McKee's chief of staff gets DEM approval to develop wetlands area, despite town objection
By BRIAN P. D. HANNON/ecoRI News staff
This piece of property on Canning Street in Cumberland, R.I., contains freshwater wetlands, and the town has objected to its proposed development. (Brian P. D. Hannon/ecoRI News) |
State environmental officials have given a green light to a planning proposal by the governor’s chief of staff to develop a small piece of suburban property located on freshwater wetlands.
Tony Silva, McKee's chief of staff (Valley Breeze) |
Wedged between two adjacent homes
and mowed lawns on the quiet street, the slice of property is overgrown with
trees covering the view of the wetland surface beneath.
When Cumberland officials were first
made aware that the project was being considered by DEM, the town’s planning
director, Jonathan Stevens, wrote in a Nov. 22, 2019 letter
to the state agency that the applicant proposes a wetland disturbance of at
least 5,196 square feet, or 93 percent of the entire 5,600-square-foot lot.
“The proposed ratio of disturbance
to lot size is extremely excessive and unreasonable,” Stevens wrote.
The planning director also noted the
chronic flooding problems that plague this section of Canning Street.
“Displacing this wetland with additional impervious surfaces stands to adversely
affect downstream residential properties,” he wrote.
At the end of his letter, Stevens
requested that DEM deny the application, “as granting approval will not be in
the best public interest.”
In another letter to DEM five months
later, Stevens noted none of the amendments to the revised application
justifies the town changing its objection to the project. “The application
still proposes to disturb an astonishing 93% of existing wetlands on the lot,”
he wrote.
“The proposed drainage swale channel in conjunction with the pipe replacement only benefits the owner of the lot in question, whose water-saturated lot would be drained and made potentially buildable,” Stevens wrote in the April 17 letter.
“The
additional stormwater conveyance efficiency would have a negligible beneficial
effect on the stormwater ponding and potential flooding at this Canning Street
location, and an inordinately adverse impact on the adjacent lot receiving the
stormwater flows at higher rate.”
The Valley Breeze, which first reported the story, reported that Gail Mastrati, DEM assistant to the director, said the agency approved a revised wetland application for the property June 3. The agency’s decision noted the plan’s updated stormwater design would not increase flooding or put neighbors at risk of additional flooding.
Mastrati said DEM found wildlife
would not be “significantly harmed despite some filling of the wetland in
question” and that, despite comments from neighbors and town officials, a
public hearing was not required because potential flooding had been addressed
by the applicant, according to The Valley Breeze story.
Michael Healey, DEM’s chief public
affairs officer, told ecoRI News on July 23 that the ruling giving the
developer permission to move forward at 45 Canning St. and the decision not to
hold a public hearing had not changed since early June. He added that the
comments made by Mastrati to The Valley Breeze remain accurate.
Following a July 21 DEM announcement
that a department update of rules concerning freshwater wetlands
would take effect in 180 days, Healey said the decision concerning the
Cumberland property would not change as a result of the updated regulations.
“The 180-day period is to allow for
predictability for projects that are being permitted now. In six months,
proposed projects will have to adhere to the new rules,” Healey wrote in an
email.
Silva did not respond to requests
for comment from ecoRI News made through the governor’s office.
In a July 21 letter to
DEM, town solicitor Kelley Salvatore noted the town strongly objected to this
permit application not once, but twice.
“Despite the Town’s objection, and
objections from abutters, including the one adversely effected by the
additional drainage discharging onto her property, RIDEM failed to hold a
hearing on this matter,” Salvatore wrote. “My office has fielded numerous
requests for information regarding the process and the approval of the permit.
I would also appreciate an explanation as to why the permit was approved and
why a hearing was never held.”
Mayor Jeff Mutter told ecoRI News
that the Town Council has hired attorney Marisa Desautel to protect the town’s
interests relating to due process and the lack of a public hearing before DEM.
“I do not consider the matter
closed,” he wrote in an email. “I do think RIDEM’s decision to proceed without
a public hearing is not in the best interests of all involved and should be
reconsidered.”