Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Planning and zoning panel OKs rock crushing plant

- By Andy Tsubasa Field Andy.field@hearstmedi­act.com @AndyTsubas­aF

MONROE — A building materials supply company won approval from Monroe planning and zoning officials to build a rock crushing and screening plant.

The town's Planning and Zoning Commission Thursday voted 4-1 to approve the proposal. Monroe Recycling and Aggregates LLC will crush brick, concrete, asphalt paving fragments and other materials. It will also make products that include screened topsoil, screened dirt fill and bedding sand.

"We're happy with the outcome and look forward to getting this up and operationa­l," Chris Pawlowski of Solli Engineerin­g, the firm hired by Monroe Recycling and Aggregates, said in an interview.

The crushed rock material would be sold to area contractor­s who would use the material for roadways, sidewalks and other constructi­on projects. It would also be used by the company's owner, Joe Grasso Jr., who runs a constructi­on company that has worked on safety improvemen­ts along Pepper Street.

Engineers hired by the company said the rock will be crushed in the enclosed building, which would house crushing machines and rock screeners — equipment that separate rocks into different sizes. Inside the facility, conveyor belts would carry the rocks to the machines and form piles that vehicles would pick up and offload into storage bins.

Water sprinklers over the bins will help control dust. A set of walls made from concrete and boulders would prevent the facility from impacting nearby wetlands, according to a project applicatio­n.

The project had previously raised concerns among a few planning and zoning commission­ers worried about dust impacting nearby wetlands and affecting people using the Housatonic biking trail.

Pawlowski said the company agreed to make several changes to the proposal, including moving a screener into the enclosed building and reducing the number of excavators and other equipment at the facility.

The company also previously agreed to provide quarterly reports on materials it uses, and to not crush steel rebar.

A draft of rules presented by Town Planner Rick Schultz Thursday would require the company to agree to a process for the town to monitor noise from the facility. Those same rules would also require reports when the company upgrades the facility.

“If there are any deviations, they gotta come back to the commission,” Schultz said.

 ?? Andy Tsubasa Field / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Chris Pawlowski, of Solli Engineerin­g, presents Monroe Recycling and Aggregates LLC’s request to build a rock-crushing facility on Pepper Street during a Jan. 5 Monroe zoning meeting.
Andy Tsubasa Field / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Chris Pawlowski, of Solli Engineerin­g, presents Monroe Recycling and Aggregates LLC’s request to build a rock-crushing facility on Pepper Street during a Jan. 5 Monroe zoning meeting.

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