Politics & Government
Provco Appeals Newtown Township’s Denial Of Wawa Land Development Plan
At the same time, Provco also is moving forward with a validity challenge of the township's ordinance.

NEWTOWN TOWNSHIP, PA — Provco is taking the township to court over its vote to deny land development plans to build a Wawa convenience store and gas station in the township's office/research zone at Lower Silver Lake Road and the Newtown Bypass.
On Wednesday night, the board of supervisors voted 3 to 2 to authorize its solicitor to defend the township’s decision to turn down Provco’s preliminary/final land development plan.
In November the supervisors voted to deny the plan citing its failure to obtain approval for a larger canopy over the gas pumps, for submitting its plan as a preliminary/final plan rather than just a preliminary plan and for providing an eight foot setback from the road where a 20 foot setback is required.
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Voting in favor of the motion to fight Provco in court were Kyle Davis, Elen Snyder and John Mack., the same supervisors who voted to deny the plan. Supervisors Phil Calabro and Chairman Dennis Fisher voted against the motion.
Last week, Patch also reported that Provco is moving forward with a validity challenge of the township’s ordinance. That appeal is scheduled to be heard by the township’ zoning hearing board as early as late January.
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In preparation for the challenge, the supervisors on Nov. 22 voted to retain David Babbitt & Associates to assist the township in its defense of the challenge. Babbitt had assisted the township in fighting zoning variances for the pumps and signage and is familiar with the proposed development, said township solicitor David Sander.
Provco will be seeking to declare the township's zoning ordinance "unconstitutional" because it did not provide for a combination convenience store and gas station use prior to the development of the E30 curative amendment.
“If they are successful at the zoning hearing board or ultimately on appeal through the court system they will have the ability to develop their property as they wish with a convenience store and gas station without having to comply with the E30 use ordinance,” Sander told the
supervisors.
Shortly after submitting plans to the township in 2019, Provco challenged the validity of the Newtown Township Joint Zoning ordinance for not providing for a combination fueling station and convenience store use.
The challenge prompted Newtown Township, working in conjunction with Wrightstown and Upper Makefield - the three municipalities that make up the Newtown Area Zoning Jointure - to develop a curative amendment to remedy the oversight.
The sale of gasoline as an accessory use to a retail operation had not been permitted in the office-research zone, or for that matter anywhere in the Joint Municipal Zoning Ordinance (JMZO) making the ordinance challengeable, Provco’s land use attorney told planners in 2019. The company followed through, filing a challenge with the Newtown Township Zoning Hearing Board over the exclusion.
Provco put the challenge on hold while the township developed a curative amendment. The supervisors subsequently approved the ordinance in September 2021 and Provco moved forward with the submission of land development plans to the township under the regulations established by the E30 ordinance.
The E30 ordinance limits the use by special exception to a minimum four acre lot in the office research zone in Newtown Township and places limitations on the square footage of any proposed store, limits the number of fueling dispensers up to a maximum of eight based on acreage of the site without a variance, imposes restrictions on signage and lighting and sets parameters for parking, buffering, etc.
Provco subsequently submitted land development plans to the township under its new E30 ordinance. The plan, however, was denied by the board of supervisors in early November.
Meanwhile the township is already in court with Provco over a zoning board decision to deny variances for the number of gas pumps and for signage.
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