Tyner drops resolution against Carvel project


 

PINE PLAINS — Citing a lack of support from fellow legislators, Dutchess County Legislator Joel Tyner (D - District 11 ) has pulled a resolution from the Dutchess County Legislature asking planning and town boards of both Pine Plains and Milan to reject the Carvel Property Development.

While he does not represent either Pine Plains or Milan, Tyner has said he is concerned of the impacts of the project on the towns of Rhinebeck and Clinton, which he does represent.

"Unfortunately, there seems to be a lot of misinformation out there about what I proposed," Tyner said. "What I proposed was a resolution; I never proposed any legislation. I have not been trying to stop the project, all I have been doing is asking it to be scaled back."

According to Tyner, the resolution read as follows: "The Dutchess County Legislature requests that the Planning Boards and Town Boards of Pine Plains and Milan reject The Durst Organization's proposed golf resort development in Pine Plains and Milan on 2,200 acres of the Carvel property as currently proposed, as the entire project needs to be rethought with stewardship of the natural environment, the guiding principle of site planning and design."

Tyner, who is chairman of the Legislature’s Environmental Committee, said that he has received a significant amount of support for the resolution.

"I have had tons of people who have sent me e-mails and letters thanking me for sticking up from them," Tyner said. "Some people have criticized me for the resolution. Frankly, I would be derelict in my duties if I did not exercise some oversight. That’s what I was elected to do."

He said that he did not plan to reintroduce the resolution any time soon.

"I’ve already spoken my peace," he said. "Who knows, maybe by me speaking out on this it may generate more pressure. I’ve already done more than enough."

In a previous interview, The Durst Organization’s director of external affairs, Jordan Barowitz, said the company is displeased with Tyner’s resolution.

"This cynical attempt to subvert SEQRA [State Environmental Quality Review Act] unlawfully interferes with Pine Plains’ and Milan’s review of the project and is riddled with pseudo-science and demagoguery," Barowitz wrote via e-mail. "This publicity stunt demeans the substantive public hearings and discussions that this project has engendered and insults the judgment and independence of the leaders and residents of Pine Plains and Milan."

While Tyner said he is giving up on passing a resolution in the Legislature, he said that he will host a public forum on Tuesday, May 6, at 7 p.m. at the Rhinebeck Town Hall, located at 80 East Market St. in Rhinebeck.

Tyner said the forum, titled "Home Rule, Open Space and Our County Legislature," will be a discussion on county government being involved in local land use issues.

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