Garden Homes Mgmt. Corp. v. Town Plan & Zoning Comm'n of Fairfield

Decision Date13 August 2019
Docket NumberAC 40519
Citation216 A.3d 680,191 Conn.App. 736
CourtConnecticut Court of Appeals
Parties GARDEN HOMES MANAGEMENT CORPORATION et al. v. TOWN PLAN AND ZONING COMMISSION OF the TOWN OF FAIRFIELD

Melinda A. Powell, with whom were Sarah L. Wilber and, on the brief, Cindy M. Cieslak, for the appellant (defendant).

Daniel J. Krisch, with whom were Mark K. Branse and, on the brief, Kenneth R. Slater, Jr., for the appellees (plaintiffs).

Keller, Moll and Lavery, Js.

LAVERY, J.

The defendant, the Town Plan and Zoning Commission of the Town of Fairfield (commission), appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court sustaining the appeal of the plaintiffs Garden Homes Management Corporation (Garden Homes) and Garden Homes Residential, L.P.,1 from the decision of the commission denying Garden Homes' application to construct an affordable housing development. On appeal, the commission claims that (1) reversing the court's decision will serve the public interest; (2) the court improperly declined to review certain evidence presented to the commission on remand; (3) the commission has satisfied its burden under General Statutes § 8-30g on the basis of fire safety deficiencies in Garden Homes' site plans; and (4) the commission has satisfied its burden under § 8-30g on the basis of pedestrian and traffic safety concerns. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The following facts and procedural history are relevant to this appeal. Pursuant to the Connecticut Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals Act, General Statutes § 8-30g et seq., Garden Homes applied for permission to build a ninety-five unit apartment building that would accommodate affordable housing units.2 The proposed development would be situated on a combined 2.9 acres of abutting lots located at 92 and 140 Bronson Road in the Southport section of Fairfield. This site is bounded to the north by Interstate 95, to the east by the Mill River, to the south by Metro-North Railroad tracks, and to the west by a private residence. Consequently, the buildable area is constrained by the nearby highway and by wetlands restrictions that prohibit encroaching upon the river.

Cognizant of these limitations, Garden Homes consulted Fairfield's fire marshal, William Kessler, early in the design process for direction as to compliance with safety standards. Kessler confirmed that Garden Homes' projected twenty foot wide access way would be the "minimally acceptable parameter" to provide for fire truck safety and functionality. Garden Homes, thus, submitted to the commission initial site plans that proposed a single entry, twenty foot wide access way, among other features that would make the development suitable to accommodate all ninety-five units within the buildable area.

The commission held an initial public hearing on Garden Homes' application on July 8, 9, 15, and 16, 2014. Joseph Versteeg, Garden Homes' fire code expert, testified at the public hearing that the twenty foot wide access way was adequate for fire safety purposes. He stated in relevant part: "[According to] the Technical Committee of [National Fire Protection Association, Standard 1 (NFPA 1) ] and [National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) ] Technical Committee members, as well as the NFPA staff, the reason for the twenty foot road width is that it facilitates two-way traffic, it also will facilitate one fire truck to pass another fire truck that has stopped either to connect with a hydrant or for whatever reason."

Laura Pulie, Fairfield's senior civil engineer, cautioned that the proposed twenty foot wide access way could be "too narrow for an emergency vehicle to pass into the site/building location, should a vehicle park along the driveway despite ‘No Parking or Fire Lane’ signs." Accordingly, Pulie recommended increasing the proposed access way width by four feet.

An additional concern addressed at the public hearing pertained to the adequacy of the proposed fire truck turnaround area. The site plans proposed that the 300 foot long, twenty foot wide access way would be the only route to enter and exit the property, which dead-ended at the apartment building. The concern, therefore, was that fire trucks would be able to exit the site only by backing up the full length of the access way. David Spear, a traffic engineer retained by Joel Green, attorney for the Lower Bronson Neighborhood Alliance in opposition to Garden Homes' proposal, opined: "The turnaround right here is the weak link ... once [a fire truck] get[s] in here, they're stuck. They have to back out and back all the way out of the site." Additionally, Richard Felner, Fairfield's former fire chief, testified: "[I]f other emergency vehicles get [to the proposed access way] first, for example, an ambulance should get there first, our rescue truck comes in second, to get the ambulance back out, we have to back a truck out, and we'd have to back the ambulance out.... To make that swing with our ladder truck is almost, as I see it in looking at the plan, [i]s almost impossible ...."

During its rebuttal on the final night of the public hearing, Garden Homes submitted a revised sketch that eliminated four parking spaces and three units to afford larger vehicles sufficient space to turn around at the end of the access way. The commission did not consider this submission in reaching its decision.

After the close of the public hearing, the commission voted to deny Garden Homes' application and unanimously granted a motion to adopt, as its collective grounds for denial, the recommendations set forth in a staff report presented to the commission, with the addition of a statement that Garden Homes had not demonstrated that its application reflected adequate sewage capacity. Subsequently, on July 24, 2014, a clerk for the commission sent Garden Homes' counsel a letter that memorialized the commission's statement. The letter noted, inter alia, that "the record indicates that the [twenty] foot paved [access way] width is insufficient for the number of dwelling units proposed and for the length of the singular access point to the proposed development." The letter also indicated that the twenty foot width of the access way would not provide fire trucks sufficient space to turn around on-site. The clerk's letter stated that the commission expressly made the following three findings: "1. There is sufficient evidence in the record to support a finding that the proposed development would pose substantial risks to public interests in health and safety. 2. Those public interests clearly outweigh the need for affordable housing. 3. There are no reasonable conditions of approval that can be made to protect those public interests. Therefore the application is denied."3

The original plaintiffs, Garden Homes, Sandra Conner, and Richard Irwin; see footnote 1 of this opinion; timely appealed from that decision to the Superior Court. In its September 10, 2015 memorandum of decision, the court reviewed the record as to each of the commission's grounds for denial to determine whether the commission had satisfied its burden under § 8-30g. The court began by noting that each of the concerns set forth in the commission's letter pertained to " ‘substantial public interests in health, safety, or other matters’ that are generally ‘supported by sufficient evidence in the record.’ "

The court then reviewed the commission's concerns as to several specific features of Garden Homes' site plans to determine whether that given feature would pose such a health or safety hazard as to outweigh the need for affordable housing. The court first reviewed the adequacy of the proposed twenty foot wide access way. Recognizing that a twenty-four foot wide access way would be desirable, the court nonetheless concluded that such an access way was not required. It reasoned that under applicable fire codes twenty feet was "the minimum acceptable width ... and that level of compliance should generally be sufficient for an affordable housing project."4 It further reasoned that even if twenty feet deviated from applicable standards, such deviation would not "create a public health or safety concern that outweighs the need for affordable housing in the community." On balance, the court, therefore, concluded that the commission's concerns as to the twenty foot access way width did not outweigh Fairfield's need for affordable housing.

The court also assessed the commission's concerns as to the proposed single entrance drive onto the site.

As in its assessment of the access way width, the court acknowledged that a secondary point of entrance would be desirable but concluded that it would not be necessary. It noted that neither the NFPA nor the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) codes would require multiple means of access to accommodate Garden Homes' proposed site plans.5 Thus, on balance, the court concluded that "the single access [way] ... should be sufficient for an affordable housing project." Although the court determined that a secondary access way was not necessary, it nonetheless was concerned that the site otherwise contained no area with adequate turnaround space for fire trucks, among other large vehicles. Such vehicles, therefore, could exit only by backing up the full length of the access way.

At the same time, the court acknowledged that Garden Homes had attempted to assuage the commission's concerns on this issue by offering a sketch that proposed an expanded turnaround area, as well as a decrease in the total number of units. The court opined that this concern adequately could be resolved with site plan revisions and, therefore, "remand[ed] the issue of the [plaintiffs'] most recent redesign of the access way and apartment building ... for due consideration by the commission." The court additionally noted that Garden Homes "should submit to the commission a fully engineered site plan, indicating the provision of the turning...

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