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#BarnLaw
oh, he's issued many such explanations
...and every one torpedoes his case further!
For example, during the last court case, he said that there WERE other locations where it would fit, but he'd have to move his propane tank [ which would cost $200 ].
>>>https://twitter.com/upstatefederlst/status/1455954842103451653 …
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Replying to @MorlockP
Thanks. I've been fascinated to watch the "you shouldn't fight this in court" people respond to this stuff. My in-law's neighbors built a fence 4 feet onto their property and wouldn't move it nor pay to have it moved. Seems like your responders would be like "it's just 4 feet"
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If the rainwater or snow-melt coming off the new outbuilding floods out the road or your neighbor's yard, whose responsibility is it to mitigate that?
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So perhaps legally required setbacks weren't plucked out of the air and have a purpose?
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I can assure you, the difference between 20 and 26 is noticeable on certain streets so, yes, I'd call the cops on someone who was repeatedly doing it. If you believe the zoned setbacks are too close, get the board to change them. Otherwise, they're there.
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If it doesn't matter why is in the zoning code? Why bring your buddy the zoning code guy out to inspect, not inspect, then lie about why you didn't, then after a judge has ruled try and get the code changed retroactively? Assuming I understand all the relevant facts correctly.
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you do have the facts correct, fwiw
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