About this meeting
- Government Body
- Planning Commission
- Meeting Type
- Planning Commission
- Location
- Westport, CT
- Meeting Date
- February 9, 2026
Transcript
1245 sections (from 1,412 segments)
Good evening, and welcome to the Planning and Zoning Commission meeting for Monday, 02/09/2026. My name is Paul Leibowitz. And, of course, pursuant to state law, there is no physical location for this meeting. The meeting is being held electronically and livestreamed at www.westportct.gov. This meeting is also being shown on Westport's optimum government access channel 79, which is subject to availability, and the public may attend and offer testimony during the meeting by using the meeting link published in the agenda prior to the meeting.
The meeting agenda is available at westportct.gov as well on the meeting list and calendar web page, and all written comments may be received prior to the public meeting and should be sent to pnz@westportct.gov by 12PM on the day of the meeting and intended to be distributed for consideration by members of the planning and zoning commission. All written comments received after that time of 12PM on the day of the meeting will be entered into the record, but not distributed until the next business day. And, of course, all of the meeting materials that we use are submitted and available at westportct.gov on the planning and zoning department's webpage under p and z, pending applications and recent approvals. So, again, as I said, good evening. My name is Paul Leibowitz.
I'm the chair of Westport Planning and Zoning Commission. And tonight, I'm going to be joined by commissioners Mike Kalise, commissioners Bree Injewski, commissioners John Bolton, commissioners Craig Shavoni, and I believe commissioner, Patrice Zuccaro will be joining us. And I actually, know that, commissioner Mike Kammire will be slightly late. Now because he's going to be late, what I am going to do is ask the commission members if we can shuffle the
Excuse me, mister chairman. I just wanted to jump in because I did wanna clear I went did wanna remind that we told Rick Redness that he could be first because he does have other hearings tonight. He reminded me of that because so
Yeah. I I do. I I remember that as well. Alright. So does that move our plans around a little bit then?
Yeah. I mean, I I think to stick with our word that maybe we should just do I'm sorry. One second.
Hey, Paul. Yep. Who's I'm here, and I could certainly hear those items until Ken Meyer gets here because I was
Well, we're not gonna we're not gonna have him I appreciate that. Thank you. Let we're gonna continue to liberate.
I could ask a question?
Yes, sir.
How long is the item that you were going to move up?
Half hour.
Oh, okay. We can live with a half hour.
Yes. Excavation and fill.
Oh, fine. Well, we can live with that. Thank you.
It's only a few cubic yards. Okay. Alright. So back to commissioners, and back to you, mister Vellante. Thank you for your, for sitting in. First things first item of, therefore will be, the substitution of Mike Vellante for Patrice Zuccaro. I don't see Patrice. Patrice, are you here? Yeah.
I'm here.
You are here. Alright. Thank you. Would you turn your camera on, and locate yourself?
Sure will.
Thank you. So, Mike, we have a full quorum for this. I do appreciate you stepping up, and please stay close. Next item of of business is an order, commissioners, to move an item on the night of. We have to have a two thirds vote.
We have six people here. Two thirds vote would be four. We need four yeses or more than three nos In order to move Hockingham Road, that's 15 Hockingham Road, up, which was the second item on the schedule, and it would go before the the redness and me presentation for seven eighty five and text amendment eight sixty four? Eight sixty eight sixty four. Yeah.
So the first thing I wanna do is, ask for, whether or not you agree that we can shuffle the calendar. I'm gonna go around the room and ask you individually what says you should correct miss Shivani. Sure. Alright, mister Bolton. Try that, button again.
Not working. I'll come back to you. Miss ingest
There it is. It's working now.
And mister, police?
Yes. Thank you. You're saying that six are sitting in on this? Yes. Why don't you have Mike sitting on this and get a full call?
Trees here. So? It's not the the question before us is whether or not we are switching the first item with the second item. That's the question.
Senate.
Alright. Mister Bolton, can you, affirm your, vote? Wave your hand. That's an up. Miss Zacarra?
Yeah. I'm fine.
Alright. Great. So thank you, commissioners, and thank you to the applicant, mister Donald Coombe. And so first item of business is 15 Hockenham Road. Miss Zincheski, do you have your calendar in front of you, your agenda?
I do. Would you like me to read this one in?
Yes, please.
Alright. Item number one site will be 15 Hocknam Road, special permit site plan application PZ2500712 submitted by David co Donald Coon for property owned by Ed and Mindy Tan to prevent nonexempt excavation and fill for the reconstruction and reconfiguration of existing retaining walls located in The Residence A A District, P I D D 13131000. Applicant's presentation time is fifteen minutes.
Alright. Mister Kulme,
the stage is yours. Good evening, everybody. My name is Don. I work for the Laurel Rock company as a project manager. Do you mind putting on your I I've tried everything, and I can't get it to work. I don't know why. Is is there something I'm doing wrong? I mean, I I've clicked on every button that looks like I'm turning my camera on, and for whatever reason, it's not working.
Check the camera cover at the top of your laptop?
Yeah. No. They
no. Yeah. That's not
the issue. It is a new laptop. We all we just issued, so I don't know if there's a setting in the laptop that's not I don't I don't really know. Any other suggestions? No. Please proceed. Okay. Sorry about that. So, anyway, I work for the Laurel Rock Company as a project manager. I was in charge of the project at 15 Hockenham Road, which started in '24 and went into '25.
We did go through all of the proper channels with getting civil site plan and zoning location surveys and and did submit a full permit application package. I guess what I believe happened was that the grading plan built by the architect didn't show some amendments we made over on the south side of the house. If you're looking at the plan, there used to be two retaining walls that ran perpendicular to the house, that had a a recess between them. You know, in other words, they were retaining the dirt, allowing the windows to have, full access to seeing the yard. We ended up taking those walls and sweeping them in and creating more of a window well, and then ultimately filling that that area in to give the tans more flat space.
I missed the regulation that state anything outside of 25 feet required this excavation and fill permit, and it didn't come up or out until conservation or actually the town engineer went out and picked up on the difference in in what the plan showed and what the actual grade was. So, you know, I I then went through, Kusidi
is
the engineer and and planning and zoning and and came up with, you know, all of the, documentation of what happened versus, I guess, what what was shown when we went through permitting. I don't know if that that sums it up. So what we're asking for is permission now to do what's already done.
Alright. I see materials. You you mentioned a a site piece. Is that do we have that?
Yes. You do. I I submitted it as part of the application. It it shows the the bubbles of what, you know, where the 25 foot area was, and then it shows you you see that?
Yes. Thank you. Okay. Great. Alright. Michelle, staff report.
Thank you. This application is again special permit site plan for authorization of excavation and fill beyond the exempt areas in relation to a pool, porch, patio, and retaining walls. But the conservation department issued approvals for the pool, pool house, driveway, and patio in October, and the health district also issued issued approvals for the pool house, but has not issued the final approval for the pool yet. So that will be a condition of approval. Projects were completed, but have not received so they have received zoning permits, but they have not been issued zoning certificates of compliance, ZCCs, since the construction exceeded the scope of the permits required and required the excavation and fill approval through the commission.
There are about a 157 square feet of steep slopes on the property and 4,900 square feet of wetlands. The property is served by septic and public water, and it is a rare lot with an access way. There is, in terms of the proposal, about 2,343 cubic yards of fill and cut is allowed, and they have done about 361 cubic yards. That includes 213 cubic yards of fill and a 148 cubic yards of cut. The regrading did not occur within five feet of the property line, and the project resulted in about a three foot change in grade, that also complies with the depth and the height allowance of 10 feet.
Comments from the town engineer dated December 10 state, the grading that was done does not appear to have any adverse engineering impacts with respect to drainage grading or other public safety considerations. Additionally, as a condition of approval and issuance of the zoning certificate of compliance, the applicant will need to file the resolution on the land records, which is standard for a special permit, obtain final approval from the engineering department, and obtain final approval from the Aspedot Health District. I don't believe there were any comments from any neighbors. Everything has been posted on the website and has been available to the commission, and I'm here for questions. Thank you.
Thank you very much. I do appreciate it. Commissioners, I think we generally refer to this as an oops application.
Yes.
Anybody wanna take a crack at it? Questions for the applicant? None? Okay. I have a couple I wanna ask you. What was the idea behind removing the two retaining walls or the legs of those retaining walls and then, closing it in? What what were you looking for there?
It was more or less unusable space. They have two young kids, and not a tremendous amount of yard space in the back. So we're just trying to extend flat area back there. So with those walls the way they were, they were just more like drop offs into a, you know, a a cavern or a recess, of land that that really was, I guess, unusable for for their kids.
Okay. Very good. And the the idea that the the grading levels were mislabeled as as indicated by the engineering department, how does something like that happen?
So the grading plan, it it you know, like all projects, they're always evolving, right, even through the, even once we've been permitted, but generally not such a way that it affects permitting. This one just happened to not show up on the grading plan. It showed up in the concept of doing that, moving those walls. So when the civil engineer, ended up getting the proposed plan layout plan, it didn't indicate any grade change over there. So therefore, they didn't include it in their civil plan.
Is that, is that somebody that your office uses, quite often?
The civil engineer? Both both the architect and the civil engineer. Yes. Typically, this doesn't happen. It's kind of an oddity. I can't honestly say I can't remember ever doing something like this, taking retaining walls and swinging them 90 degrees and, you know, filling in like that. It's situational.
And just for my own benefit, did you guys recommend that to the applicant or was or to the homeowner or was this something that they asked for? Sure.
So the it was always on the table. What do we do with that space? And it did it was a think tank of all of us, you know, coming up with what would be a logical, way of trying to capitalize and utilizing that that area.
Alright. Well, I can't remember a time in the past when Consudus Engineering was in front of us with an oops application. So I I I'll take everything you've said at face value. The idea here is to be looking for, you know, whether or not it was a ask for, forgiveness afterward instead of permission first. We do we tend to frown on that as you may well know.
Sure. I I understand that, and and I promise you it was not. It didn't never occur to any of us, honestly, that that this would would turn into a a mistake on our part. It didn't didn't even think about that, honestly.
Very very good. I, I don't think I have anything else on this. Does any of the other commissioners have anything regarding Hockenham? Mister Bolton? I'm sorry, John. I I I can't hear you. No. Nothing. You wanna unplug it and plug it back in? Standard fare with the when things go wrong?
Alright. Well, he'll be back, I'm sure. Any of the other commissioners have anything that they'd like to ask of this applicant? If I don't see it, I'm gonna go to the public on this. So is anybody here to speak from the public here to speak regarding 15 Hockingham Road special permit site plan? You can put your hand up or wave furiously at me or use the electronic device. Alright. Seeing none, I'm gonna come back to the applicant and ask Don whether or you have any parting words for us.
No. No. I just really wanna emphasize that it was an oversight and lack of experience, I guess, my part for for knowing that doing something like that was something that required I mean, I am familiar with excavation and fill, but it was in in my mind, I'm just thinking it through. I I was thinking we were just using fill from the site and not not making any great changes, but now I know. So I Alright.
Very good. Commissioners, everybody okay with this? You wanna entertain a motion here?
Shouldn't close.
Thank you. Alright. Thank you. We have a first and a second. Secretary will please record that. Let's go around the room. I say yes. Patrice? Yes. Yay. Thank you. Mister mister Kalise? Yes. Thank you. Miss Shivani? Yes. Miss Zinjewski? Yes. Okay. And mister Bolton? Yes. Hey. It's one of big
It's a reboot.
Yeah. Classic. That. Alright. Fine. Thank you very much. Thank you, commissioners, for moving this guy up. I'm sure it gives mister Kemmire just a few more minutes to come. In the meantime, Michelle, how much of the two applications does Bree have to read?
She doesn't have to just has to read really the application number and the continue when it was continued from and the address or the text amendment.
Hey, Paul. Should we talk about whether Mike should should sit on this for me? Because I don't mind, and he was here last week or whenever it was that it was on. And so he should have the opportunity to finish it if he wants to.
Well, this is our fourth go around on this, so it's not a question of, of familiarity. That that's up to you, Patrice.
It is sort of a it is sort of familiarity because he he's been more at least had it he's heard it more often than I have. So if he wants to sit for it, I don't mind.
Mister Valente, are you available?
I am.
Just flip your, camera on. Thank you very much. Where did you sit on this last week? I did. Last time around? And did you sit previously to that?
I didn't sit to the one before that.
Okay.
Alright. I I mean, I attend the number.
No. I'm just asking. And, Patrice, did you sit on this at all?
Yeah. I've sat
on it.
How many times? Twice. So, I'm not sure I understand why you wanna step off it.
Well, because he's more familiar with it. It's been on the he heard it last week, so he's up to speed on it. If he wants to sit on it
Are you are you not up to speed?
Michael Kalise wants him to sit on it too, so I'm okay with not sitting on it.
It it's not a popularity contest. I wanna know. No.
I understand that, but it's it they he was here he's heard it last week. It's it's it's he's had more opportunity to sort of sit and listen and talk about it.
Mhmm. Okay. And did you, review the tape, from last week?
Not fully.
Well, there's our real answer. Alright. So, that's absolutely reason to, step off. If you're a commissioner and you don't review, then, you should always be telling the, committee, the commission that you are not familiar with the proceedings from the last week. And for that, Michelle, does that we don't have to vote that. We can as chairman, I can just put mister Vellante in the position. Correct?
Yes. That's right.
Mister Vellante, you ready? You know which button is which?
Yeah. I do. Alright.
Very good. Mister Redness, the floor is yours.
Okay. I'm just a little confused with all that, but do we have seven members sitting?
Ready. Go.
Okay. The record, Richard Redness, Redness and Mead, and we have been at this for some eighteen months. I guess I will share my screen.
Michelle, you on top of that?
Should be all set.
Okay. So picking up where we left off at the last hearing, what we're talking about is 785 Post Road West, Toyota dealership here, splash car wash here, another IHZ nearby right here backing up to us, and we have a few asks. One ask is we're looking for a small addition to the height of the existing building so that instead of office over the store, we would have two residential units over the store. We still are way below the allowable density, and, a lot's happened in ten years since this was done. So we need more housing than we need office, so we're asking for your approval of those two units.
The second thing is another something we've learned in the last ten years and that is special needs individuals are using the state definition rather than The United States definition. It limits the applicability to an IQ of 70, and that eliminates a lot of very needy, well qualified people that could be benefiting from this type of housing, but it's an artificial 70 IQ that prevents it. So we would like you to change that. That's our second request. Our third request, is the text change for off-site housing opportunity, a tool in the toolbox that you have discretion to apply.
And at the last meeting, I was told, go back and limit the applicability. Limit the applicability. And coincidentally, I found out that Fairfield recently allowed off-site affordable housing, and they they had the word sole discretion four times in their opening paragraph, and they limited it to for sale units, which is another limiting tool that we're happy if you want to include that because as I'll show you, that's basically the big difference between for sale and for rent. The other thing was limiting it going forward. So we said, okay.
You can limit it as the they have to be IHZ at the time that this regulation goes into effect. So that would prevent any future applications. And again, if that's what you'd like to do, you can do that with these words. And lastly, we were asked what happens to prior IHCs and we said, well, we could limit that too. If you have your final ZCC, you're not eligible.
So you can limit this if you so desire to 785 and 1620, the clubhouse, which is hasn't even come back for its final approval, which you might remember, we had condominiums next door that were interested in perhaps having that join them and be part of their condominium, etcetera. So it would be a good tool perhaps in the future for 1620, but it would just be for these two sites if you decide you want all the wording in green. The standards we've gone through before, you have to be with a nonprofit. That's important in terms of oversight, supervision, etcetera. We think a fee in lieu payment is consistent with the affordable house trust fund, with your affordability plan, etcetera.
So we think that's a good tool. Whether it gets used or not is up to you. And then the overall evaluation, we still use the criteria that was put out by staff back in 2018, which I'll show you in a second, and we just added another sole discretion just to make sure you know you have that. So we have six zones over eighteen years, and there's been three off-site approvals that have been, acted on. Three, eighteen years, six zones.
And you'll notice that number two was a four sale development. Number five was a four sale development, and then number six was a senior development. So none of their rentals have asked for nor received off-site affordable housing. Again, this is not breaking any new ice in our region. Darien allows off-site.
Fairfield, we just learned, but we also learned Fairfield is at the AMI, which is a higher level. The units it doesn't serve as a lower income level. New Canaan, Wilton, Westport, and Stanford. So there are plenty of examples around town where you have that. So what what we're proposing is that one townhouse would remain on-site and be, de restricted affordable at 80%, and that would be either through our rental with Homes With Hope or perhaps for sale.
We're still seeing if we can make that work, and that might be with Ableis or or Homes With Hope. And then we were asking for off-site at 3 George Street. This is 3 George Street's location. It and again, this was subject to the pre op that we showed you as to abut GBD here along the post road. Obviously, we abut retail and you see what is close by.
This is a mixed use. This is Rogers septic over in here, 3212. So this is the location on George Street. It it was zoned commercial. Had a commercial use unit over the garage and the front house, and that is what it looks like now.
What we showed in our pre op was that could be expanded to be a special needs housing, which means instead of a group home with individual bedrooms, it would be in of it would be individual mini apartments with little kitchenettes and a private bathroom. Then it would constitute a unit, five, and it would generate a lot more moratoria points and serve for a wider range of benefits to the population. This is the staff memo from 2018 in terms of how can you evaluate, what are the types of things, and we're not limited to this. You you can use whatever you want. But this is what was approved right here, and then this is what we're proposing as a combination on and off.
And this is, you know, is it satisfied? Is it superior? So from a floor area standpoint, it is significantly more floor area devoted to affordable housing. Number of people served on the minimum size, three units with five bedrooms. This minimum would be three with seven bedrooms or it could be as many as six.
So we think that's satisfied. Fee in lieu, there was no contemplation ten years ago. Now what the fee in lieu according to your regulations would amount to 670,000. This is virtually double that which has gone into 3 George Street. Moratorial points, as I say, if it were three for sale, it'd be three points.
Three for rent at 80 would be 4.5. And here, minimum points and up to 9.5 if it were the special needs housing. The affordability level is 80. Here, it would be sixty and eighty. The location, the post road, you know where that is between the two car dealership and and car wash.
And then the other one is a combination of that same location in 3 George Street, which is obviously more residential, so we feel that's superior for people to live in. There is a one car garage, and this has multiple garages, a yard, plus a basement. The finishes are new. Obviously, same on-site would be new, and the special needs would be renovated. So we say yes in terms of the new.
It's the same, and the renovations would be determined with an application to you all. Affordability plan, again, instead of private, it would be with a five zero one c three as required by the regulations, either h, homes with hope or ableist. And the limit, so if it was three on sites, they have a forty year limit. If it's this, if it's on and off, it's one forty year and two without a limit. And again, the other issues have to do with involvement with our known nonprofit affordable units.
So again, we we have tools in the toolbox, and we're looking for those individual decisions. I think, you know, we've been at this for a long time. We got swept up in the hamlet. People were very concerned about precedent and what, you know, what's happening with the hamlet and what they did or didn't like. And it's it's been a long, long journey, but it comes down to now pretty simple asks.
We we hope it's simple now before you. Two units over the store, improving the applicability of special needs individuals, and then allowing a mix of on and off-site with a limiting text. And that would conclude our presentation.
Thank you very much, mister Rednis. Make sure to take down your screen share.
I I did. Okay. Is it still up?
No. I'm just I'm not I don't have two monitors today.
Okay.
Alright. So thank you for that. And commissioners, it is now back to us to try and arm wrestle this. I'd like to go last only because my questions are a little more specific. So I'm gonna come to the commission and see who's got oh, Michelle, I'm sorry. You have your hand up.
Oh, thanks. I just had a quick summary I wanted to provide. Yes. I just wanted to to let you know that supplemental staff comments dated February 6 were posted to the website and provided information on the revised text amendment that was submitted, which mister Redness spoke about, as well as information requested from staff. In summary, the request was that staff provide the zoning districts and supplementary use regulations that are that require on-site affordable housing.
In my first staff report, I only listed the six, I believe, districts and situations that we've allowed off-site. There are 11 zoning districts and supplemental use regulations that require on-site affordable housing of some sort. Some of them have not been used, but they are on the books. So I just wanted to put that information into the record. As well as I just wanted to also remind the commission, and I I don't know.
It's probably might be better in work session, but, you know, in terms of the July application, there's definitely the ability, as a reminder for the commission to say, you know, approve in part, deny in part if if if that comes up in the future, whereas you want to approve the the two units and not approve the off-site. There's there's options to for us to discuss. So if if there's any questions about that, we can we can certainly discuss it. And if you want any more specifics about those 11 zoning districts, I can go into that, but I just wanted to let you know the work staff comments on the website. Thank you.
Thank you very much. Didn't mean to exclude you there. Sorry. Alright. Back to commissioners. Hands? Comments? Question? Thank you, John.
It's more of a general comment, but I I almost feel this is a little bit of a war of attrition because it's gotta be the fourth or fifth iteration of this coming back to us since July. And if there you know, I know it's been going on for a long time, but it wasn't just the Hamlet. This thing's been what's going on and brought back. The first iteration had nothing to do with special needs, although it said it did. And I'm not sure how much progress we've made up until February '26 back from June or July.
Actually, I think it was this club in March or April actually of '25, it's been around. No question. I just don't see a seismic shift in anything here that would, in any way, still address the concerns that we had over the summer and last spring. And then there's, you know, the obviously, the big policy issue is is this a town that wants to endorse off-site affordable housing. I know there's a lot of folks around here who don't like it.
I don't like it, and there's a bunch of reasons, socioeconomic and otherwise. So I guess, Rick, I do have one question for you if it's appropriate. Could you give me, like, in thirty seconds or less, something that is significantly different from the first presentation you made six or eight months ago to what you presented over the last week or two?
Sure. I think there's a couple of things I can say. In terms of special needs, when we began this, which is over a year ago, we were working with the town to get more special needs housing. That is why it was included, and and this was on the record, and Michelle clarified it. The we had special needs housing.
We were looking to put special needs housing on other town owned land, not in a town owned building. So we started with that. And for reasons that included the planning and zoning commission reviewing Barron South because we also looked at putting off-site affordable housing there. We looked at putting special needs housing on Crescent Park, the four lots that the town owns there. And when it became clear that the town was not going to be prepared at this time to move forward on any town owned land.
I see Michael Kamara coming on. Is that a seventh member?
Yes. Correct. Your math is not wrong.
Terrific. Thank you. So so so that's the first thing, John, in terms of when you say it had nothing to do with special needs housing, it absolutely had to do with special needs housing when we started and where we've come back to. So, yes, there was things in between that we looked at, but we're
we've
been trying to address the issues that people have raised. And you at the last meeting said looking to limit the applicability, just part of what we've done here with these four ways of limiting the applicability. We also showed that Darien allows special needs housing in almost all their zones. So there's been a combination of things to try to address special needs housing. It was very successful at one thirty six.
There's a waiting list. There are Westport families that could benefit. And so we've been trying to do this. The only reason that we temporarily took it out was because the town was out and because if you remember, we had a property that in Saugatuck that we were working on and that was with Homes With Hope. And we you know, again, everything has to happen in real time in terms of actually controlling property, closing on property, it being suitable in terms of its location, etcetera.
So when the opportunity presented itself for 3 George Street coming on the market, we showed it to Homes With Hope, and we showed it to Ableis. And Ableis was particularly interested. It laid out very well for them. The location was very well, and they were excited about it. So that's how we've proceeded.
So that's, you know, that's again, and I appreciate your concern during the time period when it when it wasn't special needs housing. And I I understand your feelings about that, but know that it started there and it's still there right now. And I know some people last time said, we'll let ableist buy 3 George Street, and they can do this, and we can still have the three units on-site. Well, that's not gonna happen. Ableists cannot afford to go out and pay market value and then put in all the money to make the individual apartments and then rent them all out to, all affordable housing.
The way we did January, they got it for nothing, zero. And we got a $250,000 fund for them to be able to keep it up over the next forty nine years because it's town owned land and it was a lease. So the town got the benefit of a sale. They got $2,000,000 worth of improvements, and they get the land back. They get they get it back.
So each one of these is very unique, and these are tools in the toolbox. And we we think that we finally put all the clarity together. So I think that's what's different than, you know, other iterations that we've had.
Thanks. Good answer.
Anything else, mister Bolton? That's it, mister chair. Thank you. Other other commissioners? I'd like to acknowledge that mister Kammeyer is on with us. Other commissioners, any questions for mister Redness? I see mister Galisa stand up.
Is it okay for me to speak? Yes, please. Okay. Rick, I have some questions about George Street. This is currently a two family house. Is it occupied?
The front house is not occupied. I'm not exactly sure if the re if the apartment over is. I don't think it is. I don't think it's occupied. The only thing that's occupied is the back garage. I think there's a nonresidential use still there.
And there's a there's a residential living room in the garage.
I'm not I don't I don't think there is, but I'll get you that answer definitely. I I'm not sure that there's anybody in there.
What what I'm really interested in knowing is getting to the chase of all this. What are we displacing? I mean, this this is a a two family house with the ability for a third. I've always known it as a two family house. It was owned by a local contractor, Victor Burkowski.
And, you know, one of the concerns that I've always had about offset affordable housing is the displacement of existing tenants and existing structures and properties that provide below market rents out of the system. And the removal of those with as you well know, nothing is gained. If we got a two family house with two below market tenants in it and they're not part of the system, and we displace them with a couple of eight thirty g options or something similar or house this type of housing, then we simply put two people in the street or two families in the street, and we've replaced them with solutions which are part of what we need to achieve when we're looking for numbers or release of requirements or anything of that nature. I mean, I I I do always have felt, and you've heard this before, that our existing housing stock in Westport, which provide these provide these low market opportunities, is a very valuable asset. And I'm just wondering what what what what are we doing here?
You know, what happens to this property? It's you had mentioned more than once that it's available for purchase, And I had never really checked it out. I I went into the MLS system today, and it's it's not listed on the MLS for sale. And it's been held by a local builder whom has been before us a number of times since the single digit twenty thousands, 2520 something like that. So, you know, I wonder what every what he's really trying to do here and where they're going.
And in fact, what would we really accomplish? This is not about housing for special needs. I mean, god knows we need this. It's a great idea. Every opportunity that we have to achieve this is wonderful, and and we need to move on it. But most of these opportunities are created by the applicant. And if in the process, we're taking advantage of something that exists that's already an asset in our housing inspector, then we've not gained anything.
Oh, and and, Michael, you know, we we've discussed this a little bit before, but there are new board members. So I think it's worth discussing again and going through some of some of the points that you've raised. Couldn't agree with you more about naturally occurring affordable housing, being an asset to a community. The problem that we have is twofold in Westport. Number one, since the IHZ was created, 2010, we we have more than one a week housing being torn down in Westport.
So we don't have protection for the existing naturally occurring affordable housing. And I'm not saying that all those demolitions are affordable. I mean, I've seen in Westport, you know, million plus dollar houses bought and torn down. But many, many times, they are your post World War two capes, etcetera, being torn down. So how do we protect them?
And Well, I mean, what you're speaking of Can I just finish medical?
I would just like to finish these and then happy to go back. But the other the other situation that we have in Westport is we we do have the issue of eight thirty g. We do have the issue of moratoria points. And the way the state statutes work, your naturally occurring affordable housing does not count. And so you don't benefit from that unless it's deed restricted.
So you would need a, you know, a a different policy to encourage people in naturally occurring afford affordable housing to deed restrict their properties. The the couple of other points that you made in terms of who's not living there, one of the reasons we know about this house, and it it is no longer owned by the person who owned it as you cited, it's now owned by Ryan Moran and RPM Homes. So and the prior occupant in the past of this was a local developer who I can assure you is not affordable and was living in that house and made some of the improvements to that house. So you can't always make the assumption that the people living in these houses are qualified as affordable. So a, what are we protecting?
B, it's not protected. C, you don't get any points for it. So, you know, those are the reasons why we need tools and regulations here so we can take advantage of the opportunities to get some, special needs housing in a unique setting like this. So, and I and I was informed that the person that, living over the garage is leaving soon. I do not know that person's income, so I don't know whether that person is a qualified affordable person.
So I I think there's just a difference between theory and practice. So I agree with you in theory, but unfortunately, in practice in Westport, it just doesn't hold up.
Well, I mean, what you're doing is you're bringing into the mix these single family houses, which might be much smaller than a builder might want to build, and the willingness of a builder to buy one of these house because it's a lot ready to build on. This house has been sitting around for a while as proven by the land records. And it it's a it's a good opportunity for a young couple who might wanna buy, live in one side, rent the other side out, be part of the housing stock in Westport that we that we don't like to acknowledge exists. We wanna we wanna we wanna move everything into the system. And I mean, I'm not not against the I'm I'm no.
I I shouldn't even have said that. It's it's not a matter of being against her for anything. I've I've long been in favor of creating a regulation which encourages housing of this type. In other words, assisted living houses. So it's I'm not against your concept, and I'm not against your desire to see it happen somewhere.
I just wonder about the sensibility of recurring at this particular location. And also, when we use this kind of a development and and use it as a springboard to change our off-site housing rights, it makes me a bit queasy. You know, I wonder what we're really trying to achieve here. July has come before us numerous times, well beyond the sense of the sheer cost of carrying this through. So so why is somebody it's been turned on before.
No. No. It's not been turned on.
No. It's not been turned on before.
But it's been before multiple times. And I wouldn't submit that at this point in time, the sheer expense of carrying it through the process far outweighs any financial gain that the developer would make by moving this one unit off-site. So I I just wonder about the whole thing. It's just Well There are a lot of moving pieces here that that don't give me answers.
Well, I'd I'd like to limit the moving pieces. So we're asking for that site to be approved for ableist to own that property. We have an opportunity to do that. You approve it, it happens. If if it doesn't happen and this house goes back on the market, there's certainly no guarantee that some young family is gonna move in and rent it out and, you know, rent out the garage or whatever.
The house next door to us on on the West Side, I'm told put a lot of money into that house. Bought it, put a lot of money into it. So this could very well be a tear down. This could very well be another McMansion going in. It's a great location, a nice neighborhood, sewers. So, you know, we don't know what's going to happen. It would be nice to think that there is a young couple that could benefit it that way, but we have a burden in hand for ableist to go in and serve the community with all affordable housing before it goes back on the market, and who knows what happens.
Has it has it ever been on the market?
Well, it was on the market enough that, you know, Ryan knew about it and bought it.
When I pulled the history on the MLS, it wasn't on the market.
Alright. Gentlemen gentlemen, this, this is a wonderful conversation. I'm wondering if we have Mike, if you have any questions regarding, what the crux of the argument, which here, we're trying to do off-site. I I three George is very interesting to me too. But I'm hoping we can drill down on off-site. Do you have some thoughts for, mister Redness on that?
You mean in terms of the regulation?
No. I'm talking to mister Kalise right now.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Michael Kalise? Yeah. Your thoughts on off-site? Because I really wanna give him the feedback so that he'll know what he might be facing and when we vote.
I I understand that, but I'm
but allowing off-site under the, I don't I don't wanna use the word pretense, but other than the side, under the a concept which yeah. It only exists in people's minds that made no application. We know it to be an existing two family house, which means that it's gonna have two market rentals, below market rentals, and changing a existing zoning regulation with an even heavier burden that's speaking to off-site housing for affordable. And they themselves have resolved a portion of their financial structure that they felt was a burden by with the two additional units on top of the stores. And both of those units could be affordable.
It's not to say that they're forced off-site. They have plenty of options.
So if I could just follow-up on one point, Zillow had it for sale 04/1625. It went on the market at $1,000,003.09 9. Okay? And then it had some price reductions before final sale. I'm I'm not sure what you looked at, Michael, but that's what it was.
And a million $3.09 9, I would argue, is not gonna go to or anything over 1,000,000 to the young family that you're referring to. So that's what and again, in terms of why have we been trying to do this, And and we're we're not gonna make the units over the store affordable. We discussed that last time. Though there would be three townhouses. That's what we have said.
So if you approve the two units over the store, which I I can't imagine any reason not to. It we're not even close to the density allowed. And then you approve the text for Ableus in terms of the IQ, and you say you could approve the text even, but you could say, but we don't wanna use it here. So you have those choices, but the three units on-site would be three townhouses.
Thank you. Appreciate it. Mister Colise, anything else? Mister Feliz? No. I'm I'm
I'm I I'm good. I've said my piece. I mean, basically, if this were the acquisition of a single family house somewhere that they wanted to put this particular project on, I might feel differently about it. But in any event, I've said what I needed to say.
Appreciate it. You have all the information you need from this applicant. Alright. Other commissioners? We've heard from two. Miss Shivani, please.
Just a question. I thought I understood through when we heard this the last time that the George Street property would be developed or could be developed for Ableis and Homes With Hope without, redness involvement. Am am I clear on that, or is redness's involvement contingent on this?
So let me try to understand the question and try to answer it. What we what we said in terms of, again, theories, we were talking about what could happen to 3 George Street. And we said it could go it it can go back on the market, k, which is
if this is getting
if if this is denied, it you know, that's a very real possibility. If homes with hope bought it, which I they won't because it's too expensive. But if they did, they could use it for two families. If Able has bought it, which they won't because it's too expensive. So those were debt those were in regards to what could that property be used for, and that was more from a neighborhood perspective as opposed to a planning and zoning perspective. K? So those are off the table. So if
So the only way this is gonna be developed for Homes four Hope and Abliss is if it's part of this project is what you're telling. Correct.
Correct. If it if the three units stay on-site, three townhouses stay on-site, that is entirely up to the applicant to decide. Does he just do them himself? Wait to forty years, and then they're no longer affordable? Does he lease them to a nonprofit? Does he sell them? All that is out of your purview.
Wait. The three townhouses on-site, if they were on-site, they would be
transferred to Ableist to manage? No. No. What what nothing we're not proposing that at all. If there are three units on-site, the property owner will do what they want with them. That's not up to the commission. We're not asking. That's like any other affordable on-site. They will lease them to whoever they qualify and put in there.
Okay. So how does then the, the upper story residential fit into all of this? And I I had to I have to say I'm a proponent of upper story residential over commercial spaces. But how does it fit into your equation here?
Okay. Great great question. So the office that was approved way back when was actually thinking about an office for the applicant. That's not in the cards anymore, so we don't need that. So the IHZ regulations allow 18 units per acre in the commercial zone and 12 units per acre in the residential zone.
So we haven't used any of the commercial zone for residential. So that's a completely separate request to now use some of our residential in the commercial zone. The affordability doesn't change because it would it went from 14 units, which rounded up to three units, to 15 units, which is still the same three units. So it was approved at 14. They combined two units into one.
So there's now 13 units in the back, two in the front, that's fifteen, twenty percent is three. So that's why we still need the three units. There's another equation that you have to do that I can go into if you really want to, but it's it gets very there's a lot of interactive requirements in the zone. But that's why we're being asked to do that, but it doesn't require any additional affordable housing to do it. Okay.
Thank you. Other
commissioners?
Yeah. I just have one question for Rick, and thank you for all the details. Of the three units to be supplied on-site on July, how many bedrooms are those?
Two each. Two each. Alright. Thank you. Yeah. Originally approved was five bedrooms. K? Because a smaller unit was approved in the other building, which was a flat. And so now we we're going to three townhouses. And, again, I can explain why if we need to.
You will with me.
Okay.
Other commissioners? Mister Vellante, that was it? You good?
Yeah. Yeah. I had I had all
the information.
Thank you. No problem. Comments, criticisms, corrections, miss Zinjewski?
So the the only real question that I have, is probably a quick one, is in this latest version, you included, an effective date in there, as of the effective date of the the regulation. And I was just could you just explain why that's included in there just because regulations aren't retroactive by nature? So I I was just I didn't understand why that's necessary to have that in there.
Well, the the that wasn't for retroactive. That was the proactive part. That in other words, again and it's funny. If if Patrizia was on here, she she would be arguing for more inclusion. If it's a good idea, we should do more of it. But as a result of the last meeting, we said, how can we limit this applicability? I understand both. So if the concern is setting a precedent and then someone else comes in for an IHZ and says, hey. I'm doing an IHZ and like, four fifty five that we have before you, it's a rental. And they said, well, we wanna do our off-site.
They're ineligible. They're ineligible because they're a rental. They're ineligible because they're coming after the effective date of this. So so we we we preclude anyone else from qualifying going forward. The going backwards is the ZCC so that the existing IHZs like the one right next door at 793 could come back and say, hey. We wanna take ours off-site. Now besides the fact that it's your sole discretion to let them, this would preclude them from even asking.
Okay.
So if you've already finished and you're occupied, you're done.
Okay. Got it. So I'm just gonna you know, I we were talking about theory and, you reality and what's gonna happen in practice. I do like, in practice, what you've proposed, I think it's it's it's a good idea. The bridge or the the inclusionary housing zone being used to allow that off-site there. Like, that that's a good property that you're or a good, affordable housing off-site that you're proposing. And my concern is just, you know, what else could happen if we approve this text amendment. Then it's the unknowns. I think that we're all just trying to trying to prepare for here. And I I think what you what you just explained to me, I don't read this, the way it's written as actually doing that.
I think there's a better way that this could be worded so that no applications for other IACs come after the effective date. But okay. Thank you for explaining that, and, also, thank you for explaining the the for sale unit piece of it. Because I also wasn't totally sure why that was added, but that's all that's just restricted so that it will only apply to those two those two properties.
So you raised a a very interesting point, and there are other ways to do it. What you did, if you notice when I pointed out the Roger's septic, you approved Roger's septic with a sunset clause, which basically said, you can do it here, and then it sunsets. You did it there. You can do it here. You don't have to include it so I so $16.20 is eligible. Yeah. You could you could you could give it a sunset clause, and so when they come back in, it's
not available. I'm not suggesting You're giving that it's a it's an
option for us. It's not a request on your part. Got it. Okay. Correct. Correct. Also, one more thing. You didn't even hear the fee in lieu of payment. And since this particular application is not asking for the fee in lieu of, and I know that'll move it. I I certainly questioned how all the fee in lieu works. I think other commissioners have as well. And I'm like, we really didn't get any more explanation about the fee lieu of this. So if this were to go forward, is that a requirement that that stays in here, or is there any benefit? Is there any anticipation of if we leave that in there, are you actually going to come back and ask for a fee in lieu of?
So the the answer is no. We're not. Okay. B, you can remove it. We don't care. The reason we left it in is because it's in your affordable housing plan. It's in the affordable housing trust fund documents that you have this tool in your toolbox. So what we do when we do regulations is we try to make them as useful as possible. But in this instance, we don't need it. You wanna take b out, by all means, take it out.
No. I I appreciate that that you drafted this more broadly, than just for your specific property so that it isn't, you know, the spot zoning. So I do appreciate that, but I just think there's lot of open questions about how that might work. And so I'm not particularly comfortable with, with the fee in lieu of it. At this point in time, maybe in the future, if it's all explained and and having Okay. Better better capability of, like, asking, like, questions about what that actually means. But right now, I'm I'm not I'm not comfortable with the fee in lieu of anything. Fine.
By all means, take it out.
But, okay, those are those are my only real questions, just kind of about the structure of how this was written.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you very much, Bree. Do appreciate it. I I I my list is pretty long. Before I dive into that, I just wanna see if mister Kammire has anything, that he's unsure of who wants to ask.
No. I think everybody's done a good job. I'm still I'm in the camp of these are you know, George's is a great idea, and I'm in the camp of should this be linked or not. I don't know if I have any questions relating to it. I'm listening, and I'm looking forward to hearing what you asked, Paul.
It's it's some basic philosophies here when this slot was approved for what's built on it. Right? I think we've asked Rick a ton of questions. I think Rick has come forward with some great framework. And as you said, we have the choice to adopt the framework, but not for this you know, adopt the framework for the text amendment, but not for not apply it to this project. I know that's not a goal, clearly, of the developer, but I'm just you know, it's that's our prerogative as the commission. Do we think it's appropriate or not? Right? But as far as questions go, no. I'm looking forward to hearing what you have to ask.
I think our fellow commissioners have asked all the questions, and I don't need any more answers.
Mister Redness, wanna take a break or shall I dive in?
No. I just want I I know that Michael came on late. I didn't know if he heard the Fairfield words that we added because you you had specifically said to limit applicability. I don't know if you heard what we added to limit. You
can go forward and repeat. Okay.
So I I can bring up the text, but but what we added was, we added two more times the word sole discretion. They they had it four times in the opening paragraph for recently approved off-site housing in Fairfield. So we added two more sole to the sole discretion, and plus you did have the legal opinion on that. We added the criteria that you had to be for sale housing. So rental housing would not be considered for off-site.
It has to be for sale. That's something that Fairfield did. It applied here, and that's a good line in the sand. We also then did two things to limit applicability, one going backwards and one going forwards, and we just went over that with what Brie's questions were. So I think you got those two.
Right. And I got that, I guess, on that. Yeah. No. Look. Part of me says you're disincentivizing people to not sell it. You're you're to create rental property. Right? You're incentivizing by allowing the off-site. You're incentivizing, hey. Buy it and and sell it and do your affordable off-site. Great. Go make a I'm saying it like, look. It's not our bag about with regards to go make a pile of money or not. Right?
But our our job is to, I guess, there's a mandate of affordable housing in the state. Right? That's our job. So we approve something for affordable housing. Now you're saying, if you sell these units, you can do your affordable off-site. You will look. I'm a strong believer that you will make more money by doing that. If you rent them and you have to do it on-site, you're going to make money potentially. I don't really know the economics of it. I'm not here to litigate the economics of that.
But you wanna keep incentives aligned. I don't know if that does that, although it does really limit the scope of this. Right? I get what you've done. That makes sense. That's my only comment there.
Oh, in terms of aligning, you know, it's interesting, and I was on the governor's task force when we set up the moratoria points in in nineteen ninety nine, two thousand. And one of the things that came out of it was rental versus affordable. And so affordables
Rental versus affordable for
I mean, rentals versus for sale. Sorry. Rentals versus So for you get an extra half point for a rental as compared to for sale.
So that incentivizes the town to want rentals, but it doesn't the town isn't the one paying the foot in the bill for any of this. Right?
That's correct.
It's it's mister developer, and mister developer is not in now even more incentive unless the economics of rentals are way better, then the developer is incentivized not to do this type of thing and fine. So here's By the way, it's good for the town. I get it. It's good for the town. Go find some other property and protect it. I get that too. I get the argument. I I'm just this is not this is not an easy thing. No. It's not.
No. It's not easy. And I get this question all the time about why so many rentals. Why so many rentals? Why are so many developers doing it?
Hundreds and hundreds of units and they're leasing up as opposed to for sale. And, you know, it's amazing some of the reasons that you hear why in terms of what discourages homeownership. I'm a big believer in homeownership and sharing an appreciation. It's very, very difficult in affordability because your appreciation is limited to the increase in area media and state median income. So if you own it, you put in a new roof and you, you know, fix up and replace things and do things, you don't get your money back.
So so there's it's very difficult with homeownership. Also, our federal policies and taxation. If you do of housing and you sell, you're you're treated like ordinary income versus if you have rental property, you can depreciate it. It's there's all these thinking way above my pay grade that discourage homeownership. So I I and I'm a believer in it, and that's one of the reasons why we we've worked with HDF over the years, which is affordable homeownership.
But, again, it it's there's a lot of balls to juggle. There's no question. But we have an opportunity here right before us, real life, real time. So, hopefully, we can make this happen. And it's more people, more more points, and Yeah. Hopefully, we can do it.
Mister Kemer, any We've been
talking about Ableist, not Homes With Hope. Right? This is an Ableist project, not a Homes With Hope project?
Well, the where we are with that, and we're we're been talking to Homes With Hope, as you know, for many years. So if the townhouse on-site turns out to be a rental, we've we've been working with Homes With Hope to manage that for the forty year period. That's that's what we're looking for. If it goes for sale, we've been talking to both Ableis and Homes With Hope as to how could we work out a sale of that, and that has not been determined. That could be either one of them if it went in that direction.
So that's that's where that sort of splits.
Who's responsible for the paperwork with deed restrictions and and making so that we get the points.
So that that's a combination of Michelle and the law department.
It's not on the developer or sorry. Oh, yeah. No. The developer
has to satisfy Michelle and the law department that the deed restrictions are consistent with eight thirty g.
Department of the town or a law department of The town. So Homes With Hope or Ableis is not responsible for the paperwork?
No. If if we were to do, like, what we did at 01:36, Ableis was responsible for the paperwork and worked that out with the town and the town attorney as to what those deed restrictions would be. That's if it if it's a situation where they are the responsible party. If we if we so if we under the proposal we have before you, ableist would be responsible in terms of satisfying the staff and the law department on the deed restrictions. Keep in mind that that would have another step to go if that was not going if it was gonna be a group home, it's one thing.
We don't need anything. But if it's going to be well, we would just deed restrict one unit. It but if it's going to be special needs housing, then, you know, it would have a similar deed restriction to what we did at 136.
And if and if it and if we don't if the decision is not to go off-site, it's only on-site who's responsible for that paperwork? The developer. The the developers.
RPM homes. Okay. That's it.
Is is, the ZCC contingent on that paperwork being submitted properly?
Final. Yes. Always.
Okay. So is this an administrative burden to either Ableist or Homes With Hope if we go in that direct if you go in that direction?
Which which direction? You mean with them
with them? Site if you go off well, I guess if you're on-site and homes with if you're on-site, it's on RPM homes to make sure everything is right. So there's no there's no administrative burden for anyone. If you go off-site, is it who's where's the burden lie if we go off-site with administrative work to make sure the points get done properly?
Well, the well, the burden in order to satisfy this package, the burden remains with the developer until the town is satisfied. What what happened at 01:36, and Amy Amy is away, and she's on here.
No. I'm I'm here. I'm here. I'm sorry. I'm in Florida with my my kid. I'm sorry. I I just wanted to can you hear me?
Yes.
Okay. It's not an administrative burden. The organization, manages. We make sure that the SMI is in compliance and the documented disability, every year. So it it hasn't been a problem in Darien, and it hasn't been a problem at Westport.
Thinking that you're ableist. Right?
Yes. Yes. K.
And Helen is on too if you
No. But this isn't really germane to what we're doing.
I I we're I'm I'm done.
I have a question.
Where are you? Oh, there you are.
There I am. So 122 Wilton Road. My understanding is that the applications of kind of four points have fallen through the cracks. In talking to Michelle, she said both that homes with hope needed to do paperwork as well as Westport.
What's going I'm sorry. Should we be doing this now?
Oh, if you don't think we should be doing now, that's that's fine. But it did tie into what Michael brought up is where's the administration of
So I recognize that both of you are nibbling at it, and I know that's because we have an issue with the points not being allocated correctly. However, mister Redness is here to find out about off-site.
Well, again, no. Thank you, Paul. But I I also don't want anything if there's something that happened with that, which remember was an eight thirty g that the developer is a true nonprofit developer, made a great deal to sell that to Homes With Hope, through all of Helen's efforts with the state and the town, etcetera, and increase from six affordable to be all affordable. So, you know, but I I I've heard about this concern that people have about the points, etcetera, and I don't want, you know, a good thing that has a little something issue that needs to be worked out. A, diminish that effort because that was phenomenal and cloud our effort, which is entirely different, which we've done successfully before without any issues.
So to that extent, I'm glad it was brought up because all these issues, you know, let we gotta sort them out. So we're making an informed decision.
Well and also to those who wanna know the answer to that question, and I will count myself among you. We will get our answer because our staff, our department, is required to finalize that, and they will do their job. Right, Michelle? A nod as soon as the wind.
Yes. That is correct. We are working on it. It's we're finalizing paperwork for three of the units, which the income levels are slightly different than what we can get points for, so we're working on it with Homes With Hope.
Remember, not getting our points or finishing our paperwork is not part of this application.
I have a question. Sure. Is there a reason why the unit allocated for, affordable is designated special needs, or could that just go up to regular in the regular affordable equation?
Yeah. So, again, I apologize if I didn't make it clear. The unit that would remain the townhouse that would remain is 80% rental unit, whether it is owned by the developer or owned by Homes With Hope or owned owned by Ableis. So that is not designated as anything. There's no definite special needs.
There's no definite well, no. If the package includes one or the other, a nonprofit developer will be in charge of that unit for the forty years that it exists. But it's doesn't necessarily mean it's gonna be special needs. Could be, but it doesn't mean it has to be.
Okay. Thanks.
All good? All good. Other commissioners? So, Rick, I'd like to get a crack at this. There's a you you certainly gave us a lot to think about.
Now as I said to you the last time you were here, you took a very complicated situation and made it worse. So I'm gonna try and untangle this Gordian knot that you wrapped in a question and surrounded by, confusion. First thing I wanna say to you is I'm, I'm in favor of off-site housing. However, I think it comes with limitations, and I think you've done a good job of trying to put those limitations into place here. And I do recognize Darien's attempt at it, and it seems to be working.
And I do know that Fairfield is now, approaching that. So And there's no reason why Westport can't follow suit if done correctly. I haven't heard a single reason why it shouldn't be done. I've heard a lot of supposition about precedent, about scary monsters under the bed. If what if you do this, you open the door. I'm not afraid of the door if we're the ones controlling the knob. And so sole discretion means a lot. So the first thing I wanna do is drill down on that word, soul. I wanna make sure this is ironclad, dead clad. There's no there's no wiggle room.
If you're coming at us in ten years from now, you can't blow a hole in that. As as Brie said, the the verbiage is what counts. And I wanna make sure that that's what counts because I don't wanna come back and hear, well, we should've done that when Rick was with us. So just, just soothe my nerves with the word soul that this thing is truly bulletproof, and it is our sole discretion.
So, I mean, obviously, Fairfield felt the word was important, put it four times in its opening paragraph. And if someone comes to you as an applicant and says, I wanna do this, and it's terrible. It's a rundown house in a rundown neighborhood, you know, and it's just a bad location and nothing about it. And then you deny it and they take you to court because they said, hey, you did it before. You gotta do it now.
I am not a lawyer. I you've checked with your law department. I've been doing this almost fifty years. I've never seen an application that has discretion that was overturned because of someone saying that, no, you don't have discretion. Now there's a difference if it is a site plan and it meets the regulations Right. And you don't like it, but those are your regulations.
Right.
This is a voluntary thing that you do. It's like when you do a pre op. You have to sign the paper that says it's nonbinding. You all and you've done it before. You've said to somebody, hey. Yeah. We like this idea. Then they come in with an application. It's, woah. That's a little bit too much.
Okay. So Right. And then you have the I recall the first time around, you gave us, the 16 criteria. And so just wanna, jump in there. At if it's our sole discretion, it can be any one of the 16 or all 16 of them or any combination of the 16.
Or number eighteen, nineteen, whichever you come up with, and,
you know,
you you decide for some other reason. It's in a floodplain for some other reason.
And then, I did notice that one of them is, that we asked for as a condition or you suggest that we ask for as a condition that the quality be the same or better. And so and so that's interesting.
Yeah. Quality is an important consideration, again, because you're the judge and jury. And if someone is, you know, building something on-site and it has granite countertops and the one that they wanna do off-site, you know, is plywood, you know, you you can say that the, you know, the the that alone knocks you out.
You know? I get that.
Not saying that it necessarily would. It could be fantastic other than that. But
No. I was actually thinking just the other way around.
Okay. Alright.
So I I don't believe it it it has a precedent setting effect. I know people like to, to think about that, but it's only precedent if we allow it. And so if it's sole discretion, then it's not precedent. And so to me, that is a that's a workable I believe that what what I'm hoping is that that will outlast all of us, and therefore future commissioners will look at this and say, what they had in mind. That's what I'm looking for is to make sure that that's clear here. Let me switch topics and go to sixteen twenty. What effect do you have? What effect does this have on them in your mind?
So if you allowed this to be approved IHZ without ZCC, it's amazing how we talk in acronyms. So the only two presently existing IHZs without final ZCCs are July and 1620. So in theory, 1620 and last I was talking to Lansdowne in 1620, we were discussing how could we do this and how could they own it and could we access it through them, etcetera. They then shifted gears and didn't wanna entertain this now, but we were in pretty deep discussions and looking at alternate plans. And so let's assume for the sake of projection that that came back into being, you know, a year from now.
And 1620 got together with Lansdowne, and they came in with an application and they said, hey. We're gonna add these units to Lansdowne, which would require a text change, k, which you have discretion on. You're acting in a legislative capacity, so you have discretion on a text change. So they come in, they say, we want to expand Lansdowne, take the development rights, and we're gonna do this with it. Presto.
And we have 90 units at Lansdowne, and they're all homeownership, and we don't want, you know, a rental or affordable on-site. So the only way Lansdowne is doing the deal is with off-site. And so then they the application would come before you. It would be to change the text. We'd be modifying the 1620.
It would be a bundle of applications with a a lot of discretion before you even get to the off-site part that, you know, would have to be in place. But what if they came and they said, hey. We have a million dollars that can go to your trust fund, or we have an opportunity to build units on town owned land or to fix up these are all things that we've explored in the past. To fix up the crumbling units at Barron South so they could be properly used, indeed restricted. And and you like the idea, whichever one of those ideas you happen to like, then then they could use it.
They could go off-site. They could go somewhere else. And any one of those tools would be out there for you to decide if you liked.
Okay. I get it. And 1620, we've done the math. We've looked at the IHZs. Those are the only two left without ZCCs.
Correct.
Right. And so what we're really talking about here is if we choose to limit it that that much, then it would be those two. Let's talk
wanna limit without them, you could do that too. You could just say that, you know, that
Well, if we take that restriction off, in other words, it doesn't need to have a ZCC. It doesn't it it can it can have an existing ZCC now. If we say that, how many units is it?
So well, we'd have to go back and look at how many IHZs we have. So we 48.
Michelle, what was that number?
No. No. No. That that I think 48 was the number at one time of potential sites. The number of existing IHZs is,
I don't know, like,
two or three. Yeah.
Five or five? Four. Maybe four
out of the 48, we have we have five of them. Yeah. Okay. So so so the max number goes from 48 down to five. And if we want to, we can further limit it from five down to two.
Correct. And down to one if you'd so desire.
Right. Of those five, the list of limitations of sole discretion would still apply to them as well. Correct? Correct. Because that would because the new law would be in effect, and they would not be able to take advantage of any pre, you know, pre 2026 ruling or anything like that. They would be covered by this rule.
Well well, no. If if there's an existing IHZ out there, 793 right next door to this, that exists. It's, I believe, fully occupied, which means the affordables are occupied. So if someone you know, if you if you allow it to this question was raised. If you allow it to apply to all IGs, existing or proposed, then anybody could come in including an old IHZ.
And and I thought that you wanted to prevent that and in a way that also goes to Michael Kalise's, you know, theory. Here we have not only a naturally occurring affordable unit, we have an occupied affordable unit.
Well, let's let's stay on this let's stay on this path of five because we've already eliminated it down to five. Right? So of those five
Yeah.
They would they had they would have to be under this text amendment. Correct? They couldn't do anything other than what's in this text amendment if they wanted to go off-site.
Yes or no?
I'm I'm I just wanna make sure I get the question right. If the existing already built and occupied IHZs wanted to go off-site, depending on how you approve this, they could ask you.
Okay. And it would be under go ahead, Michelle.
I'm sorry. Michelle Pratt Crowley, planning zoning director. I just wanna say there's actually 459 Post Roadies, which is Bedford Square, has five affordable units, seven eighty five. So this one, 793, which has post roadies, which has six units, and 1135 Post Road East, which has two affordable units. The others are in 30 other zones.
Okay. There's four of them. Thank you, Michelle. I do appreciate that. So these four could come back and say, we'd like to go off-site, which means to my police's thought process, the affordable units that are on-site would then be shipped off-site, and they would then become for sale units on-site, and the ones off-site would then have to be, would have to, meet the definition of affordable. Correct?
Well, no. They don't have to be for sale. I'm sorry. 793 No.
No. I didn't say the ones the ones off-site are not for sale. The ones on-site are
The the ones on-site, yes. In other words, right now, 93, believe, is a rental. So what you're saying is if they wanted to go for sale, then yes. If they wanna go for sale and if you haven't precluded them, then, yes, they could be eligible.
I just needed to hear that you that you understood it as well the way I understood it. The reason is because that's what's at risk here if we approve this.
No. It's not at risk.
No. No. Time out. Time out. If we approve this where we allow them to have an existing ZCC.
Yes. Okay. Correct. And if we
and if they don't have a ZCC, then it goes down to two units. Correct. Alright. We're getting somewhere here. Okay. Remember, we're talking about precedent. Oh. You can't do precedent if you don't qualify. Right now, know that there's five that qualify or two depending on how we structure this. Okay? Five or two. There really is no others. Four or two. Thank you, Michelle. Four. 1141 does not count. Correct?
1141 is a senior resident. It already has off-site. Already allows us. It's already off-site, and you already did it.
Alright. Very good. Alright. So I'm less now concerned about precedent and more interested in the sole discretion. If it is truly airtight and we truly have, as a body, as a governing body, we truly have the discretion to do it, I'm willing to take a spin on it because it has to come before us.
It has to have the benefits, and the benefits are clearly defined. In fact, they're in the regulation. And so there is no unforeseen circumstance. There is only what we have, what we what we care for, and nobody can sneak something through because we didn't think of it. Let's talk about the three options that you have.
I'm okay with the 2nd Floor units, by the way. I I always thought that they should have been when I was there when you originally approved when we originally approved this as a commission, and I I I wasn't quite sold on what you were trying to put in there as commercial. I always thought it was a stupid spot with poor egress and exit and even worse parking for anything other than a very low use. And so, residential, is the lowest. So that's actually not a bad idea, and I like it.
The fact that they're not affordable doesn't bother me at all. I wouldn't don't even really think that they should be. So I'm okay there. You have so that's that's one of your asks, and I'm okay with that ask. The second one of your asks is that you convert one now instead of three on-site at 785 and allow the other two to go to George Street. Is that correct?
Correct.
Alright. I'm less okay with that, but willing to hear you out as to why that works. So, and I kinda wanna work backwards and start with George Street. Why is that only two units? If
you have
a if you have a very small footprint or square footage, sleeping quarter with a kitchenette, how many that that only handles two?
No. We we would be five. We if we went special needs housing like we did at one thirty six, it would be renovated into five units.
Okay. I missed that part.
Yeah. It's two units now. It's would we'd renovated into five with a text change to you as we described in the Pria. Yes.
Okay. I like that. And then what happens to the garage?
The garage would remain the the apartment over the garage
probably last time, the caretaker, if that's the right word.
The yeah. This the the qualified staff person would likely live above the garage. And would that units would be for the special needs individuals.
And would that require construction to the garage?
It would require renovation to the garage in terms of the space is is tired.
So Yeah. I know. I know. To was Yeah. We need to fix there. And Yeah. They illegally dropped all over their property the other day.
Will not be prosecuted.
I you know what? I don't have my badge, and I need a new one, but that's beside the point. Let me ask you a kind of a a far field question just so I cross it off my list. Can you put an ADU on this property, or can we restrict it so it cannot be put on this property?
So, yes, going forward, the application before you, you could restrict that. Again, I don't know I I I don't even know if that would be theoretically possible because a special if we go in the way the pre op described as special needs housing, you know, it's it's not it's now a special needs housing use. It's not a single family house use.
Correct.
And in terms of an ADU, it it it effectively has an ADU now.
I just wanna make sure with that somebody doesn't come back to us later and says, you you you failed to make sure that we can't.
Right. I guess the the question, I guess, would be is if you have a legally nonconforming two family house in a one family zone, can you still add an ADU? And I think Michelle could answer that question.
That's for another day. Okay. Alright. So if you're doing five units special needs and you have custodial help on-site and you're renovating it and then turning the entire thing over, What does that mean? They become the the ableist becomes they don't you don't put the deed in their name. They don't become the owner.
No. They well, but our proposal is they would become the owner.
Okay. If they're gonna become the owner. Yeah. Why does it have to be deed restricted? I'm I'm sorry. Let me say it let me say it differently. Why does the deed restriction have to have an endpoint?
No. The deed restriction would not have an endpoint.
K. Thank you.
The only reason we did an endpoint at January was because we had to cap the lease with the town.
Okay. So in this case, because it's a 100% owned, it would not have to have an endpoint.
It would be the the life of their use of the building. Yeah.
Alright. I'm gonna ask you a question here. You're not gonna like this one, but I'm gonna ask it anyway. Is there any possibility of a fund to allow Ableist or a like company to go below the AMI?
Well, they are going they they're we're doing this at SMI, so so it all would qualify for points. So in in terms of a fund
In other words, to go all the way down to deeply affordable and still be able to keep it running.
Yeah. I I think that when we hopefully bring an application in the future to you, you do have trust fund money. You you could, you know, we could develop a formula, which is way above my pay grade to to say, hey. We can write down the eighties to 60. We can write down the 60 to 40, But here's what it's going to cost. We've looked into that before. We actually looked into it on January before Homes with Hope got involved.
Right.
So there is a formula out there, and you do have money in your trust fund. So that's something that if you wanted to do, you know, that could be icing on a cake.
Alright. So, you know, this is now you're right in my wheelhouse. You've got, a high a high amount of units, a high amount of points, and a high amount of benefit to the town. And what the applicant gets is he gets to sell, put up for sale, those two of the three affordable units that he was thinking of selling.
Correct.
Okay. What if you're, in the future, what if both the investor, builder, owner is gone, he sold, And the, and the person that's that's handling the special needs housing has sold as well. Anybody coming in is through a sale is covered under these same rules and cannot make new stuff up?
Correct. They would be subject to the requirements and restrictions that are put on the land records and on your ZCC and your zoning approval.
So if Ableist became ABC company, there is the same restrictions. Correct. If, and if your guy over at seven eighty five sells the whole package three years from now when he's done, anybody who comes after is under the same restrictions.
Correct.
Now look. I told you going into this thing that I really did not like off-site housing because typically, as mister Kalis has enunciated, it does not move the needle. But this is moving the needle. It's, I've had discussions with other commissioners about, you know, what are the benefits to the town, and I hear a lot of benefits to the town and not a lot of downside. Let's talk about off-site versus for sale.
Why? Why is that so necessary for this guy? And and, you know, mister Kenmeyer was talking about it earlier. The ebb and flow of this of the economy just changes the whole math. You know, it seems like every five to ten years, we go from a must sell it to a must rent it market. So what's to say in five years from now, they don't wanna switch it all back?
Well, I listen. I undoing something undoing affordable housing is a lot harder than undoing regular housing.
Fair enough. Alright. Thank you for, putting this together. I for me, you've answered a lot of the questions that I started out with, and I certainly, have a different view, a more clear view of off-site housing and what it really means versus what people think it means. So I'm done. Who else wants to go? I saw mister Vellante, you had your hand up.
Yeah. I just had a had a question about the sole clause. Does that mean because we put sole in there that another applicant couldn't object to our opinion and so they it would preclude them from appealing a decision or suing us?
Paul, listen.
I I'm sorry. That was for Paul.
Oh, I'm
sorry. So the answer where Rick was gonna go is, anybody could sue anybody over you could sue a ham sandwich in this state. You know? The answer is, though, when a when a a judge looks at something that we've made a decision on, and we have said this is our decision, it's our sole decision, and through that, here's what we decide. It's gonna be awful hard for somebody to pick that apart and say, that's not what you meant.
Unless there's something in the record that speaks otherwise, our discretion is our discretion. So if we decide, and you you you know of the 16 points that Rick brought forward, if we decided that those 16 points are the those are the the determinant factors of whether or not something qualifies for off-site housing, then, yeah, that's it it's ours, and we own it, and no one else can come in and go, you guys didn't really mean that. Again, of course, it has to be in the record. And that's why sometimes, not always, but sometimes you'll hear us actually take a resolution where we're approving something and read every one of the pieces into the record so that it's really clear in a later date what it was we had in mind. Understood?
Yeah. But it doesn't preclude it. We would have to then defend ourselves and Always. Spend a lot of money and hope that we
would No. No. We have we have an entire legal staff that loves it when we get sued. No.
I didn't see it. But yeah. Michelle Free legal staff. Michelle's gonna be a gonna reach out. Big one, but it's not a free one.
No. No. It's never free.
It's not guaranteed.
That's right. But as long as we're using our sole discretion, it's guaranteed.
And, you know, they can they can appeal any decision you make. They can appeal conditions of decisions you make on on anything.
Right.
That's always that's always out there.
Alright. Now we're gonna before we go to the fun part of the evening, which is where we let, the, public come in and give their thoughts, we do have time for our, 08:00 bio break. So if everybody would like to take advantage of five minutes, agreed? Does everybody agree? Alright, mister Phyllis.
We are going on five minutes. We'll see you back here at that five after eight. Okay, ladies and gentlemen. We are back in session. That means we are going to go to the public.
First person I see is miss Simonelli. Miss Simonelli, you have the floor.
Thank you, mister chairman. I have several questions. I'm gonna try maybe to skip over some of them. But the the first one on, the issue of sole discretion, I really think you need an attorney's viewpoint on that, which I'm I'm sure you'll get, but I I do
recall Actually, we we already got it.
Oh, you did?
Yeah. In fact, they they they vetted it fully for us.
Okay. I I just recall mister Bloom, at one one of your meetings giving you chapter and verse on, you know, various reasons for denying an application and and how airtight it had to be. So I was just, you know, I'm just skeptical of some judge trying to define discretion and trying to define soul. But if you got the legal opinion, I guess I'm I'm satisfied there. I wanted to understand okay. And I'll go through my questions. The the the property on George Street is owned by the developer
since
July. Was that was that established then?
I'm not sure. What's your what is your question? Well, I'll I'll try to get you an answer.
Well, he purchased the property specifically to to use as leverage for this other project.
He bought it and is hoping to do something with it. Yes.
Okay. So there there's no altruism here in purchasing that that property for the use of ableist.
It's Well, no. That's not true at all. If you're he in order to go off-site, he knows he has to put it somewhere, so he's gotta he's gotta find something. And in the past, one of the roadblocks is that it takes, five meetings to decide whether or not to do something, And meanwhile, something that was on the market is long gone. So this guy, went ahead and bought it and is now waiting for the decision. As the applicant has said, if he, if he if it doesn't go his way, he can always just sell it again.
And Ableist will, operate, maintain this if if this all happens. They will they have sufficient funds to operate, this this new property.
Yeah. They're they're a very they're a very thoughtful effort. Yes.
Oh, okay. I was last week or last time that this was a meet there was a meeting. I think it was commissioner Bolton had questions about the definition of special needs. Was that resolved this week?
They gave us a different definition that we've not had on the books, which I believe definitely helps. Yes.
And that is the state, not the federal definition, I think he said?
Has to do with that. Has to do with IQ.
IQ. Okay. In the affordable units that the property developer will continue to own and operate, how is eligibility determined and documented?
Same way for all affordable within the town.
I mean, it's it's a
huge it's a huge list. I mean, I I would defer to Michelle Pirelli or the or or the affordable folks to go chapter and verse. We don't have enough time this evening to go through all the affordable things, but it's a it's a it's a lengthy process. It's a big application. You have to do it and you have to do it every year.
So the town I I was left under the impression that the property owner has the basically, the sole responsibility for vetting, the tenants the affordable tenants. But the town does get involved. Is that correct?
The answer is yes. We approve their affordable housing proposal.
The of the inhabitant.
We approve the tenant no. I'm trying to figure out where you're going with this, Tony.
I wanna know who controls access to the affordable units.
It it it's controlled by the person, in this case, Abelis, the person on-site
I'm not talking about George Street. I'm talking about the other affordable units, on-site unit.
Michelle Prelley, planning and zoning director. So the original lottery is done by the, by the applicant, by
the
developer, and then they also would do the changes in ownership. However, annually, the town, our housing specialist verifies all the information submitted annually, request the name name of the tenants, their income, and rental amounts, all the information that we need to verify annually that the applicant or the tenants are still in compliance and the rental amounts are still in compliance.
I see. So and so if they fall out of compliance, they get evicted or something?
They have to go to a a market rate unit or
unit. I gotcha. Okay. Thank you. That does answer my my question on that. I that's all the question. Oh, I'm sorry. I was, wondering, is this if you approve this tonight, is the project approved, or is just the text amendment approved?
Well, first of all, we would close, not necessarily approve. But if we voted on it in work session, then it would be the project would be approved. Remember, there's two things in front of us here. If you look at the agenda, you'll see that seven eighty five is in front of us and so is text amendment eight sixty four. So we'd have to prove each one.
So there's two votes, and you'd have to approve
each one.
Okay. Alright. And then, I guess, I will just conclude by saying I I still stand by what I said at the last hearing and in my email. I don't like off-site affordable housing. I don't see why it can't be left on-site. And further, if there was true interest in providing housing for for the ableist organization. I don't see why this developer couldn't help out from a more of an altruistic standpoint rather than opportunistic. Those are my comments. Thank you.
Thank you very much. Do appreciate it. Mister Brady?
Hello, sir. How are you?
Fine. Thank you.
Can you hear me? Oh, well, thank you guys for everything you do. I appreciate you have a very hard and sometimes I would think a thankless job. But I'm a thirty four year resident of Westport, a small business owner. And for those thirty four years, I have lived at 7 George Street.
Something mister Redness said about commercial zoning on George Street. I wanted to mention that that a small sliver of three George is commercially zoned and so are some of the other properties on George Street. But, you know, it's a wonderful little family neighborhood, and we're not here to fight whatever might happen. I think what I'm here to say is that, specifically, like mister Redness' client at 785 Post Road. I mean, this text amendment, the builder at 785 was granted permission to build it, the luxury townhomes with the at that point, he was supposed to provide three on-site affordable units.
And I think that he should have to live up to his agreement and not, you know, do a Hail Mary and bundle in three George to get that approval. I I believe the builders should be required to live up to what he agreed upon. If this text amendment passes, the planning zoning commission will be overwhelmed with requests from developers seeking to separate properties to pay off or circumvent affordable housing, obligations. This would set a precedent that allows this builder and others to come back to the commission asking for changes after they made agreements to what they were approved to build. And I believe at one point, I think it was commissioner Volante said at the last Zoom meeting, you know, are do we ready to open this barn door?
And I'm not sure that you guys should open that barn door because can it ever be closed? And this says, you know, it's two separate I wanted to give you a little history on George, which George is what you know, three George, whatever it happens, happens. But I don't believe the tax amendment is a great idea. I think it benefits a builder and not really the town. That's my opinion.
Appreciate it. Duly noted. Other, townsfolk? Anybody else wanna speak? This is a chance.
Yeah. I do, but I didn't get can't get my hand up.
Feel free to speak, mister Mandel.
There we go. Can you hear me?
I got a picture.
So I've been on the record for a long time that says that we should do on-site affordability. But if not, it has to be much better than what was proposed. It's interesting what what Harry just said was that a builder will come back. So I think if you move forward with this part, it has to be built into the application at that time, not say, okay. We're gonna do the three affordable and then come back and make the change would have to be at that point.
Mister Kammeyer, at the end of last session, basically got my brain thinking in into the aspect. The IHC was meant to be on-site, but only if it's superior, only if it's demonstratively better should we move forward with it. And I wrote, what, a year ago in January, if it's whatever it is, it has to be plus one. So if it's supposed to be three, they'd have to build four. And that's where the town gets some benefit.
In talking with Rick, Rick says to me, he goes, but that's a very simplistic view that one more unit is better. Well, what about x, y, and z? And we're seeing different concepts that could be brought forward. And that's the toolbox where it could be better for the town if we do this, but only if you guys think it's the case. Now when it comes to George Street, you may not think it's the case, but you may think that we should be able to move forward with this for other applications.
I think the idea of the timing of it for only allowing mister Redness' two pieces sort of smacks of of it being just for them. If it's a good idea to have the ability to look at it as being a better opportunity, then you shouldn't limit it just to these two because then it's just for them. It's just for this developer who clearly has a financial desire to do this or he wouldn't be coming back. There's something behind it. He's getting the value. The town needs to get the value as well. Our hands should be out. It's a toll. It's a payment. What does the town get for a developer coming in and saying, hey.
You know, I don't wanna do the three on-site. I've got another piece here, another idea. Well, town has to stick its hand out and say, pay your toll. Simplistically, that's one more unit in my mind. So if it's three, it needs to be four.
You don't have to be approving George Street at this point if you don't want to. You have to look at it separately. I think Paul just said, we would close this, we'd vote for it, and then we'd look at the things moving forward. That's the rub here is to whether you think that the proposal is demonstratively better as mister Kamara talked about, or else it's as what mister Brady said, your agreement was for three on-site, then do the three on-site unless it's so much better. The goal is to find more affordability.
More affordability is what everything we do is about. We are the leaders when it comes to that with 20% required for any project. Darien just went to 14%. They're lagging behind us. So that's the goal. How do we get more affordability? Now is it because we're going for points or are we going to get points because it's more deeply affordable? It's a mathematical equation. Speaking of math, the fee in lieu of doesn't seem to work for me because if they paid the fee in lieu of as as mathematically, it said, it's about $1,000,000. But the building they're going to buy is $1,300,000.
So we wouldn't wanna do fee in lieu because it costs more to buy the apartment. Think we would have to look at that and change those numbers if we wanna do the fee in lieu of. We have to look at it to see if it's matching the market, if it's changing, and how much is it worth? How much is a unit worth to not have to build it, but to pay us instead? We do have an affordable affordable, housing fund.
The RTM approved that two years ago. And by the way, there's $1,700,000 sitting in that fund. And maybe some of that goes to buying down more units from the next person that comes in so that we've got a 10 unit condo situation that's coming in and they're gonna build two or three and we throw money out and we get four or 550% of it becomes affordable. It's a possibility. So bottom line is it's a tool in the toolbox and you shouldn't just throw it out because it bothers you that they someone might be getting over on you on us unless you look at it in your sole discretion that this is better for the town to do it.
And if it's not better for the town, then don't do it. But it's a tool that you should be able to use. And I was listening to mister Leibowitz who's moved himself along here when he didn't seem to be so interested. Now he is. And he understands that there if there is a value to it, then go for it. But to go back to what miss what mister Brady said was, if it's not better, if it's not good, three units are right there. That's what was approved. That's what you all agreed to. But if there is a project that makes it better for the town, more affordability, more points, better for a nonprofit, better for special needs people, then it's an option that you should look at at least and make a decision. Not all of them you're gonna go for, but some of them you might.
It's an opportunity. Thank you.
Thank you, mister Mandel. I do appreciate that. Anyone else from the public like to speak to this, issue? Anybody else? Alright. Seeing none, I'm gonna come back to commissioners and ask you. You've heard a few comments from several of the public, a wide range of subjects, all of which are good. Do you have any additional questions for the applicant in lieu of what you heard? Michael, can I hear anything?
Yeah. Well, Matt just made some points. Do we need to make some tweaks to this before we and then come back on it?
So I I love that that you call them tweaks. They're actually that is our business. So the answer is, of course. The answer is absolutely. So if you go into work session, you could absolutely say, you know what? I I would vote for this, but and then to quote mister Mandel, I think we should get more so you can do that. They're not tweaks. They're what is it you want. I don't know if we should go
because this is crafted, if we go into work session, we lose the benefit of asking Rick questions. I would think it'd be more helpful to give feedback and have I don't know if the timing permits, but to give feedback and have Rick bring it back in front of us to discuss it to make sure we got it according to what it is that as a commission we want. Does that make sense, Paul?
It does. I mean, it's a it's a question of style. How do you wanna do it? I, I think depending on how in-depth of a change you wanted to make, you could easily do it either one of two of those ways. So for instance, if it was a a very small tweak, something that miss Injeski was saying about how she wants to just tighten up some of the language, that could be done in work session.
But if you believe that the conditions that you wanna change are tremendous and you wanna get the feedback from the applicant rather than commit to it beforehand, that's valid also. You could do it either way. And I by the way, I'd like to I'd like to just mention something about what mister Brady said. You know, he's absolutely right. We have three units.
That's not going away. There's no wiggle room there. We've got three units. Now the question is, do we believe that we could get better, improve for the for the town as mister Mandel put it, what is being offered. If not, then we say no. And what happens is we get three units. So it's I mean, we can't lose. Mister Kemaher, anything else? No. Any many other, commissioners? Mister Vellante? Mister
Kemaher? Would just say that I think you're right. We have three, but that's not to say it's three or swapping three. I think there is always the possibility that something positive could be done at George Street in addition to the three we have at 785. Right.
I don't I don't know that we should be looking at that as a trade, and I kind of at least I think where you were going, Paul, kinda makes sense to me rather than continuing to ask the applicant to refine and rewrite or asking the fox to design the henhouse. I I just think we've done that a couple times, and maybe now we need to decide what what what we want to require rather than, you know, attaboy. Continuing to try to re repaint this thing.
You are thinking like a commissioner. I love it. Now speaking of commissioners, we have miss Zuccaro here, and I know that you're neither on the staff tonight on the on the commission tonight or in the public, but you're welcome to speak. What do you think?
Thanks, Paul. I think that we need some time to work through the the language to get it perfect. I I I think that no matter what you do, it's going to be difficult to not set a precedent. And I know that we've said that that we have our sole discretion, but we know how that is because we just do. So I don't wanna go down that path.
But I think that, if you intend to make this as a tool in your toolbox, we need a little time to finesse the wording to make sure that it can be utilized as a tool in the toolbox for the future.
Thank you. I appreciate that. You know, the difference between this one and the first one that Rick brought to us is that first one literally had an expiration date of, like, the next day. It was hurry, hurry, hurry. This one, I think we have a little bit more time to do it right because number one, I believe that the applicant is willing to give us the time because they they believe in what they're asking for.
But, also, he owns the property. So if George if George Street is involved, he owns it. It's not somebody can't buy it out from one damn. And I think there's a benefit to that. If you need more time and you wanna, you know, contemplate it, you know, I get that.
The only pushback I'm gonna give you is that, we need to banish the word unintended and consequence from our lexicon because there is no such thing. It's a consequence that we write into the regulation. And so let's try not to do that. That's all. Simple. Don't be afraid of the future. Let's make sure that it's exactly how we want it. Who else?
Hey. Can I ask a quick question before anyone else?
Please do. How are you, Paul? Yep. Have
we ever gone into work sessions and talk about an application that's not closed?
No. You can't. That that's not called a work session. That's still called deliberation.
Interesting. Right. Because what Patrice just said is we need time to work through this, but what if we have questions? Right? What if we didn't close it and started just talking about it as if we were in work session and not and literally read through it as if we're in work session and talked about it the way Patrice is saying mentioning to do. That was that. I Well That's kind of reading through the lines here.
Yeah. I mean, you know, the the correct answer is you have a question about it. We get that answer from Michelle. You know, what's the right way to do this? We put it in. Yeah. Put it in. You're in charge. You have the sole discretion.
Yeah. I would just support what you just said there, Paul. Michael, I don't know that we need to ask the applicant questions. It's like also what Michael Volante said that we can take the reins on this one. We understand what needs to be done and if there's things that need to be changed. And I think there are things that definitely need to be changed the way this is written. I'm I'm confident that we can do that, with Michelle's guidance. And
Yeah. We get, Michelle's guidance, and we get, our town staff attorney's guidance there, both available to us through work session. Look. I mean, the applicant has explained everything. He's gone he every syllable, every I has been dotted, every t has been crossed in what he's asking for. If you have any questions, now is the time because there shouldn't be any there should be no questions as to what they're asking for. The only questions when we go into work session should be, and do you wanna do it? If not, why? If so, why? I mean, that's that's us.
That's called sole discretion. Other comments? Mister Bolton?
I'm pretty good for them. Right. I've heard all you know,
I mean, all the other commissioners ask really good questions, and you've laid it out there. I don't agree with you on a lot of policy issues that you enunciated, but I I I think we've covered this pretty well.
Alright. Are you willing to debate those in, in work session with me?
No. Absolutely. Yeah. I don't think we should I don't think it's appropriate for me to do that now.
No. No. It's not it's not even germane to the applicant. Right. Yep. Do you have a do you have a motion for me?
Motion to close.
I I I I'm sorry.
Woah. Woah. Woah. What
what could you possibly wanna say more?
Well, the the the public spoke, and usually the applicant gets to, you know, close.
That's right. Wait. Let me
All I wanna all I wanna do, I'm not gonna go through any of the things that have already been done or any of the questions and things that were raised. I just wanna point out that there are four items. One, two units over the store. That's a separate application. You know, the separate piece of an application.
Two is special needs housing. The definition is to go from the state to broaden it to the federal so that the IQ is increased. If you have any questions, Amy is on the call. If you have any questions about that, that is completely separate to on and off-site. K? Number three is the text. And as Matt said, that's a tool in the toolbox. You should have the tool in the toolbox. That's a separate vote. And the fourth is three George and one on-site.
So there's four distinct votes. The other thing I would say is, I'm glad you asked Patrizia her opinion because if there's a bit of the yin yang, and I understand both. If it's a great idea and Matt said the same thing. If it's a great idea, make it more universal. But what I've heard from the other members is, I'm concerned about the unintended consequences and would rather make it limited to start.
That is I every application that I've done, and I've done lots in town and lots of these tax changes and lots of affordable housing, every one of them we've had this debate. And almost every time, you go for the narrowest definition. I'm fine with that. I also agree with Patrizia and Matt that if it's a good idea, what are we afraid of? Let it out there.
But what I don't wanna do is see perfection be the enemy of good because we can't satisfy both of those. Because you do it one way, I'm not voting. If you do it this way, I'm not voting. And then that's the only thing I don't wanna see happen here. Okay? And that that's all I wanted to say. Thank you very much. Appreciate your time and patience.
Well, thank you, mister Redness. It's very beneficial. Alright. So given that you've laid it out so succinctly, I'm gonna go back to the commissioners now and ask. I'm gonna do it one by one, and I wanna make sure that everybody here is clear. Does do all the commissioners understand and have no more questions about two over the store? Can I get a hell yeah?
Yes. Yes.
Alright. So you have an opinion. You're ready to defend it. And if we go into work session, you're not, m m you're not ambivalent about your your knowledge there. You you understand it, you're ready to go. So I had a lot of yeses. Mister Cleese, mister Zuccaro, mister Vellante, yes to all three?
Yes.
Fabulous. Fabulous. Special needs. Let's start with mister Bolton. Do you agree? Do you, are you are you satisfied with what he brought forward? No. Okay. Do you need anything else from the applicant to make a decision on that?
I don't. The only thing I wanted to ask you was, well, you just pulled everybody. As far as talking about the units over the store Yeah. You you missed me, and that's fine.
But No. I I I asked a general question, then I zeroed in on people who who didn't say anything.
Okay. No. That's fine. No. I want to say that. Didn't didn't the applicant just say that's a totally separate application?
It is. Seven eighty five. Yes.
Right. So is there any reason why we're other than just, you know, trying to be more efficient? Why these are not being taken as stand ones?
No. He's he was given the commercial property in the front when we originally approved this.
I understand that, but it
wasn't changing it.
When we originally approved the condos? Way back when. Right. Okay. So I guess I guess what I'm saying is if this wasn't part of the original application, I'm going back to March or June. No. Why wasn't that part?
This is part of that. This was not part of the original one way back when.
Just just to clarify, the units over the store, I don't think were discussed last spring.
No. They weren't. You're right.
Right. And if you split your vote, it's splitting one special permit. You can ask Michelle. I believe we have a special permit request to modify for the two units and a special permit for off-site. So so you you you have you can vote a and b. You can split your vote that way, but what you don't wanna do is say yes to this one and then, oh, gee. Now we don't have the other one because we already said yes. You know? So you you just need to make sure you keep track of that it's a two part special permit. That's the way I understand it, Michelle.
And that's how it will be written in the resolution. We would approve it in approve it in part and deny it in part. And then we'd enunciate the difference between them and give the explanations of what is what. Now we haven't done many of those, but that's a matter of course.
Alright.
Mister Bolton? Question is do you have enough info?
I'm sorry. The original question was do I have enough info? Yeah. I have enough info.
Okay. I appreciate that. And if if anybody does not, now's the time. Next, have three George. That is before us.
Does everybody have what they need to go into a work session and discuss a yes or no vote on that? Is there other information that you believe you need? Seeing none, the last is the the actual text itself. Now, obviously, there's things that we may wanna change as as enunciated by miss Injeski, but, the question is, do you need the applicant for that, or are we ready to be in work session alone? What say you? Anybody?
Work session.
Very good.
Paul, did you say what was that question again?
The text is, is being worked on. So our current text amendment is being changed. If we approve it, do you have enough information for the info of what you have there to do that by yourself and not need ask questions of the applicant? Okay. Work session. Okay. I don't see anybody saying not, so I'm going to make the motion myself to close. I'll second that, Paul. Does everybody agree? Let's go around the horn. Mister Vellante? Yes. Mister Kammire?
I mean, the second.
Yes. No. This is the voting part. That was the
Yes. Close.
Thank you. Miss Schrohni? Close. Mister Kalis?
We're talking about going into a work session?
Yeah. We're talking about closing this, and the next step would be going into a work session, not necessarily tonight. It's fine with me. Thank you, sir. Miss Zincheski?
Yes.
Mister Bolton? Yes. I'm a yes, and I'll call miss Patrice.
Oh, k.
Wait. That's a you can't do that.
I just wanna say, can you close them separately too? There's the amendment
in there. You're right. That that was for seven eighty five. Let's do 846. This is the text I'm sorry. 864, which is the text, ma'am. So we're gonna I need a, I need a motion for this.
Motion to close.
Thank you. I'll second that. I'm gonna go around the around the horn. Mister Vellante.
Yes to close.
Thank you. I'm a yes. Mister Bolton? Yes. Miss Zinjewski?
Yes.
Mister Kalis? Yes. Miss Schmoney?
Yes.
And mister Kamar? Yes. Alright. What we've set ourselves up for is a nice little marathon work session where we're gonna tackle four issues in two different applications, and so come ready to battle. When would you like to do that, Michelle?
We can do that on the twenty third if you'd like. Unless you wanna do it tonight. I mean, we we can also
do it tonight. Anybody have any stomach for doing it tonight?
I would prefer to not do it tonight.
No. I got two no's and a yes.
I have a yes.
Right. I counted you. Of course. I'm a yes. That's two and two. I need a tiebreaker here. Miss Zinjewski, mister Kamar. I
would be fine waiting, but also if you wanna go through tonight, but I Alright.
That's a half of half. Mister Kamar, you are the actual tiebreaker.
What's the what are the options? Tonight? Tonight.
Tonight or the what did you say it was, Michelle?
The twenty third. February 23.
02/03. Everybody get out there. Yes. Calendars. Alright. So that's been two weeks.
What's on our agenda? Do we have the agenda yet for that meeting?
Because have
a full
meeting. That's pretty far ahead.
Okay. We we have the calendar and not not the agenda. And it hasn't been legal notice yet, so I have to send that on Wednesday morning. So I can talk to the chair about how many applications we should have if we're gonna spend a lot of time on the decisions.
I don't think there's anything wrong with starting this. I mean, there's am I looking at the agenda right? We've got
Oh, tonight? I'm sorry. Yes. Tonight, we just have one other the odd cam and work session.
Gotta do 22 Ono Park, which is a cam, and then there's 13 o Orocodim, which I missed earlier, and then this.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. That's
right. So we should at least
work through this a little bit. No? Hang on a second. Hockenham and Oroc, they don't have to be tonight. Obviously, they they're easy, and and you could definitely, you
know Mhmm. Power through them.
But we have how many days on those, Michelle?
Once you close, sixty five days.
Sixty five days? I mean, I I don't wanna hold up pocket them for sixty five days, but still.
Why don't we
Yeah. I Paul, I would I would I'd I'd ask to to to give us a little time to process some of this information. We're gonna take on some work that I think I personally would benefit from doing a little more of my own homework to think about what kind of revisions would make sense. So I I worry that we would go and start talking in circles and work session right now rather than taking the pause, coming back prepared, and cutting through it.
I agree.
Who is that? Craig?
Craig.
Okay. Alright. Listen. You guys you guys make make the vote. I I personally like to strike where the iron is hot while you're thinking about it, while it's fresh in your mind, while you have your notes in front of you. You've been taking notes. Right?
So where are we with voting on
this, Paul?
It looks like, too many people wanna wait.
Well I'd be fine doing it tonight. I'm I've already started drafting kind of revisions that I would wanna make, so I can do tonight. We want at least start.
I think we should start it tonight also. We don't necessarily have to finish it, but I think we should start it.
Mister Vellante, go
I again, I I you know, I I well, I appreciate the desire for expediency. We do have other things that we could do tonight, so it's not
There's only one other thing.
Wasting alright. We still have something else we could do tonight. And I do think the thought that this deserves, given the implications that have been discussed now for a couple hours, warrant us to take a beat, think about what we want to modify, correct, approve, not approve, is the more prudent approach.
Yeah. Alright. I mean, look, we've been doing this since '25. It's getting to feel like the death march to Bataan, and I don't want any more casualties along the way. So, I guess we'll give it another two weeks, Rick.
Thank you.
Might not have me that night just to record.
Well, no. Don't tell me that now. Come on.
Seriously. I in all honesty, I'm coming back from Japan the day before. Might you have me short, but I have no idea what my mind's gonna be like. I will try. That's why I wanted to just read through it with everybody and get some notes on it now, and then it's easier. But I totally get where my is coming from.
About Let's You can also It's
fine. It's fine.
You know, again, in terms of starting, you don't have to vote on all of the aspects, but you could
certainly I think it's closed. Done.
Rick, I think we're closed.
Oh, so I apologize.
I think we should talk through our thoughts on this for a little bit, but not get into heavy detail on it. Like my father said, he wants some time to read through it, but I'm sure I'd like to everybody like to hear everybody's thoughts on it now.
Yeah. I think I think that's a good idea. I was it's fresh in everyone's mind. We can go and do, like, broad strokes. We don't have to do, like, the nitty gritty things. So we can get on the same page, and then we can come back, and we can think about it and make the make these edits for when we actually come back with something that's revised.
Alright.
I agree. It's to do all of it orally. I think it would be probably easier to actually put this in writing, and then we can all see it. But
Michelle?
Yeah. That's what I was gonna say. It might make sense just to at least talk about some of the issues, and that way maybe I can go and try to figure out some language and then at least come back for the next meeting with something in writing, and we don't have to do it on the fly. But it was just a suggestion.
So like a hybrid. Little above. Split up the workload. Mhmm. But say you, mister Vellante.
Tackle the easy stuff tonight.
I'll try again for the third time. In the spirit of everybody's enthusiasm, could we agree? Is that a yes? No. Could we agree that we're not gonna start debating the issues amongst ourselves, but rather simply state, here's the things I'm gonna try to work through, but not the punch counter punch of, yeah, buts. Because then we're just might as well be in all work session, and I don't feel prepared to to to speak on it well. This this Okay. Really important stuff here. John brought up stuff about about statutes and
Okay.
Text changes.
Yeah. Yeah.
I get it.
It's not it's just not it's just not fair to the importance of what what this is being done.
Let me just and you're right. We we wanna be fair. But let me just remind you that it is not the counterpoint point back and forth. Okay? You get you you get your you get a yes, no vote. I don't expect to change your vote. But you get in work session, you get to discuss how you why you wanna vote a certain way. You don't necessarily have to come off of that. We don't we're not we're not gonna sit here and berate your opinions. It's not what we do on this commission.
I like the term browbeat better, but okay.
Yeah. I do too. It's especially when you have the unibrow. You know?
So let's go do Eleanor Park, and let's move to work sessions to start.
Yeah. Well, we already closed this, so we're let's go. Somebody make a motion to go in.
To go to work session.
Thank you. We are in work session. Would the secretary read the last and final item?
Yes. So the last item on our list is 22 Ono Park, coastal site plan application number PZ2500729 submitted by Neil and Elise Gabriel in care of Peter Kadu, architects on behalf of Neil and Elise Gabriel, property owner for the construction of a new accessory dwelling unit and associated drainage and landscaping for property located in the Residence A District, PID C 0302500. Applicant's presentation time is five minutes.
Thank you very much. Who do we have here to read us through this? Oh, there she is.
Me. Thank you. Let me just share my screen so I can print my PowerPoint.
Oh,
yes. We have a PowerPoint. Thanks to Michael.
I never know how to
make a full screen, but
that's okay. Okay. So this is can you see see it okay? Is it kind of weird?
Okay. Okay.
Okay. So this is 22 Ono Park. It's a coastal site plan application. The property is in a resident's a district, point five acres. It is in the Campo Beach area abutting Grays Creek as shown on the map.
The lot is wholly within the coastal area management boundary and within the 100 air flood zone, with the AE 13 to the base flood elevation is 13. Coastal resources are shown as general resources, coastal hazard areas, near shore waters, and tidal wetlands, which are adjacent. This is an existing condition survey that show is that there's a non FEMA compliant single family residence, a covered patio, deck, driveway, pool house with patio, in ground swimming pool, and drainage. The proposed conditions show a new accessory dwelling unit, a new planter, and a new walkway. So that's here.
These are the proposed elevations. The base flood elevation is shown. Base flood elevation plus one foot is required, and the highest point of the pitched roof is 21 feet three inches. This is the zoning zoning chart showing that the project is consistent with the coastal residents I'm sorry, consistent with the residents a zoning standards. The lot area shown the building coverage permitted is 15%, and the proposed the PowerPoint has a typo.
It's actually the building coverage is actually 14.99 under proposed conditions, which is 3,130. And for total coverage, it's 23 o nine, which is 4,819 square feet, both compliant with the residence a standards. Again, talked about the height. It also was compliant with the flood zone and has the required 1st Floor at 14 Elevation 14 with the proper flood venting. Again, the state is fully within the hundred year flood zone and complies because the 1st Floor is elevated.
The mechanical equipment is gonna be on a raised platform at Elevation 14, and the crawl space will have the required flood vents. The stormwater management has been provided on-site. Underground stormwater galleries will provide will capture the roof runoff from the roof and all per pervious surfaces as required by the engineering department. Sediment erosion controls will be installed including silt fencing, anti tracking pad, and, staging and stockpile areas will be surrounded by silt fencing. And the applicant is now proposing a new vegetative buffer.
There's an established 10 foot wide native salt tolerant buffer that was required when the house was constructed in 2008. So that approved planting plan will be retained. Again, you always have the authority to schedule a public hearing if you want to engage with the applicant before rendering a decision. And that's all I have.
Thank you very much. No problem. Commissioners, who wants to weigh in on this pool house? I mean, on this property?
Anybody? It's a pretty inoffensive application.
Thank you.
And it's a pretty I'm sorry. In it's inoffensive, meaning it's a very yeah. It's a there's nothing controversial here. You're not offended? Not offended. They're doing the right thing. There's no oops here. You know, they're and they've already gotten approval from DEP and conservation, although different jurisdictions, different criteria. You know, I I I I was looking through this. I just didn't see anything that was gonna be an issue.
Patrice? Thanks.
The only question I have is I I don't understand the chart that you showed with the the compliance with the zoning district. So, like, for example, bill building coverage, it says that it's proposed 23.28, but then you said it but then the required is 15.
So it's Yeah. There was a oh, sorry. I'm sorry. I didn't mean to interrupt you. I thought you're done.
No. No. It's okay. I mean, it happens throughout, though, like, you know, the setbacks.
I know I know that for in there was I was informed that there was a typo with the coverage, the building and the total coverage. So I I can show you on the site plan. The actual I think it was just a carryover from a previous. But if we if you want, I can pull up the site plan that shows the actual numbers if you feel more comfortable. Allow me.
Find them.
And they even like the what is it? The the rear setback? The rear setback is supposed to be 25 feet. It's 23.1.
Let me see here.
You're not are you sitting on this, Patrice?
I don't know. Am I?
Well, that would make you the eighth commissioner.
Well, I thought we were Mike Mike was just sitting on that one, but
Oh, okay.
I have
to sit on this.
I see. I didn't know you either.
I don't care either.
No. That's my bad. I I mean, we
They assumed because it was just being read in
Uh-huh.
That she was
I'm just trying to keep track of you guys, you know, which one's on, which one's off.
Who's on first?
Who's here? Who's not here?
What's on second?
Yeah. I'm gonna share my screen just so you can see that the setbacks are compliant. I apologize. So the 15 foot setback is here, that dotted line. So that runs through over here. That's the side, and then the rear so the 15 foot is here. This is where the setback is. We complies there. There actually is no the lawyer. I said the 25 feet is over here.
It also it complies. So I don't I think it was just held over from a previous PowerPoint. The setbacks do all comply. And the coverage, I can show you as well that that's that also complies.
And then here. Yeah. So here you
can see it better even. That Yeah. Yeah. It combines there. It means 25. Yeah. Yeah. And then the coverage is over here. So difficult to see, but coverage is proposed proposed lot coverage 24.76.
Shouldn't it be 15 or something like that?
No. Total company is five. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Yeah.
All good? So
Yeah.
Sorry about that.
Yeah. No problem.
Commissioners, questions? Campsite?
Anybody? Hey, Paul. Just for point of, information. I mean, it's not really dispositive, but when the law changed in October, right, this would not have been in front of us? Which law? What the new the new CAM designations in October, was it?
Oh, this would have definitely been before us for sure.
Definitely would have been. Okay.
Yeah. This is in Orennock. The new law is affecting people more than a thou was it up to a thousand feet, Michelle?
Or Yeah. Up to a up to a thousand feet. So it's it would be the ones that were more landward, more inland that will be you'll be seeing where there won't be coastal resources
Got it.
Close by.
Thanks. Yep. Miss Patrice?
Sorry. So one last question I have is, when it says here that there's two separate votes that we're taking in the the variance part, what what exactly I'm not sure I fully understand.
Wait. Wait. Hang on. Where are you getting that from?
At the end of the,
the report. Staff review?
Staff review.
Let let me pull that up.
As will I.
It's on
page eight at the bottom, process considerations.
Okay. I gotcha. Two part approval process. Therefore, two separate votes. One is the variance. The board shall grant the variance application.
Is this a man? Not intended that's not intended for us. Right? This is also an an error.
That's a
no think that that's an error with, yeah. I think if if it's a variance application, then that should be in there. So number one Yeah. Number one. Yeah. So if you're only looking at the coastal site plan, you're only looking at that, and that would be the only vote.
Yeah. We don't deal with unusual hardships.
Yeah. That's why I didn't understand.
Okay. Think it feels like we do, but you know what I mean. Alright. So, Michelle, you'll strike that out and make it a one part process?
Yes. We'll we'll reflect that in the resolution as well.
K. Very good catch, Patrice. Thank you. I mean, it also says optimum government access channel thirteen ten. You know? But who's we're not gonna stick with that.
I'll check. Yeah. I'll check. I'll, talk to Michael about that.
Did Michael do this? Yeah. Alright. Alright. Any other questions, commissioners? Michelle, there's, we don't have a requirement, do we, for a path clearly delineated from an ADU No. To, like, the driveway or etcetera. No footpath. Nothing. No. We're not even pretending.
Well, we just don't have any requirements for any walkways, really.
I mean, do we really think that they're going to rent this out to make it turn it into affordable unit or grandma or family or anything even close to that? Yeah. You're not answering that, are you?
I can only tell you what the regulations say.
That is the crux of the biscuit, isn't it?
Is this another ADU situation that we're we may be No.
Look. Mean, look at it. Look at it. It it it's called a pool house. It's not even called an
ADU. Right. Right. Paul started with the pool house language.
Which is why I started with that because I I know why we brought this the ADUs forward, and I know why the state asked for them. And I know the language that we all put in there, but this does not resemble that. It meets the regulations, mind you, and therein is you know, that that's really what I'm talking about. So then does that even back
to your regulation revision subcommittee, we need to take care of things.
Yeah. I mean, I'm not sure I would do, like, insist that there be a path or things like that. But if some if this owner goes and a new owner comes and a new owner says, gee, I really wanna rent that out, but I don't even have a path for them. There's not even a parking spot for them to park on. It kind of it it's not what we intended when we said the words ADU.
But that's for a later date, I guess. Right, commissioners?
Paul, let's add this to the, list of
I think that's what mister Bolton just said.
Yeah.
Yeah. Mister Kalise, anything, from you? This is your neck of the woods over here on Horn Oak. No.
I have no coverage. You
all good with this? Alright. Do I have a motion then?
Motion to close. Thank you.
Do I have a second? Make sure the secretary records that vote.
Was it seconded?
That's yeah. That's why I said it. Speak up.
I was who seconded it?
Nobody.
Nobody else seconded it?
Alright. There we go. Alright. Well, I guess we'll vote on this. Let's go around the table starting on my left, miss Zakara.
Yay or voting in favor?
Mister Bolton? Oh, I'm sorry. Yay. Mister Kalise?
Go. Mister
Kammire? Yes. Miss Shivani? I'm sorry. Miss Shivani? I have to smash the button. Please like and subscribe. Sorry. Thank you. Miss Zinjewski?
Yes. There's just one little typo, Michelle, on the preliminary draft. You have an old address in there.
Are we I thought we're only closing.
Oh, we're only closing or That's fine. Okay.
But that's fine. That's good to know.
And, mister Leibowitz, here's Okay. We're now in work session. We have no more things on our agenda. And so we can decide right here now what we wanna do. Who wants to give me marching orders?
Well, it's working backwards. I think that we should which is another I would like to talk about even if it's not in details Yes. That I think we should all step through this. Yes. What's the most efficient way to do that? Is it to actually open up the text amendment on screen and go through it? It to talk about what we like and don't like? What do you think?
Sure. Absolutely. But before we do that, I'm gonna make a motion to do Barn Oak 1st, Hockenham second, and then the rest of the time we'll spend on, 785. Do I have a second?
Second. Second.
Thank you. Who would like to, do Michelle, do you have a resolution positive on Oren Oak?
Yes. I do.
Alright.
Yeah. It was sent in your email
at Thank you. Commissioners, are you ready to vote on Orennook? Voting's in proof. Thank you. I'll second that. Here we go. Anybody wanna discuss it? Anybody have an issue with it?
Jessica, one little thing I noted is one.
Yeah. Please.
Okay. The owner's address? That's correct. K.
Alright. Seeing nothing, I'm gonna call for a vote. It's gonna be, around the table. Miss Zuccaro. Yay. Mister Bolton? Yay. Miss Kalise?
Yeah. I'm okay.
Thank you. Miss Kamara?
Yes. Approved.
Miss miss Shivani? Yes. Miss Zinjewski?
Yes.
And I'm a yes as well. Secretary will record the vote. For our second item, we have Hakanam. The oops application, do I have a Motion to approve. Motion to alright. And I'll second that. So that's a motion and a second. Does anybody have any questions and wanna discuss it? Anybody have any issues with it? Hearing none, I'm gonna go around the table again. Miss Sukara? K. Mister Bolton? Aye. K. Mister Kliese? Mister Kliese?
Sorry. I didn't unmute. The answer is yes.
Thank you, sir. Mister Kammire?
Not voting on this one.
Not voting? I wasn't
I didn't I didn't didn't participate.
Miss Chavoni? Yes. Miss Zincheski?
Yes.
And mister Libowitz is a yes as well. Last but not least, we have, I guess we've gotta break them up. Which one do you wanna do first? Wanna do seven eighty five, or do you wanna do the text? I actually would like to do seven eighty five. I just think it's the easier of the two. Anybody? Anybody? Don't leave me
out here. It's like a Oh, right.
Who has a preference? Motion to adjourn?
Yeah. I'll second it.
Yes.
Come on, you guys. It's the lord's work. Let's You asked
us one more. You asked us again. Just what was it? Just start this
Let's start again.
Which of the two would you like to do? One is 785. The other is 864.
So specifically, on the 785
You have
the two over this floor? Modification of special permit to allow the conversion of the 2nd And 3rd Floor of the approved commercial building. Correct. It has two residential units, minor vertical expansion of the 3rd Floor Correct. Potential on slash offset affordable housing solution for property located in the okay.
3 George. So
yes. I I actually think the text amendment is, like, you can't do 3 George without the text. You can't, like can you?
Michelle, words of wisdom for us? I
mean, maybe it makes sense to just talk about the, yeah, the the two unit the two units over the store.
Oh, let's start there.
That's like the simplest thing to determine whether you're in support of. I think they're they're allowed it complies with all the regulations. So I think just taking that out and just and looking at that in itself is probably the first thing to to do.
Okay. Let's go around the room. Who wants to tackle it? Who wants to tell us how come this is not good? Who wants to tell me why it should not be approved?
I'm gonna just share that in the IHZ, it was designed to have both commercial and residential. So they wanna still have that. Right. But now they're saying they wanna take and convert and modify. Right.
We're only talking about the two units that they wanna add above the commercial store in front.
There's gonna be an office on the top. They wanna make that into two residentials. Right? Actually commercial below it.
That's right.
Yes. There's retail. Right. So so okay.
And it could have been originally residential. Yes. It could have. So it checks boxes. Which ones? It could have been. Meaning, this is not you can they could have decided to go one way or the other way. They would have checked the box either either.
It would have been it probably would have been approved the first time they came to us if they said they wanna put residential upstairs. Don't forget, right next door is 795, which has a ton of commercial downstairs, the Life Cafe. I think there's a State Farm there, and there's some very nice units above it, all market rate. This would match that. So we don't applicant Say that again?
It certainly helps the applicant financially in supporting on-site affordable,
the
rest of it. If if that if that addresses their affordability at all, then Right. It certainly helps that.
Well, in this way, yes, you're absolutely right. He gets two more units. And I had asked Michelle earlier, three unit affordable of 16 is the same as three units of 15. So it's the same math.
Yeah. The
same required number of units. Yeah. He doesn't pick up any, doesn't lose any. We don't get any more. Mister Mandel did, enunciate about that, but I'm not sure that it's right for here. Like, I wouldn't try and jam another one upstairs. Right. What say you, mister Kalis? Residential units above the commercial space?
Can you repeat the question?
Sure. Are you in favor of allowing seven eighty five to have residential units above the commercial space in the out front building that is yet to be built? Yes. Thank you, sir. Mister Bolton, what do you think?
In the vacuum, completely isolated from every other issue here, it's fine. Because I I also think that having residential above commercial is a is a good mix in certain areas. But that but that's it, though. That that's as far as I'm going.
We're just we're just we're just checking those box. This Yep. We're gonna do one box at a time. Yep. Okay.
We're gonna Yeah. We're good with that.
Alright. Miss Injewski?
Yes.
Miss Shivani? Yes. Miss Zuccaro for the eighth vote of the evening?
Well, I'm not voting,
but just to give you my opinion on it, I I think it I agree. I I don't really have any objection to having residential units
on top of them. Alright. That's an easy commercial. I'll come back to you, mister Katmire, because you didn't really give me a yes, no.
Oh, yeah. I'm fine.
Alright. So that's that's the easy one. Why don't we try the special needs definition? Because I bet you that's not as hard even though mister Bolton and I might go a few rounds. Essentially, what they're saying is, in this town, Westport, would like to offer a definition that is wider than the current definition being used.
The current definition being used, and mister Bolton, help me here, is if you have an IQ of seventy one? Seventy. 70. If you have an IQ of 70 or less, you can be qualified as special needs. And what this applicant is saying is we want to broaden that so more people can fall into this category because more people do fall into this category.
And that this that this, is an artificial barrier that cuts out some people who could utilize the special needs category. So, let's go around the room and see what people think. And sorry, Patrice, but I'm not gonna include you this time. Miss Shivani?
Great. Great. Patrice, yeah. What?
Yeah. Can I comment, Paul, just to give you my comments and
you Not a work session? Vote.
Not a work session. Work session is just the commission and, Patrice, etcetera. And, unfortunately, it's the commission that is sitting. Miss Shivani?
My concern is that this is still narrow and that we are going it sets a precedent, and it opens the door for other developments to come and ask for this as well.
Do you have a problem with them doing that?
I actually, I have a problem encouraging it because I think I I I think we're going down a road where, you know, this is a very worthy cause. This homes for hope and disabled housing is is very worry worthy. I like that we are adding to it, but there is a there are types of affordable housing.
I'm sorry. Maybe I wasn't clear. We're, and I apologize. I didn't mean to cut you off. What we're doing here is talking about the definition of special needs.
Oh, I'm fine with the definition of special needs.
Alright. So we're broadening it is what we're saying.
I'm I'm I'm good with that.
Okay. That that
It's how it's how that definition fits in. Okay.
Alright. Thank you. Mister Vellante?
Yeah. This is one of the ones that I was trying to cite by saying I don't really don't think we're in the position to write a decisions on. I mean, we're we're broadening it based on a developer's request for expanded land use capability.
This is not this doesn't really come from them. This comes from the people that he would turn it over to who do this for a living. Right. And if you may recall
But it's but it's in it's not it's a change. Not a town wide change. It's a change that would apply to a land use.
Yeah. No. It it it would apply to anybody,
any land use. Right. Right. Right. So we're taking a definition of a patient cohort or a population cohort
Yes.
So that could be applied to a land use.
Yes. We have it now. But
it's based on but it's but it's based on a statute that's a state statute, not, we think it could be better.
Wait. Why don't you read it, Paul?
Michelle, do you have some?
I just wanted to mention that we did actually change the definition the talent change, the definition when we wanted to do project return, and we allow now homeless people at risk of homelessness as being considered special needs. So this is not I just wanted to put on record that this is not something new that we have done this over the course of Right. The last five years. So I
question around let me
ask question around that. And, again, I am formulating an opinion here, so I'm not trying to to debate it or negotiate that. It was what I'm hoping we weren't gonna do tonight, but I I'm trying to understand. So, Michelle, when you say that, you say the town changed the definition or PNC took a a different interpretation or a different definition?
Well, it was it it's town owned property at project return. My recollection was it was somebody working with homes with hope who was administering at the program there, but it was a town owned it's a town owned property. So it was in conjunction with the town, and then the planning zoning commission approved that that change. We made change.
So we made the change exclusively for planning and zoning?
It's for the town. We made the change For the town. We had to make the change so the books were correct. We allow that
We wanted to allow that use. Yes. We wanted to allow that use and have and consider it special needs housing so that we could have that special permit use in that residential zone so that we could create actual units instead of it being a group home. It they're individual units, and we're now getting points for them because they're individual units and not just a group home. Oh, I mean, I have the definition here if you want.
This is what we do, mister Vellante, for
many share.
We expand the use of, properties to include x. In this case, we are saying that if you're going to do special needs on a piece of property, you're allowed to include people who have a higher IQ than 70. And the way we got that was from the people who do that for a living. They've asked specifically for that change because it allows them to do their job better, help more people, broaden
it up. And is that change then consistent with a different statute, a federal one or a state one or something that isn't Westport P and Z?
It is referred it refers to so there's three ways to be a special needs individual. A person that's blind, physically disabled, or and or has intellectual disabilities pursuant to section, I think one dash one f of the Connecticut general statutes. Two, that have been homeless or at risk of being homeless. And now we're adding a number three, persons who have a developmental disability as defined in 42 USC section one five zero zero two eight regardless of age of onset of such disability. So that's the new section which refers to my understanding people that are autistic and things like that.
So and then it goes in then it refers to thirty two twenty seven, which is the special needs housing. So the special needs individual need need to be housed in the special needs housing. Right. Explains that you need supportive services and things like that. So so we're referring as we do with the statutes to the US code, I guess. Right? Is that what it's called? US code. Yeah. The US code, which has a definition.
Correct.
But we're expanding upon the US definition?
Are you
saying we're trying to be more inclusive of the of the
Our definition is including that definition now.
So that's sorry. It's also, Michelle. It's also, it's also expanding on The US code definition because within The US code definition, it limits it to people who are I think it it limits it to people whose onset was around, like, 25 or something like that. And so at the request of ableist, they brought this forward and their attorney had been explaining this, like, the last time we heard about this, they want to include people who whose disabilities onset after that age because it it it just limits people. If you have a stroke in your twenties or something like that, you wouldn't be able to qualify. So it's like The US
And this was covered the last time they were here by both the attorney from Darien and Abelis gave us a tutorial on how inclusive we are being and forward thinking by expanding the use, thus allowing more people to take advantage of so needed housing. Back to you, mister Vellante.
So like I said, lot to process, not weighing in on a position at this point. Wanted to understand more of the context of what this change represents as it relates to what the town has as regulations in other capacities so that I could then determine my level of comfort in having something that deviates, whether it be more constrictive or expansive, than what the town already has.
Yeah. You may recall we had some impassioned discussion from the public who came forward in the first two in the first two iterations of this, and they discussed how this is helpful because it's poignantly real in their
life.
Yeah. And very I mean, look, I very well may get there too, but, you know, again, wanting to understand context matters.
Okay. That's why we're here. That's good. Any do you have other questions?
About this? No.
Yes. About special needs. No? Okay. Let me see if I went around the room. Did I go to everybody? Miss Shivani, did I get you? Yep. Okay. Miss Angezka, I think I got you.
Yep. All good on this one.
And I got me as well. So two of the four. Who wants to take a whack at the text? Ask me. What? You
did not ask me.
Should I? I'm sorry. I I apologize. You don't you don't
have to ask me.
I'm not I def definitely want to.
I'm good.
You didn't ask me, Paul.
And you asked, John.
I thought I asked you first.
No. You said that we were gonna have a hand to hand combat at the end.
We already did that.
And the Super Bowl wasn't played yesterday.
You knew they were gonna lose. Come on. This is not their year. Alright. Go ahead.
Yeah. Mister Bolton, what are your considerations for
I listen. I think that I'll I'll make this concise because, I mean, I could go on, you know this, for a long time on this issue. So I'm just gonna say that we are not a diagnostic board. We are not clinicians, and we are not DSS or DDS or BRS. And there's a reason why there's a a gulf between the federal and state definitions of, special needs because the state is pretty much doing it based on providing services of a monetary nature, and the federal government is more defining it so to prevent discrimination, enforcement of ADA, and whatnot.
And can we just be honest here? I mean, there's nothing wrong with saying this if you're a abolus or the applicant. They want to expand this definition to make it more economically viable for ablest. That's it. That's why they're doing it. Now it's nice to call it inclusive, and then you can serve more people, and it helps them do their job better, and it may all be true. Alright? But let's be honest. The reality here is that we're sitting there and there's a big elephant in the corner, and nobody wants to look at it except for me. And I'm gonna sit there and call it out.
That's why it's been expanded, to make it easier for them financially to make this work, and you're and you're tinkering with something that we really have no business playing with. I can't imagine anybody from DSS or Social Security or anywhere else of the state, Department of Health or whatever, trying to take up something that has to do with land use or land use. We are not supposed to be defining medical or neurological conditions or expanding them or contracting them to fit a desired outcome on a particular application. So so is offensive to me. Offensive.
So so so, John mister Vellante. Hang hang
on, mister Vellante.
Okay. I apologize.
Remember, this is an arm wrestle between
No. I'm not arm wrestle. I'm actually asking for clarification.
Oh, yeah. Go ahead.
What's question? That they they're looking to expand it, and and you, again, you may be exactly right. But are you saying that because they think that's a bigger population? Correct. Is it that the expanded use would allow for, like, higher rents because it would
No.
No. It it it gives them more of a client base. It gives that angles of mind. The state says and Paul was right. The state said 70 IQ or less.
But then there's the big one, which was sort of touched upon by Brie, but in the state, it's eight the condition that creates the special need has to have, you know, made itself evident or surfaced prior to the age of 18, whereas the federal government doesn't have that. So it's it's narrower at the state level, but they do that because it's because they're dispersing, you know, the grant money from either the Fed or whatever, and the state programs. And to sit there and to you know, you're we're going about this by we're changing the population target to make it easier for the applicant. And we're doing it in an area that we have no business doing it in. And I find it, you know, and they said, well, this is the voice of someone who's gonna complain.
Right? I will. I think this is just this is the most can't remember objecting or being that offended by zoning application five years more than this one. Seriously. And I'm not doing that for hyperbole. It's just and and as long as it has the the characteristics of being benevolent, inclusive, and this and that, it makes it okay? No. It does not. And
Well, let me ask you a question there. Yeah. Is it benevolent and inclusive and this and that?
Yeah. You just said it was it was it it made it for more inclusiveness in our town. And you said it allows Apple is to or able, excuse me, to do, their job a lot better. And what I'm saying to you is that may be true, but that's not the motive for this. And so now you're
using I'm
How do you know that?
This was sent a testimony last time. Look. There's there's witnesses on the record saying that if we expand the target population to make, you know, the special needs broader, it's gonna make it a lot easier for for, the, vendor to be economically self sufficient in that project.
What what's wrong with that?
There's nothing wrong with that. But don't sit there and say that we're doing it just to be inclusive. It's Well,
it's never
one read. It's never just one reason.
But remember remember the reason here, the ultimate John John,
on on George Street, there's five units. They can fill those five units up by blinking their eye.
I understand that.
But what we're talking about here is, do we want Westport as a whole to be more inclusive? Now you're saying no because some developers That's not the question.
That's not the question. That's the to be inclusive is a separate question. The question is, do we wanna start tinkering with definitions of
It's the only way we can. No. It's not.
How can I think it's a very I think it's a very profound policy shift that would have to be, I think, taken up at a town wide level by our first selectman, our second selectman? I just agree with you. And I don't think the man I don't think the man's body has any right to discuss
this. Where we're gonna arm wrestle. Okay? Because Yep. If I'm the first selectman or the second selectman and I want to tackle this subject and find out how can we serve a greater the greater needs of the public. I'm gonna call somebody like Abilis or that attorney who does this for a living and say, jeez. But you're
not but you're not gonna call the applicant.
The applicant has nothing to do with this.
It's here before us because
the applicant Yes. But this could be but this isn't for their benefit.
Of course it is. It's not for the applicant's benefit. Absolutely is.
I I
a 100% disagree with you. You think this applicant's gonna have a hard time filling up five five spots over at George Street?
No. No. I think that I think that by putting a little more of the dressing around the main meal, it's going to buy our goodwill and who is going to say no to special needs. That's what this is all about. And it's it's just a lot of diversions here.
Final consider this. Final consider addressing.
At this point, to your point, if the if there's enough demand and doing this doesn't add more, like, units, then you don't need to do it in order to satisfy the units. So then why would you even why entertain it if it comes with John's point of tinkering with statutes that aren't applied in other town situations and
Well, what what makes you think that? I mean, we just heard from two experts who came up here and said, this is how we do it down at Darien.
Okay. Are we are we Darien? We're not Darien.
We're not Darien. We're We're kinda no.
Come on, guys. Guys. Woah. No. We're not Gary Ann, but that's
not Can I can I ask a question to everybody for a second here? If you were to separate this which is what I said another time. If you just sort of separate this from
On its own.
That application. Right? What we're saying is someone like Stacy Kern's son. Right? She's she testified, so I can say it. Right? It it it enables someone like him to to live in these potentially live live there. It enables more more people who are in town, right, to to do this. John's not wrong by saying that development kind of wrap this in to say, hey. Just let's cast a wider net.
But if you take it as a separate isolated, call it, text change that has no bearing on anything that we're immediately hearing. All we're excuse me. All we're doing is just widening who can potentially live there. John to John's point. Right?
John's like, well, why are we doing that? That's not a hard business to do that. And we're saying some of us are saying some folks are saying, well, why not rate, like, widen the net? If you are deemed by The US as, then, you know, you should have an opportunity to make it more equality and whatnot. I I think getting into the merits of it, John, it's like there's nobody better if you're hitting this perfectly.
But and I'm just this is my question. It's like, if you guys look at the text, right, I think Mike Belanti and John are kind of arguing two different things here. And if we just look at the text so step one is do we in an isolated scenario because we don't have to approve off-site, we don't have to do anything. Right? So if we just look at the text where it says, or persons who have a developmental disability as defined in US code, right, regardless of age or onset.
That's the debate here is do you want to expand who can live in special needs housing? That's
all
we have to talk about here. But John's point is the spot on is, like, I personally don't disagree with John in that they they're putting the stages to cast a wider not. Now do they really care? Probably not because they'll fill it anyway. But if they went in and they're making the text change, maybe they're gonna cast a point. This could affect Glenn Denning. Right, Paul?
Glenn Denning's in front.
So so they Glen Denning sold. Yeah. Even the that's irrelevant. You know? No.
No. He asked if this was similar to Glen Denning. I think they I think that's off the table now. Right?
We don't know what he's
gonna build there. No. No. No. That was sold. The property was sold
by person who bought it could build whatever they want there, so we don't know. And so so we can't necessarily answer
approved there even though it's not yeah. It could affect it.
Right. It was. It was. Right.
So to kinda answer mister Volante's question, this town has a history of going beyond and above the mandates handed to us by either state or federal agencies. So when the ADUs came down, we went above and beyond. When granny pods came down, we went above and beyond. When recycled plastic bags came down, we went above and beyond. This is the kind of town that we live in, and what a bill has come to us and said is 70 is too restrictive.
So we want so they've asked us to go above and beyond. And so if the you know, as Michael said, in a vacuum, if they just came to us with that, I think it would get approved. I don't see any reason why we wouldn't want to. Remember, it's a bill that really cares. The the initial group of people who go in at George Street, if it's approved, will have the interaction from the applicant. But after that, it's all the bills. And they're the ones who have said to us, hey. We'd like you to go above and beyond. Yeah. There's a reason for it.
But but you also said, if we don't do this, no problem filling the spots.
We don't have to do this.
No. No. I'm just I'm just asking just clarifying.
That's correct.
You felt that if we don't make a change
Right.
Live with the statute that we have
Right.
It does not compromise
In my answer
to the opportunity for the available units.
In my answer to mister Bolton, this this applicant, the builder, is not gonna see any more or any less monetary value with that change because there's five people out there that they can fill that spot with. It's the it's Abilis and the and the attorney and Redness who came to us and said, if you if you want, this is an opportunity to change your regulations and expand them, make them more inclusive. I know you hate that word, but fulfill the needs of a larger range of audience. And and I feel, just my personal opinion, one reason why I might vote yes for this is because I believe that what was handed to us isn't always the best and that we should take an opportunity when experts come to us and say, it's not fulfilling all the niches and all the needs, we should take that opportunity to do better. Yeah.
But it doesn't but it doesn't it it grows the the the potential people who would qualify. It doesn't grow it doesn't fulfill anymore anything because there's a fixed number of units which apparently we're saying are gonna get filled anyway.
Right. You're not gonna this no one's this is not,
an offer This doesn't turn three into eight.
No. And nothing you can do to do that because that's always gonna be outside of the purview. Right. But what it will do is it'll make this town easier to help those people, and that is part of our purview. That is in the land use records. That's it's in there now, right now, but we're gonna expand it and make it better. So it's what we have, make it better. That's okay. It it doesn't necessarily say, hey, builders, come on down because, oh, look. We do this. That that's not that's not part of this. It's not what this is. It's not an enrichment tool for builders.
So say you, Paul.
Well, you tell me where it is.
There's a already outlined. No. Listen.
I already outlined. Be a land rush of builders to say Yeah. What if I build that? You know? Alright. Anybody else wanna speak?
The three
of us The three of us have banged this around, and I I'll throw a duly noted out to the two of you, and let's see who else wants to say something.
I I would just say, like, I generally I I I support expanding a group of people that can be served by our our current definition. Because like John said, we do planning and land use. This this program development for people with developmental disability is not our expertise, which is why our statute relies on the currently relies on the Connecticut code definition, and which is not, again, for land use reasons and zoning reasons. And we want to also then include The US code definition, which also not for land use. It's for programs for people with developmental disabilities.
And just look at the code. That's where this definition comes from. And we wanna take those because those are crafted presumably by people who have big expertise in those areas and how those and defining what should, constitute people with that with, disabilities. I think that there's nothing wrong with us using those definitions, and it we're relying on people with expertise. And so it's I think it's a good idea to use them while also recognizing that those statutes were drafted for different reasons.
And so they have limitations that don't necessarily make sense for planning and zoning, such as the one in the state law that has the IQ, the IQ limit that we've been told by ableist who's not a developer who just wants to serve people with developmental disabilities, that that IQ limit is too low. There are still people who have a higher IQ but still equally need this type of supportive group housing and who benefit from it. Similarly, with the US code, which doesn't have that same limit on the IQ, but it does have this age limit that if if this onset before you're 22, I just looked it up. It's not 25. It's 22.
Then you're you're excluded, which is somewhat arbitrary for our purposes. Like, if if somebody's disability onsets when they're 25, they no longer qualify for housing. And I don't know how setting an age limit benefits our town or does anything or is even a planning and zoning issue. So I think it makes sense to remove those limitations where it makes sense. And that, well, developers may somehow benefit from this.
This really came from ableist, and maybe they have a profit motive behind it. But I think it's probably just more they want to be able to serve as many people as they can that they believe meet the qualifications to need their services. And that they I don't believe that Able has has some ulterior motive beyond beyond that. I mean, they do. I I don't remember exactly.
I I there there was an explanation of why they wanted to expand it, and it was not simply an altruistic just to be serving more people. But it it to me, it didn't go much beyond that. And so I'm I'm comfortable with this, with us taking this approach to incorporate the US code and expand it because it'll serve more people. And it's we don't have to we could just re practice entirely from our own side of what we want the definition to be, but I think it's good to rely on in the state statute and the federal statute.
Which, by the way, that goes to prove once again that I really should let Brie answer those questions instead of me.
Well, there you go. That that's my take on it. Is
the horse dead and in the middle of the road? Shall we move on? What about three George? Where's everybody there? I'll give you mine. I'm okay with having five units and then a unit over the garage. I think it's a wonderful use of the property. I wish we could do another 30 of them. Next.
I agree. I think you said it well and succinctly.
Miss Shivani?
I agree.
Mister Kalis?
You're on mute, Michael.
My sorry. My voice is a mess up. I I think at this point, I'm I need more information.
What are you wrestling with, Mike?
I'm not wrestling with it. I I'm I'm not pleased with it. I don't like it, and I wanna keep an open mind.
Anyone else? Mister Vellante, you're the two who have not spoken yet.
So you you like this as five. You don't like it as the group home?
Five, I believe, is a group home.
That is yeah. That's it. That is the group home.
Five's the group home, and then what is it if they turn it into the mini
Oh, sure. 5 isn't yeah. You're right. 5 is not the group home. 5 is the the individual units.
Can I just add one thing? I'm sorry. I did find out from Mike Santoro that we would not get any points under the group home scenario. More house no housing because there was, I think, some contradictory information, and that will require the text amendment and the special permit approval after this for 3 George Street.
Does everybody understand that? Very key what she just said.
Yeah. I I do worry about this concept of let's chase points. We should be doing what's right, and hopefully, the regulations line up that if if we're doing what's right, that points are with that. We start tuning text amendments to gain points. I do worry that that seems.
It it does count towards the 10% list, just to clarify, but we don't get points.
Okay. Thank you.
So I guess in that one, you're really kinda thinking through, do we serve the town well under the current regulations, which sounds like it ends up being more a a group home than, than a text amendment playing twister with seven eighty five.
Okay. Mister Bolton?
So when we started this whole thing earlier, I said we're essentially dealing with four different almost applications. Right? We're kinda wrapped up until one or two tonight. I have such a bad taste in my mouth about all of this that I can't say that I would support that right now. I can't.
I might be convinced otherwise, but there's just there's too much detail here because you have the two units above there, but then we have this here, and we have that over there. Oh, we wanna do off-site, and we need to expand the pool so it's more economically viable. I mean, it's too many moving parts, and we're chasing moratorium points, which is my favorite thing about being a zoning commissioner. So I can't say yay on this right now. I just can't.
Anybody else wanna weigh in?
I'm having some technical difficulties. Sorry. I'm not on camera for a minute. Okay.
Can you give us an audio read?
Yeah. Again, isolated on its own. Good use of property. Thank you. Yeah.
And I, obviously agree that five is better than two, and not just for the points, but for who we serve and how many people we, help, which to me is the benefit
to the town. Isn't it more than two though, Paul?
What are you talking about? You're saying
five versus two?
Well, two family versus five kitchenette units.
But I thought it was a two family, and then there's an outbuilding that also had residential in it.
Mhmm. Just two
Didn't Mike Cali say that?
No. Mike's not the applicant.
Above the garage they keep saying above the garage, but when they're saying that it's attached to the house, it's out I is my understanding. It sounds like it's a detached structure, but it's not. It's part of that main principle dwelling. There was a commercial use in the back at one point.
So is it two or three? It's two. It's currently family.
It's currently two units. It would stay as two units unless they made this change, in which case it would be five kitchenette units, which I don't know what that's called. That's unitettes, you know, unit light,
mini Two units. I mean, they're yeah.
Well, I mean, we have a template. We did this at one thirty six. It's been wildly successful. It's a 100% filled. And I believe, Michelle, is this correct? It's a 100% filled with Westport residents.
Yes. That's what I'm told. Yes. That's correct. Amazing.
Just trying to do the math again. I'm sorry. So if it's two on George and three on 785, that's five.
No. No.
We're not we're not getting we're not getting both. It's only
Right. Well, let me let me just make sure let me just make sure tell what
I what I thought I heard. Would do tell me
where I'm wrong.
Tell me where I'm You +1 785 and 2 at George. That would fulfill your three.
Correct. You don't do it? Or if you don't
do it, then get that three.
Get three at 785
All 780
at least two on George.
No. He could just sell it and just get rid of it.
It does Zero. You get zero on George if they put all three on-site.
But we don't we but we get zero from them. Who else is gonna provide the restricted You still get too affordable because it's a two family house that is a is a is an affordable property.
Not is not deemed restricted affordable.
Not deemed restricted.
Based on what they said, the people living there currently probably don't meet the requirements for low income. They just happen to have an inexpensive
And and one is empty, and the other one is going to be empty soon.
I understand this proposal to be five efficiencies.
Yes.
And then one and then one on-site.
That's and that and that question. And that fulfills the the requirement. Yeah.
And then everything we say about on-site is just dismissed.
What no. What what is being dismissed?
I mean, you know, a
lot there was a lot of debate. I didn't sit on the Hamlet, but there was a lot of debate on Hamlet and other ones about how we how this commission or the commissioners at the time on the commission were opposed to this idea of trading off-site and that it it it began to infer, you know, Nimbe, it's fine, just not over here. Except in this case, we're gonna go but we're okay doing that this time.
We approved it in the Hamlet. I don't know what you're talking about.
Yeah. And a lot of people said they really resent. They they reflected on that saying they didn't know they were happy doing that.
People always reflect on what we do. I I you
know what? I meant people I meant commissioners. Sorry. Well, I mean, I think, Paul, you were relatively in general opposition to the idea of doing off-site.
I said the same thing on that as I said on this. I am generally opposed to off-site if there is not enough benefit to the town. And on this one, just like on the Hamlet, I felt there was enough incentive to the town. It's not just replacing unit for unit, especially given the way they wanna bracket this, make special needs, expand the special needs definition. I mean, to me, that's a win win win.
Oh. Yes.
Paul, the doesn't that bring into play a lot of personal personal feelings and personal impressions, and that's not what a regulation is supposed to do.
When you say personal, what do you mean?
Regulation is supposed to clearly define the solution. And when you start bringing in the personal opinion, things such as the commission deciding that they like something, and so therefore, we can pass it. I mean, in essence, what you're really saying is is that the regulation itself is less meaning and the personal feelings of of some of of some of the participants on a commission has greater strength. And and I don't think that's what regulations are all about. I get it.
In essence, you'd be saying, this is a half acre zone, and you're you're allowed to it's a you're allowed to to build a footprint of this size or that size. You have height restrictions, setback restrictions. But if the commission feels that they like your idea better, they can they can pass it. And now we're we're moving into away from the regulation and the meeting and structure of the regulation to personal opinion. And it's it's sort of it's sort of like moving it into the ZBA, although it's clearly not that.
But I I just think it it leaves too much to question. I mean, people need to when when it's not uncommon. It's almost the order of the day that anyone that walks into the PNC office is going to leave saying, I need to get a variance. And, in essence, it's really what we're doing here. We're setting ourselves up for everybody pushing the envelope and making you an an outside of the regulation itself.
I think our regulations have to be well, we all know that. Our relations have to be clear and definite, and that's the reason we have feet and height and all kinds of measurements and floor counts and things of that nature. And once we say that, except that, a few people can say they like the other thing better and think we're we're chipping away at our regulations. It reminds me of ten or fifteen years ago when it was very common for the applicant. There were a number of them who would say, pass this regulation, but you don't have to worry because you can always say no when we come forward with our application.
And then the, applicant comes forward with the application, and the commission says, well, we don't like that. And the applicant says, just haven't gotten it approved. The applicant says, I'm sorry. You approved it. You have to let us do what we wanna do.
And it's it's just just
this strange brings too much personal opinion into a regulation.
I appreciate your thoughts on that, Michael. I don't agree with you, and I'll tell you why. If I could change your entire soliloquy about that, I would change one word. It is not my personal opinion. It's my professional opinion. We sit on this board because we're elected to make these decisions. That's your job. And so you need to take your job seriously. We need to make sure we do things in a professional manner, and that means following the regulations. But it also means tweaking the regulations when it's time to tweak them.
Okay? There are many things on our books that didn't exist fifteen years ago as you were speaking. Okay? But it was our job as they came forward to deal with them. This is another example.
Special needs is not necessarily something that was, thought of or, or, set aside for in in town regulations, and it's much needed just like senior housing or affordable living. These are not concepts that were original to the context of our state statutes. They're they've come about lately because there's a need. And our townspeople have elected the seven of us, eight if you count Patrice, nine if you count Nicole, to make the decision. They trust us to say, you've thought it through, you've looked at both sides, and you've decided.
I'll use myself as a good example. I've said no many times to off-site. Don't like it. Don't want it. Don't need it. And yet here it is in front of us in a new iteration, and so I can change. Change is okay. As long as it's based on a real need and it it it helps the town, there's no reason to say no. It's not a personal thing. I don't benefit one way or the other. I have a feeling that the town will benefit from it. So that's our job here, and I take that seriously.
So when you say that we tweak things here, you're talking about our regulations that we tweak. Correct?
The entire the entire book. We own the entire book. That means that anything
in there can be But that doesn't mean tweaking state and federal regulations. I'm not that's trying to what not trying to do here.
No. No. No. No. Their statutes, their regulations are on our books. Once they're on our books, we can change them.
Unless we're
we unless we're doing federal law?
Unless we're doing something illegal. Yes. Look. I mean, you you know, perfect example. You you know, is is the cited at Appomattox Court House of South Carolina. Vote that we took the vote we took two weeks ago on medical marijuana is not in the federal statutes. But yet we have looked beyond the difficulty of of changing something federally and changed it when the state said yes. That's okay. We're allowed to change.
But the state hasn't said yes. The state did say yes to the department. As it relates to this application, what is No.
You wait. Wait. Turn up. Turn up. You're you're saying you can't change it because you can't change federal. Bullshit. They can change whatever we want here as long as we do it legally.
I don't think we can do that. I don't think we can do state either. And I just think that we're we're we are way out of our lane here.
Alright.
And I think I think
I mean, look. You know, we have was trying to say was not the subjective or personal feelings, but he doesn't like applicate correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought I heard him say something to the effect of he doesn't like applications that sway the passions or the emotions of the commissioners. Because who is going to sit there and go, I don't like this because it helps special needs on the surface? But if you dig a lot deeper into this and you see it's not what it purports to be, and we're going in and we're waiting into territory that we have no business doing. And when you go beneath the surface of this, now you're beyond the passion or the emotions. Who's not who doesn't think one thirty five is a great idea? Come on. So we're about here. You're right about government. You're talking about one thirty six? I mean, one thirty six. You're right about government trying to make the quality of life better for everybody.
We had a lot of people who
have done genuinely. We have a right to say something.
We had a lot of people come in and say they didn't want it.
And did you hear how they qualified? Everything was like, look. I got nothing against or I owe somebody or my best friend's kid. You know? Of course. You know what you know what I'm saying? I just think that I do. It was a very it was smart. I don't like it, but it was obviously he got mileage. So
Listen. I I've said since the day I stepped onto this commission ten years ago that half the people will hate what I did and the other half will love what I did, And that is the that is the nature of the position. It is what you sign up for, and that's okay. I'm alright with that.
But it's also a case that seven eighty five could be required to fulfill the three that they signed up to do. That's something not through seven eighty five positive could happen with George Street. It's not the assumption that nothing positive can happen with George Street if this doesn't happen and we don't take it from seven eighty five to get it. There was talk about using the housing fund that the town has been accruing. I think mister Mandel or something said $1,700,000, something like that.
That's right.
So I I I to me, I don't I don't I don't see why the two have to be linked together.
I'll try it one more time, when it comes to this.
Alright. I mean, I know your opinion on it. I just don't I don't see it.
Alright. So I was there when we approved July the first time. In fact, I'll go back even further. I was there when we approved the IHZ to only have on-site. The reason was because we couldn't fathom the unintended consequences of off-site. Nobody wanted to deal with it. And so the developer, through Rick, because he did it, said, alright. Well, what if we just keep it on-site? And that way you control it. It's your sole discretion, but at least we get something done.
That was called walk before you run. We never actually adjudicated the idea of whether or not off-site was good or not good. We just avoided the conversation. I don't wanna deal with that. Too many unintended consequences. If we're gonna set a precedent, I don't want our builders coming in and, you know, telling me I did that, so I gotta do this. So we made it just on-site. And we knew from the math that we're gonna get three. And to us, that was easy enough. When July was nearing completion, the market had changed.
It no longer was a rental market. It is now a selling market. When he first came when they first came to us, it was a rental market. It was not a selling market. We're in a housing crash or or or what have you. So nobody was thinking about selling, but people are thinking about selling. And you can't separate the the the why a builder wants to build from, well, these are our rules. Too bad, buddy. That's why I said to Rick Redness tonight that the it ebbs and it flows. It comes and it goes.
It's a ten year cycle, a five year cycle. What's what's constant today about the sales of of property may not be correct five or ten years from now, and it might be back pendulum might be swinging the other way. But what doesn't change is the rules, what we vote on. And right now, off-site makes sense in this particular issue. It might not make sense in another issue, which is why if I'm gonna say yes to it, I'm gonna make sure that I have the sole discretion for it to meet a high bar.
I'm looking forward and saying, well, what if things change? Because they will. That's the one constant we know, and that is that everything changes. So there's the timeline. When we first did IHZ, we said we we wanna do it only on-site. And it was I was there. I listened to the commissioners say, especially the chair, well, I'm I too many unintended consequences. We don't do off-site in Westport. Yeah. That's fine. Michael said that that was a personal opinion. It wasn't a personal opinion. It was fact. It was what we we didn't do it. We had never done it before.
We don't like doing it. That was twenty fifteen. Things have changed a bit.
Point of inquiry? Please. I agree about the ebb and flow and that there's changes in markets and whatnot. But how do you allocate the responsibility for, a commitment that was made that no longer makes or is no longer financially viable?
Very simple. Do you want the guy to go out of business?
You're giving him two more units. I'm just saying. Do do out of business.
I'm just saying. You know, it's it's another builder would not would might not approach us if they can't get it. And so who loses in that? We do. Why do you think it's so hard to build affordable housing in a town where where people buy houses builders buy houses at 1,500,000.0 and knock them down.
I'm in that business. I'm in the mortgage business. I give people loans for homes. Someone called me today and said a builder, and I know the builder, called me today and offered me about 1 and a half million on my post World War two house. Cape. 1,500,000.0 if I move. He got a letter in the mail. Hey. If you move, I'll buy your house for 1,500,000.0. Abilis and Homes for Hope cannot compete.
They're not out there. They cannot get those same houses. And quite frankly, they might be in a neighborhood where we might not want it from the planning and zoning perspective. But that's the reality. That's not gonna change. Yep.
And in this case, you're gonna give up two affordable
Where's the
the the two family house.
Where where where's the affordable?
I think it was Mike Calise that made this comment.
No. No. No. He Mike doesn't know who rents in there and what they pay. Look. Even if we did know what even if we did know who rents in there, let's say for instance that both of those units laugh. Let's say both of those units are being rented at market rate right now. Let's say $1,800. Okay? The landlord can turn to the people who live there and say, I'm making it $3. The he's loud. You could take him to the fair housing board, and maybe you win, maybe you won't, but he can do that. Yeah. Okay? When it's affordable housing, he can't.
That's the difference. I know Mike likes to say that there are properties that are affordable. They're affordable today only because the guy's been living there for ten years, and he started to rent at 900. And there are some landlords in this town that purposely pay or or demand less because, oh, the property's on their property, and they like that person, and they don't wanna switch tenants. But the market rate is much different.
Market rate in my building is almost a thousand dollars more today because it's gone up quickly than it was three years ago. Okay? And so it the the it's a misnomer that just because the house is two family and it's old and it's on the Main Avenue, that it's somehow affordable. You don't know what the people are in there. You can ask John Bolton about the bartender over at Romanoci's who got priced out of her own home on Franklin.
Landlord jacked it up. She couldn't afford $3. So it's not affordable. The problem is it's not deed restricted either. And there's no there's no test for who goes in there. And so no. Know what you mean when you say affordable.
Well, you also
you've introduced a lot of information that is you don't know either. Come on.
I know it. I'm just telling you.
Okay. Okay.
Thank god we're not voting on this tonight. Right?
Today? Yeah. For sure. Yeah.
But when you say they can't compete, could you at least concede that there's some economic considerations going to the state's definition?
Always economic.
Okay. I mean, that's
Always. But I'd rather I'd rather that the the economics make sense for them to at least look at this town and decide, hey. You know, let's let's convert that commercial building into residential. It's on the books. Economically, I can make that work.
I do way too much talking here, and I apologize. No.
I I I'm not sure what that meant, but
okay.
I think I've killed the
horse. Dead in the street. Backed up and ran it over.
So so where
are we as of right now with the top different topics?
Well, we went through all four of them. And I'll bet you if we come back in when is it, Michelle?
Two weeks. The
20 when we come back in two weeks, your opinions won't necessarily have changed, but maybe your, maybe your, your ability to vote will be clearer. That's all I can hope for.
Do we have any internal takeaways for Michelle between now and two weeks from now?
Yeah. Are we here?
Are we using the term absolute discretion?
What?
So Just says soul.
Soul. I meant soul.
I'm sorry. Yeah. It only rests with us.
I mean, we could add, like, it can be denied for no reason at all, if you want Yeah. No. I mean, that's when you
say reasonable discretion, right, instead of absolute
No. That could be unreasonable.
Yeah. I mean, legally, the only thing we can't be is discriminatory.
An arbitrary capricious and all that. Okay.
Well, that's my question. The arbitrary and capricious I mean, total discretion, there is a level of arbitrariness there. It's kinda
like Oh, that's what I'm saying.
It's not
a lot. No. Exactly.
So I think as I mean, as long as we aren't doing it for discriminatory reasons.
Right.
That was my under that was my read of what the town attorney's take on this was is that as long as we comply otherwise with the basic parameters of of what we can deny things on, we can deny it for no reason. Right.
And adding and adding reasons, putting our justification in for why we, you know, was it not where the things that we took into consideration when we made the decision, I think.
And not and not using the Redstein amendment to to, to approve it, to actually go through each one of the reasons and enunciate them so there's a tape so they can go back and look and say, this is what they thought of when they approved that in Westport so that there's no ambivalence. So, Brie,
this idea of soul, you're saying, is not gonna preclude a future applicant from wanting to leverage it in a different way and contesting something that we might deny. And then then what happens? They sue us. They
Well, anyone can sue us for any anyone can sue us for any reason. And I think we may be putting in maybe we just get more clarification from the town attorney here, and I think we may be putting too much focus on the word soul. And it's just kind of and and we're not focusing enough on, you know, the criteria that we need to consider, the factors that go into this. In the list that he has, there's some that I wouldn't necessarily call there's some there's some minimum requirements, but then there's also just evaluation criteria. And included in there is any other factor that the Planning and Zoning Commission deems appropriate to consider.
And so there's a few things that are listed that are, you know, the basic ones, but then also, like, anything else we could consider. We could consider that, you know what? They just put another affordable housing right next door to that one. We want things to be spread out. Like and I think as long as we are putting that in our, you know, our reasoning, it's it's we're protected by that.
It's not like a special permit application or these other or some other, like, a campsite plan review where there's we need these specific criteria that we have to look for, and we can't we have to approve unless it doesn't meet that. We're given a lot of discretion to approve it based on what we think are the appropriate criteria for that application. We decide what the criteria are, and we decide whether it meets that bar. And I think my another one the issues that I had with the way this is drafted is they use the word superior. I think that's a little too.
I it's it's not to me, it's not a legal word. Know. There's there's better language that we could use rather than a a superior standard, based more on, you know, demonstrated benefits to the town or is you know, there's other language that could go in there that has to meet or exceed the intended purpose of this affordable affordable housing requirements that we have, and that the benefits to town are met or exceeded, that we believe that that is the case. And so the yes, focusing on the word soul may not be the right the right thing, but the way generally that this is drafted gives us a lot of discretion to decide whether or not off-site is approved.
Yeah. I I There's
a That's where my head is still circling around that element of soul and whether it's as absolute as as mister
Reddy's requirement. Because wealth is gonna decide this application but the p and z. Like, we're the ones who are gonna decide this. So
The there are 16 criteria built into this. That's more than I've seen in most, statutes that we vote on, and they're specific. So to me, that adding the word soul was just mister Redness' way of saying, you guys, trying to give you some warm and fuzzies. But it's really the 16, the list, that is the that is the specifics. If we follow that on each and every, affordable housing that comes across our desk, we're gonna win because they'll be the way we want them to be.
Yeah. I agree with you. I think that the list that we have in there, the points the the factors that are in there, they're they're pretty it's a good list to to start with to determine whether this off-site is in the town's best interest.
Right.
Whether that we're getting something from it.
And by the way, without it, I I probably wouldn't vote for this. I I it's like it's too open. It's too wide. It's too it's it's you know, you drive a truck through it, I think, is what we said the first time we saw it.
And then what are the thoughts around what I think mister Redness cited that Patrizio would say? That if this is such a good thing, then why try to exclude it at all?
If it's Well, that was what mister
just be Yeah.
That was what mister Mantel said.
Yeah.
Yeah. Which is yeah. It just means that, like so they so Rick had offered these ways to make it apply to only two properties. Like, if we really were so uncomfortable with this concept, there are all these other, like, limiting things we can put in there, so it only applies to two properties. Streetsia usually says, if it's so good, why are we limiting it?
It should be a town wide thing. And I tend to agree with that in this context that over limiting it isn't gonna give us a tool in our toolbox, especially when this tool, we can use it at our complete discretion. And so I don't I I personally, I don't think that we need to include that it only applies to, you know, properties that already have their I IHZ at the date that the that it's effective. I think that that's gonna be too limiting and that perhaps there are applicants that would come forward in the future with a really solid initial application saying, I wanna build this, but I wanna do off-site. And here's my plan, and here's my and here's why it's so great that I do it off-site that we might approve that.
But we won't know, and it you know, developers may be less likely to explore those options if it's not a tool that's already in in in the toolbox to keep using that.
And a per a perfect example of that is the very zone that we're trying to change, the IHZ. When it was put in together in fifteen was it how many years ago, Michelle?
Yeah. Fifteen.
Fifteen years ago, they made it overly restrictive because we were afraid of unintended consequences, setting precedents, and so we walked before we ran. What it turned out was we crawled before we walked. In fact, we didn't even crawl. We took how many steps? How many did we do in fifteen years?
Just the 39 a one. We did just five. And then thirty two twelve, I think there's, like, another five.
Okay. So, you know, think about that.
Why don't we just off the I IHZ zone? Eek.
Oh, I love the way you think, but I really I I think maybe there's a better way than than, you know, completely rezoning it. If I I think this is the right way. I I don't like that it's piecemeal, but I I don't wanna do the whole town and rezone. You know, it's this is almost better because we wait for a problem to crop up, and then we say, okay. How do we fix it?
And in this case, the IHZ was never being used. The authors of it even admitted that it's just it was overly restrictive. No builder looking at it and said, I'm not gonna do that. And the few that attempted it, we got I mean, one of them almost bankrupt himself. Right, mister Kamar? And then this one
This is a valuable tool tool to about to developers in.
I think it'll encourage more of the behavior that we want.
So then I guess it raises a question. And I think mister Mandel made this point. Are we getting enough?
So I don't I don't agree with mister Mandela on this. K. And and only because we're we're not ready for that. This commission isn't even ready for that. We have spent almost I don't know how many hours for how many meetings and how many hours on off-site.
It's just off-site. Imagine trying to do this for the whole town. I would love to. He's he's right that we could use it, but I can't afford I I I I'm not gonna take the slings and arrows. You know, just this conversation just the conversation between you and I about affordable and the assumptions that we make by the by what something looks like, that therefore it must be affordable, you have to if you're gonna do a town wide redraw, you have to dispel all those myths and have facts.
And you gotta drill down. So you literally have to study it. And you gotta send people out with a clipboard and say, how much do you pay? How long have you been here? What does the rent look like? All of that stuff has to be available in order to make a good decisions.
Paul? I mean, maybe if if you tie these things together with 785 and he's getting two additional units at 785, maybe it shouldn't be just have one deed restricted affordable at 785. Maybe he should have to have two plus the George Street.
Sure. If you ask Mandela, he'll say, you're not getting enough. Don't ask for three. Ask for four. And and in a way, I agree. Except I'm not gonna do it now, not here.
What I'm saying is I don't know who's ever gonna help is because he's you're because it's part of a different part of the application. He's asking for two more market rate, right, which you could deny and say, great. I'll give you the George Street, and then you give me the one. But I'm I'm now on top of that, I'm adding two more market rate. You could be like, you know what? I want one of those market rate
Alright. So you look around at the heads on this call, and you tell me, can you sell that here right now?
Well, again, I started out by saying I didn't wanna try to sell tonight. I was trying information, but these are this is information I'm processing. Do you think You forced this into having this debate tonight, which I didn't wanna do, but that was you, Paul, because that's what you do. So that's you. But but no. So I don't wanna try to sell somebody out tonight. No. But do I think I might be able to? Two weeks? Maybe. Yeah. Maybe.
My work here is done.
Paul, two comments. First of all, can we go back and tell him to give us one of the units above the commercial space? He's got a home run economically doing the George Street project. It's doing, honestly, shitty little efficiencies, and he's not even and it's not even new construction. So that's one point I would make is is I think we should be able to ask for one for more.
Not a full townhouse, but more. The next next comment is I kind of agree with Brie. I'm more comfortable if this was not restricted to the IHZ zone. If it were broader, it would give the perception and the latitude we'd have in reviewing and deciding applications would, I think, be much broader. I I am very uncomfortable having what you know, a this so specific that, first of all, everyone in the IHC zone's gonna go and go for it and partner up with homes for hope and ableism
because it's gonna Let's I know you thought that, but let's dispel that right here and now. There's only two that don't have a ZCC. All the rest have a ZCC. Okay. So if they're coming back, they're taking on the full Megillah. They don't get anything. Nothing. So I I wanted to spell that, and I'll ask Michelle. I mean, do they have an easier road because they're in the IHC, but they're they're they they have their ZCC already?
Well, then, I mean, most of them are rentals, so I wouldn't see them choosing to do that. If they change to if they change to sale units, then they could come back to you and then ask you to do off-site units, but it's still a special permit.
And most of them are housing rental companies. Okay? Like, my building is 5th Street out of Boston. Okay? They're a giant conglomerate that rents apartments. It's what they do. They're not coming in here going, I think I'd like to sell some. It's not that's not that's not the economics of the industry that are out there now. We're not gonna get a flood of that. But understanding the dynamics of the market, which is what Mandela was saying, is correct.
We should be. I just don't know if this town has an appetite to do it now. I would love to. Love to. And in fact, for those of you who are gonna join me, we should do it on the POCD to encourage flat out, if you really believe that. Because we don't encourage it in this town. In fact, it's discouraged that IHZ was, when it came into place fifteen years ago, it was a bone thrown out there to just say, look, we did something. It went nowhere. But if you wanna go radical, we can go radical. I'm not sure this commission's ready for that.
I'm certainly not because I don't wanna take the slings and arrows. They're gonna come with, oh, you're changing the town. You know? Oh my god. You know? Look what you're doing. You know what comes with that. You've been there. Do you have enough to come back in two weeks and make a decision? Have we given this enough discussion so that you are capable of making a decision with discussion in two weeks?
We we go through this again. We can spend another hour and a half on it. It doesn't matter. It's not time. It's doing it right. We started this at nine, I think. So I think we spent an hour and a half. That that's certainly this this big a change is certainly worth spending that amount of time. What say you?
I wanna come back and have the two weeks to review it.
Oh, you have that. We're we already we already
know that. Yeah. And think that through.
What I'm asking you is did we, did we discuss it enough tonight that you're okay coming back and leaving the rest of the questions that you might have to to vote in two weeks?
Yes. Of course.
And he knows?
What's the alternative to vote on this tonight?
No. No. The alternative was to to enunciate what what you'd what you need more of this evening. Otherwise, we adjourn, and we see each other in two weeks. Sounds good. I'm just saying
that we say, do I have a no or a yes? What do we
I didn't ask you I didn't ask you whether or you're ready to vote. What I asked you is, do you have enough information to come back in two weeks, discuss it again, and vote?
I think we all do. I I I just I would hope so. I'm sorry. I I I'm just getting a little bit lost here because if we all said didn't have enough, what would we be doing then? Think still ask If everybody says I don't have enough to go two weeks, did I miss something? Yeah,
John. I think it was just a question was, do you have enough to start to formulate your thoughts and opinions to come back in two weeks, have some final discussion, and vote. And if you didn't have enough, then we would use more time now to begin to Okay. Okay. Talk through talk through what information you wanna process over the next two weeks.
Got it. Got it. Okay. No. That's a good question. Yeah. Have enough. I mean, that's a yes. We can, like, come back two weeks.
Craig?
Yes.
You look miserable. You do. You look like you hate this thing.
I'm about there.
Yeah. Was there an action for somebody to draft changes to the text?
I think what we're gonna do is come back, and next week, or in two weeks, we're gonna use, Bree's immense experience on this to it's not that many lines. We can go line and line by line. Are you guys okay with that? Yes? No?
Try to write it real time
through for discussion. Try to try to make changes where we think it needs to be.
Yeah. I think we'll make changes real time, but between now and then, through the text amendment. Yeah.
Out of push.
Through the highlighted part of the agenda of what Michelle Lee offers very clearly. And if you don't like it, like, you know, figure out why you like it. If you like it, figure out why you like it. And if you wanna edit it, figure out what you wanna edit. We'll put all that together. And even if it's voting on the word as or is or the, we'll figure it out. Make sense?
Does to me.
Sounds good. K.
Shall I make a motion, Paul?
I was hoping somebody would. I'll make the motion to adjourn.
And I will Second window.
Beat you to it.
Have a good night, everybody.
Alright. Bye.
Bye, folks. Bye.
Good night.
Thank you.
This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.