A Busy Week in Hurley: Town Board Withdraws Moratorium Proposal, Signs Agreement With Highway Superintendent and Launches New Comp Plan Survey

by Maya Schubert/Kingston Wire

Shortly after the town board withdrew a controversial proposal for a
partial building moratorium, the Town of Hurley launched an online
survey this week to receive public feedback on the draft comprehensive
plan released in mid-April. According to the town, the survey, as well
as a public presentation on the draft comprehensive plan on June 6, is
the next step in finalizing a 10-year plan that reflects the ideals of
Hurley residents.

“In a perfect world we would have every single resident taking part in
the comprehensive feedback process,” said Town Supervisor Melinda
McKnight at a town board meeting Tuesday evening.

Going forward, the draft comprehensive plan will be the subject of
focus group discussions, interviews with stakeholders and the town
planner, and reviews by the Hurley and Ulster County planning boards.

The town has stated that the draft plan drew from public input from
surveys and workshop meetings throughout 2022 and “reflects the
public’s desire to maintain Hurley’s historic, small-town, rural
character.” The plan, the town stated, “takes into account concerns
expressed by the public, which included overdevelopment, increased
traffic and the potential loss of a sense of community.”

The draft notes that Hurley’s rocky terrains and inadequate water
infrastructure make it unsuitable to certain developments. But a
statement from the town said that the plan does not take an
“anti-development stance.”

“Rather, it calls for development that is incremental, sustainable,
well-designed, locally oriented and at a scale appropriate for the
community,” the town stated.

On Tuesday evening, the town board withdrew a proposed nine-month
moratorium on development projects in some parts of town in response
to public criticisms that the law was anti-development and jeopardized
landowners’ rights.

The public hearing on Tuesday evening was a continuation of the
hearing that opened on April 18. The first hearing saw a range of
opinions from the public with more speaking in favor of than against,
but the majority of residents speaking at Tuesday’s meeting said they
disapprove of the moratorium.

“Over the course of the two hearings about the proposal, it became
clear that Hurley residents did not favor a moratorium being enacted,”
McKnight said after the meeting. “We took their comments to heart and
deferred to their judgment.”

The board made several adjustments to the proposal in the weeks
following the first hearing. Notably, the moratorium would have been
extended from the A2.5 and A4 zoning districts to encompass major
subdivision projects, site plan applications, and/or special use
permit applications across the entire town on properties larger than
15 acres. In addition, the moratorium would have prohibited land
development activity on more than one acre or where proposed site
disturbance would require an excavation and filling permit.

The revised moratorium plan also provided exemptions to agricultural
projects, visual assessments, certificates of appropriateness, signs
and projects which already had conditional approval. Both the original
and revised versions included an “escape hatch” that allowed people
who could prove the application of the moratorium to their property
caused “economic hardship” to appeal to the town board for a waiver.

Despite the exemptions and hardship waiver, residents at Tuesday’s
hearing decried the moratorium’s expansion and voiced concerns that it
disrespected landowners’ rights.

“I don't like development,” said resident Gary Graff. “But I never
felt that right to impose those feelings on anybody else.”

Several attendants at the public hearing suggested that if enacted,
the moratorium could prompt litigation against the town, leading to an
increase in legal costs. One resident stated that it was unfair for
the town to levy a tax upon land in “limbo.”

“Why can't the planning board just deal with specific projects that
might arise during comprehensive plan revision instead of blanketing
the entire community with a moratorium?” asked Karen Gill.

Another resident said that between septic fields, driveways and house
footprints, even many projects on small properties disturb more than
one acre and therefore the moratorium would have prohibited almost any
project.

After closing the public hearing, McKnight made a motion to withdraw
consideration for the moratorium. The board voted in favor
unanimously.

“The town will continue to monitor development proposals in Hurley,”
McKnight said later. “And it will act in accordance with local laws to
ensure that proposed projects serve the best interests of our
residents.”

To view the town's draft comprehensive plan, click here:
tinyurl.com/ycjkphrw. To take the comprehensive plan survey, click
here: tinyurl.com/2hxnm3wa

At the same meeting, the board voted to adopt a revised 284 Agreement
that included paving projects removed from the agreement first
prepared by the Highway Department. The town previously stated it
excluded paving projects from the agreement to transfer money to
general repairs for drainage problems. Highway Superintendent Mike
Shultis, however, refused to sign the agreement, saying that the
paving projects were necessary and budget money could not be moved
around.

On Tuesday, McKnight said that the board had a discussion with the
Highway Department earlier that day and agreed that the paving
projects were necessary. The board and Shultis signed the 284
Agreement after the meeting.


In Other Hurley News:

Reformed Church Yard Sale

The Fifth Annual Hurley Reformed Church Yard Sale will be held on
Saturday, June 3 from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. at the church on Main Street.
Spots can be rented for $25 for the day. Please call Kelly at
845-532-2995 to reserve a spot. Refreshments will also be served.

Planning Board Meeting Time Change

According to an announcement from the town, beginning in June 2023,
meetings of the Hurley Planning Board, which are held on the fourth
Thursday of each month, will start at 6 p.m. instead of 7 p.m.
Planning Board meetings are held at Hurley Town Hall, 10 Wamsley
Place, and are open to the public.

Vacancy on Ethics Board

There's a vacancy on the Town of Hurley Ethics Committee, the town
reports. Hurley residents interested in filling the seat should send a
letter of interest to Hurley Town Clerk, P.O. Box 569, Hurley, NY
12443 or clerk@townofhurley.org.

Kingston Wire's new coverage of the Town of Hurley is underwritten by
Hurley Up. Kingston Wire has complete editorial control of what is
reported and published. We accept submissions of letters to the
editor, longer opinion pieces, community event notices and story
ideas: email us at info@kingstonwire.com

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