Tuesday, August 11, 2009

EDC Tours RFP Proposal Sites in Maromas

(The Economic Development Committee listens as Dic Wheeler describes his vision for a new home for ArtFarm in Maromas.)



The last portion of the town Economic Development Committee meeting took place outside of the dreary (but air-conditioned) confines of Room 208 in City Hall.

Members of the Economic Development Committee took to the road to tour the sites of five proposed outdoor developments in the Maromas section of town.

Six proposals have been submitted, one for a 9 hole golf course, one for home for ArtFarm, one for a trail system, and three for existing uses including a tree farm, haying and model airplane flying.

The proposals submitted in the RFP will be formally considered, with presentations by those who have submitted proposals, at next month's meeting of the Economic Development Committee meeting.

The tour took a convey of committee members, and members of the public from River Road to Brooks Road, in the Maromas section of town to examine sites for the nine holes of the proposed golf course, and the site for the clubhouse and a practice ranges, which is being touted as the state's largest. The group also toured the tree farm, hayfields and drove by the model airplane landing strip. The final stop was at the proposed site of he new home for ArtFarm.

Dic Wheeler, director of ArtFarm, emphasized that the development and extension of ArtFarm is only possible if land, like the proposed site, is granted. City planner Bill Warner noted that the golf course is also affordable because of the nature of the land grant, and that competing courses in other cities would be envious of the low cost of development, and potential low greens fees.

(At the site of what would be the first tee of the proposed Arawana Golf Course. The building in the background is a CVH building deeded to the city and slated for demolition because of deed restrictions.)

Before the EDC departed City Hall, the committee approved a proposal to send a recommendation to the Common Council to purchase development rights to the Brook Farm property along South Main Street and Brush Hill Road. The 46 acre parcel which has been farmed since 1651 is one of the country's oldest farms. It has the distinction of once being a dairy farm with the third highest milk production in the nation. Currently it has the highest per acre corn and hay yield in the state. The purchase of development rights, with a DEP grant of $500,ooo, a USDA grant of $450,000 and $500,000 of open space dollars from the city would allow the owners to continue agricultural production and expand into blueberry farming and a possible vineyard .

Warner reported that negotiations between the city and the lessee of Harbor Park Restaurant, Frank Marotta, had been abandoned and that the dispute between the city and Marotta would be going to trial in November.

The committee also approved of a new method to pay for emergency expenses at the city-owned Remington Rand building allowing the building manager to make expenditures of $2000 or less with approval of the planning office.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

How about opening a tour of the areas in question to the general public so that we could have a better understanding of the actual areas that will be impacted.

Anthony Pioppi said...

Anonymous:

Please feel free to contact me and I'll email you back a file showing exactly where the golf course will sit.

Regards,

Anthony Pioppi
hauntedgolf@gmail.com

David Bauer said...

If I could quote Woodrow Wilson Guthrie, this land is your land. You enter these parcels at your own risk, but you are not trespassing to be there.

* please stay away from the construction area if you would *

I can't seem to link to the City's Web Site, so I am forwarding all the proposals I have received to Mr. Eye Guy.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your suggestions...but an actual tour of the area with people familiar with the maps is what I am suggesting. I have been hiking up in that area - but it would be helpful if someone could step up and actually lead a tour of the area.

Anthony Pioppi said...

If you want to walk the golf course site, I'd be happy to show you around.

Regards,

Anthony

Anonymous said...

To Anthony...where the golf course "WILL SIT"?????? How can you be so certain it "will sit" there? You have only responded to an RFP.

Are you so confident because you have friends in high places? Maybe even the same friends who created this RFP opportunity for you to respond to?

Oh please, I am so sick of Middletown's good old boyz politics.

MIDDLETOWN DOES NOT NEED TO USE THIS LAND FOR ANOTHER GOLF COURSE. I would rather bank-roll the land for future purposes of real value to this community instead of bank-rolling you in a business enterprise.

Anonymous said...

another golf course? I was unaware we had other golf courses on this side of the city.