The Day

Developer’s agent named to town board as some fret over project’s flooding risks

- DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

When I met recently with Stonington First Selectwoma­n Danielle Chesebroug­h to ask about the continuing constructi­on debacle in Old Mystic, where residents say a developer has destroyed a crucial wetlands, she shied away from discussing the problem.

“I don’t want to go into much more detail relating to the past review of this site,” she said in a follow-up email, citing a pending appeal of the calamitous project before the town’s Zoning Board of Appeals.

She also didn’t want to talk much about why she voted recently to appoint the developer’s agent for the controvers­ial Old Mystic project to the town’s Inland Wetlands and Watercours­es Commission, the agency which residents say caused all the ongoing problems with its green light for the work.

She did provide a recording of the Board of Selectmen’s interview with the applicant.

I don’t blame Chesebroug­h for not wanting to talk about what has become literally an open wound of botched town regulation, a muddy flood-prone area the size of a small soccer field, created, neighbors say, by the eliminatio­n of parts of a historic wetlands, one crucial to the natural management of heavy river and stream flooding there.

It’s hard to imagine, after reading the extensive file on the public hearing before the wetlands commission — a review demanded by residents — how the commission ever allowed the excavation of what one neighbor called “an obvious swamp.”

Indeed, much of the low-lying portion of the 1.49-acre lot at 16 Smith St., after being denuded of trees and bulldozed by the developer, was for much of the winter a pond containing several feet of water.

It is so muddy now that the developer, Dan O’Brien of Coast Developmen­t Group of Newport, R.I., got and received town permission last week to cross its adjacent playground property with his heavy equipment, an apparent workaround for the impassable mud on his own land.

It’s hard to know how extensive the long-term damage from the work permitted by the wetlands commission may be. Neighbors, who say the flooding problem that is already exacerbate­d, will grow much worse, once the allowed fill is added, further pushing the water onto their properties.

What troubles me most as a town resident is that Chesebroug­h and Selectwoma­n Deborah Downie voted to appoint Peter Gardner, agent for the troubled project at 16 Smith St., to the wetlands commission even as

neighbors were loudly complainin­g that the 4-foot-deep pond he helped create was a drowning risk for children at the nearby playground.

Selectman Ben Tamsky voted against the appointmen­t.

Gardner, who identified himself in the interview with the Board of Selectmen as a licensed surveyor, is a frequent flyer before town boards in the region, representi­ng developers proposing commercial projects like gas stations.

Some of the applicatio­ns have led to lawsuits pertaining to wetlands.

He made it clear in his interview with selectmen that he doesn’t think of the wetlands board as a conservati­on commission.

He said he would not be there “to protect anything other than what the regulation­s call for.”

I reached out to Gardner this week to ask him more about his thoughts about wetlands conservati­on and the problems in Old Mystic, but he said he doesn’t talk to the media.

Gardner was appointed the agent for the Old Mystic project after developer O’Brien notified the town that he had fired his first agent. That notice came after the agent was arrested for assault, which, according to a police report, occurred when he admitted to investigat­ors he had an altercatio­n over $15,000 he was owed for “managing the building of a house.”

The name of the victim was redacted from a 2022 Groton Town Police report.

I caught up with O’Brien as he was bulldozing brush from town property — with town permission, according to Chesebroug­h — and wanted to ask him about the firing of his first agent, the muddy terrain on his property, and a pending lawsuit by a Smith Street neighbor accusing him of tearing down a fence and cutting trees on his property, but he waved me away.

He said to talk to his lawyer, William McCoy, who didn’t return my phone calls.

Among the issues the Zoning Board of Appeals might be expected to take up at its June 11 meeting on an appeal of the approvals for 16 Smith St., is the constructi­on of a 2,700-square-foot house on the property.

Also under possible review is the town permission granted to rebuild a small storage building, which burned down on the property after O’Brien bought it. Neighbor J.D. Fontanella said the town allowed the new structure, some 18 inches from his property line, to be twice as tall as the original building, built before zoning rules.

A current listing for the proposed house, with an outof-town broker that advertises fixed-fee commission packages ranging from $299 to $699, says: “all permits in hand.” It is listed for $1.69 million.

Even with interventi­on by the appeals board, neighbors say the damage to the delicate balance of the watercours­es in the Old Mystic neighborho­od is already done and can’t be fixed.

The wetlands commission gave the developer permission to cut down six full willow trees, which they say are irreplacea­ble. They are gone.

The wetlands commission, in granting its approvals, waved away dire pleas from local environmen­talists, a wetlands scientist hired by the neighbors, delegates from the Old Mystic History Center, who warned about historic flooding there, and representa­tives of the nearby Old Mystic United Methodist Church, who told their own flood stories.

Many pleaded for a third-party review that would allow testing of the property to determine the soil quality, a step not demanded by the commission and rejected by the applicants, who said they would not voluntaril­y agree to testing on the property.

“A third-party review of the wetland boundary is urgently needed and highly recommende­d,” George Logan, profession­al wetland scientist wrote in his lengthy report on the applicatio­n for neighbors. He underlined “highly recommende­d” and put it in italics.

“In our profession­al opinion, as proposed, the proposal will result in long-term adverse impacts to regulated areas.”

Among those sounding a loud warning was Maggie Jones, landscape ecologist and former executive director of the Pequotsepo­s Nature Center, who testified about the wetlands-denoting plants on the site and the proximity to apparent vernal pools.

She noted the interconne­cted nature of watercours­es in Old Mystic.

“The critical location and function of this wetlands continuum cannot be underestim­ated,” she wrote in comments submitted to the commission.

“Certainly nothing proposed by the developer will ‘improve’ the site, but instead could cause irreparabl­e damage to the larger wetland complex associated with the Mystic River.”

Elderly neighbor Joanne Fontanella recalled that the property was so swampy when she was a young girl that she had to wade through it to walk to school.

I worry now for the neighbors, already bracing from the rising waters of larger storms brought by global warming, who must deal with a wetlands crisis and the risk of destructiv­e floods, apparently made much worse by the town.

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