Hearing Monday on Still Meadow drainage

SHARON — A public hearing of the Inland Wetlands and Watercourse Commission will be held on Monday, July 14, 7 p.m. at Town Hall.

The primary item on the agenda is an application for the construction of swales and a boardwalk at a property owned by Dr. Joel Danisi at 55 Stillmeadow Road.

Danisi, a Sharon resident and local doctor, purchased the 39-acre Still Meadow property about two years ago from the Kelsey family.  

The Sharon Land Trust had previously  tried to purchase the land but was turned down. The Trust considers Still Meadow to be a notable wetland, in part because it is calcareous, meaning it has a good deal of lime. Such wetlands are rare and are home to many rare plants and animals.

The meadow is ringed on one side by Sharon Center School and on another by the Sharon Motor Lodge.

The paved Still Meadow Road cuts off the flatland portion from a hillier section, where several houses were built decades ago.

Danisi has built a house on a portion of the land that is not considered wetland. He has also built a stable and a paddock for the three horses that he is raising there with his daughter, who is a horse trainer.

Danisi would like to fence in the remaining portion of his land and add two swales to direct the water from two town culverts and back to the rear of the property. The swales are expected to prevent flooding and drain into a catchment basin.

He also has submitted an application to the commission for a boardwalk that would extend out behind his house to a pond near the back of the land.  The locust wood posts will be placed in the ground approximately 10 feet apart and topped with pine wood planks one foot above ground.

So far, there has been vigorous opposition by neighbors and some members of the Inland Wetlands Commission to Danisi’s new plans. Neighbors fear that the addition of the two swales will damage the wetland.

They also dispute his claims that raising horses is a farming activity. Town Attorney Judith Dixon said that if the use of the land is determined to be an agricultural activity, Danisi can proceed with his plans without a permit.

The property was historically a farm and has reverted to wetland in recent years.

The other property owners on Still Meadow Road, who live above the paved road, have formed a group called Friends of Still Meadow. Membership includes neighbors and conservationists Françoise Kelz, Alan Tucker, Sal and Janet Accardo, Dary and Laurie Dunham, John and Bonnie Kerr, Robert “Skipâ€� and Lyn Mattoon and Sandy Feibelkorn. Also involved with the group as advisers  and associates are Hamilton Wright, Art and Dot Felske, Joel Katz (advisor), Larry Power of the Sharon Land Trust (advisor) and Chris Clow, of the Sharon Association (advisor).

This reporter visited the site last week. On a walk along the road, Danisi pointed out that all the houses on the upper portion of the road have swales and culverts that have drained for decades into the meadow. He contends that his swales will not impact the health of the wetland.

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