Filed Date: 6/10/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Proceeding pursuant to General Municipal Law article 17 (initiated in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Fourth Judicial Department) seeking annexation of territory from respondent to petitioner.
It is hereby ordered that the report be and the same hereby is unanimously confirmed without costs and judgment is granted in favor of respondent as follows:
It is adjudged that the proposed annexation is not in the overall public interest.
Memorandum: Petitioner, the Town of Niagara (Town), commenced this original proceeding pursuant to General Municipal Law article 17 seeking annexation of a commercially-zoned area of 52 acres (hereafter, the site) from respondent, the City of Niagara Falls (City). The developer of the site favors annexation to the Town and seeks to build a Super Wal-Mart on the site. Pursuant to General Municipal Law § 712, this Court designated three Referees to hear and report on the issue whether the proposed annexation is in the overall public interest. We agree with the unanimous conclusion of the Referees that the Town failed to meet its burden of establishing that the proposed annexation is in the overall public interest, and we therefore confirm the report of the Referees.
In determining whether the proposed annexation is in the
The evidence at the annexation hearing established that the City’s fire protection services are superior to those provided by the Town. Indeed, the evidence with respect to fire protection services established that the City has paid personnel while the Town uses volunteers and, in comparison to the Town, the City has greater resources, a fire station closer to the site, and a shorter response time when called upon to provide services. The evidence further established that the City’s police resources are superior to those of the Town. With respect to water and sewer services, the City presently has active sewer and water connections to the site while the Town does not. Moreover, when the site is developed, the County’s Water Board will be obligated to accept a new City user but not a new Town user. The guaranteed availability of water and sewer services under the governance of the City and the City’s ability to provide superior fire and police protection weigh against the proposed annexation (cf. Matter of Common Council of City of Fulton v Town Bd. of Town of Volney, 238 AD2d 903, 904 [1997]). We note that, although the Town expressed concern that the initial development plans for the site did not adequately address issues of drainage, the site developer redesigned the drainage system as a result of the Town’s concerns, and the Town’s consultants thereafter approved it. Thus, there is no evidence that the proposed annexation is necessary to ensure that the Town’s concerns with respect to drainage are addressed by the site developer.
We agree with the Referees that the “requisite unity of purpose” supports the proposed annexation because the Town presently has many businesses and retail establishments in the immediate area (Common Council of City of Gloversville, 32 NY2d at 6; see Incorporated Vil. of Ilion, 261 AD2d 952 [1999]). Nonetheless, based on our consideration of all relevant factors, we conclude that the proposed annexation is not in the overall public interest. We have examined the Town’s remaining contentions and conclude that they are lacking in merit. We therefore confirm the report of the Referees and grant judgment in favor of the City adjudging that the proposed annexation is not in the overall public interest. Present—Green, J.P., Hurlbutt, Kehoe, Pine and Hayes, JJ.