Changes in zoning for town of Salisbury?

Neighbors can’t always get along and they can’t always agree on the best approaches to handling their properties and changes to them. Matters of planning and zoning can become extremely contentious, despite what are often the best of intentions of all concerned, and can lead to problems that can seem insurmountable. People pay a lot of money for their properties and so want to be able to make changes as they see fit while at the same time maintaining some control over the changes their neighbors may make that would affect their viewsheds.The differing views of how special permits for nonconforming uses in Salisbury should be handled have been expressed by town residents, especially but not exclusively those who live around Lake Wononscopomuc, and by town officials at recent town planning and zoning meetings. Now, changes to the zoning regulations have been proposed by the commission members and will be up for discussion at the July 5 planning and zoning meeting (see story, page A3). Those changes have undergone some modifications since they were first announced, but appear to affect, among other things, the vertical enlargement of nonconforming structures and special permits.Could these changes favor one set of residents over another, as some have charged? Such a possibility may exist, but so far those residents who have been part of this discussion have avoided bringing lawyers into it and have kept it neighbor to neighbor and neighbors to commission. Without the addition of legal representation in a commission meeting, all town residents should be weighing in on an equal footing.Those who were elected to the planning and zoning commission should be able to handle fairly and equitably the intricacies of both regulation and human interaction. When that is in doubt for residents, that is when lawyers become part of the equation. Then, one set of residents could have the upper hand, but it is to be hoped that this argument will not come to that.These changes should, however, be carefully vetted by all the town’s property owners. Now is the time for any town residents with an interest in the handling of planning and zoning matters to read over the changes and voice their opinions at the meeting on July 5. While some such changes can seem straightforward, their long-term effects are not always easily predictable. Salisbury’s planning and zoning officers are surely convinced that the proposed changes will improve the town’s regulations; now they should make their cases strongly and also convince town residents.

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