Greenway in trouble, could delay local grants

AMENIA — While Gov. David Paterson is looking to consolidate the Hudson River Valley Greenway Council and Conservancy into the Department of State, the town of Amenia is fighting back.

State Assemblyman Marcus Molinaro has sent towns in the area a letter asking for support on this issue. A letter was drafted and signed by members of the Town Board during its meeting last Thursday, Jan. 15, calling the proposal “an unwarranted action.�

Amenia was one of the first towns in the Greenway. As town grant writer Mike Hagerty pointed out, the Greenway was responsible for a $100,000 Environmental Protection Grant that paid for a new sidewalk and streetscape enhancement connecting Amenia to the Harlem Valley Rail Trail.

“This may not mean grants are going away,� Hagerty said, “but they will at least be delayed.�

Silo Ridge Findings Statement

Attorney to the Town Michael Hayes and the Town Board reviewed the status of Silo Ridge’s application process.

The 97-page Findings Statement was approved by the Planning Board at its last meeting, and as Hayes explained, the next step is the Special Use Permit (SUP) application.

The Planning Board will review the application and schedule a public hearing. Once the special use process is approved, Silo Ridge will move into the site plan process which, as Hayes calls it, is the “real engineering� for the proposed resort community.

Silo Ridge will have the option of doing the site plan in phases or all at once. If the process is broken up, a public hearing will be required for each section.

Councilwoman Vicki Doyle asked if the approval of the Findings Statement finalized Silo Ridge’s proposal to reserve space in their wastewater treatment plant for the town to utilize. A sewer system for the center of the town is essential to the creation of affordable housing, according to the general consensus.

Hayes said the Findings Statement is not an approval and a decision has not been made yet.

Doyle also suggested that while the Planning Board has reviewed the details presented by Silo Ridge, the Dutchess County Department of Planning and Development has a full department that could independently look over the information for free. The town would then have a completely unbiased  evaluation of the project’s numbers.

The next Town Board meeting will be held Thursday, Feb. 12, at 7 p.m. The next Planning Board meeting will be held Thursday, Jan. 29, at 7 p.m. Both meetings will be held at Town Hall, located on Mechanic Street.

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