courant.com: Board Agrees On Land Deal

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simland0810.artaug10,0,2421543.story Board Agrees On Land Deal Town Selectmen Support $11.1 Million Conservation Proposal By DIANE STRUZZI Courant Staff Writer August 10 2006 SIMSBURY --After listening to more than an hour of public comment Wednesday night - much of it in support of conserving more than 420 acres owned by the Ethel Walker School - the board of selectmen recommended the town appropriate $11.1 million to preserve the property.Initially, the board considered passing a resolution that included an appropriation for only $8.5 million. But Selectman John Romano asked to increase the recommended appropriation to $11.1 million. Romano's request was met…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Board Agrees On Land Deal

courant.com: Board Takes Up Land Purchase Issue

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simland0809.artaug09,0,57662.story Board Takes Up Land Purchase Issue By DIANE STRUZZI Courant Staff Writer August 9 2006 SIMSBURY --In a pivotal but preliminary step, the board of selectmen will decide tonight whether to move forward on preserving 424 acres of land owned by the Ethel Walker School, acreage that was once slated to include a subdivision of luxury homes.The main issue - how much the town is willing to spend to buy the land. In June, the school and the Trust for Public Land, a national nonprofit conservation organization, reached an agreement, offering to sell development rights to the town…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Board Takes Up Land Purchase Issue

courant.com: Board To Review Land Acquisition

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-5brf0808_2.artaug08,0,3465413.story Board To Review Land Acquisition August 8 2006 SIMSBURY - --The board of selectmen will review a proposal to acquire a tract owned by Ethel Walker School, at a special meeting to be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Eno Memorial Hall Auditorium on Hopmeadow Street. The selectmen will discuss and possibly approve a resolution concerning the land, according to a town meeting agenda. The private school once considered building luxury homes on part of the 424 acres and is offering to sell development rights to the town for $13.85 million. The land, on Bushy Hill Road,…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Board To Review Land Acquisition

courant.com: Age-Based Testing Is Discriminatory

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/letters/hc-lets0715.artjul15,0,5666308.story?page=2 July 15 2006Town's Character At Stake Once every generation or so, we are called upon to make a significant decision regarding Simsbury's natural and financial resources. Thirty years ago, Simsbury acquired the land that we now know as Simsbury Farms, and we are all thankful that our predecessors had the vision to preserve that land for the good of the town. Today, we face such a decision - whether to preserve the Ethel Walker property and the pristine Stratton Brook aquifer. This issue is entirely different than any other, financial or philosophical, currently facing Simsbury. Now it is…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Age-Based Testing Is Discriminatory

Good Deal On Walker Woods

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/editorials/hc-walkerwoods.artjun23,0,7266967.story Good Deal On Walker Woods June 23 2006 Many people in Simsbury moved to the town to enjoy its rustic charm. So many, in fact, that keeping the rural character has become a challenge. But residents now have a rare opportunity to preserve a large piece of sylvan splendor. Last year, the Ethel Walker School announced plans to develop 122 large houses on more than 400 acres of woodland it owns behind the school. The proposal drew considerable opposition; a group called "Save The Woods" formed to fight the development of the pristine forests and wetlands. Meanwhile, officials…

Continue ReadingGood Deal On Walker Woods

courant.com: School Offers Open Space Deal

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simland0623.artjun23,0,188740.story School Offers Open Space Deal By JENNIFER GROGAN Courant Staff Writer June 23 2006 SIMSBURY --A private school that once considered building luxury homes on part of its 424 acres of woods is offering to sell development rights to the town for $13.85 million.The town has until November to decide on the offer, made by the Ethel Walker School for a parcel it owns on Bushy Hill Road. Town officials have long had an interest in preserving the property as open space."This is the best option," Susanna Jones, head of the school, said Thursday. "We're very excited that…

Continue Readingcourant.com: School Offers Open Space Deal

courant.com: With Spring Comes Sprawl’s Toxic Runoff

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/commentary/hc-plcstormwater0514.artmay14,0,2211368.story With Spring Comes Sprawl's Toxic Runoff By ERIC HAMMERLING May 14 2006The pejorative term "sprawl" conjures up an image of cookie-cutter subdivisions marching inexorably over gentle hills that were once farms or forests. Many of us bemoan the changes that sprawl has wrought on our neighborhoods and towns - more paved areas, more traffic, more look-alike strip malls.We rarely speak of what may be the most harmful aspect of sprawl, and that is how it affects our water supply.What is happening isn't hard to explain. Sprawling development is accompanied by an explosion of paved areas, which scientists call…

Continue Readingcourant.com: With Spring Comes Sprawl’s Toxic Runoff

courant.com: Value Judgments On Land Use

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simland0127.artjan27,0,1897260.story Value Judgments On Land Use Forum Participants Talk About Town's Need To Balance Preservation, Development By MARK SPENCER Courant Staff Writer January 27 2006 SIMSBURY --The balancing act between development and preservation has been a major issue in town during the past year and lends itself easily to heated exchanges.But Thursday night at Eno Hall, more than 120 residents listened in a more relaxed atmosphere as a panel of experts discussed the issue in a forum called "Forging a Vision for Simsbury."The forum was sponsored by a residents' group called Keep the Woods, a group formed last year…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Value Judgments On Land Use

courant.com: The Stuff Legends Are Made Of

From the December 24, 2005 Hartford Courant.School Shouldn't Develop Property Ethel Walker School, a prestigious all-girls school, is planning to develop hundreds of acres of pristine open space in Simsbury with 122 suburban castles. This is being done to correct shortages in the school's endowment. For a private educational institution to attempt to resolve a short-term cash-flow problem by massive and irreversible development of greenfields is reprehensible. Housing developments like this do not come down in Connecticut; they usually multiply. The proposed development would entail not only 122 large-scale homes, but most likely more than 500 people, at least…

Continue Readingcourant.com: The Stuff Legends Are Made Of

courant.com: The Stuff Legends Are Made Of

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/letters/hc-lets1224.artdec24,0,2787290.story?page=3 The Stuff Legends Are Made Of December 24 2005The Dec. 18 editorial "One Whale Of A Tale," explaining the characteristics of the tusk of the narwhal, brought to mind Bill Faude's reopening of the famous Steward Museum at the Old State House a few years ago.Mr. Faude was quoted in The Courant as having acquired almost all of the exhibits and curiosities necessary except for a two-headed pig and the horn of a unicorn. I immediately called him and told him I had such an object mounted in my den and I would be happy to donate it…

Continue Readingcourant.com: The Stuff Legends Are Made Of

courant.com: Planners Want Some Breathing Room

http://www.courant.com/news/local/mr/hc-crmmorat1219.artdec19,0,5378754.story Planners Want Some Breathing Room Moratorium Proposed For Zone Changes, Larger Subdivisions By GARY LIBOW Courant Staff Writer December 19 2005 CROMWELL --The planning and zoning commission in early January will consider enacting a moratorium on applications for zone changes and subdivisions of more than 5 acres.Town Planner Craig Minor said a moratorium would give the panel several months of breathing room while an advisory panel works to update Cromwell's plan of conservation and development.The planning panel has scheduled a public hearing Jan. 3 in town hall for comment on the moratorium plan. The commission likely will vote…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Planners Want Some Breathing Room

courant.com: Taking Stock Of Water Woes

http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-water1218.artdec19,0,1967262.story Taking Stock Of Water Woes By STEPHANIE SUMMERS Courant Staff Writer December 19 2005Your neighbor just built a pond and filled it with his well water. It dried up your artesian, but guess what? Under Connecticut common law, you have almost no recourse.On the other hand, you'd better not draw too much water from the stream near your land because it's not OK to undercut its viability downstream.Experts say Connecticut's water wars are just going to get worse.There is no overarching water court to decide between the golf course that wants to keep its greens green and the…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Taking Stock Of Water Woes

courant.com: Treasures Quietly Slipping Away

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/commentary/hc-plccondon1218.artdec18,0,2596464.column Treasures Quietly Slipping Away Tom Condon December 18 2005Westland Street in the North End of Hartford and Route 44 on the east side of Avon Mountain are separated by a few miles of land and the divide of wealth. What they have in common is the shortsighted loss of open space.In both instances, the loss might have been prevented if the public was aware of the status of the land.Westland Street is the home, for the moment, of Brackett Park. The 7.39-acre parcel - a lovely piece of land, if not always perfectly maintained - was the site…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Treasures Quietly Slipping Away

courant.com: An Overdose Of Stores

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/commentary/hc-plckuykendal1218.artdec18,0,7528934.story An Overdose Of Stores By JIM KUYKENDALL December 18 2005I'm aquiver with excitement.Less than a five-minute drive to the north of my house, they're building a new Walgreens.This is great, because now I won't have to suffer through that pesky five-minute drive to the south to go to that other Walgreens. It was so out of my way.Of course, Walgreens isn't my only choice. Within that same five-minute drive from my house I also have at my disposal two CVS pharmacies. And if those drug stores don't suit me, there also are two Stop & Shops, a Big…

Continue Readingcourant.com: An Overdose Of Stores

courant.com: Developer, Spare This Vital Industry

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/commentary/hc-plcadammoore1218.artdec18,0,5122487.story Developer, Spare This Vital Industry By ADAM MOORE December 18 2005The diesel engine heralds its approach. I sip my steaming coffee, peer over the crescent of frost on the windowpane and watch as traffic passes on Route 77 below. A moment later, there it is, a log truck with its load piled high, rolling toward a North Guilford sawmill. It rumbles past, leaving December's dusting of snow swirling about in its wake. This morning, every morning, and several times a day on my road, a loaded log truck passes by. Timber does not readily come to mind when…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Developer, Spare This Vital Industry

courant.com: If You Love Our Forests, Let Them Stand

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/commentary/hc-plcforestmain1218.artdec18,0,3287497.story If You Love Our Forests, Let Them Stand By DON SMITH December 18 2005 People in Connecticut tend to believe that the land where they live, work and play has lots of trees - always has, as far as they know, and therefore, always will. Not necessarily. Things are changing for the worse and we are in danger of losing large portions of our forests unless we take strong action now. For more than two centuries after Europeans first arrived in Connecticut, they labored to clear the forest for agriculture. By 1860, more than 70 percent of the…

Continue Readingcourant.com: If You Love Our Forests, Let Them Stand

courant.com: Investing In Land That Lasts

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/editorials/hc-whitaker17dec01,0,1377736.story?coll=hc-headlines-editorials Investing In Land That Lasts December 1 2005 SOMERS & NEIGHBORS -- More of Connecticut's fields and forests may be saved from development, thanks to $6.8 million in recent state Department of Environmental Protection grants for open space. This money is a significant step toward the state's goal of preserving 21 percent of its open space by 2023. That's 673,210 acres. We're 70 percent of the way there. One of the largest awards - $450,000 - will go toward purchasing the 286-acre Whitaker property in Somers at an estimated cost of $1.2 million. The town and the local…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Investing In Land That Lasts

Trust Joins Preservation Effort

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/editorials/hc-ethelw5nov30,0,4776513.story Trust Joins Preservation Effort November 30 2005 SIMSBURY -- Although the Trust for Public Land signed an agreement with Simsbury officials to help preserve 450 acres of woodland owned by the Ethel Walker School that is proposed for development, there is still no assurance that the land will be saved. The arrangement is the first of many steps that must take place to prevent the school from building a large luxury-home subdivision. Plans call for construction of more than 120 houses on 165 acres of the property, which is zoned residential. Homes would be built on 1- and…

Continue ReadingTrust Joins Preservation Effort

courant.com: Preservation Group To Help Town

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simland1121.artnov22,0,5043004.story Preservation Group To Help Town Goal Is Saving Ethel Walker School Woodland From Development By KATIE MELONECourant Staff Writer November 22 2005 SIMSBURY -- A national land preservation group has signed an agreement with the town to help preserve 450 acres of woodland that the Ethel Walker School has discussed developing into a luxury subdivision. The move by the Trust for Public Land, which has an office in New Haven, came about a month after the board of selectmen authorized the first selectman to enter into the agreement with the nonprofit to try to buy the land or…

Continue Readingcourant.com: Preservation Group To Help Town

Group May Help Town Preserve Tract

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simethel0916.artsep16,0,2429649.story Group May Help Town Preserve Tract By KATIE MELONE Courant Staff Writer September 16 2005 SIMSBURY -- A national land preservation group says its ability to assist the town in preserving a 450-acre parcel on the Ethel Walker School campus will hinge on whether it can raise sufficient donations. It will take at least a few weeks - and possibly longer - before the Trust for Public Land can say whether it can enter into an agreement to help the town buy the land, or the development rights to the land, said Tim Northrop, the trust's state director.…

Continue ReadingGroup May Help Town Preserve Tract

Preserve Ethel Walker’s Woods

http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/editorials/hc-ethelwalker5sep19,0,697200.story Preserve Ethel Walker's Woods September 19 2005 SIMSBURY -- A report that the Keep the Woods citizens group intends to withdraw its legal challenge to the Ethel Walker School's plans to build a large luxury-home subdivision on its wooded campus in Simsbury is encouraging. The group's appeal of the town conservation commission's approval of a campus wetlands map that is needed to proceed with the project created unnecessary animosity and divisiveness. No one, not even the trustees of the school, which has kept the land in pristine condition for 90 years, wants the development. Unfortunately, the school must…

Continue ReadingPreserve Ethel Walker’s Woods

Citizens’ Group To Withdraw Appeal Would Encourage Talks Over Preserving Ethel Walker School Property

http://www.courant.com/news/local/fv/hc-simethel0913.artsep13,0,266955.story Citizens' Group To Withdraw Appeal Would Encourage Talks Over Preserving Ethel Walker School Property By KATIE MELONE Courant Staff Writer September 13 2005 SIMSBURY -- A citizens' group has promised to withdraw a legal appeal it hoped could stall the Ethel Walker School's plans to build a large development of luxury homes on its wooded campus. Keep the Woods group felt emboldened by recent talks between the town, school and a land preservation group, said Susan Masino, a member. Instead of focusing on litigation, the group decided to encourage the three to enter into an agreement for the…

Continue ReadingCitizens’ Group To Withdraw Appeal Would Encourage Talks Over Preserving Ethel Walker School Property

End of content

No more pages to load