POCD subcommittee ties up loose ends

WINSTED — The subcommittee updating the town’s plan for conservation and development is expected to complete most of its work on the revised document this week before handing it off to a New Haven consulting firm to put together a final draft.

George Closson, chairman of the Plan of Conservation and Development Subcommittee, told The Journal Tuesday that his board had “a good meeting†on Jan. 14 and that the group planned to tie up most loose ends at its meeting Wednesday night.

The subcommittee, under the Planning & Zoning Commission, has been working for several months to update the current plan, which was completed in 1994.  

Closson said, however, that before the subcommittee can pass on its work to the consultants who have assisted its members throughout much of the project, TPA Design Group, he must first receive the approval of the Planning & Zoning Commission to appropriate the money needed to fund the firm’s final work.

“We don’t have any spending capacity,†he said of the subcommittee.

Over the next few days, Closson said his focus will be on obtaining an estimate from TPA Design on how much it will cost to put the subcommittee’s draft “together as a polished document†and then present that number to town planners and hope they approve the appropriation.

If approved, the consultants will move forward with their work. The draft will then be returned to the subcommittee, where they will give it “one final review,†Closson said.

“If we say it’s OK, then we send it on to Planning and Zoning,†he said.

Connecticut law requires that each municipality update and file a plan with the state every 10 years. The plan serves as a guide for town officials and developers for Winsted’s future economic growth.

Before town planners adopt an official version of the revised document, the final draft will be passed along to the Board of Selectmen and the Litchfield Hills Council of Elected Officials for their review.

Residents will also have an opportunity to make comments and voice their opinion on the draft at a public hearing sometime before the final plan is approved.

Last month, a draft of the town’s revised plan of conservation and development was posted online at the Economic Development Committee’s Web site (winchesterctdevelopment.org).

That document, however, was not the final plan. It was an individual draft that contained the comments of former Planning & Zoning Chairman James Roberts.

A note clarifying that Robert’s draft was not the subcommittee’s final, approved plan was added a short time after the document and the cover letter that accompanied it were posted online Dec. 14.

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