HomeMy WebLinkAbout2016-06-09TB 6-9-16
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TOWN OF DRYDEN
TOWN BOARD MEETING
June 9, 2016
Present: Supervisor Jason Leifer, Cl Daniel Lamb, Cl Linda Lavine, Cl
Deborah Cipolla-Dennis
Elected Officials: Bambi L. Avery, Town Clerk
Other Town Staff: Jennifer Case, Bookkeeper
Ray Burger, Director of Planning
Jennifer Jones, Recreation Director
Supv Leifer opened the meeting at 7:02 p.m.
Town Board Vacancy – Supv Leifer announced that last night interviews were held
with Paul Rachetta, Dan Wakeman, Craig Anderson and Kathy Servoss and moved to nominate
Kathy Servoss, seconded by Cl Lamb. Cl Lavine said she has known Craig Anderson for a long
time and his contribution to the town and she would choose him to fill the vacancy. Supv
Leifer said everyone gave a good interview and there is room for them all to do something for
the town. Paul and Dan would be interested in helping out in another capacity if they were not
appointed to the town board. Cl Cipolla -Dennis said they all were strong candidates with good
experience. She thought Kathy Servoss expressed specific things she would like to do on the
board and is familiar with the issues and what they are working toward. She has served as
chair of DRYC and had several references from employer and community. She appreciates the
interest K Servoss has shown and for sticking through the process and will support her. Cl
Lamb said we are fortunate to have four strong candidates, each with their own perspectives.
This process allowed the board to hear from community members and hear their perspective.
He has seen K Servoss work as chair of the DRYC and admires her style as a potential working
partner. Her references and experience with public works programs are strong. All applicants
were encouraged to stay engaged and get involved with other boards. Board members agreed it
was a good process. It was noted Craig Anderson is extremely valuable on the Planning Board.
RESOLUTION #103 (2010) – APPOINT K SERVOSS TO TOWN BOARD
Supv Leifer offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby appoints Kathrin Servoss to fill the seat
vacated by Gregory Sloan until December 31, 2016.
2nd Cl Lamb
Roll Call Vote Cl Lavine No
Cl Cipolla-Dennis Yes
Cl Lamb Yes
Supv Leifer Yes
Kathrin Servoss was sworn in by Town Clerk Bambi Avery.
Route 366 Force Main Study – The board reviewed the proposal from TG Miller, P.C.
for engineering and surveying services related to improvements of the force main on Route 366
from the pump station on Route 366 to the Town of Ithaca line. There were at least six breaks
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along this section last year. The projected fees seem to be fair. The plan is to bid this out in
the fall and the project cost is expected to be between two and three hundred thousand dollars.
There was some discussion about the number of units that can hook in to the system is
constrained by our percentage of ownership in the wastewater treatment facility, not the size of
the pipe or state of repair of the infrastructure. The rest of the infrastructure study will be
complete before the road work on Route 366 is done. Supv Leifer will ask for authority to
accept the proposal by TG Miller and sign the document .
Cl Lamb wants to be sure that the capacity limitation, and the ability to purchase more
capacity, is made clear to residents.
Red Mill Bridge Plan Approval – R Young explained the bridges are the county’s
responsibility and they must follow state guidelines. The town is responsible for doing the
decking and the apron. He doesn’t see any reason to not sign this agreement. R Burger said
SEQR had been done when the agreement for payment was approved. The historic bridge is
being handled through SHPO. The county will do maintenance for 10 years on the bridge. The
town has 90 days after substantial completion of the Malloryville Road Bridge in 2017 to make
the payment. The board will have to decide whether to pay cash or bond for it.
Zoning Law Amendment – A public hearing will be set for July.
1061 Dryden Road – Ray Burger explained that a concept plan for a planned unit
development (PUD) has been submitted. Applicant proposes 36 townhomes on 7 acres
adjacent to the rail trail near the FH Fox bridge. The plan is complete and the Town Board now
can recommend changes or forward it to the Planning Board for their recommendations or
reject it. Planning Board would review it, hold a public hearing and provide feedback in a
report to Town Board. Town Board would then hold public hear ing also. Applicant will need to
get DOT approval for location of curb cut, a possible 60 to 90 day process. Cl Lamb said he
has visited the site and visibility should be increased.
Ray Burger explained that a PUD is an overlay district. A Portion of a rural residential
district could be changed to allow for a greater density. In this instance the allowed density is
currently 2 dwelling units per acre, and the plan as proposed will increase that to 5.5 dwelling
units per acre. That is the main exception to the present zoning. The n eighboring district
allows up to 11 townhomes per district, so this would seen an appropriate transition. Water
and sewer infrastructure is available. The advantage to the PUD process is the amenities
piece. Applicant proposes to deed over an acre of land to the town that contains the former rail
bed. There is an advantage to keeping this project in the PUD.
The Board will vote next week to send it to the planning board.
S Hill Recreation Way Extension – This would extend the rail trail from the city of
Ithaca through four towns: Ithaca, Dryden, Danby and Caroline. The property owner, NYSEG,
is now open to an agreement. Letters have gone out to adjacent land owners. The board can
choose to hold a public hearing to collect public opinion. The towns now need to decide
whether to endorse it and if so, there will need to be an MOU. Presently the Town of Ithaca
does maintenance and could continue with the rest of it, billed to the ap propriate towns, as
some towns will simply be monetary contributors. Supv Leifer said he has heard from some
neighbors who hunt in the area and are not in favor of this trail. Ithaca shuts down the trail
during hunting season. If there are people in opposition next week, we will g ather questions
and get them answers after the meeting. We could possibly hold a hearing in July.
Montgomery Park Revitalization – Supv Leifer said there is a group working with the
Village and DRYC. DRYC has not yet made a recommendation regarding courts. The
revitalization committee wants the town to contribute toward resurfacing the courts and is
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working on estimates. The DPW may be able to help with the surfacing and painting and will
get a quote together. The revitalization committee will choose from the options and make a
recommendation as will the DRYC, and then the board will make a decision. Supv Leifer wants
to be sure there is an MOU with respect to the town being able to hold recreation programs
there.
Green Building Codes – Planning Board has a draft report. The Green Residential
Code is optional until October when it becomes mandatory. Cl Cipolla-Dennis disagrees with
Planning Board’s recommendation to make this voluntary. These are practical things we are
asking homebuilders and homeowners to do. We have to seriously think about climate change
and anything we can do to push energy efficiency and reduction of the use of fossil fuels needs
to be done. The town needs to determine what is in the new code and whether the town wants
to do something in addition to that because our code could be more stringent. There’s more to
learn over the next few years. R Burger said other states have implemented increased green
codes and we can use those to determine whether we want to make additions. Cl Cipolla-
Dennis will talk with Kevin Ezell, R Burger and Marty Moseley about whether this is enough or
are there other things that can be done over and above the state code. We need to be up to
speed when approached by a builder. Cl Lamb would like to find what other communities in
New York are doing. Cl Cipolla-Dennis said we’re moving in the right direction, but there is
more work to do.
Solar - Board members are attending educational sessions on solar and will work
toward helping people when they are approached to lease land (similar to when the leases for
fracking were going on). The property tax issue is real and we have 60 days to send a letter out
under the Real Property Law informing an applicant for a solar farm that we’d like to seek a
PILOT, or they will be exempt from property tax on the project. Supv Leifer will work on a letter
starting Monday. The Planning Board is touring TC3 at their next meeting. They are hosting a
session by Chris Denton about commercial solar and solar leases at the end of the month.
People are signing away their renewable energy credits (RECs) in leases. Supv Leifer doesn’t
want to join the suit against the state (NYSERDA) for retroactively stealing the RECs from
people. DiNapoli is looking into it for fraud. This also affects County’s ability to claim
greenhouse gas emission reductions and the County recently passed a resolution with respect
to this. Renewable energy credits are being turned over to NYSERDA who then turns them
over to NYSEG and NYSEG can claim that they are producing green power, when they aren’t.
Then the people actually producing green power don’t have the authority to claim that green
power. You need to own the RECs in order to claim to produce green power.
Community Energy Coordination involves the town being a provider of energy.
NYSEG wants letters of interest before our next meeting. Supv Leifer said if the town is
interested, he can send a letter, but we could back out at any time. We probably don’t have
staff to deal with something like this. Cl Cipolla-Dennis said she doesn’t think this will be the
last opportunity and that probably the reason municipalities got the email was more for
customer awareness. It seems that NYSEG wants towns to be customers, not necessarily the
provider. It seems that they want business to do this, not municipalities.
Community Choice Aggregation – Cl Cipolla-Dennis said she attended the meeting and
they will continue to meet as a group learning about this. This is basically a way for
municipalities or private citizens to create an aggregation. A group would go together to
purchase solar power or wind power from MEGA or another source, and all of their power
would come from that source. There will be a presentation from MEGA at the group’s next
meeting.
The board reviewed the items for next week’s agenda.
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Verizon – R Burger will send an evaluation via email tomorrow. The public hearing will
be next week, but the board may not vote on it until the July meeting.
4 Cricket Lane – David & Theresa Kalb, who cannot be at the meeting next week
addressed the board. They have lived at 171 Groton Road over 34 years, a corner property on
Cricket Lane. It has been a quiet residential neighborhood on a dead end street and about 9
people in the near vicinity. Seven of the nine live within 50 yards of the proposed facility. It is
a small, condensed residential neighborhood with small lots. They have had no
communication from the applicants until today when they received a letter in the mail. That
letter says they propose to be open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 8:00 a.m. to 7
p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. That doesn’t seem to be a part time business. The Kalbs don’t
begrudge the applicant something to do in his retirement, but it seems he has been ramping up
for some time. He built a large garage, expanded the parking area and large equipment was
just delivered by two tractor trailers. They completely disagree with a special use permit for
this auto shop in this residential area. There are no sidewalks. Children walk to the bus at the
end of the road. They play in road all the time and neighbors know this. Customers will not be
used to this and it is a dead end street. It will forever change the character of the
neighborhood. They’ve already seen more traffic, and there will be more noise. When you turn
onto the road, you then have to make a quick turn in to narrow driveway. There is always the
possibility of spills, and the neighborhood doesn’t want to be in the policing business. They are
concerned about their well water. It was un-neighborly for the applicant to say he had spoken
with neighbors when he had not. They first received a postcard from the town, and are now
reacting to the letter they received from the applicant. He should have gotten the SUP when he
bought the property. D Kalb will write a letter to the board in support of his position that this
use is not compatible.
No truck signs were discussed for this street. Cl Lamb would like an exchange of ideas
between the neighbors and for them come up with a counter-proposal. Mr Kalb said people in
the neighborhood don’t want the applicant to do more than he already is. There has been
increased traffic with what is going on already. The public hearing will continue next week.
Items that may be added to the agenda for next week:
o Conservation Board resolution for The Schug trail with respect to adding
exercise equipment along the trail.
o Village wells at Dryden Lake and MOU to continue to operate the park at the
lake. The board discussed smoking regulations at the park. Enforcement may
be an issue.
o Moratorium on expansion of infrastructure that uses fossil fuels.
o Time Warner line extensions.
R Burger reported that Mike Moore who has a SUP for a storage facility on Route 13 is
ready to build his second building, but it will have a slightly different footprint with an increase
of 10’ in length, a minor change. This may need an amendment to the SUP. The Town Board
asked R Burger to have the Planning Board take a look at it this month.
The 1401 Dryden Road project is proceeding. The old house will be used as a training
site for the fire departments before it is taken down.
RESOLUTION #104 (2016) – APPROVE ABSTRACT #6
Supv Leifer offered the following resolution and asked for its adoption:
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RESOLVED, that this Town Board hereby approves Abstract #6, as audited, general
vouchers #371 through #458 ($240,888.67) and TA vouchers #71 and #72 ($3,687.53), totaling
$244,576.20.
2nd Cl Cipolla-Dennis
Roll Call Vote Cl Lavine Yes
Cl Servoss Yes
Cl Cipolla-Dennis Yes
Cl Lamb Yes
Supv Leifer Yes
Cl Cipolla-Dennis has a timer to use for citizens privilege and has developed some
simple rules to be considered by the board. She will share this with the board for
consideration next week.
On motion made, seconded and unanimously carried, the board moved into executive
session at 8:43 p.m. to discuss the employment history of a particular individual. No action
was taken. The meeting was adjourned at 9:20 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Bambi L. Avery
Town Clerk