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What's New
November 22nd, 2005
Statement by Sandra Kissam at SPARC Coalition Press
Conferance at Little Britain Grange
Greetings!
As president of SPARC I welcome all of you today: members and
friends of SPARC and coalition organizations, members of the
media, and others who care about Orange County and its future.
We are thrilled, after 18 years of hard work, strategizing,
lobbying, fundraising, networking, among other things, to have
arrived at this place, at this time, when we can announce to
all, with intense pleasure, that we have basically achieved our
goal. If only Ben Kissam were with us.
We, SPARC, the Sierra Club, and the O.C. Federation of
Sportsmen, have been pursuing legal action since our case was
filed in October of 2000, continuing in the courts to the
present time. But meanwhile, throughout this past summer,
we have been laboriously crafting an agreement with the state
agencies, the DOT and the Thruway, an agreement that would win
for both sides their most important objectives. Nothing is
perfect, but we've done it, and, I must say, it feels good.
Yes, the highway project is slated to proceed, but balancing its
impacts will be the impact of 1,700 additional acres that the
state has agreed to add to and make part of the Stewart State
Forest. This makes for a total of about 7,000 acres of preserved
land, a contiguous open space second in size only to Sterling
Forest, and located in the middle of our most rapidly developing
eastern Orange County area. These lands are conveniently
located and easily accessible to all our residents. They
represent lowlands, as contrasted with ridges and mountains,
lowlands that are lost to development every day, all year round. Parts
of the lands are actively farmed. Every year, more people
use and enjoy the land for bicycling, walking, birding,
horseback riding, cross country skiing. The land is the
largest public hunting area in a multi-county region. It is
rich and teeming with wildlife, including rare and endangered
species. It forms a noise and safety buffer for Stewart
Airport and helps to clean up the environment. It is simply
Orange County's jewel.
Here are some of the highlights of the agreement.

• As the map shows, these are the lands that will be added
to the current State Forest lands which comprise almost 5,300
acres.
• Approximately three quarters of the acreage west of Drury
Lane and between Drury Lane and Maple Avenue, which includes
Buchanan Hill, the highest point of the Buffer Lands.
• All those lands that fall on the east side of Drury Lane,
south of Crestview Lake and below the boundary of the lands that
had been leased to NEG as part of the airport, and extending
easterly to First Columbia's International Plaza, exluding the
West Point housing area and the Little Britain School.
• The larger and more southerly portion of the lands along
Barron Rd. that had been reserved as a potential industrial
development site.
• The inclusion of internal roads that were formerly reserved
as ROW's for DOT development, specifically Maple Ave. and Barron
Rd., to be treated as part of the preserved State Forest lands.
• All of these parcels represent approximately 1,700
additional acres to the Forest.
• Public access to Tenney's Pond, located within the
development area, to include a 25 foot easement around the
pond and the use of the pond itself for fishing.
• The providing of access points along Drury Lane and Rt. 207
to the lands east and west of Drury Lane.
• The requirement of a 500' setback for any buildings in the
developed area, so as not to impede hunting on the adjacent
State Forest Lands.
• A firm deadline of December 2006 for the completion of the
Unit Management Plan (UMP). This has been in process since
1999.
• The provision that any advisory board related to oversight
of the lands or the UMP, include a seat for each co-plaintiff:
SPARC, Sierra, and OCFSC.
In return, we will discontinue both of our lawsuits and permit
the mitigation site, subject to appropriate safeguards for the
purple milkweed, to be constructed.
We remember that these lands were seized by Governor Nelson
Rockefeller in 1971 under the laws of Eminent Domain. We
hope that keeping these lands as a public natural resource will,
in part, vindicate those displaced residents. We honor
their forced sacrifice.
We want to recognize and thank the numerous organizations that
have at various times endorsed and supported us, including the
Sierra Club, the Orange County Federation and its member clubs,
Riverkeeper, The Beacon Sloop Club, the O.C. Audubon Society,
the Sullivan County Federation of Sportsmen, Sloop Clearwater,
Orange Environment, Scenic Hudson, Friends of the Shawangunks,
AFFIRM of New Paltz, the NY/NJ Trail Conference, the Adirondack
Hiking Club, the O.C. Land Trust, the Windy Hollow Hunt, to name
some of them.
Certain individuals have also been outstanding in their support
of our efforts: our attorney John Caffry, Congressman Maurice
Hinchey, Assemblyman Richard Brodsky, the late Assemblyman Jake
Gunther, Legislator Tom Pahucki, former Maybrook Mayor Bill
Schimpf, the late Frank Hartmann of the Conservation Council,
scholarship donor Dr. Eric Singman, Michael Sussman, Pat O'Dwyer,
Barbara Clark, Nick Zungoli, John Gebhards, and David Gordon of
Riverkeeper, John Yrizarry, David Straus, Spider Barbour, Steve
Gross, come to mind. There are many others.
We deeply appreciate our Board members: Bo Eriksson, Lynn
Barber, Susan Mischo, Tom Forsyth, Mike Serinsky, Ralph Grimaldi,
Joan Ruffino, Linda Meyer, and former Board members Diana
Krautter, Pat Williams, Lynne Delesky, Frank Carbone, Vicky
Matovic, Mauro Parisi, Caperton Tissot, and of course Rudy
Vallet. We thank the numerous volunteers that help with so
many tasks, all because they love the land and want it saved.
But don't assume that this is a farewell speech. Not
at all. SPARC, with its partners, will continue to monitor
the lands and the provisions of the agreement. The actual
land transfer is due to be accomplished by June of 2006. A
great deal of input must go into the Unit Management Plan
Process.
An enormous fundraising effort faces us. We must quickly
pay down legal debts of almost $60, 000. This is a serious
obligation and it must be tackled immediately.
But, in the meanwhile, we are thrilled by what we have
accomplished. We hope you are also. Our efforts have
not been in vain. We are providing benefits to our
communities now and to future generations. We have this
wonderful, peaceful, place that is now saved and protected for
our pleasure and for our wildlife.
A dream realized.
Thank you all.
City
of Kingston Public Hearing
Wednesday, December 14 - 6pm
City of Kingston Planning board is holding public hearings on
AVR’s proposed development, The Landing, on the
remaining 1.5 miles of Kingston’s Hudson River waterfront at
the former Cement Plant. Come and let the City officials know
your concerns at City Hall, 420 Broadway, Kingston, NY. For more
information:
Victor: 845-473-4440 x211 - Andy Bicking: 845-473-4440 x232
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