North Canaan businesses begin to change, grow

NORTH CANAAN — Among the items on the agenda of the Aug. 8 Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) was old and new business, and a new sign for a prominent local business.Zoning Enforcement Officer Ruth Mulcahy reported that after much deliberation, the McDonald’s restaurant franchisee has dropped plans to seek a variance for a sign that would have been double the size of the original pole sign.That sign has already been removed from the grassy area west of the parking lot. The plan includes installing a sign of about the same size in a different location.“It will look essentially the same, except without the ‘billions and billions served,’” Mulcahy said.Two public hearings were set for Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. (prior to the regular meeting).One is a special permit application for a welding contractor establishment at 213 Daisy Hill Road. The applicant is John Jacquier.The other involves legal adjustments to commercial property.Attorney David Cusick came to the commission to work on creating a specific parcel of land to legally separate the “tank farm” at Lindell Fuels.Built a couple of years ago on a back corner of the Lindell’s property, behind the drive-through warehouse, the structure is a cement enclosure that isolates heating oil, propane and other large tanks of fuels. It is located in a flood plain of the Blackberry River, and is designed to contain potential spills.Mulcahy explained to the P&Z commissioners that there are about 10 different parcels that make up the Lindell complex, which includes the hardware store. But a separate driveway that leads to the warehouse parking lot and the tanks satisfies frontage requirements for making it a separate lot. No special permit was issued for the tank farm, as it was determined to be an appropriate accessory use to the retail use. But separating off a parcel means the facility needs its own designation. At Mulcahy’s suggestion, Cusick submitted an application for a special permit for a petroleum station.

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