W. Hartford Interfaith v. Town Council, No. Cv91-0501205s (Aug. 26, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 8030, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 1085
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1992
DocketNo. CV 91-0501205S
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 8030 (W. Hartford Interfaith v. Town Council, No. Cv91-0501205s (Aug. 26, 1992)) 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
W. Hartford Interfaith v. Town Council, No. Cv91-0501205s (Aug. 26, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 8030, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 1085 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION I. Introduction and Factual Background

A.

The present appeal concerns an application to construct ten units of affordable housing in West Hartford, Connecticut.12 The applicant, West Hartford Interfaith Coalition, Inc. (hereinafter, "the Coalition"), is a private nonprofit organization composed of individuals from the West Hartford community and eleven local churches and synagogues with a stated purpose "to provide entry level home ownership opportunities for individuals and families of low and moderate income." (Return Items 4, p. 6; 82). At present, the Coalition holds an option to purchase 2561 Albany Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut, located near the confluence of Albany Avenue and Flagg Road and now owned by Messrs. Martin Levitz and Neil Cohen. (Exhibits 2; C; D; E). The property is approximately 55,000 square feet and is currently zoned R-13, a single family zoning designation requiring 12,750 square feet of lot area per dwelling unit. (Return Items 4, p. 3; 102; Plaintiff's Brief, p. 3). A small tip of land to the east is now vacant and just beyond that is the Bishop's Corner shopping area, one of West Hartford's major commercial centers. Bishop's Corner is surrounded by single family homes with an intervening multifamily zone on three of the corners. There is no multi-family zone on the subject corner but there is a 19 unit multi-family complex west of this site on Flagg Road. (Return Item 4, p. 3). The applicant has filed two applications: (1) a request for a change of zone from R-13 to RM-4 multi-family (4,000 square feet of land per dwelling unit) and (2) a request for special development district designation to construct the project. This court will refer to the applications collectively as the application.

The defendant is the Town Council of the Town of West Hartford (hereinafter, "the Council") which acts as the zoning authority for the Town pursuant to special acts of the General Assembly. 19 Spec. Laws 934, Secs. 1-6; 20 Spec. Laws 188; 22 Spec. Laws 473, Sec. 172; see also, Cascio v. Town Council, 158 Conn. 111, 113 (1969); Clark v. Town Council of West Hartford, 145 Conn. 476, 480-481 (1958); Sullivan v. Town Council of West Hartford, 143 Conn. 280, 282 (1956). CT Page 8032

B.

The instant application was filed on May 6, 1991. (Return Item 1). Three buildings, two four unit buildings of 5,000 square feet and one two unit building of 2,000 square feet, are proposed which will meet the affordability requirements governed by General Statutes 8-30g.3 (Return Item 1). The Council scheduled a public hearing for June 17, 1991, which after not concluding, was continued to June 27, 1991. On the first night, Donald Foster, West Hartford Town Planner, presented a slide show for orientation, related the history of recent zone changes in the area, and answered specific Council questions about the project. He noted, for instance, that the site as now zoned would probably allow four dwelling units. (Return Item 4, p. 3).

Patricia Williams, the Executive Director of the Coalition, Attorney Robin Messier Pearson, Counsel for the Coalition, and Richard Mahoney, a real estate appraiser, all spoke on behalf of the applicant. (Return Item 4). Ms. Williams discussed the Brace-Dale project, a four family limited equity cooperative, also developed by the applicant in West Hartford, which required similar zoning approvals. Under the cooperative scheme, family occupancy would be based upon certain criteria including "sweat equity" of approximately 300 hours (the "down payment") and an income range of about $10,000 to $34,000 per year. (Return Item 4, p. 7). The families would own and manage the buildings, with a 99 year lease to the land. The proposal also contained restrictions for resale so that the units remain affordable. (Return Items 3; 4, p. 9).

Attorney Pearson's review of the proposal started with a description of the area. She noted that the existing buffer area multi-family zones were denser than the proposed zone with RM-3 (3,000 square feet per unit) to the north, RM-2 (2,000 square feet per unit) to the northeast, and RM-3 to the southeast. (Return Item 4, p. 12). She commented on the Hartmeadow project on Flagg Road which was also developed under the RM-4, special development district concept. She noted further that the Town Planning and Zoning Commission recommended approval of the project and in 1987 had recommended that the site be developed as low density multi-family. (Return Item 51). She reviewed the site plan and such items as height, buffer, sewer, and water proposals noting that the Metropolitan District Commission had approved the project (Return Item 38) and that the West Hartford Design Review Advisory Committee had approved the building design. Indeed, that municipal committee had indicated that "the scale, massing and CT Page 8033 general siting of the buildings, parking and landscaping, (existing and proposed) blends well with the surrounding community." (Return Items 4, p. 17; 50). She further reviewed traffic issues noting that a traffic consultant was not retained as the Town Traffic Engineer, Steven Weitz, believed the ten unit proposal was too small to warrant a review of traffic generation. (Return Item 4. p. 20). She discussed the issue of sight line distance and noted that both the applicant's and Town's traffic engineers had deemed it to be satisfactory. (Return Items 4, p. 20; 15; 49; 87). She reported that Mr. Weitz indicated that there were very few traffic accidents in the area. (Return Item 87). Finally, she noted that the lot coverage for the proposal was 12%, while an R-13 allowed 30%, an RM-4 allowed 20% and that coverage in the general area ranged from 4.6% to 17.4%.

Richard Mahoney, president of a local real estate company and a broker and appraiser with over 30 years experience in town, testified that this project would not have an adverse affect on the value of real estate in the area. (Return Items 4, p. 23; 48).

After the presentation, and questions by certain Council members, a number of West Hartford residents and other interested individuals spoke on the application. A representative of the Northwest Homeowner's Association spoke in opposition based on traffic, environmental, and spot zoning reasons. (Return Item 4, p. 25). A member of the Coalition submitted a petition with 1250 names of residents supporting the proposal. (Return Item 4, p. 46). A representative of the Board of Trustees of a local Jewish congregation reported that that Board supported the project and the President of the League of Women Voters spoke on behalf of the project. (Return Items 4, pp. 46,; 52; 43; 45).

At the continuation of the hearing on June 27, 1991, members of the public again spoke on the application. A member of the West Hartford Housing Partnership testified in support noting that the ten units would assist the town in accomplishing its goal of 281 units (Return Item 5, p. 4). A letter was read from the Mother Superior of the Sisters of Mercy in support of the project. (Return Item 5, p. 15). Likewise, the Executive Director of the Capitol Region Council of Churches spoke in favor of the proposal. (Return Item 5, p. 26). Another individual noted that the other multi-family development on Flagg Road (Hartmeadow) was not comparable since it contained 18 one story cottages on six acres.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 8030, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-hartford-interfaith-v-town-council-no-cv91-0501205s-aug-26-1992-connsuperct-1992.