By ROB SMITH/ecoRI
News staff
The town of Charlestown has alleged Charlestown Farms LLC, at 565 Alton Carolina Road, has been processing off-site material and sand washing without the permits required. (Google Maps) |
Local zoning officials and neighbors are at odds with a gravel company seeking to expand its operation.
Charlestown Farms LLC
owns three properties along Alton Carolina Road, not far from the Pawcatuck
River. The business, owned by Thomas Miozzi, who runs a North Kingstown-based
paving company, has been illegally processing off-site material and sand
washing and expanded its operations onto lots 3 and 4-1 without obtaining the
necessary permits, according to a July 14 notice of violation
sent to Miozzi by Joseph Warner, the town’s building and zoning official.
The company also
installed a concrete pad without a proper zoning permit, according to the town.
Local officials claim
the actions violate the town’s zoning ordinances. Residents have also
complained of gravel dust and noise pollution from trucks starting as early as
5 a.m.
Miozzi appealed the
violations at a special meeting Sept. 1 of the Zoning Board of Review, arguing
sand washing and expanding onto new lots were within his rights.
John Pagliarini, legal
counsel for Charlestown Farms, said the business doesn’t need a special-use
permit under existing town laws, as all three lots have a legal nonconforming
use.
“I don’t need town
approval to wash sand because your own ordinance says I can wash sand,”
Pagliarini said.
Charlestown adopted its
first zoning code in 1974. Any businesses present at the time of zoning were
grandfathered in, even if the businesses violated the new code. The stipulation
is any property owner could only keep the nonconforming legal use and avoid
zoning board oversight by keeping to any activities on a property that had been
done at the time of the adoption of the town’s zoning code.
Any expansion,
industrial intensification or new activities, such as sand washing, would
require getting town approval.
Charlestown allowed COPAR to operate this site
EDITOR'S NOTE: During and after the battle against the COPAR Quarry on the Charlestown-Westerly line (2010-2015), I had repeatedly suggested Charlestown adopt a "bad actor" ordinance comparable to the provision in the federal Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCRA) that regulates coal mining. A local bad actor law provides a municipality with the tools to deny permits to companies whose owners have committed any of a range of illegal acts. Here's a 2014 Google Earth screen shot of the same quarry shown
above after COPAR took over operations
Since it was my idea, the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA) which controls the town naturally ignored it. In 2013, contrary to all common sense, Town Administrator Mark Stankiewicz issued a permit to COPAR to take over the Morrone sand and gravel pit. HERE'S A COPY of that license.
Here's the kicker: today, this property causing so much Charlestown heartburn is the exact same property COPAR took over with help from Stankiewicz. It was bought from Morrone by Miozzi in 2019 for $800,000.
But wait, there's more! In 2014, Stankiewicz awarded a construction contract to Miozzi for work on Klondike Road, even though Charlestown DPW Director Alan Arsenault was surprised at the incredibly low bid. I did my own research on Miozzi in 2004 and came up with THIS which I communicated to Stankiewicz.
Stankiewicz ignored Arsenault's concerns as well as my research and gave Miozzi the contract.
Is it any surprise that Charlestown is once again embroiled in this kind of a fight? It's pretty clear to me that Stankiewicz, the CCA's darling, has no learning curve, that no one pays attention to recent past history or does any sort of due diligence. Does no one remember that this was one of COPAR's sites?
When Miozzi received his business permit from Charlestown to run the old COPAR-Morrone site, did Stankiewicz do any kind of due diligence? Doesn't look like it.
Perhaps this is why the CCA has apparently erased the sordid history of COPAR in its current complaints about Miozzi's operation of the same site. - Will Collette
Please continue to read the rest of ecoRI's article.
One of the parcels, lot 4, was originally bought by the Kenyon Brothers in 1951, who later formed a company to quarry the property. Lot 4-1 was created from an undeveloped portion of lot 4, and sold. In 1983, the brothers bought lot 3 from a railroad company that had owned the property for almost a century.
Charlestown Farms acquired all of these properties in 2019.
Zoning officials contend the nonconforming legal use does not apply to lots 3
and 4-1, as there is little evidence they were used for quarrying prior to
adoption of the town’s zoning code.
Town solicitor Peter
Ruggiero said the company had not done enough to prove the burden of
nonconforming legal use.
“Sand washing didn’t
start according to their own papers until 2007, long after 1974 when the town
got zoning,” Ruggiero said.
Pagliarini disagreed
with the town’s interpretation, claiming the zoning code allowed any customary
uses associated with extractive industry, such as graveling. The lots in
question had always seen some form of washing, just not the way it is being
done today, he said.
As further evidence,
Pagliarini submitted several aerial photographs from before and after 1974 that
he claimed showed evidence of graveling on lots 3 and 4-1, and an affidavit
from a member of the Kenyon family claiming graveling operations were
conducted.
The Zoning Board of
Review questioned whether the lines on the photographs were mining roads and
gravel pits, as Charlestown Farms alleged, or something else entirely.
“There’s nothing
definitive in front of me telling me what it is,” board chair Raymond Dreczko
Jr. said. “I can use judgement calls, but I don’t see where [these] pictures
prove anything to me.”
Ruggiero maintained the
affidavit could not be considered as anything but hearsay. He said the burden
of proof for nonconforming legal use required any witnesses or experts to
testify under oath in person.
Other board members
questioned if the land had always hosted the same refinement processes as it
does now.
Board member Lara Wibeto
expressed displeasure at the lack of oversight, saying, “This is the problem. We
wanna be pro-business as a community, but there is an issue with this unbridled
development when our town doesn’t allow it for anyone else in the town of
Charlestown.”
“It’s not about getting
control of an out-of-control industry,” Pagliarini said. “But rather the matter
is and was if Mr. Warner [the town zoning official] is correct in his
interpretation of the zoning ordinance.”
Charlestown Farms pledged to remove the concrete pad, saying it was built without the proper permits. As for the rest of the town’s concerns, Pagliarini warned the business is willing to take the matter to court if a decision is made not in its favor.
The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management has cited Charlestown Farms for disturbing freshwater wetlands. (DEM) |
The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) issued Charlestown Farms a citation Aug. 10 for disturbing more than 30,000 square feet of freshwater wetlands on lots 3 and 4.
According to the
citation, a DEM inspection of the properties last March revealed clear-cutting
of trees and shrubs and creating a surface disturbance within the forested
wetland.
Charlestown Farms agreed
to hire an environmental consultant to address the issue. The business is
required to repair the area by October, and DEM assessed a $5,000
administrative penalty.
During the recent Zoning
Board of Review meeting, Pagliarini admitted to the open violation and said
Charlestown Farms would meet with DEM in the next two weeks to have scientists
walk the property.
It’s not the first time
Miozzi has run afoul with environmental officials.
In 2014, Miozzi’s North
Kingstown company, T. Miozzi Inc., settled with the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) after the federal agency claimed it violated the air
permit issued by DEM.
Additionally, the EPA found the company
failed to maintain certain records, including records relating to testing of
emissions from the company’s rotary drum burner used in manufacturing asphalt
and testing of equipment used to control particulate emissions.
T. Miozzi Inc. paid a
penalty of $23,700 as part of the settlement and worked with EPA to correct the
violations.
The Zoning Board of
Review made no determination at its Sept. 1 meeting. The board is scheduled to
hold another special meeting on the matter tonight Sept. 7 at 7 p.m. to
solicit public comment.