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Sports

Despite illness Longwood senior sticks to sport he loves

September 30, 2011

Golf Gazette/Jay Dempsey: Champions crowned across North Fork

September 26, 2011

Girls Soccer: Wildcats fall 1-0 on penalty kick

September 22, 2011

Education

Mount Sinai school board reviews most recent test scores

September 25, 2011

Photos: Longwood kids celebrate Day of Peace

September 23, 2011

SWR Notes: Board gives green light for new reading program

September 21, 2011

Business

Women’s Network celebrates 30 years of business connections

September 26, 2011

Johnny O's sports bar and grill to open in Coram this fall

September 19, 2011

Where do you get your favorite fall seasonal brews?

September 14, 2011

Community

What's happening this week?

September 23, 2011

Daily Poll: What would you most like to see built in Calverton?

September 19, 2011

Miller Place Country Fair set for this weekend

September 16, 2011

Obituaries

Frank J. Carasiti

September 20, 2011

Doris Mae Meachum

September 19, 2011

Edith Watson

September 13, 2011

Real Estate

Fall backyard trends: Economy has some opting for 'staycations'

September 16, 2011

The end of summer doesn't mean you should stop planting

September 5, 2011

Real Estate: Too tight to travel? Bring the warmth to your backyard

August 31, 2011

Opinion

Letter: Sad to see The North Shore Sun go

September 29, 2011

Guest Spot: Amid desperation and despair on Sept. 11

September 17, 2011

Column: How sports can help us heal

September 15, 2011

Riverhead Planning Board rejects study of Wading River development

The Riverhead Planning Board last Thursday unanimously opposed a resolution calling for a study of the impacts of two large commercial developments proposed for Route 25A in Wading River.

Supervisor Sean Walter, himself a Wading River resident, said he had asked the Planning Board to do the study and is “not happy” that they voted it down.

The two developers, Kenn Barra, whose Knightland proposal calls for 24 small stores at the Route 25A/Sound Avenue triangle, and John Zoumas, whose Central Square plans call for stores and a restaurant just east of CVS on Route 25A, both indicated through their representatives that they would do a cumulative traffic study of their projects, using the same consultant.

But Mr. Walter and some Wading River residents say there are issues other than traffic that need to be studied. “That was something I wanted them to approve,” Mr. Walter said in an interview. He said the 2003 master plan didn’t contemplate anything like the Zoumas project, where the zoning was changed by a court ruling. Likewise, he said, “I don’t think anyone contemplated Kenn Barra assembling all those parcels” at the Knightland site.

“I’m probably the most pro-business supervisor you’re ever going to see, but to overrun Wading River with this level of commercialization is insane,” Mr. Walter said.

He said the master plan recommendations for Wading River are “ridiculous” and came at a time when there were three Jamesport residents and no Wading River representatives on the Town Board.

Planning Board members are appointed by the Town Board to five-year terms.

Joe Baier, also a Wading River resident, was the only Planning Board member to speak during the vote. He said that instead of requiring a draft generic environmental impact statement, as the resolution proposed, he felt only a supplemental impact study was needed, which would be a less intense process.

Peter Danowski, the attorney for Mr. Barra, said the state Department of Transportation would already require both applicants to study the traffic impacts of their projects. He and Marty Sendlewski, an architect representing Mr. Zoumas, both said they would agree to do a joint traffic study.

But Mr. Sendlewski said the other issues were already studied in the master plan.

“Clearly it was not the intent of SEQRA [a state environmental law] to put excess burden on projects by requiring them to redo the same studies over and over,” Mr. Sendlewski said. “All of this has been done as part of the master plan.”

He said Mr. Zoumas has already reduced the size of his project and no longer proposes any two-story buildings. Mr. Barra has told residents that he is cutting the number of stores he’s proposing from 30 to 24.

Mr. Baier said the largest concern he had was with traffic.

Mr. Danowski said in an interview after the meeting that traffic is the only issue that needs to be studied, as the projects comply with zoning and building requirements.

“It’s disingenuous to say that traffic was the whole focus of our issues,” said Dominique Mendez of the Riverhead Neighborhood Preservation Coalition after the meeting. “This will change Wading River. The hamlet can’t sustain all that retail development.”
Ms. Mendez submitted a letter on behalf of her group, as well as the North Fork Environmental Council, the Wading River Civic Association and the Group for the East End, an environmental group, calling for a cumulative, comprehensive review of Knightland, Central Square and the proposed expansion of the clubhouse at Great Rock Golf Club, which is located near Route 25A but not on it.

They suggested that traffic, the need for the projects and their conformance with the master plan are issues that need to be studied. There is some conflicting language in the master plan recommendations for the Knightland property, they said.

Planning Board member Ed Densieski explained his vote in an interview Monday, saying, “This area has been studied ad nauseam.” He said it was studied in the master plan, which residents supported, and said the developers have property rights and the traffic impacts will be studied.

“If the town wants to discuss a zone change, I have no problem with that on new applications, but it’s not fair for people who are at the end of the process,” Mr. Densieski said.

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