Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Weston Property Values at Risk! Attend May 6th Planning Board Hearing at 7:30 at Town Hall. Be informed!!!

Dear friends and neighbors,

I am forwarding you a copy of the letter that I sent to our Selectmen
yesterday. I think it is important that you are all aware of what is
happening in our town, because your property rights and values are going to
be directly effected by the proposed changes. Among other things, your
ability to sell your property in a timely manner, if you ever need to do it,
in many cases will be GREATLY effected. This year the Planning Board is
pushing bylaw proposals that will have a huge effect on our properties. Town
meeting is just  10 days away and it is VERY important that you know what
you will be doing to your own property rights and values if you decide to
skip that meeting. If these proposals are voted in without changes - you
WILL pay for them out of YOUR pockets one way or another.

Also, please read the following article in this week's Town Crier and
educate yourself.
http://www.wickedlocal.com/weston/archive/x342375816/Beware-of-zoning-proposals

 If you find the information in the article too technical or confusing -
please e-mail me your questions to oaginsky@comcast.net and I will be happy
to clarify it for you. In any case, please come to the Planning Board
hearing on May 6 at 7:30 p.m. We will be discussing some of these issues
there.

Please feel free to forward.

Your neighbor,

Olga

“Construction noise” warrant article.

http://a.wordpress.com/avatar/calhoununderground-128.jpg
Dear Selectmen,

I have some concerns for the town over the "construction noise" warrant
article.

Please consider changing this proposal back to your original idea to allow
for construction work from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. on weekdays and from 8:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Saturdays. The current warrant language is too
restrictive and actually discriminatory against a specific industry. It also
places unnecessary financial and emotional stress on residents who are
looking to improve their properties as well as contractors who live and work
in this town (there are many).

1.       Discriminatory nature. Normally, towns have bylaws that regulate
noise. All noise. You can't let the dog bark, the lawn mower roar or the
contractor work before and after certain hours. Our bylaw is proposed, for
some reason, only against construction noise. How logical is that? What if
someone is blowing leaves at 6:30 in the morning, or is working on their own
house with a radio blasting at 9:00 p.m, or is mowing grass for 3 hours on a
Saturday starting at 7:00 a.m.? Why they are not regulated, but someone who
is trying to cover the roof before a rainstorm or repair a septic system on
a Saturday is being hand-cuffed? I consider this a form of discrimination.
Noise is noise. Ironically, construction noise is temporary, while grass
mowers and leaf blowers are forever.   

2.       Prolonged, more expensive construction process for homeowners and
neighbors. The other problem is that the less you allow people to do in one
week, the longer the entire process will be (the longer the neighbors will
have to live with it) and the more expensive each job will be to the
homeowner. 

3.       Hidden consequences.  The best contractors can choose where to
work. They stay successful by working hard, keeping themselves very busy,
and staying focused on getting the job done on time and on budget. If they
are having difficulties with over-regulation and restrictions, they will go
and work elsewhere leaving our residents with a less than qualified pool of
contractors to fill the holes. This is already happening in our town as
evidenced by projects on Glen house way and Beaver road.

4.       Unnecessary expense and emotional burden.  Scenario: It has been
raining for 4 days since Sunday. You are adding a room to part of your
house. Your contractor needs to open a side and part of the roof and connect
the old and the new. It should take about 3 solid days to make it weather
tight, assuming that there is no traffic and delivery issues and everyone
can be at the site on time...  It is Wednesday.  Finally there is a break
for 3 days and then another storm front is coming. Your contractor works as
fast as he can, but since he can't work after 5:00 p.m. or Saturday - your
project is still open to weather for Sunday's rain storm. 

Is this what we want? Until now, these over-restrictive work hours have only
been applied to new Planning Board construction for very large, expensive
projects. Applying this restriction to the entire town might sound
attractive to most residents at first, but it will eventually be felt as a
cost to them in the long run. Most of the complaints regarding construction
noise have been about the noise before 7:00 a.m. rather than noise at 5:30
p.m. or at 11:00 a.m. on a Saturday. That is the main problem to be
addressed by this bylaw, which is why I urge you to consider going back to
your original proposal for the town vote.

Sincerely,

Olga Shulman