I submitted 22 comments on the Final Environmental Impact Statement, to the Planning Board, but also to the Woodstock Times. I was invited to adapt my comments, which are included in this blog (post #72), to a "Point of View" article of about 1250 words. The newspaper printed the article, and here it is:
What You Deserve to Know about Woodstock Commons
The terms affordable housing, Woodstock Commons, and RUPCO have become highly charged in
Question: What is Woodstock Commons and who is involved?
Answer: Woodstock Commons is a proposed housing project for
Q: What is the goal of Woodstock Commons?
A: Woodstock Commons is allegedly designed to meet
Q: Whose idea was it to bring RUPCO to
A:
Q: Will Woodstock Commons meet
A: No.
Q: Why not?
A:
Q: But isn’t this project for
A: Not really. By law, eligibility for Woodstock Commons will be statewide. Qualifying applicants will enter a statewide lottery- no preference is given to
Q: But how will anybody outside
A: RUPCO has been advertising Woodstock Commons for years, and has a long waiting list of non-Woodstockers for its other housing projects. And, once the
Q: Won’t that deprive Woodstockers who are in need of affordable housing?
A: Yes, it will, however RUPCO’s two interests are filling the units with any eligible applicants, and taking in tax credits to reward their investors.
Q: How can the Planning Board not understand that Woodstock Commons will help from zero to at most a couple of Woodstockers?
A: RUPCO tells the Planning Board that affordable housing traditionally is filled by area residents, not by people from afar. The Planning Board does not appreciate just how exceptional
Q: What can
A: Nothing.
Q: Are you saying that Woodstock Commons will fail in its mandate to meet
A: Yes, that is what I am saying.
Q: Well, other than failing in its only mandate, (other than making money for investors,) what else should I know about Woodstock Commons?
A: For starters, Woodstock Commons will raise town, county, and Onteora school district taxes- according to RUPCO.
Q: Huh? Locals are going to subsidize housing for newcomers?
A: Yes.
Q: How much will taxes increase?
A: RUPCO projects an increase of about 1.5% of property taxes, which comes to about $250,000 per year.
Q: Is that a lot?
A: It is, but it will be even worse than that. A few years ago,
Q: How much will this project cost
A: There is no way to know whether RUPCO will pay any taxes at all on this housing.
Q: So, Woodstockers in need of affordable housing will not benefit, and the taxpayers will pay up to 100% of the local tab. Dare I ask what else is wrong with this project?
A: Since you asked, yes, there are a few other problem areas, such as the disputed width of
Q: Why does that matter?
A: Well, although measuring the width of a road seems straightforward, RUPCO reports two very different widths in its application. When pressed by the Planning Board to state the width of
Q: I don’t understand why RUPCO would not answer the question.
A: RUPCO evaded the question because
Q: Can’t RUPCO just widen
A: Nope. RUPCO has no right to alter
Q: So why won’t the town just widen the road and then RUPCO can go ahead?
A: The town is not allowed to spend big money to widen a road that currently does not need to be widened; not without allowing the town to hold a referendum on the expenditure.
Q: Are you saying that if the Planning Board learns that
A: Yup.
Q: Then why don’t you tell the Planning Board that
A: I did.
Q: What did they say? What did they do?
A: They asked RUPCO: “How wide is
Q: Wow. Anything else I should know?
A: Certainly. Last month, RUPCO broke the news to the Planning Board that the parking lot at
Q: Is that a big deal?
A: Yes. The Planning Board wants to keep this quiet, otherwise the merchants might turn against the project.
Q: Why would they turn against it?
A: It is likely that Woodstock Commons’ added traffic will cause more traffic accidents at the intersection of Route 212 and
Q: Wow. Say, I heard that Woodstock Commons will feature geothermal power. Isn’t that an innovative and green heating technology?
A: Yes. Installation will require drilling 53 wells, each 300 feet deep, which is over three miles of drilling. Curiously, RUPCO did not factor this enormous endeavor into its construction timeline. Nor is the noise of the drills estimated in the list of construction noises, and well drills are louder than any of the machines that do appear on the list.
Q: What does all that mean?
A: If the town allows RUPCO to build Woodstock Commons, expect it to be late, noisy, unsafe, expensive for taxpayers, profitable for investors, and virtually worthless to Woodstockers in need of affordable housing.
Thanks to