Ramapo record on 'open space' stirs questions

October 27, 2008  Community View in The Journal News

Robert I. Rhodes

For years, Ramapo Supervisor Christopher St. Lawrence and town attorney Michael Klein have assured us that the open space he has been buying will never be developed. Preserve Ramapo has suggested that St. Lawrence is not to be trusted and asked why he has refused to dedicate this property as parkland, a simple process requiring only a formal resolution by the Ramapo Town Board.

Recent events have proven that Preserve Ramapo's warning was not just a cheap political shot. After putting just one tiny ad in an obscure publication, the town signed a contract to sell the Tilcon Quarry to a developer for what seems to be a fraction of its true value. Their excuse: We only had one bidder, and when we listed this parcel as one of our open space/parklands it was an innocent mistake. This innocent mistake was repeated over and over both in statements by St. Lawrence and in several town publications. (Documentation can be found at the end of this article.)

The builder wants to build 496 luxury condominiums on this 65 acre parcel and, according to the contract with the town, will only end up paying just over $5 million for the land and flood relief.

The development and construction will cost somewhere in the neighborhood of $300 million and the cost of the land will only be about 1.5 percent of that cost. Normally a builder expects to spend one-fourth to one-third of his total development cost for land acquisition. That would be as much as $100 million this case. If Ramapo were to sell this land for $100 million it could suspend its town tax for almost two years! What a great deal for the builder.

Preserve Ramapo is now suing the town to stop this outrageous deal. In response a very embarrassed St. Lawrence and his rubber-stamp town board have finally dedicated the second of 23 open space parcels. Attorney Michael Klein, according to Tuesday's Journal News editorial ("Liberty Rock solid") tells us: "The board is considering which properties to dedicate as we speak" and similar actions will be taken, and soon, on other properties "even though they have been informally dedicated in the past."

Would you bet your last dollar that the properties that are not formally dedicated will, like the Tilcon Quarry, be sold at bargain prices to other favored builders when St. Lawrence finds it politically convenient.

The writer, a Suffern resident, is chairman of Preserve Ramapo.

 

DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE:

In response to a Freedom of Information Act request submitted to the Ramapo Town Clerk's office, the following document was returned as the official list of open space properties in the Town of Ramapo. This is one page of several, and it is included here to show the official status of the Quarry (first item on this page) as Open Space. Mr. Klein, the Town Attorney, now says this was just a mistake. See below for a second example of the "mistake."

This is one page of a brochure sent out by Christopher St. Lawrence, trumpeting the success of his Open Space policy in Ramapo. It also has the Klein "mistake" listed as item #16.

There were other public proclamations that identified the Quarry as Open Space. Were the Supervisor and Town Attorney not telling the truth then, or are they not telling the truth now? Millions of taxpayers' dollars are at risk with this program.