By Will Collette
It’s the third Wednesday of the month and that means it’s
Planning Commission time. If you ever find yourself with nothing to do and are
looking for a good time, this is the place to be.
Last month, the Planning Commission had a remarkably light
agenda with no old business and no new business, yet they somehow managed to
fill two hours of meeting time anyway. The big excitement last month was the
delivery of their new I-Pads – yes, taxpayers, we’re all paying to outfit our
plucky planners with I-Pads.
This month, they’ll be able to compare how many levels each
member has reached playing Angry Birds.
Planning has several major priorities going before the Town
Council on June 11 – the long-running dark sky ordinance for example, and the sleeper, Ordinance #349, which would subject businesses and other non-residential property owners to
being tortured by the Planning Commission – but neither of these issues is on
the Planning Commission’s May 23rd agenda.
There is one “minor subdivision” on the agenda under new
business – the Botka’s Hillside Acres 5-unit proposal. This project would go on King’s Factory Road . Whenever the Botkas
have a project in front of the Planning Commission, there’s fireworks. This
item might be the main event for tonight’s meeting.
Here’s the remainder of the agenda:
A.
Review of deficiencies in approved
Site Plans.
Comments: this is where Commissioners discuss deviations from the norms the
Commission has tried to establish for the town. Before Kate Waterman retired
from the Planning Commission, you could always count on her to complain about
Dave’s Coffee (at Galapagos on Route 1) setting out two sandwich boards, instead of one. It will be interesting to
see if the Commissioners discuss the Nordic Lodge’s new “billboard” on Route 1
at the Flea Market site.
B.
Affordable Housing Advisory Review. Comment: this is an on-going
matter involving the Affordable Housing Commission’s interest in commenting on
comprehensive developments that are not actually not part of Affordable
Housing’s jurisdiction. The Planning Commission generally isn’t interested in
advice from other Commissions, so this item keeps getting carried forward.
C.
LMIH Analysis. This is Commissioner George
Tremblay’s project. He wants the town to hire a consultant to look at
affordable housing data to prove the Planning Commission’s bias against the
state’s affordable housing law is correct. Only one person applied to be the town’s
consultant. And that was Melina Lodge who, despite being eminently qualified,
is politically unacceptable to Platner and her plucky planners (read all about
it HERE). So George will have to settle for a student intern to cook the numbers for
him.
D.
Discussion/Review House Bill
H7866 & H7804. This is some pretty bad
legislation proposed by the RI Builders Association (and discussed in this
recent Progressive Charlestown/EcoRI.org article - click here). The legislation is going no where fast. The General Assembly intends to
adjourn on June 8, leaving very little time for this legislation – which has
been pretty much universally panned by the state’s environmental organizations
– to have any chance of enactment. But strange things happen at the end of
legislative sessions. After all, it was at the very end of the 2010 session when
the 38 Studios deal slipped through.
E.
Rewrite of Subdivision/Land
Development Regulations & Zoning Ordinance. Comment: no documents attached,
so this item could simply be a placeholder. But, that said, Platner’s plucky
planners always seem ready to re-write Charlestown ’s
ordinances, learning them the reputation of being Charlestown ’s second legislative body.
F. Public Comments Specific to Agenda Items
G. Planner Comments
H.
Solicitor Comments
I. Workshop (time allowing)