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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2003-03-12TB 3 -12 -03 TOWN OF DRYDEN I TOWN BOARD MEETING March 12, 2003 Board Members Present: Supv Mark Varvayanis, Cl Stephen Stelick, Jr., Cl Deborah Grantham Absent: Cl Charles Hatfield, Cl Christopher Michaels Other Elected Officials: Bambi L. Hollenbeck, Town Clerk Jack A. Bush, Highway Superintendent Other Town Staff: Mahlon R. Perkins, Town Attorney Henry Slatcr, Zoning Office David Putnam (TG Millers), Town Engineer Supv Varvayanis led the pledge of allegiance and stated that while they were still one board member short of a quorum, they would hear reports and /or comments. Z i , V - 0 C*Til F ITW W Jennifer Gla.ab, Recreation Coordinator, said she has attended meetings of the Recreation Commission, Recreation Partnership, Youth Football League, spoke at the Kiwanis Club and talked about the possibility of starting a partnership with them. She has developed a volunteer code of conduct, volunteer application, and scholarship application. There will be a summer baseball league meeting on Sunday at the Town Hall at 7:00 p.m. She is looking into a possible fishing derby and concerts at Montgomery Park. She has set up a Pepsi Pitch, Hit and Run Competition in April. COUNTY BRIEFING W Mike Lane said they have been watching the governor's budget and one of the things Gov. Pataki did in his amendments was to withdraw the proposal that would have required the municipalities that have empire development zones to pay half of the cost of those incentives given to businesses to encourage development. Tompkins County is one of the 11 counties that does not have an empire development zone and they are concerned because of the competition they are starting to experience from surrounding counties that do have thew. Some realtors and developers are trying to lure some Tompkins County businesses to places that have existing unfilled industrial/ commercial space with the tax incentive programs available under empire development zones. if Tompkins County had an empire development zone, that would not be the case. The County did apply for a zone last year but was not successful. One of the areas that Tompkins County had designated was the area north of the Village of Dryden, and is an area where the Town could see an expanded tax base. M Lane said he understood that County Assessment had recently sent a. letter to the Towns regarding the assessment review boards indicating that Town Board members could not serve on the assessment review boards according to State Law. He said it was a complete surprise to the Board of Reps and they are wondering if they can serve on those review boards. The County is looking into the matter. Page IofII TB 3 -12 -03 AMBULANCE REPORT ® Terri Allen reported that Dryden Ambulance responded to 86 calls in February (203 calls for 2003). The total amount received in February was $16,449.78 ($9,447.45 for 2002 services and $7,002.33 for 2003). Reports were distributed to board members. Cl Stelick thanked Neptune Hose, together vcith Varna and Freeville Fire Departments, for giving the board a tour of their facilities. COUNCIL PRIVILEGE Cl Grantham stated she had fed -exed the Storm Water Notice of Intent. Highway Supt Jack Bush informed the board that he would like to attend the 2003 Highway School and asked them to authorize the expenditure of $80.00. RESOLUTION #S 1 - AUTHORIZE HIGHWAY SUPERINTENDENT TO ATTEND HIGHWAY SCHOOL Supv Varvayan.is offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board authorizes the Highway Superintendent to attend the 2003 Highway School and the expenditure of $80.00 in connection therewith. 2nd Cl Stelick Roll Call Vote Cl Stelick Yes Supv Varvayanis Yes Cl Grantham Yes J Bush explained that he had computed the cost of sweeping the roads included in the area mapped for the MS4 requirements at approximately $8,000 per year using a vacuum sweeper. The industrial vacuum included in this years budget is minimally $35,000. The one that was demonstrated included some options and the price quoted for that, used, was about $58,000. Because he felt the options were important, he suggested that they not: purchase the industrial vacuum this year, but instead put additional money in the budget next year to purchase the equipment with the options. Another alternative may be to purchase a vac - sweeper, which may also do the same thing as an industrial vacuum. There is the possibility of purchasing a sweeper truck that would have the ability to do % %hat the industrial vacuum can do. He will not purchase the industrial vacuum this year, but will continue to investigate the options for next year. J Bush said he had received a copy of the Notice of Intent and told Cl Grantham that she had done a great job. Board members have been provided with the proposed 284 agreement and a project description for each of the roads that will be scheduled for paving. J Bush - As I have stated in the past, like changing the oil in the engine of your car or replacing the shingles on the roof of your house, the Highway Department must perform maintenance on roads on a regular basis. The goal that has been implemented since 1999 is to do approximately eight miles of preliminary maintenance and paving each year. This maintains a fifteen year cycle for the Town of Dryden roads. It is also as important to surface ® treat or seal roads every three to five years. There is no guarantee, however the hope is to Pabc 2 of 11 T3 3 -12-03 make the road last fifteen years. New York winters are very hard on the roads and the ® longevity can actually be much shorter. The way the roads have been prioritized are based on condition, traffic, roughness, importance, length of road and the cost of work to be performed. All these factors tie into staying within the budget passed in January and ending up at the end of the year reaching the goal and having a successful year. Every year, based on the conditions of the roads, there are more than eight miles that actually need to be worked on. The 284 agreement that I am proposing this year has 7.88 miles of various roads. Other roads, such as a section of Genung Road between Ellis Hollow Road and Snyder Hill Road and Hunt Hill Road, need paving and other work. These two roads have been purposely left off the agreement to successfully find a solution on how to move forward with maintenance and improvements. My proposal tonight after discussions with the Town Supervisor and Engineer and Attorney is to discuss and either agree or disagree on spending money for an aerial fly -over of Hunt Hill Road and Genung Road, along with other engineering services. The Engineer has estimated the cost to be about $21,000. The two roads would need to be done after the snow melts and before the leaves are on the trees. If the Board wants to proceed tonight with at least the fly -over, the cost would be about $6,000. Just so you know, a rough estimate of the total cost of Hunt Hill Road if labor, equipment and material are used for the determining factor, is probably around $200,000. Dave Putnam presented the Board examples preliminary planning maps of a road in Tompkins County prepared from a fly -over in 1996. They show edges of existing pavement, culverts, light poles, major trees, brush lines, back side of ditches, etc. They can be used for planning and meeting with homeowners to develop easement maps if working outside the existing right of way is necessary and assist in engineering work. With respect to the estimate, once the aerial information is received, the estimate for mapping may be reduced. $6,000 ® covers the aerial photo and ground control work done. The critical thing is the two to three week window in which to complete the fly -over. Supv Varvayanis said he thinks is a good way to proceed for a plan for the two roads in question and will move the expenditure. Cl Grantham agrees. RESOLUTION #52 - APPROVE EXPENDITURE FOR AERIAL MAP OF ROADS Supv Varvayanis offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board does hereby authorize the expenditure of $6,000 for an aerial fly -over of Hunt Hill and Genung Roads. 2n(I Cl Grantham Roll Call Vote Cl Stelick Yes Supv Varvayanis Yes C1 Grantham Yes Supv Varvayanis asked if any members of the audience had come to talk about the 284 agreement. Bill Hume of 130 Mill Street asked about tsec cutting on that street. J Bush told him that they were looking at trimming trees or brush that hangs over the ditches or shoulder of the road and before any work is done the residents will receive a mailing. If they are concerned about anything in particular they can contact him and he will meet them at the site. Mr Hume was told there was no plan to remove the large maple trees at his residence. R Seeley asked what part of the budget tree and brush removal came from and was told ® it was under DA- 5140.4, miscellaneous brush and leaves. She asked how many trees would be Page 3 of 11 T13 3 -12 -03 cut and how it was determined they would need to be cut. J Bush said it was included in the ® event they needed to cut trees in order to get the work done; that there may not be a need to cut trees. Any cut would be in the right of way, in the area the Town has been regularly maintaining. R Seeley asked if it was necessary to do a SEQR form and was told that tree removal was exempt from SEAR. R Seeley said she was not certain the projects were exempt from SEQR and asked the board to consider that it might not be exempt. At:ty Perkins said that if you are maintaining areas that are already in the right of way it is an exempt activity. R Seeley asked how the Highway Superintendent knew where the right- of-way for the roads was and he responded that he knew based the Judge's decision. She asked whether the Town had deeds to any of the roads proposed to be worked on and was told that Genung Circle w*as a deeded road. Supv Varvayanis asked J Bush if at some point it turned out that he needed to work well off the right -of -way, if it would be unreasonable for him to come to the board, explain what he wanted to do and do a SEQR. J Bush said it would not be unreasonable. Peggy Walbridge said she is concerned that the Highway Superintendent's responses are vague and they got into law suits because they had previously found his responses vague, and that he should not be surprised that some citizens are asking specifically what is going to happen. Supv Varvayanis said this is early in the process and the Highway Superintendent is probably not entirely sure what he will need to do yet, but he believes the Board will hear more. They will try to have extremely specific plans for Hunt bill and Genung Roads. P Walbridge asked that the Board try and have enough community input so that they feel they are part of the process rather than have it imposed by their government. Supv Varvayanis said yes, that was the whole reason the Town was going through this. ® R Seeley asked that the highway management plan that was talked about a few months ago made public and asked if the Town could somehow* adopt that so that everyone could see what the priorities are for the roads. She felt a lot of work went into the plan and she wasn't sure it was being used; that it: would be interesting for people to look at.. Supv Varvayanis said that legally it was a public document. R Seeley noted that while the document was prepared a few years ago, the total sum to be spent on the roads listed in the 284 agreement was about half what they were listed for on the agreement. J Bush said that plan was prepared by a Cornell student that had attended a three day school and had no experience when it came to highway matters and that there were several errors in it. It was done in the hopes that it would be helpful, however it hasn't because it contains incorrect information and suggestions that were made that were not sensible. It did not turn out to be what he had anticipated, but it does contain a list of the roads and the lengths of them. He does not use that to make any of his decisions. With the winters in New York it is difficult to predict with any accuracy the work to be done on any particular road. Supv Varvayanis said that at this point the 284 agreement is a best guess at what needs to be done and allows the Highway Superintendent to move forward and buy the necessary materials. If things change the agreement can be modified later. R Seeley said she raised the matter of the highway management plan because it seemed to be a good tool, but if that one is not good, perhaps another could be done. J Bush said that no matter how it is manipulated, every road will get worked in a cycle and as necessary. Supv Varvayanis asked if a good inventory of the roads could be prepared in the Fall noting their condition that would be available for citizens. J Bush said it changes constantly and he was reluctant to put something in writing that: could later be used against him. P Walbridge said the people who live on the roads drive them every day and there is a lot of citizen knowledge about the roads they live on and the communities they commute in and Page 4 of I I `rB 3 -1243 she hopes the Righway Superintendent will start to become open to citizens input and not see ® it as cross examination. She would like to see some committees for different areas because for example, the residents of Hunt Hill Road know the drainage and the history and the condition of the road far better than Highway Superintendent in this Town, and she is sure that is true on other roads. She hopes the Board and the Highway Superintendent will move toward trying to get some ways citizens can have input on the process so there isn't a problem later. J Bush said he disagrees with much of what vas said but agrees that the public does have input and that is why he has promoted knocking on doors and talking to people and he doesn't know a better way of approaching roadwork than standing with the property owner and explaining what is planned. He does not think she is giving Highway Superintendents enough credit because they are out there when it: is raining and flooding and seeing what is happening with the water on the road and in the ditches. C1 Grantham said she didn't think there vas much of a. problem with visibility on Genung Circle. J Bush said he wants to be very conservative there with what is going to be cut and is planning only on cutting the smaller growth that has accumulated over the past ten years. With the heavy snows this winter the snow accumulated on the brush along side the road and bent it over into the road making it difficult to drive down the road. Brush and tree removal from the roadside is necessary to prevent this from happening. They need to make the roads safe and make the roads last. RESOLUTION #33 - APPROVE AGREEMENT TO SPEND HIGHWAY FUNDS Cl Stelick offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby approves the Agreement to Spend Highway Funds as presented for 2003. 2rut Cl Grantham Roll Call Vote Cl Stelick Supv Varvayanis Cl Grantham FINGER LAKES STONE QUARRY Yes Yes Yes Buzz Dolph, General Manager of Finger takes Stone, introduced Jim Hobart, President of Hobart Stone, the parent company of Finger Lakes Stone. He explained they are before the board in response to a letter from Atty Perkins and understand that the board and some citizens have questions about their operation. He said that the facility has been there for 100 years and zoning came into effect 33 years ago. Since they had been. in business for sixty some years they were grand - fathered in as a non - conforming use. What they do in terms of processing and hoNv they might market it or actual stone products that they might produce changes, the fact that they quarry stone, produce stone, fabricate it, import it, sell it on a retail basis and wholesale basis has not changed. It has been the same since his father started working there in 1950. He is not sure if they are a non- conforming use how they can be brought into compliance. B Dolph exhibited photographs of quarry activity beginning in 1928. The quarry was owned by Cornell University at that time and operated by the University un12 1950 when his father came from Pennsylvania work for the quarry and build Annabel Taylor Hall, Mr. Dolph then took over the business and it grew rather rapidly for a while. An Ithaca Journal article dated 1957 shows a photograph of the quarry operation and several more photos of fabrication Pate 5 of I I TB 3 -12 -03 methods used during that time. Business flourished through the 50's and 60's and in the late 0 60's they provided the stone for the Albany South Mall. The quarrying activity and fabricating activities on site were probably as big as they had ever been and the period of largest employment was probably during 1969 when zoning came into effect. They worked two and sometimes three shifts to meet demand. During this time the quarry probably had the largest amount of affected property in its history. Of the 180 acres owned at the time, two- thirds of it were being stripped or quarried, using heavy equipment and blasting. A new fabrication mill was built and new machinery acquired. Aerial photos of the affected area (1969) were shown to the board. Half of the total property was subsequently reclaimed and sold as residential lots. During the .1970's Mr Dolph became ill and the activity in the quarry fell off. He died in 1979 and B Dolph took over the quarry operation with just a few employees. He began to grow the business and employed more people. In 1994 and 1995 he began to automate, putting computers on the saws which would allow them to run all night with no one there. People hours were limited to daytime hours. They began winding down some of the quarry operations at that location and began quarrying at: other locations, which has allowed them to begin to reclaim areas of the quarry. For a brief period of time they tried to promote different types of landscape products, concrete wall retaiu*ng systems, pavers, and other things directly related to the type of business they are in, with a different medium. That didn't work out and since 1977 they have given that up. They continue to grow in terms of creating new products. They are trying, to employ more people, become more profitable and increase their activity, as most businesses do. In 2000 B Dolph sold his stock in the company to Jim Hobart, but continues to work and basically play the same role he always played. In responding to some of the questions that have brought up about: how much they have changed, B Dolph said they have changed, but they are doing the same basic business they have always done. They have always sold stone and landscape/ stone related products on a retail basis. It has been done since 1950. They have always imported different types of stone. They are currently importing more than they ever have, but his father imported all of his flagstone and flatstock that vas sold on various projects all over the state. It was imported from different areas and fabricated. Historically, the milling operation is the operation of the business. It is a quarry, but 201/o of their payroll historically goes to operating the quarry, and 809/6 goes to fabricating stone. They take big rocks and make them into little rocks. There was a question about advertising different kinds of products. B Dolph says he has run the same ad twice a year for about 7 years advertising a sale they have in the Spring and Fall for landscape products (copy provided for board). The ad has not changed in years. With respect to the issue of noise, B Dolph said they have put in new doors, insulated doors, have tried insulating the walls, and they have created a noise policy. It has been posted at the site for about five years and tells what the outside hours of operation are supposed to be, what types of equipment can be run outside prior to those hours and after those hours. They have cut back on their quarrying activity and he says that is a huge reduction in noise. There is less dust and noise, new ground is not being disturbed. The ground on the west side of Quarry Road is currently being reclaimed. The increased truck traffic has a direct relation to the reclamation plan. He has an agreement with Paoloangeli Construction and Cornell to accept all their clean fill. When the hole is filled, it will never be quarried again, but will be turned into property which will probably be used for single family residential housing. B Dolph said they work hard at trying to be good neighbors and trying to maintain as little impact, particularly after hours, as possible. He said anyone could come to the quarry Page 6 of I 1 TB 3 -12 -03 after hours, after the doors are shut, and stand outside and listen. His office is 150' from the is doors and when the doors are shut he has to strain to hear the saws and know whether one is off, noting you can hear it.. but can still hold a normal level of conversation without a problem. They have also tried to reduce the visual impact from the quarry as much as possible. They have regraded the spot behind Richardson's electrical facility. They have plans for the summer to regrade everything from the southern end of Quarry Road, on the east side of the property. It will be replanted and they hope to plant a line of trees there and have a. visual block. B Dolph said he is not sure what else they can do, and are more than happy to listen to suggestions. Jim Hobart said that Buzz Dolph knows the history of the company better than he does, but benchmarking against other businesses of similar size and more remote locations without the handicaps of somewhat voluntarily not running t%vo and three shifts, he is of the opinion that it is a financial burden when they have work available to chose not to run those shifts. He understands that government agencies have to respond to concerns, at a wasted expense to the taxpayer, to put them `through the hoops" to find out that they are not doing anything wrong. He in his opinion that wastes their time as well as government agencies' time and still not recognize the benefits of what they are being accused of, which would be running two or three shifts which would obviously be more lucrative. Cl Grantham said that since 1989 the activity at the quarry has increased a lot, and the type of activity has changed. She has no interest in causing financial hardship by closing the quarry, but said there are neighbors in the Ellis Hollow area who find the noise bothersome and that is what she would like to address. J Hobart asked how many citizens had contacted the Town about noise and Cl Grantham responded it was probably half a dozen households. Norm Vrana. of 1296 Ellis Hollow Road said that he can attest to the increase in truck traffic and has noted trucks driving to and from the quarry at about, five minute intervals in 2001. They can't open their front windows in the summer because of the trucks and that is different than in the past. There are also flatbed trucks delivering stone and that is something he had never seen before. A lot of them come up Turkey Hill Road now. B Dolph said most of those trucks have to do with the fact that material is being brought from the University to fill the quarry. When there is a large project and large excavation, the trucks will be running heavier. He agrees they are nuisance, the trucks go past his house which is across from the quarry. However, the trucks are serving a purpose in the longterm betterment of the situation, a reclaimed quarry, which they have to do by law. That is also part of their mining plan to accept those trucks as a means of filling the quarry to reclaim it. He also understands that the condition of the road during wet, muddy times is a problem, and they sometimes have to scrape the mud off the road five or six times a day to keep the mud down. With respect to the trucks carrying blocks of stone that come from the other direction, they are importing blocks of stone for cutting. B Dolph said that while there are more trucks traveling Ellis Hollow Road, there are more trucks leaving the quarry also and that is a positive sign and indicates their business is thriving. Two to three times a day they bring blocks of stone in that they then fabricate in the mill. He said that traffic has increased, but things change, businesses change, and asked if that means a change in the fundamental business they are in and said he does not believe it is. They are in the business to saw stone and sell stone and have always been in the business to saw and sell stone. Page 7 of I 1 °rB 3 -12 -03 Tom Seeley said that he grew up below the quarry at 1344 Ellis Hollow Road. It was rare then that you saw a truck leave the quarry. Now he lives farther out and does not see the trucks from Connell bringing in the fill, but does notice big flat bed trucks carrying big blocks of stone and he does not recall that in the 50's, 60's and 70's. He said there is a change in the business. B Dolph said that there may not have been blocks of stone, but there were flatbeds of flagstone and various other products that would come in from other locations. They have fabricated different types of stone over the years, not just the stone that comes from the quarry. They have sawn granite, limestone, and imported sandstone blocks from Colorado. The volume may have changed, but the fact that it has always happened has not changed. They have historically quarried stone and fabricated stone of a lot of different types. T Seeley said that the nature of the operation of the quarry has changed. B Dolph said the nature of their business in terms of how they conduct it might change, but they still spin diamond blades and they still saw stone. Zorika Henderson said the big change is the power saw and that is a lot noisier. B Dolph said he has pictures from 1956 of just as many power saws, same variety of saw, same circular diamond saw. The automated saws work on the same idea, circular blades with diamond blades that cut stone. What has changed is the technology that operates the saw and allows them to be run when people are not there. The noise is the same. Z Henderson said she understood that the new types of saws are noisier. J Hobart said that is not the case. They have chosen to limit the quarry at this site to bringing in stone for cutting, and using more efficient methods of blasting at other quarries. But they could go back to blasting at this quarry. They are limiting the amount of noise associated with quarrying by bringing blocks for fabricating from other quarries, such as their quarry in Conklin, New York. mCl Grantham said there are complaints about noise from the business and they have i/ certain activities that are grandfathered under the zoning ordinance. Other activities she does not think are grandfathered and there is strong evidence in the advertising that says they have new and different activities going on in the business. That indicates that the Town has the right to ask them to come in for some permits, and the only reason for the Town doing that is to establish some controls over noise and operating hours. J Hobart said that Hobart Stone has been allowed to flourish in the industry, as other stone yards have, in not being handicapped by a non - conforming use. They may advertise at Finger Lakes some products that are available at Hobart Stone that finger Lakes never sees. The trucks dispatched from Hobart will deliver directly with more efficient delivery vehicles, rather than having it go to Finger Lakes, and in a sense limits the truck activity. Their position is that they are in compliance. B Dolph said they have always had a retail business and the fact that he introduced a related product for a brief period of time, and then stopped selling it four years ago, but his father from the time he came here in 1950 sold the exact same products. He asks why if they put an advertisement out that they can meet needs for landscaping projects with building stone, are they all of sudden not in compliance. Atty Perkins said the Board has heard the position of Finger Lakes Stone and suggested the Board address the matter from a legal perspective in executive session. Town Clerk read a letter from Mabel Demott Beggs noting the increase in truck traffic to and fi•om the quarry over the years. Zorika Henderson said that sometimes t:he loader is working at 5:00 a.m. and asked if ® they could start later. B Dolph said they have instructed trucks not to arrive sooner than 7:00 Page 8 of 11 TB 3 -12 -03 am., but there are two or three employees who start at 5:00 a.m. and work inside the building. Z Henderson said they are sometimes working outside. B Dolph said he will speak to the employees again about not running the large loader prior to 7:00 a.m. Generally from 5:00 to 7:00 a.m. they offload the material inside the building that has been fabricated. They had previously dumped tubs outside and after a phone call from a resident, they do not do that anymore, or drive anything other than the smallest forklift in the yard prior to 7:00 am. He will speak to his employees again. B Dolph said he has also spoken with Cornell and Paolangoli about the hours of operation, particularly on the weekend. The minuzg permit states large trucks are not supposed to operate before 7:00 or after 3:30. He cannot regulate the speeds the tricks travel down the road because they are not his employees, but he %vill relay the concern of the neighbors (speed and jake brakes). Supv Varvayanis explained that the board will go into executive session at the end of the meeting to discuss the quarry matter. ATTORNEY Atty Perkins has prepared and distributed a proposed resolution to the board regarding the requested change in a zoning for a parcel of property on Royal Road. The action is subject: to SEQR and compliance with Section 239 1 & m of the General Municipal Law. The County has 30 days to comment. SEQR will be done at the public hearing. Atty Perkins noted that the lot technically does not meet the requirements of the MA Zone in road frontage (150). The Board will need to adopt the resolution, hold a public hearing on the proposal to IS change the zoning on the parcel. The public hearing cannot be until after the recommendation has been received from Tompkins County. Atty Perkins suggested that the board adopt the resolution setting the public hearing for April 9, providing compliance with §239 1 and m can be had. RESOLUTION #54 - SET PUBLIC HEARING FOR ZONING ORDINANCE AMENDMENT Cl Grantham offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: WHEREAS, Cornelius J. Drost has requested a change in the zoning classification for a parcel of property owned by him abutting Royal Road, and WHEREAS, the existing RB -1 zoning classification is derived from a time when the parcel in question was part of a larger parcel which also fronted on Hanshaw Road, and WHEREAS, the larger parcel has been subdivided and the parcel now owned by Drost fronts only on Royal Road, and WHEREAS, the request was referred to the Planning Board for its review and recommendation, and WHEREAS, the Town Board is in receipt of the Planning Board recommendation in favor of changing the zoning classification to M -A, NOW, THEREFORE, BE 1T RESOLVED AS FOLLOWS: 1. Section 401 of the Town of Dryden Zoning Ordinance as last amended is hereby ® amended as follows: Rige 9 of I 1 TB 3 =12 -03 0 "Section 401. All land in the Town of Dryden shall fall within one of the established zones as shown on a map entitled "Town of Dryden Zoning Map" originally prepared by Egner and Niederkorn Assoc., Inc. and last revised 4/09/03." 2. The area to be affected by such change is approximately 3.60± acres of land and is all of Town of Dryden Tax Parcel 43. -1 -29.6, 3. Prior to applying for site plan review, the owner must apply for and obtain an area variance for the substandard road frontage. 4. The Town Clerk shall give the required legal notices of such proposed change and notice that a public hearing will be held before the Town Board on the proposed amendment to the Zoning Ordinance on April 9, 2003 at 7:00 o'clock p.m., prevailing time, provided compliance with General Municipal Law §239(1) and (m) can be had. 2jW Supv Varvayanis Roll Call Vote Cl Stelick Yes Supv Varvayanis Yes Cl Grantham Yes Atty Perkins distributed to Board members copies of the letters he had written to Valeria Coggin and Aurora. Valenti regarding the Moore Woods Subdivision. TOWN CLERK Board members have the Clerk's monthly report. ENGINEERING No report. DISCUSSION Supv Varvayanis asked the board if they wanted to consider paying the charges not covered by insurance when Bangs or some service other than Dryden Ambulance responds to a call in the Town. Cl Stelick said he would like to wait and discuss the matter when more board members were present. Supv Varvayanis is working on a draft of proposed changes for the ernployce manual. He will continue to work on that and then present it to the board. Cl Stelick said he was in favor of putting vacation, sick and personal time all in a group, and not tracking it other than the total. ZO Slater asked the board what would happen to the accumulated sick time that some employees have and that could be credited toward insurance on when they left the Town's employ. Supv Varvayanis said he would check into that. ZONING OFFICER Board members have the 'Zoning Officer's monthly report. Page 10 of I 1 TB 3 -12=03 RESOLUTION #55 - APPROVE ABSTRACT # 103 C1 Grantham offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby approves Abstract #103, as audited, vouchers # 139 through #222, totaling $89,499.55. 21111 Cl Stelick Roll Call Vote Cl Stelick Yes Supv Varvayanis Yes Cl Grantham Yes RESOLUTION #56 - TRANSFER FUNDS Cl Grantham offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption: RESOLVED, that: this Town Board hereby authorize the transfer of $2,384.96 from A 7020.4 (recreation contractual) to A7020.2 (recreation equipment), and the transfer of $25,000.00 from A1990.4 (contingency) to A8745.401 (Virgil Creek Lake Road project). 211x' C1 Stelick Roll Call Vote Cl Stelick Yes Supv Varvayanis Yes Cl Grantham Yes On motion of Cl Grantham, seconded by Cl Stelick, the board adjourned to executive session at 8:55 p.m., to discuss the employment history of a. particular individual. No action was taken and the meeting was adjourned at 9:15 p.m. Respectfully submitted, Bambi L. Hollenbeck Town Clerk Pigc 11 of 11 0 March 10,2003 To The Members of the Dryden Town Board, Since it is impossible for me to attend this meeting, 1 am submitting this written statement. I have lived at 1309 Ellis Hollow Road since 1946, my home is the first house ( on the north side of the road) east of the intersection of Ellis Hollow Rd. and Quarry/Turkey Hill .Rds. - I am directly opposite the Finger I::akes Stone Co. quarry. As you will note 1 have had over 50 years to observe the activity there. In the early days of my residence here, I would occasionally be aware of work being carried on at the quarry, but it was not annoying. However, in the last few years this has changed considerably. The noise level has increased so that it is very disturbing, and it begins at dawn in the morning. Large trailer trucks laden with stone come down the incline of Quarry Rd. using "jack" brakes which are extremely loud, that combined with the sound of the accelerating motors as they move out from their stopped position makes a combination of sound that destroys the atmosphere of this once peaceful area. The intersection is clearly visible from my house and I can observe the traffic which meets there from four directions. The truck. traffic to and from the quarry is considerable and poses a hazard at that intersection. For the last few years trucks traveling from the west on Ellis Hollow Rd. loaded with dirt, have been coming to bring fill to the Quarry, these trucks are not only noise makers, but many of them travel at speeds that are unsafe for others, who are also using the road. I would not wish to impose a hardship on the business of the Quarry, but I believe that it is possible for them to engage in their work in such a way, that it is not annoying to their many close neighbors. Signed,, n -k'Ll (b to �. C�s 6zb t\ �•J VL �i 1 Town of Dryden Town Boyd Meeting March 12, 2003 Name - tPlease Print) Address p o G, 1lst�se. v�v 6C- r�L \ LC