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Commission denies DRD setback text change and denies rezoning without prejudice amid density and access concerns

January 08, 2024 | Shelton City, Fairfield, Connecticut


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Commission denies DRD setback text change and denies rezoning without prejudice amid density and access concerns
Two contested land‑use items drew the most extended debate at the Jan. 8 meeting: a text amendment (application 24‑18) proposing to eliminate a DRD tract‑perimeter setback and a zone‑change request (application 24‑19) seeking R‑3 zoning for three parcels.

Commissioners voiced concerns that eliminating the 75‑foot perimeter buffer entirely would remove an important planning tool that protects adjacent neighborhoods. Commissioner Patricia Christiano said she was not in favor of reducing the setback to zero and favored an approach that preserved a minimum buffer; counsel suggested language giving the commission discretion 'up to 75 feet.' After discussion, the commission voted to deny application 24‑18 (roll-call recorded as an approval of denial by 5–1).

On application 24‑19, commissioners raised site‑specific issues including inconsistent site maps, a 'paper road' (Wiboset Street) whose ownership/abandonment status affects setback calculations, and the unresolved relationship between rezoning and an associated DRD special‑exception application. Commissioners expressed reluctance to approve a zone change that would permit higher density as a matter of right without seeing a coordinated development plan. Commissioner Ticky moved to deny 24‑19 'without prejudice' so the applicant could return with an integrated submittal; the motion was seconded and passed 6–0.

Why it matters: Changing setback rules or zoning can materially alter density and how new development interfaces with existing neighborhoods. Commissioners prioritized preserving discretion and assessing a full development plan over approving zoning changes in piecemeal fashion.

Next steps: The text amendment application (24‑18) was denied; the applicant for 24‑19 may revise and resubmit combined rezoning and DRD materials to address setbacks, access and conservation concerns.

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