The Norwalk Hour

We can expect gentrifica­tion of E. Norwalk

- And Diane Cece is president of the board of the East Norwalk Neighborho­od Associatio­n.

As unpreceden­ted housing developmen­t continues around East Norwalk’s commuter train station, coupled with ongoing transporta­tion infrastruc­ture projects, the East Norwalk Neighborho­od Associatio­n (ENNA) would like to remind readers about our organizati­on, and encourage them to be informed and involved by signing up at www.eastnorwal­k.org for our e-newsletter­s and links to our monthly meetings.

The ENNA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit started in 2001 with a mission “to foster and preserve the residentia­l character, natural & historic resources, and quality of life in the community, and to encourage the residents of East Norwalk to actively participat­e in achieving this purpose.”

Being involved is more important than ever. Recent updates to Nowalk’s zoning regulation­s creating larger scale, highdensit­y developmen­t (changes that were widely rejected by residents but adopted anyway) are now coming to fruition as developers take advantage for greater profits, but with negative impacts and few public benefits. The latest applicatio­n, winding through the zoning process to a public hearing soon, is the “The Lofts at Mill Pond” at 1 Cemetery St., atop the tranquil Mill Pond. This 77-unit, 3-1/2 story, multibuild­ing structure is the latest in what will be many developmen­t applicatio­ns for mixed-use, luxury apartment complexes. This particular project’s “public amenities” that qualified it for that extra height, reduced setbacks and double the apartments are hardly “public,” and should have been the price of entry —they’re meaningles­s in terms of value compared to the negative impacts of the developmen­t, and are installed at cheap, one-time costs yet will reap huge financial benefits to the developers for decades to come. And still, only 10 percent of the units are required to be “workforce” affordable. Little or no dent will be made in the dire demand for truly affordable and lower-income housing, instead we can expect the gentrifica­tion of East Norwalk.

The ENNA hopes residents of 06855 will learn more about this proposed developmen­t and get involved. We’ll spread the word once that public hearing date is set, and will be ready to launch a “residents tool kit” of sample emails, fliers, lawn signs, and petitions to use in urging the P&Z Commission­ers to send this Cemetery Street plan back to the drawing board for modificati­ons that respect our neighborho­od, our environmen­t and our quality of life.

Visit ENNA at www.eastnorwal­k.org or email info@eastnorwal­k.org and follow us on social media at facebook.com/eastnorwal­k.org instagram.com/enna06855/ nextdoor.com

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