Annual town meeting Oct. 23

CORNWALL — The annual town meeting will be held Friday, Oct. 23, at 7:30 p.m. at Cornwall Consolidated School.

The agenda includes six items of generally routine business. They are of interest, though, because they show the broad range of interests of people in town. The items on the agenda include everything from rules for using town recreational facilities to  proposed fee hikes for building and zoning permits.

At the top of the list is a look at the new town report and the adoption of a five-year capital plan. The latter is used to budget funds for annual needs, such as road work and equipment replacement, as well as set-asides for higher ticket items, such as fire trucks and school projects.

With the state increasing the fees it levies on towns, Cornwall is finding it necessary to increase what it collects from people seeking local permits.

Building permit fees, adopted in 1982, are proposed to rise from $20 to $25 for the first $1,000 worth of construction, and from $6 to $7 for each additional $1,000 worth of construction. Property owners who start construction without a permit will be fined an additional $200.

Zoning permit application fees, adopted in 1997, are proposed to rise from $25 to $75, again to absorb state increases.

Two new fees, if approved, will require $75 per application to the Zoning Board of Appeals and the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Agency.

The new fees would be effective Jan. 1, 2010.

Great Hollow and Great Hill Roads in the southeastern part of town are eligible for repair funding through the federal American Recovery Reinvestment Act. In anticipation of 100-percent reimbursement, the selectmen and finance boards are seeking to reallocate up to $110,000 from the capital projects account for that work.

The selectmen are also proposing an ordinance to allow for rules and regulations for use of town-owned properties that include Foote Fields on Route 4, Hubbard Field on School Street, Hammond Beach on Cream Hill Road and the Town Green on Pine Street.

The ordinance would include provisions for enforcing regulations, and a $250 fine for violation of the rules.

The town meeting will afford an opportunity for greater detail of any of the proposals. Approval requires a majority vote of residents and qualified property owners.

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