Saturday, March 30, 2019

Middletown's Comprehensive Plan Needs Updating


Reviewing the Middletown Comprehensive Plan for the Middletown Leads Newsletter (published on the Middletown Library website)  raised issues regarding the effects of changing conditions and the passage of time.

The Comprehensive Community Plan was most recently updated in 2014; it was adopted by the Middletown Town Council On March 2, 2015.  Many changes have taken place since 2014 which make some of the existing guidelines out-of-date.

For example, the Aquidneck Island Transportation Study, which was used to form many of the conclusions in the Transportation section, was actually completed in 2011, which makes it 8 years out-of-date, a long period of time considering the road construction that has taken place in Middletown (and on the island) over recent years.

In addition, the state no longer requires that Comprehensive Plans be formally reviewed every 10 years, so extensive change is unlikely even though time doesn’t stand still.

Neither does there seem to be a formal process in place for making appropriate adjustments, so the Town is continuously faced with conflicts over economic development and land usage that should have been addressed before they occurred, rather than when it was too late to do anything about them.

For example, there was the recent controversy over the applications for 2 new hotels in the Atlantic Beach District. Residents were concerned that the unique character of the area was being threatened and that more preference was being given to investors and tourists than to residents. 

Some went so far as to suggest a moratorium on building in the area until the zoning could be changed to restrict further hotel development. Unfortunately, it was too late. The applications had already been submitted; the Town was legally obligated to consider them within the existing zoning ordinances.

These examples point out the need for the Town to develop a process for continuous review of the Comprehensive Community Plan and the Town Ordinances that support it.

Perhaps the Aquidneck Island Planning Commission can be persuaded to undertake another Aquidneck Island Transportation Study.

Additionally, unless the Town Council develops a review process for the Comprehensive Community Plan and the Zoning Ordinances, the Planning Board and the Zoning Board will be faced with decisions that can only lead to more controversy. 

One issue that needs to be resolved immediately is the perception that the Comprehensive Community Plan is a rule book written in stone. In fact, it is really only a guide, approved by the Town Council.

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