It’s
time for some recreation
By
Linda Felaco
A version of
this article ran in the Westerly
Sun on May 21st as a letter to the editor.
On
Monday, June 1, Charlestown voters will be presented with two warrant items,
both initiated by the Town Council, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Charlestown
Citizens Alliance (CCA), as well as a citizens’ petition that is most decidedly
not CCA-endorsed and that the CCA would squash if it could.
Warrant
Question #1
would authorize $2 million in bond funding for open space purchases, and only
open space. Past bond authorizations have been for open space and recreation,
but the CCA party opposes recreational facilities.
Witness their rabid
but ultimately ineffectual opposition to the beach pavilions in 2011 and their
recent ouster
of Parks and Recreation Director Jay Primiano, whose job has not even been
advertised by the town despite the imminent start of the busy summer season. So
this time the CCA is not even suggesting that any of the bond money could be
spent for recreational purposes at all.
The
CCA maxed out their last open space credit card on the 2013 purchase
of the 75 acres on the Charlestown Moraine formerly known as Whalerock, so
the CCA spins this question as “replenishing the town’s depleted open space
funds.”
Because the sale price offered on the moraine property was exactly the
same as the amount of the then-available bond funding, mirabile, mirabilis, the CCA was able to authorize the purchase on
their own recognizance without putting it to the voters as they had demanded
with the beach pavilions.
Now, like junkies needing their next fix, the CCA
Party’s leaders are jonesing at the thought of having to go hat in hand to the
voters for the money to buy the next parcel that comes along.
Each
new land purchase makes the CCA salivate for more and they quickly forget the
previous ones, like Imelda Marcos with her closets full of unworn shoes. Just try
finding, say, a map of any of the town-owned hiking trails at Town Hall or on
the town website.
The reason you can’t may or may not have something to do with
the fact that CCA stalwart Cliff Vanover sells trail
maps for a living. Though now that the CCA is plumping for a new open-space
bond they’ve posted an open-space
guide—on their own website, not the town’s.
Which
brings me to Warrant
Question #2, which asks voters to authorize the Town Council, every
single current member of which was endorsed by the CCA, to transfer
control of the newly purchased Moraine Preserve, possibly to a private group
that might just happen to be friends of the CCA.
Buying the land with open
space funds means it can’t be used for anything else until it’s paid for, and
even then it would require a townwide vote.
But the CCA board members,
supporters, fundraisers, and financial donors who live near the moraine are still
terrified of that land actually being used somehow.
So in the CCA spin machine
(Lather. Rinse. Repeat.), this question becomes “partnering”
to “permanently protect the conservation value” of the preserve—“at no cost to the
taxpayers”! “No cost,” that is, except the $2 million we’re already paying. Plus
interest. Plus the lost tax revenue. In perpetuity.
How
long can we keep taking property off the tax rolls and raising the rates on the
rest of us taxpayers? Between town, state, and federal parks and wildlife
refuges, plus open space owned by nonprofits, fake
fire districts, or private individuals that is subject either to a
conservation easement or to lower taxes under the Farms,
Forest and Open Space program, more than half of all the land area of
Charlestown is either nontaxable or subject to substantially reduced tax rates.
That
tally doesn’t include yet another parcel that was just converted from
residential to open space when the state Water Resources Board purchased it to
set aside the groundwater resources for some future time when Charlestown needs
it.
Meanwhile,
a group of citizens seeks to authorize $1 million in bond funding in order to
finally begin carrying out the 2008-2014 Ninigret
Park master plan. This question (called Petition
#1 on the ballot) will also appear on the ballot on June 1. If
approved, this money could also be used for long-neglected park maintenance.
The
CCA spin machine calls this “appropriating $1 million
through a construction bond toward build-out of Ninigret Park.” “Construction” of
any kind gives the CCA the vapors. Planning Commissioner Ruth Platner, who has
no legal authority to levy fines, once coerced a local company to donate $1000
to the Nature Conservancy rather than have to tear up a parking lot they’d had
the audacity to pave without consulting her first.
So, in CCA-speak, improving
the park becomes “construction” and “build-out.” Trigger words the CCA has
always used, usually without justification, to rile up their followers.
Ultimately,
voters are being presented with two competing visions of open space. In the CCA
vision, we hoover up all available properties to make sure no one else ever gets
their hands on them or even gets to use them—ourselves included.
The
citizens’ petition, in contrast, would enhance one of our existing properties and
increase the variety of recreational activities available, thereby providing
health and other benefits to the town—without further reducing our tax base.
On
June 1, vote no on
the open space bond, if for no other reason than to stop signaling to sellers
how much we’re willing to pay; no to giving up control of the moraine preserve;
and yes on the Ninigret Park recreation bond.