On Monday, Town Council will decide whether to give away $500,000 in town money to Wakefield developer
By
Will Collette
At the Monday, April 12 Council meeting, there will be a “public” hearing perhaps followed by a decision to spend $500,000 in town money and $400,000 in state funds for Tucker Estates, an over-valued piece of property owned by Brian Lind, a Wakefield developer.
Going
back over Town Council meeting videos, this project was sketchy from the start.
First, the town violated its own procedures for open space acquisition by
actively soliciting the owner, rather than have the owner file the “Open Space
Declaration of Interest.”
According
to testimony by Town Planner Jane Weidman (Town Council meeting, August 11,
2020, starting at 1:23 on the video), the idea to buy the property came from
Planning Commissar Ruth Platner and Arnolda’s Town Councilor Bonnie Van Slyke.
Screenshot from Town Planner Jane Weidman's unusual August 11, 2020 testimony about how the Tucker Estate deal started |
Ruth knew about Tucker
Estates because – FIFTEEN YEARS AGO - she had killed a proposal from Lind to
build a 22 unit housing development.
The
town commissioned an appraisal to be done on the property. For some unexplained
reason, they decided to have the appraisal done based on the “extraordinary
assumption” that the 22-unit housing development Platner had killed 15 years
ago was somehow going to be built in the near future.
The
first appraisal came in at $660,000 based on that false assumption was too low
for Lind, according to Planner Weidman so she had the appraisal re-done using
different comparable properties and got a second appraisal at $725,000.
That
was still too low for Lind so he got his own appraisal done. That came in at
$915,000 but having a generous heart, Lind has offered the town a
purchase-and-sale agreement at $900,000.
Now,
if you want a more realistic dollar figure for the land’s worth, minus the imaginary
22-unit housing development, look at Charlestown’s Tax Assessment for the
property, which pegs its value at $333,600.
DEM
awarded Charlestown a $400,000 grant, the maximum allowed, based on the town’s
“extraordinary assumption” appraisals. In case you need reminding, this $400,000 in possible state DEM funding is ALSO our money.
Weidman
told the Town Council that DEM has given her verbal approval for either the town’s
or the owner’s appraisals, except that’s not what DEM told me.
Charlestown
cannot assume DEM will go along with valuing the property based on the
imaginary 22-unit subdivision. DEM will subject the property and its value to
their own analysis. There is at least one Charlestown precedent where DEM
rejected the town’s appraisal (see below) on one of Ruth Platner’s sketchy land
deals.
Charlestown is counting on that $400,000 from DEM to cut the direct cost to the town to half a million dollars. Remember, the town has assessed Tucker Estates as worth $333,600 and here is that document:
Who ya gonna believe? Our tax assessor or appraisals based on fairy tale assumptions? |
What makes this deal smell even more is that we simply don't need to buy the land to keep it from being developed. Platner and her crusty commissioners have killed development on the land in the past and would kill it in the future. So why buy it?
That’s what will be discussed at the April 12 Town Council meeting.
If you wish to “attend”
virtually it’s relatively easy – you can click
on “Virtual meetings” on Charlestown’s home page to get access to coverage via Cisco WebEx,
an app you need to download. There are some instructions in the left-hand
column. You can also e-mail comments to Councilors – find their e-mail
addresses HERE. I’m still waiting for a response from
Cody Clarkin to my March e-mail about Tucker Estates. Scout’s honor!
Also,
much to my surprise, town government took my criticisms of the way access to
past meetings and documents were hidden. The IQM2 program – distinctly different
than Cisco WebEx – that you have to use to access past meetings was so hidden
that you needed a compass and bag of breadcrumbs to find it.
That
has changed. Now on the Charlestown’s home page, there’s a
small print link to the IQM2 web portal right
under the link to “Agendas and Minutes.” You can use this to look for yourself
at the earlier Council discussions about Tucker Estates.
Most
recently, the Town (actually the CCA’s) plan to buy a 4 acre property on Oyster
Drive from its political allies fell through over widely different appraisals.
The seller submitted a $426,000 appraisal based on the “extraordinary
assumption” the land was buildable, versus a $75,000 town appraisal based on
the fact the land was NOT buildable. The deal fell through.
But
to me, this new Tucker Estates scam more closely resembles the Y-Gate scam in 2011-12.
The Gist: The Westerly YMCA owned an abandoned summer camp on Watchaug Pond that they wanted to dump. After the town rejected an eco-friendly 10-unit development proposal supported by the Y, the Y worked through its benefactors (who also had close CCA ties) to finagle a town purchase of the property.
The
YMCA gave the town an appraisal for $735,000 that used the “extraordinary
assumption” that a zoning change and development plan the town had just rejected
might actually happen, along with a variety of other convenient omissions that
I analyzed in THIS ARTICLE.
DEM
had initially awarded Charlestown a grant for this deal, as they have for
Tucker Estates. But they also saw the flaws in the appraisal and cut the award
from $367,000 to $206,000. The Y-Gate deal dragged on for months as then
Council President, CCA leader Tom Gentz, tried one bizarre tactic after another
to get around rising public dissent.
Ultimately,
public opposition was too much, even for the CCA, and the deal fizzled out. The
YMCA found another buyer and that property hasn’t made the news in years.
It seems like every two or three years, Ruth Platner, the common denominator in all these shady deals, comes up with a property she just has to have, no matter how much it costs the rest of us.
According to the new draft Comprehensive Plan, about
half the town’s land area is officially open space, but Ruth seems to want to
grab it all, except maybe for the seaside properties where the CCA’s base owns
houses.
Ruth
does her best to stay under the radar, letting others, like Planner Jane
Weidman, do her dirty work. Platner doesn’t use the town’s e-mail system to
avoid any disclosure of her wheeling and dealing under the state open records
law.
As
long as Ruth continues to exercise de facto control over town government, this
will be a chronic problem that I plan to do my best to expose.