Who
you are determines who you trust
By
Will Collette
Tom Gentz just loves giving away Charlestown property and money to his pals |
In
the end, the Charlestown Town Council decided to accept the management
plan for the Charlestown Moraine Preserve offered by the Conservation
Commission at the June 10 Council meeting.
The plan lays out potential uses of
the land as a natural site featuring the special topography of the Charlestown
glacial moraine. The plan calls for the 75 acre parcel on Route One, the former
site of the proposed Whalerock wind project, to remain undeveloped and
undisturbed except for some trails that the Nature Conservancy has volunteered
to design for Charlestown.
The
Conservation Commission also recommended the town not seek to grant a conservation easement on the land, ending
another contentious aspect of the long-running battle over this land. Click
here for the video. If the link doesn’t work, click
here.
When
Charlestown ended the long-running Whalerock battle by spending $2.1 million to
buy the land, Town Council Boss
Tom Gentz (CCA Party) announced that the town would also be seeking to give
away a conservation easement to a non-municipal group and he prepared
a memo listing several groups that had either expressed an interest in
gaining an easement or whom he considered to be good candidates.
Like
so many of his brainstorms, Gentz’s
proposal drew immediate criticism. One key element of his plan, that the
town simply give away the easement, turns out to be illegal. A conservation
easement turns out to be a “property interest” under the law, a thing of value,
and the town cannot simply give away a valuable property interest like this
without putting
it before voters for their approval.
The
Audubon Society took a pass. The Nature Conservancy was only interested in
offering free technical assistance on the trails. That left the Charlestown
Land Trust as the last contender on Boss Gentz’s list.
Readers may remember the
central
role played by the Land Trust in the 2012 Y-Gate Scandal where taxpayers
were almost bilked out of just under a million dollars that was to be spent to
buy the busted out abandoned Westerly YMCA campground on Watchaug Pond that
turned out to be worth only a quarter of that price.
Boss
Gentz and Land Trust leader Russ Ricci pushed hard for the town to authorize
paying a quarter million dollars to the Land Trust so the Land Trust could,
with state matching funds, pay the YMCA for the land. In return, Charlestown
would get a conservation easement (yes, that term again) that turned out to be
not what Gentz and Russ Ricci said it was.
In
the end, public opinion turned against the deal and the YMCA ended up finding a
private buyer who is leaving the land as it was, except for removing tons of
dangerous debris that Charlestown almost ended up paying for.
The
Conservation Commission recommended against working a conservation easement
with the deal, not because the Land Trust almost screwed the town on the Y-Gate
scam, but because the Trust brought nothing to the table. In the
Conservation Commission’s opinion, the Trust didn't offer anything of value to the town in
return for the property interest.
Even
though Planning Commissar Ruth Platner and CCA Party pundit Mike Chambers
lobbied hard to grant an easement to somebody, anybody, but most likely the
Land Trust, even the CCA Town Council members had to admit that there was no
support or basis for making the gift to the Land Trust.
Nonetheless,
there was grumbling among the CCA supporters and followers who felt that they
needed a guarantee – Commissar
Platner called it “insurance” – in the form of an easement to prevent
something evil from happening in the future. One of them said it was a matter
of trust.
Indeed,
CCA
Pundit Chambers wrote to the Westerly Sun to accuse easement critic Deb
Carney of being in league with developers because she felt it was unwise to
lock up the land against any future need the town might have. Of course, Chambers
failed to understand that if you’re going to take on Deb Carney, you better
have your facts straight or you’re going to get your ass whooped, which is
exactly what
she dished out to him.
But
the CCA Party does not have a monopoly either on trust or mistrust. While they
are afraid that others might decide to pave over Charlestown, I think
Charlestown residents have some real reasons to distrust the CCA Party. Just
take a look at the Y-Gate Scandal. Or the phony Battle
for Ninigret Park which turned out to be little more than a tissue of lies.
There’s
no question that Charlestown is and has been deeply polarized, especially over
land use issues. Since this is an election year, it’s only going to get worse,
especially if the CCA Party runs another campaign as they have since their
inception that is based on ginning up fear and mistrust against their imaginary
boogeymen and fellow citizens.
For
now, Charlestown has settled the matter of the Whalerock wind turbines, and now
it has settled the matter of land rights to the former Whalerock property. While
people may eye each other with suspicion for a long time, eventually we’ll come
to the realization that we all live here and will have to find a better way to
get along. It would help if Boss Gentz would give up trying to give away town
land and money.