway crossings at Lot 7 and at Lot 8 only one of which would be used so as to reduce the number of driveways crossing the wetlands. The plans did not change the proposed roadway across the wetlands but the plans offered a better wetland species of plants in the area. Due to the fact that there were changes in the plans, the Agency continued the public hearing to January 22, 1990 so that Mr. Robert Oley of Land Tech Consultants, the Town Engineers, could review and comment on the new plans and calculations.

At the hearing on January 22, 1990, it was determined that the Agency had not received a response from Mr. Robert Oley seeking his comments upon the plans and calculations. During the course of this hearing, concern was raised about water draining from an adjacent property causing a gully to wash down sediment. As to whether this problem was an erosion problem or a problem involving the wetlands, neither the Agency nor the owners had addressed this issue. The public hearing was then continued to February 13, 1990 so that the owners could have a water design developed and to give Mr. Robert Oley time to review the revisions.

At the February 13, 1990 meeting, the owners submitted a letter by Torres Engineering which was in response to comments received by the agency from Land Tech Engineering. In addition, the owners submitted their revised drainage calculations dated February 13, 1990 and revised plans dated February 13, 1990. The revised plans and calculations were offered by the owners in an attempt to resolve all the problems that had been raised by the Agency and its experts. CT Page 2650

Because new plans and calculations were presented at the hearing, the Agency determined that the matter would be tabled until this information was forwarded to Land Tech Engineering for review and comment. No further public hearings were scheduled by the Agency and no particular date was set by the Agency at this time to discuss and decide the merits of the application. The Agency next discussed the application at their meeting on February 26, 1990. At this time, the Agency disclosed that they had received a communication from Land Tech Engineering dated February 23, 1990 wherein it discussed the impact of the subdivision on the wetlands. The application was continued until the Agency's meeting of March 12, 1990 so that this new information could be received. At this meeting, the Agency planned to have a final vote on the merits of the application without holding any further public hearings or requesting comments from the owners to Land Tech Engineering's comments dated February 23, 1990.

At the Agency's March 12, 1990 meeting, the Agency voted to deny the application for an inland-wetlands permit to construct the subdivision. In its deliberations, the Agency used the Land Tech Engineering information supplied to them in its letter to the Agency dated February 23, 1990 as a basis from the denial of the application. The Agency denied the application for the following reasons:

1. Section 6.1.e.i — the proposed activity — the construction of two hundred linear feet of roadway within a wetland, and two driveways will lead to the degradation of surface water and water quality by alterations in the subsurface flows within wetlands resulting from the damming effect of driveway and road construction (Town engineer's letter of 2/23/90).

2. Section 6.1.e.i — the proposed activity will reduce the wetland and watercourse quality from the accumulation of deicing sands. The application includes a plunge pool, but it's capacity cannot be determined from the detail provided. (Town engineer's letter of 2/23/90).

3. Section 6.1.e.i. — The proposed construction of the detention facility has the potential for the discharge of significant quantities of sediment into CT Page 2651 the wetland and watercourse. The application does not propose a mitigation strategy including errosion controls and construction sequencing. (Town engineer's letters of 2/23/90, 1/26/90 and 11/29/90).

4. Section 6.1.e.i. — The proposed activity which includes the construction of the roadway and driveways within the wetlands fails to adequately control the discharge of sediment on the site. The plan indicated sediment barriers at the top of slopes rather than at the base, and proposed fill sections within the wetlands with no filter barriers shown.

5. Section 6.1.e.i — 6.1.e.vii. — The alternative to wetlands disturbance for the construction of driveways to lots 7 and 8 has not been addressed by the applicant.

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norooz-v-woodbury-inland-wetlands-agency-no-095703-mar-22-1991-connsuperct-1991.