Letter to all Windham Voters
February 21st, 2010I am running for election to the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) and I ask for your vote on Tuesday, March 9.
Why am I running? And why vote for me? Because the combination of my experience and training makes me the candidate most able to assist the board in framing the issues to be decided and in applying the specific facts of each case to the standards required by law.
For those of you who don’t know me, I have had previous experience on the ZBA– from 1980 to 1986. I left the ZBA when I became a member of the Board of Selectmen. I served on that board for over 9 years. During 3 of those years, I studied the law and passed the bar. I can truthfully say that I enjoyed being a law student. One of the main reasons was that I kept having those “A-ha!” moments when I could see the reasoning behind the rules and procedures that I had been using as a member of the ZBA and the BoS. I started my legal career practicing municipal law, often representing clients before land use boards. I later went on to prosecuting criminal cases, first as an Assistant County Attorney and then as an Assistant Attorney General. I am now (mostly) retired.
In the fall of 2009, I volunteered to be an alternate for the ZBA, and I have served as an alternate since my appointment in December.
The cases that come before the ZBA are important to us all. They are important to the applicants who hope to improve a home or establish a profitable business. They are important to the abutters who want to ensure that their home values are protected. They are important to all the residents of town who have voted on the zoning that they believed would be in the best interest of all residents in our town. And it is important to all of us that that our ZBA decides cases fairly and legally.
My hope is that as regular member of the ZBA, I can use my experience to help identify the issues presented in each application and help apply the relevant facts to those issues. I would also work to ensure that all applicants, abutters and residents understand board procedures and how the specific facts apply to standards used in making a decision.
In a letter for next week’s paper, I will write more specifically about responsibilities of the ZBA and criteria that must be used in deciding cases.
If you have any questions about my candidacy, please send me an email at EADunn30@aol.com. I’d be happy answer directly or address the issue in future letters.
Elizabeth A. (Betty) Dunn