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QRWA - Bloomingdale's Action Alert
Please consider attending the next public hearing for expansion of the Bloomingdale's-by-Mail
facility, in the FIP Industrial Park, before the Cheshire Inland Wetlands
& Watercourses Commission on Tuesday, October 21th at 7:30 p.m.
at Town Hall, 84 S. Main St. (E. side of Rt. 10, in town center) It is important
that the commission hear from our members, representing the general public,
as well from QRWA staff & technical experts! The QRWA considers this application
especially important for a number of reasons.
- The large wetlands acreage to be filled (3.4 acres), is unprecedented
in the watershed, for a non-highway project of this size - involving a total
of approximately six acres of additional building & two acres of parking.
If approved similar applications are likely to follow, elsewhere in the
watershed.
- This site was chosen in 1986, after discussions with town officials, with
full intent by Bloomingdales to expand to the east to the proposed size,
despite awareness by Bloomingdales of the large wetlands impact, but without
involvement in the decision-making process by the public or Cheshire Inland
Wetlands & Watercourses Commission.
- The wetlands to be filled include seasonal pools, which are breeding areas
for amphibians, feeding and overwintering areas for spotted turtles, and
widely recognized as a very valuable type of wildlife habitat. Two pools
have already been destroyed by the existing building. These are mature forested
wetlands.
- This would be additional disturbance which could disrupt shy, forest interior
birds which nest across the river in the large, town-owned Moss Farms preserve
and a wood turtle population documented at the site (a special concern species).Outstanding
abundance and diversity of breeding forest bird and other wildlife has been
well-documented by the applicant's consultants and QRWA volunteers.
- The proposed mitigation plan is sketchy, formulated before information
on soils and groundwater was available. It involves forested wetland creation,
which has a poor track record.
- Inadequately treated parking lot and roof runoff (no detention or biofilter
basin as is currently standard practice for large, commercial facilities)could
damage sensitive aquatic habitat (including a rare fresh water mussel and
hibernating wood turtles), in the Ten Mile River, one of the cleanest, major
Quinnipiac tributaries.
- An alternative expansion layout, the "East-West alternative" would impact
only about 1.5 acres of wetlands, not including the valuable pool, and would
include a parking garage, therefore generating less runoff. It is technically
feasible although it would be somewhat less efficient, adding about a penny
inoperating costs for each dollar of merchandised sold. The additional construction
cost (primarily parking) is much lower than the cost of relocating the entire
plant. The QRWA believes that Bloomingdales would choose to stay in Cheshire,
not relocate as has been threatened, if they were denied a permit for the
full expansion.
We realize that Bloomingdale's-by-Mail is a source of tax revenue and
jobs for the region. Perhaps a completely different, truly outstanding,
alternative mitigation plan could compensate for the direct and indirect
wetlands losses and for the initial siting error. However, this application,
as it stands, is clearly inadequate. Please come to the hearing onTuesday,
and urge the commission to carry out its legal obligation to protect the
wetlands which cleanse and support our river ecosystem! Feel free to call
with questions at 203 237 2237.
Quinnipiac River Watershed Association
99 Colony St, Meriden CT 06450
203 237 2237
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