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Monday, June 29, 2026
Farmington, CT|Independent Local News
The Farmington Mercury

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Ned Statchen

IWC ChairFarmington Inland Wetlands Commission

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Coverage (7 articles)

Noble Energy Brings a Smaller Plan to Farmington Inland Wetlands

Jack Beckett·

Noble Energy returned to Farmington Inland Wetlands with a smaller plan for 8261 Fienemann Road: no restaurant, a shrunken warehouse and travel center, and wetlands impact cut from 3,700 square feet to under 1,000. The public, when its turn came, wanted to talk about four schools within a half mile. The hearing was continued to May 6.

Farmington's Last Fully Remote Commission Is Going Back to the Table

Henry Whitfield·

Farmington's Inland Wetlands Commission will return to in-person meetings starting April 15, ending its fully remote format. Chair Ned Stachen and Commissioner Robert Eisner cited litigation risk as the primary driver, noting the commission was the last in town — and possibly the state — still meeting entirely online.

Farmington Wetlands Commission Accepts Intervener Petition in Noble Energy Hearing

Jack Beckett·

The Farmington Conservation and Inland Wetlands Commission unanimously accepted Stephanie Roman's intervener petition Wednesday in the continuing public hearing on Noble Energy Real Estate Holdings' proposed travel center, warehouse, and diesel fueling facility on the upstream edge of the Batterson Park Pond watershed. The petition's expert, Carya Ecological Services principal Sigrun Gadwa, flagged a state-endangered wetland plant — Saururus cernuus, lizard's tail — on the applicant's own plant inventory. The hearing was continued to May 20, with both commissions attaching conditions to anything they eventually approve.

A Farmington Truck-Stop Hearing Comes Down to One Disputed Number

Jack Beckett·

Noble Energy wants to build a diesel travel center and warehouse on 86 acres that drain toward Batterson Park Pond — the public pond the state is spending roughly $10 million to restore. After five hearings, Farmington's wetlands commission still won't decide, and it now comes down to one contested number: the applicant says the project removes under 5 percent of a vernal pool's watershed; the intervenor says 56.8 percent. The hearing stays open to June 17.

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