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Zoning dispute roils quaint R.I. town
Sakonnet Purls owner Louisa Silverman has run afoul of zoning regulations limiting the number of signs allowed at businesses in Tiverton. Rosemary Eva, the town's former zoning czar, noticed an extra sign and is pushing the issue.
Sakonnet Purls, which occupies a 200-year-old house in the town's quaint Four Corners neighborhood, is where Ann Hood learned to knit and eventually wrote "The Knitting Circle."
Silverman, who has been in business since 1985, was ready to throw in the towel over the sign dispute but decided to dig in her heels when her customers rallied to her defense. Dozens showed up at a zoning meeting last week, the Providence Journal reported Tuesday.
Eva said her only real complaint is that the Sakonnet Purls property is the sign advertising Adam Dale's Back Alley Wood Works, which he runs out of a shed he rents from Silverman. A building inspector permitted him to put up the sign.
But Eva has also suggested Silverman should not have been allowed a non-conforming use because her property was totally residential for two years before she and her husband bought it in 1985 and that Dale should not be able to use the shed for a business because it was empty for a year before he rented it.
The hearing is scheduled to resume in July.
Copyright 2009 by United Press International
This news arrived on: 06/10/2009
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Posted Comments:
06-14-2009 08:38
wrote:
Much ado about nothing! In defense of the zoning czar, if you are not going to enforce the laws on the books, then remove them.
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