Farmington Wetlands Panel Approves Cemetery Road Shift, Garage Build, Scout Benches; Hill‑Stead Path Heads for Site Walk

Stone, Water & Votes: Inside Farmington’s July 16 Wetlands Marathon 🪨🌱

Roll Call and Ground Rules

The Inland Wetlands Commission opened at 7:01 p.m. sharp on July 16, 2025, with Chair Ned Stachin wrangling a hybrid quorum. Microphones crackled, members waved, and absentees were duly excused—standard Farmington theater, on YouTube for posterity. Meeting video.


Riverside Cemetery: Roads Move East, Water Flows South

Applicant: Farmington Cemetery Association (board trio Evan Coles, Kevin Ray, Jim Rose)
Proposal: Repave every roadway at Riverside and nudge the lower lane “a couple of feet” away from the Farmington River. A new stone verge will drain storm‑water by sheet flow—goodbye, clogged catch basin.
Highlights

  • Site walk: July 2—commissioners kicked the gravel.
  • Erosion controls: straw wattles + silt fence, all blessed by staff.
  • Timeline: two‑week closure of the cemetery; paving crew “in and out.”
    Vote: Not a significant activityUnanimous approval with erosion conditions. 😇

Crosswood Road: One Garage, One Tree, Zero Fuss

Applicant: Greg Taylor, 26 Crosswood Road
Proposal: Add a single‑bay garage; fell a dying maple “whether or not we have a garage.” Stone drip edge handles runoff; no grade drama.
Vote: Not significant → Approved, tree removal included. 🌳✂️


Hill‑Stead Museum: A Historic Path Meets Modern Wetlands

Applicants: Anna Swinborn (Executive Director) & Siobhan Towers (Landscape Architect)
Proposal: Re‑establish a 4‑ft stone‑dust loop mirroring Theodate Pope Riddle’s 1901 design—think Millennium Falcon in mulch. Phase 1 hugs the driveway; Phase 2 (future) would bridge wetter ground.
Commission Concerns

  • Wetland line discrepancies; David Fox asked for clearer mapping.
  • Commissioners want flags in the field—no guesswork.
    Action: Application accepted; site walk scheduled for late July/early August. Public hearing decision deferred to September. 🏛️

Scout Troop 68: Benches for the East Farms Pond

Applicant: Evan Guerrero (Eagle Project)
Proposal: Install four ADA‑compliant Polywood benches with ground anchors, replacing weather‑beaten seats near the school pond.
Ruling: Classified as a non‑regulated use—no wetlands triggered. Permission granted; Guerrero to keep staff updated on disposal of old benches. 🪑👍


Odds, Ends & Hazardous Trends

  • Planner’s Report: 666 vehicles (yes, really) joined the June 7 regional hazardous‑waste day; 91 hailed from Farmington.
  • Minutes from July 2 and the July 9 site walk sailed through.
  • Meeting adjourned 8:06 p.m.—the Conservation Commission clocked out three minutes later.

🙏 Sponsor Shout‑Out

Need space for cemetery records, garage tools, or Polywood benches still in their boxes? Farmington Storage (155 Scott Swamp Road, Farmington • 860‑777‑4001) offers climate‑controlled units, 24/7 security, and staff who never mute themselves mid‑sentence. Tell them the Wetlands Commission sent you and they’ll probably let you borrow a dolly. 😂


About the Author

Jack Beckett covers Farmington’s boards so you don’t have to. He files dispatches powered by a bottomless cup of coffee from the Einstein Bros. ☕—and yes, he’s on a first‑name basis with the barista.


Stay Informed with The Farmington Mercury
Dive into backstories, bylaws and the occasional bureaucratic blooper at The Farmington Mercury. Click through our beats—editorial, historic district, wetlands committee and more—or just slide into our DMs on X (formerly Twitter, a.k.a. Twix) for story tips, memes, or gentle scolding. Subscribe, advertise, or complain via:
Contact UsSubscribePositions AvailableLaw EnforcementZoning


Creative Commons License

© 2025 The Farmington Mercury / Mercury Local
This article, “Farmington Wetlands Panel Approves Cemetery Road Shift, Garage Build, Scout Benches; Hill‑Stead Path Heads for Site Walk,” by Jack Beckett is licensed under CC BY‑ND 4.0.

“Farmington Wetlands Panel Approves Cemetery Road Shift, Garage Build, Scout Benches; Hill‑Stead Path Heads for Site Walk”
by Jack Beckett, The Farmington Mercury (CC BY‑ND 4.0)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *