Friday, December 27, 2013

Petition aims to abolish Winchester's districts

Anyone wanna bet who's behind this movement? Read on ...

By Meghan Foley Sentinel Staff




WINCHESTER — On the heels of a battle to put a standalone store in one of the town’s historic districts, a new movement is afoot to get rid of the districts altogether.
A petition warrant article seeking to abolish the ordinance that established the districts will go to the Winchester Historic District Commission Monday night for review.
Voters approved the ordinance at town meeting in March 1997. It applies to the Winchester and the Ashuelot districts, and seeks to protect buildings and areas that have “cultural, social, economic, political and architectural history.”
It also aims to “encourage and regulate” new construction that fits in with existing historic architecture; foster appreciation of the town’s beauty and its past accomplishments; strengthen the town’s economy “by protecting and enhancing the attractiveness of the community;” and promote the public and private use of areas in the historic districts “for the education, pleasure, prosperity, and general welfare of the community.”
The Winchester district includes a section of Main Street from Chapel Street southwest to the Route 10 bridge, and portions of Michigan and High streets and Richmond Road. The Ashuelot district covers a section of Ashuelot Main Street, and Old Hinsdale and Back Ashuelot roads.

The petition to abolish the district comes roughly a year and a half after the climax of a controversial proposal by Dollar General to build a store on Main Street within the boundaries of the Winchester district. The issue divided residents, some of whom felt having a store there was better than having a decrepit building; others who said a standalone store is out of character for the area.


The property at 71 Main St. is home to a roughly 200-year-old house, which the project’s developer, Zaremba Group of Lakewood, Ohio, wanted to demolish. The house is owned by Margaret A. Sharra, land use administrator and code enforcement officer for the town, and her brothers, James S. and Michael P. Shannon.
The historic district commission must approve any requests to raze a building in either of the districts, and it denied the Zaremba proposal in July 2011. Zaremba appealed the ruling to the Winchester Zoning Board of Adjustment in August of that year.
In October 2011, the zoning board ruled the house could be demolished as long as the historic district commission approved plans for the Dollar General first.
Five property owners then filed a motion requesting the zoning board reconsidered its decision. The board denied the request in November 2011.
A month later, the group of residents and Kulick’s Inc., which operates a market on Warwick Road (Route 78), took the matter to Cheshire County Superior Court in Keene.
The lawsuit, which named the town’s board of selectmen and zoning board as defendants, asked the court to invalidate the zoning board’s decision and have the case sent back to the zoning board for further review.
In April 2012, Judge Kathleen McGuire ruled against the residents and Kulick’s.
Gene Park, vice chairman of the historic district commission, said Thursday the petition to abolish the districts came as a surprise.
“The commission was blindsided by it,” he said. “I have no idea where it came from.”
He is interested to hear the arguments for and against abolishing the ordinance, he said.
James Shannon and some of Sharra’s family members signed the petition. The petition also includes the signature of Denis V. Murphy 2nd, chairman of the Winchester Historic District Commission.
Murphy said this morning he signed the petition because someone asked him to.
“I’m not going to deny someone the democratic process,” he said.
Sharra, who didn’t sign the petition, said Thursday her brother, James, would be a good person to ask about the reasoning behind the petition.
Shannon was unavailable for comment and efforts to reach Sharra this morning for further comment were unsuccessful.
The petition was received by the town Dec. 11.
The historic district commission has scheduled public hearings for residents to weigh in on the petition warrant article for Monday, Dec. 30 and Jan. 14. The hearings will begin at 7 p.m. at Town Hall.


Meghan Foley can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1436, or mfoley@keenesentinel.com. Follow her on Twitter @MFoleyKS.

So who's the registered town voter who started the petition and why? Is this the next step towards Sharra getting her way? If people in this town want to continue having a say in what goes on in your town, then you'd better get yourself to these meetings and Deliberative or otherwise pay the consequences of your non-actions. Seems the few who think Winchester is their plum plan on abolishing anything that stands in their way.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Winchester tax rate takes a hike

Posted: Monday, December 2, 2013 12:00 pm
 
WINCHESTER — Increases in town and school expenses have led to a nearly 10 percent rise in this year’s tax rate.
Winchester Town Administrator Shelly Walker said Tuesday the rate increase was a given once voters approved a series of warrant articles at town meeting in March and the school budget came in higher than it was in 2012.
Winchester’s 2013 tax rate is $30.73 per $1,000 of assessed valuation, an increase of 10.1 percent from $27.92 last year.
The town tax rate is $8.40, up 20.3 percent from $6.98 last year, and the local education tax rate is $16.53, an increase of 9.5 percent, from $15.09 last year.
Winchester’s state education rate of $2.61 is up 8.3 percent from $2.41 last year. Its county rate of $3.19 is a decrease of 7.3 percent from $3.44 last year.
Under the 2013 tax rate, a house assessed at $200,000 would have a tax bill of $6,146, compared to $5,584 last year.
In March, Winchester voters approved an operating budget of about $3.4 million, which was an increase of $346,074, or 11 percent, from approximately $3.07 million last year. They also approved $237,354 in financial warrant articles in addition to the operating budget. That number was $58,903 higher than the amount of monetary warrant articles approved in March 2012.
Voters approved a school budget of about $11 million, an increase of 2.3 percent over the 2012 budget of about $10.8 million.
The Winchester Board of Selectmen was able to lower the 2013 tax rate by $1 using money from the town’s unreserved fund balance, Walker said.
Tax bills are due Dec. 31.

 Just think how much more they could have lowered the increase if they just made businesses and others pay their tax bills like the rest of us.