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Residents Angry Over Loss of Tree in Development |
By Ron Churchill
July 24, 1995, Monday, CITY EDITION
Residents of Hidden Hollow Road in Hamburg are up in arms after part of a
wooded area that shields their quiet street from McKinley Parkway was
thinned of trees and other foliage during construction of a new home
earlier this month.
The residents live in a 24-lot development created by Frank Parlato Jr.,
who emphasizes retaining a natural environment in his projects. The land
that was thinned of greenery was part of the 30-acre wild area that all of
the lot owners on the 46-acre development share.
"Hidden Hollow isn't hidden anymore," said Nancy Gorman, who lives across
the street from the site of the new home near the corner of McKinley and
Hidden Hollow. "Now I look out my dining room window and all I see is
McKinley Parkway. I don't like it. I loved being in a little nook."
"They raped the land that was forever wild," said Anne Marie Seidleck, who
lives next door to Ms. Gorman and recently brought the matter before the
Hamburg Zoning Board.
Although the damaged area is a very small portion of the overall wooded
area -- measuring about 50 feet by 175 feet -- residents say the area was
vital.
"To us that's a very important strip because it separates us from
McKinley," said Joseph Lau, president of the Homeowners Association, which
formed recently to address the problem.
"The whole neighborhood as a group is very concerned. It is a violation of
our community."
Lau said that more than half of the development's homeowners turned out for
the last meeting and that all votes taken at the meeting were unanimous.
The owner of the house under construction, Wallace Grieser of Hamburg, said
the trees removed from the area were mostly thorn apple trees that were "really wild, like bramble, or like tumbleweed. It was just a mess."
But residents say the wild area acted as a sound barrier as well as a
visual barrier from the well-traveled McKinley.
Grieser said he has already provided Parlato with a plan that will be
presented to the association in an effort to resolve the conflict.
"It's not our objective to strafe the land," said Grieser, who is also on
the Hamburg Rejuvenation Committee.
"I'm confident that the neighbors on Hidden Hollow will agree on a plan in
the next few days that can be executed to everyone's satisfaction.
"The land belongs to me as well as the other landowners in Hidden Hollow,"
Grieser said, adding that he will be more affected by the area because he
will be living adjacent to it.
Several trees remain standing, and Grieser said the proposal he submitted
to Parlato included adding 10 arborvitae and eight to 10 maple trees, as
well as some flowering shrubs.
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Contact Frank Parlato Jr. |
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