While the crisis may be over, some mysteries remain
By Will Collette
One possible use that would fit right in with the existing buildings |
For now, Charlestown taxpayers seem to have escaped getting
mugged by the Charlestown Land Trust, Sonquipaug Association and Westerly YMCA
over the Y-Gate Scandal.
We still do not know the identity of the unnamed “private
developer” who signed a deal with the Westerly Y to buy the Y’s abandoned,
derelict 27.5 acre campground on Watchaug Pond or for how much. The last asking
price made public was $600,000, a 46% mark-up on the most recent appraisal of
$412,000.
We also don’t know what this private developer’s plans are for the property, which is zoned “open space/recreational,” but as Councilor Lisa DiBello pointed out, there are a lot of permissible uses for land with that designation. In Charlestown, we have a yacht club, several shooting clubs and the Shelter Harbor Golf Club all with that same zoning designation.
Or this. |
Under Charlestown’s zoning
use table, this property, as currently zoned, could be used for:
- riding stables,
- a golf course or driving range,
- a fish hatchery,
- a farm stand,
- a fitness center,
- a library,
- a venue for live entertainment.
- a crematorium,
- shooting range or
- sewage pumping station.
Another potential use |
There’s also the question of the Donoghue v. Charlestown
litigation. After the Town Council voted last February to pay $475,000 for a
worthless conservation easement from the Charlestown Land Trust to pay the Y
$730,000 for the land, Dr. Jack Donoghue halted the transaction by suing the
town for failing to abide by the Open Meetings Act.
The judge in that case recently ruled that the actions of the Town Council did indeed violate the Act and also authorized Dr. Donoghue’s
lawyer Maggie Hogan to pursue the truth in the other major allegation, that the
town’s ad hoc YMCA study group also violated the Open Meetings Act.
This group actually never bothered to follow the law – never
posted agendas, never published minutes (actually, they never TOOK minutes).
The town’s argument is that the group wasn’t actually a public body covered by
the Open Meetings Law.
Remember that the next time you hear Council incumbents talk
about “open and transparent government.”
Anyway, the culpability of the ad hoc group is still an open
question, as is the question of the Town’s potential liability for fines due to
repeated Open Meetings violations as well as attorney’s fees.
There is the unanswered question of how much the Charlestown
Land Trust raised from people to buy the camp. Now that the Land Trust isn’t
going to buy the camp, are they going to keep the money?
And how much did they actually raise? At one point in the
process, the Land Trust had pledged in its grant application to DEM that it
would raise ALL of the $370,000 in matching funds through its own private
fund-raising.
Then, the number dropped to $100,000 when the Land Trust convinced
a Council majority last February to authorize $475,000 in town money.
Then the pledge disappeared for a while – indeed, between
the amounts the state had pledged and the town had pledged, the total amount of taxpayer money was more
than the Y’s asking price.
But then most recently, in the last gasps to keep Y-Gate
alive, the Land Trust pledged to include some amount between $25,000 and
$50,000.
All the while, it has been holding one fund-raiser after
another.
So, Charlestown Land Trust, how much did you raise and what
are you going to do with the money?
And while we’re on the subject of absent disclosures from
the Land Trust, we’d still like to see that last land assessment, the one that
pegged the property as worth $412,000. I think we’d all like to determine
whether you finally did it honestly. And the engineers’ reports that you
claimed showed there were no environmental hazards on the property.
There are, after all, two densely populated neighborhoods
abutting the camp to the north and south.
I don’t know if last week’s news that the YMCA signed with
another buyer truly means an end to Y-Gate. There’s always the chance the deal
will fall through.
The Donoghue case is still open and there are still several
questions the Charlestown Land Trust should answer if it wants to rebuild its
reputation.
Who knows if the drama is over? When the new owner is
revealed, most likely when he, she or they comes forward with a new use plan
for the site, will Mayor D’Alcomo rally her Sonquipaug troops once again to do
battle against those who would deny her a taxpayer-financed play land?
P.s. If the new owner decides to put a crematorium on the site, click here for the PERFECT accessory to use when your time comes. If you're a Democrat.
P.s. If the new owner decides to put a crematorium on the site, click here for the PERFECT accessory to use when your time comes. If you're a Democrat.