[MassHistPres] question on demo delay expiration times
Sullivan, Charles M.
csullivan at cambridgema.gov
Thu May 3 13:26:34 EDT 2012
In Cambridge, building and demolition permits are considered to be valid for six months. The CHC held a public hearing and adopted a policy that our various permissions would also be valid for six months, with one six-month extension allowed at the discretion of the chair. I would follow the advice of your town counsel with regard to the present case, and at some future time adopt an explicit policy to govern this kind of situation.
Charles Sullivan
__________________________________
Charles M. Sullivan, Executive Director
Cambridge Historical Commission
831 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, Mass. 02139
617 349-4684 (direct line)
617 349-3116 (fax)
-----Original Message-----
From: masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu [mailto:masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu] On Behalf Of Marisa Morra
Sent: Thursday, May 03, 2012 9:34 AM
To: masshistpres at cs.umb.edu
Subject: [MassHistPres] question on demo delay expiration times
I am the Co-Chair of the Weston Historic Commission
We have an issue before us that we have discussed many times, but have never actually had a case until now. We have a c.1912 house in a NR historic area that waited out a 6 month demolition delay (our maximum) 8 years ago, but never did anything to the house. Now they want to tear it down and build new, and do no think that they need to come back in to the Historic Commission for review again.
Our building inspector/ building permit administrator has said that a demo delay application is part of the demolition/building permit and therefore has a 2 year expiration date, like an actual demo permit. This is not EXPLICITLY written on our demolition delay application, but is explicitly written on the demolition permit application.
Town counsel has said there is nothing in the bylaws that says we cannot bring them in again.
Can we bring them in and go thorough the same process again without explicitly sating that on our own application? This would meant they have to go through initial determination, then [3-4 weeks later ]Public hearing, then we could impose a 6 month demolition delay from the public hearing date.
Does anyone have a similar situation?
Does anyone know of a legal case that corresponds to this?
thank you
Marisa Morra
Co-Chair, WHC
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