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A Slippery Slope: Mardirossian eyes court action

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  • A Slippery Slope: Mardirossian eyes court action

    Potomac Almanac, VA
    July 5 2007


    A Slippery Slope
    Mardirossian eyes court action to allow clearing trees and build
    fence near C&O Canal.

    By Aaron Stern/The Almanac
    July 4, 2007

    Photo:
    The entrance to Aris Mardirossian's property at 12000 River Road. The
    next phase of Mardirossian's battle to remove trees from his property
    will take place in court.

    Aris Mardirossian has seen enough of the Montgomery County Planning
    Board. On the night that the board unanimously rejected his appeal of
    a denial of a forest conservation plan - a night during which he
    accused the board's staff of being influenced by politics -
    Mardirossian said that he would challenge the Planning Board's ruling
    in court.
    `No, no more plans,' Mardirossian said about submitting a revised
    Forest Conservation Plan for review. `I guess a judge will make the
    decision.'
    `If they want to take 50 percent [of my property] then they better
    pay us,' Mardirossian said. Mardirossian said that he will challenge
    the ruling on the basis that it violates his constitutional rights as
    a property owner and the rights of his children under the Americans
    with Disabilities Act.
    The decision is the latest turn in a case that began when the
    Armenian-born Mardirossian purchased the property at 12000 River Road
    in August of 2006 with the aim of building a home on the vacant lot
    that abuts the C&O Canal National Historical Park.
    As part of his plan he applied to the National Park Service to build
    a fence through a Park Service easement on his property. When the
    Park Service failed to respond to that application within 30 days, it
    was approved by default under Park Service regulations.
    The road for Mardirossian since then has been considerably more
    difficult. In addition to the National Park Service's easement, the
    property is also subject to the terms of the county's Forest
    Conservation Law, which regulates the removal of trees on lots
    greater than 40,000 square feet in size, which is just under an acre.
    In the past two years Mardirossian - the man behind the Crown Farm
    development in Gaithersburg - and his team of engineers and attorneys
    have submitted five plans to the Planning Board's staff to gain
    approval for the construction of the home and a fence bordering the
    property, as well as the removal of trees from the property. Each
    application has been denied.

    MARDIROSSIAN APPEALED the most recent denial on Thursday night and
    held nothing back. Flanked by his team of engineers and attorneys, he
    said the Planning Board's staff was caving to political influence.
    Mardirossian filed lawsuit against community activist Wayne Goldstein
    last year, claiming a letter Goldstein wrote defamed him, saying
    falsely that Mardirossian intended to cut down huge numbers of trees
    on his property to get a view of the Potomac River.
    `From that point I started litigation that has brought a tremendous
    amount of light to this process, that I think is broken,'
    Mardirossian said. Depositions and records of correspondence produced
    during the course of the lawsuit led Mardirossian to believe that
    political pressure from a member of the Montgomery County Council
    played a part in the denial of his application.
    `It is very, very dangerous that political paybacks come to this
    building,' Mardirossian said.
    `Who are you accusing of a payback?' asked Royce Hanson, the chairman
    of the Planning Board, leaning forward to his microphone, his face
    turning red.
    `Marc Elrich,' Mardirossian said, naming a member of the Montgomery
    County Council.
    `I simply don't understand what you're talking about,' Hanson said.
    Mardirossian said that Elrich's office had sent an e-mail to Mark
    Pfefferle, Forest Conservation Program manager for the Planning
    Board. Mardirossian said that the e-mail praised and thanked
    Pfefferle for denying the conservation plan, and that he felt that
    the denial of his plan was a personal attack from Elrich carried out
    through the denial of the plan.
    `You are implying something that you aren't saying and I think you
    should be careful about what you're saying,' Hanson said. `Do you
    have any evidence whatsoever?'
    `No councilmember should ever call a plan reviewer, they should go
    through your office,' said Mardirossian, again citing the e-mail.
    `Any citizen, elected or not, should have the right to call a planner
    and express their opinion,' Hanson said.
    `The only question I'm raising is, it would be a good policy to
    [require] that any politician go through the commissioner's office to
    contact a planner,' Mardirossian said.
    `One of the things that I've learned is that we have a limited
    ability to control what councilmembers do,' said commissioner Wendy
    Perdue.
    Gwen Wright, the active director of the planning department, said
    that the planning staff has an enormous task on their hands to
    provide the board with the best information possible, and that they
    work closely with applicants to achieve that goal. Wright urged the
    members and the chairman of the board not to allow the reputations of
    staff members to be publicly denigrated, and said that Pfefferle's
    response to the congratulatory e-mail from Elrich's office was
    professional and explanatory.
    `To say otherwise would be to impune Mark Pfefferle's integrity and
    that can not be tolerated,' Wright said. `Our staff work and our
    staff recommendations are not going to be called into question.'
    Elrich was not at Thursday's hearing. On Friday Dale Tibbitts from
    Elrich's office said that the assertion that Elrich had any improper
    interaction with the planning board's staff was not true, but he did
    not elaborate.

    THE FENCE that Mardirossian wants to build along the borders of his
    property and the trees that he wants to remove have been at the heart
    of each denial of his Forest Conservation plans.
    The reason for the fence, and the reasons for removing certain trees
    on his property, Mardirossian said, is to protect his two children,
    aged seven and five years, who have severe allergies to some nut
    trees.
    But much of Mardirossian's property lies in a conservation easement
    and in areas deemed environmentally sensitive by county law.
    The conservation easement on Mardirossian's property lies in steeply
    sloped areas, according to a report issued by the Planning Board's
    staff. The grade of the slope runs between 44 and 59 percent
    throughout the easement, and any slope steeper than 25 percent in
    grade is considered environmentally sensitive under County law, the
    report said.
    This was the basis for the denial of the most recent plan, which
    sought to remove 51 trees from the easement, as well as to construct
    a fence along the property line, which would also run through the
    easement. The removal of those trees could potentially have the
    impact of destabilizing the slope and creating more runoff into the
    C&O Canal and the Potomac River, the report said. The construction of
    the fence could harm other trees and also contribute to the slope's
    destabilization, according to the report.
    Because many of the trees that he wants to remove are small in size,
    they would be cut and carried out by hand to minimize the impact on
    the slopes, said Jim Cook, a forester working with Mardirossian. The
    stumps would not be ground out, and instead would be treated with
    herbicide and allowed to decay over time.
    `We love trees,' Mardirossian said, and added that he would replant
    twice as many trees as he removed if that's what the Planning Board
    wanted.
    The fence, too, could be installed without much detriment, Cook said.
    `What I'm saying is this fence will not cause damage to the forest
    and it will not cause destabilization of the slope.'
    The proposed fence would be 6' 8' high - low enough for deer to be
    able to jump over it - and would have an eight inch gap at the bottom
    to allow smaller animals to continue their normal travel patterns,
    Cook said.
    Hanson expressed skepticism about the impact the removal of the trees
    would have, and Pfefferle said some of the tree measurements done by
    Mardirossian's staff do not match those that he and his colleagues
    have taken, and that some trees would be too large to take out by
    hand.
    A revised plan submitted to the Planning Board's staff on May 29
    reduced the number of trees that it sought to remove from 51 to 15
    because further testing revealed that Mardirossian's two children are
    not allergic to Beech trees as previously thought. The remaining 15
    trees are hickory and walnut. That revised plan also moved the
    proposed fence 40 feet east of the western property line, which
    borders the park. Mardirossian and his attorneys sought to have the
    Planning Board approve the newest plan during Thursday's appeal of
    the previous plan, but the Board ruled that it could not judge the
    new plan as its staff had not had enough time to fully review the
    changes.

    THE AMERICANS with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) requires that
    public entities must make reasonable accommodations in any laws and
    regulations for qualified individuals, said Joe Lapan, one of
    Mardirossian's attorneys.
    `The law clearly does apply to local entities [such as] Park &
    Planning,' Lapan said. `This is not just about the Forest
    Conservation Law, it is about the ADA, it is about accommodating the
    disability of these children,' said Barbara Sears, an attorney who
    led Mardirossian's presentation on Thursday.
    Mardirossian has also sought approval for his fence because of
    American with Disabilities Act requirements, saying that he needs the
    fence to protect his children from nut trees on the properties
    bordering his.
    Though the commissioners said that the evidence supporting the
    severity of the children's allergies was ample, they questioned why
    that information was not presented to the Planning Board's staff
    until the applicant's third submission on Jan. 31, 2007, three months
    after the initial application was submitted.
    Mardirossian said that he was not aware that the nut trees were on
    his property, and consequently Cook was not told to look for them
    when he surveyed the trees on the 3.25-acre lot. Cook said that the
    revelation didn't occur until a team meeting with Mardirossian and
    his engineers in December of 2006.
    Sears said that his children were diagnosed at very young ages and
    that all nut trees were removed from his present home.
    `So Mr. Mardirossian's house has no nut trees, but he bought this
    parcel without checking to see if there were any nut trees?' Perdue
    asked.
    `When I walked in there I could not see any nut trees,' Mardirossian
    responded.
    `He didn't make this up, it has been an ongoing issue since they were
    born,' said Sears.
    The Planning Board commissioners discussed the possibility of putting
    the fence at the limits of disturbance that would be incurred in
    building the new home. Such a fence would allow the children a large
    patio and a septic field to play on, which would be approximately 1.6
    acres of land.
    Hanson noted that is more space then most families have on their
    entire property.
    Mardirossian said that that is irrelevant.
    `The property is 3.25 acres. I pay taxes on 3.25 acres and I have a
    right to enjoy my property with my children,' Mardirossian said. `You
    are trying to take away 1.75 acres of my property.'
    Perdue said that the severe nature of the children's allergies was
    well-established but that there was a difference between making a
    reasonable accommodation under the terms of the Americans with
    Disabilities Act and making the best possible accommodation.
    `A fence at the limits of disturbance is not unreasonable,' Perdue
    said.
    In his closing comments Hanson agreed.
    `A lot of people have fenced yards that are substantially smaller
    than their property,' Hanson said. `That doesn't seem to me to be an
    unreasonable thing.'
    Hanson also questioned the parental wisdom of allowing one's children
    to play on steep, rocky slopes and suggested that a fence that would
    keep them away from those areas might be in Mardirossian's best
    interest.
    `Putting a fence at the bottom of a steep slope seems to me to be
    inherently dangerous,' Hanson said.
    Perdue motioned to deny the plan, and that motion passed unanimously,
    5-0.
    `This is a motion and a decision that I think is ripe for
    reconsideration,' Commissioner Allison Bryant said in seconding the
    motion to deny the appeal.
    Afterwards, Mardirossian agreed, but said that that reconsideration
    will be done in court, not by the Planning Board.

    http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/articl e.asp?article=84222&paper=70&cat=104
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