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Appendix A Public Hearing Transcripts and Written Comments

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Mahamudra Buddhist Hermitage FEIS, A-Public Hearing Transcripts and Written Comments, WSP SELLS

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Page 1: FEIS A - Public Hearing transcripts and Written Comments

Appendix A Public Hearing Transcripts and Written Comments

Page 2: FEIS A - Public Hearing transcripts and Written Comments

Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06� 1

1 TOWN OF WAWARSING PLANNING BOARD

2 ------------------------------------------

3 Combined Public Hearing on Draft

4 Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) and

5 Special Permit/Site Plan Applications

6 In the Matter of

7 DHARMAKAYA: MAHAMUDRA BUDDHIST HERMITAGE

8 ------------------------------------------

9

10 November 30, 2006 7:00 p.m. 11 Town Hall 108 Canal Street 12 Ellenville NY 12428

13 PLANNING BOARD:

14 MARTIN LONSTEIN, Chairman JOHN CONSTABLE 15 DOUGLAS HART DANIEL LITTLE 16 PAUL LONSTEIN CLAUDIA O'BRIEN 17 ALSO PRESENT: 18 MARYLOU CHRISTIANA, Town Attorney 19 DAWN BENEDICT, Town Engineer DAVID STOLMAN, Planner 20 BARBARA PAES, Town Clerk

21

22

23

24 Reported by: KAREN SCHMIEDER, CSR, RDR

2

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

1 FOR APPLICANT:

2 JENNIFER VAN TUYL, ESQ. Cuddy & Feder LLP 3 FRANK FISH, Planner 4 BFJ Planning

5 PHIL CERNIGLIA Architect 6 JOHN HENDERSON 7 Dharmakaya Inc.

8

9

10

11 P R O C E E D I N G S

12

13 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Good

14 evening, everybody. I call the

15 special meeting of the Town of

16 Wawarsing to order.

17 At this time will everybody

18 rise and please salute the flag.

19

20 (Pledge of allegiance).

21

22 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

23 you. For your information we have two

24 fire exits here. One is here; make a

3

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

1 sharp turn, go down the stairs. The

2 other is here; you go down the stairs.

3 In case of fire you do not use the

4 elevators.

5 At this time I will open the

6 meetings. It's a public hearing for

7 Dharmakaya application, DEIS, site

8 plan special use permit.

9 Now, we were asked for the

10 Dharmakaya, please, they want to give

11 a short ten-minute presentation. So I

12 think that would behoove us all to

13 listen to them.

14 I'm sorry for the lack of

15 chairs. I didn't realize this would

16 be such a big turnout.

17 MR. CONSTABLE: Ask some

18 people to stand on this side.

19 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Yes, we

20 should really have some of the people

21 stand over here so we don't block the

22 door in case we have to get out of it.

23 Okay, who is talking on

24 behalf of the Buddhist Dharmakaya?

4

1 MR. FISH: I'll speak, Frank

Page 3

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 2 Fish.

3 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Give

4 your name.

5 MR. FISH: My name is Frank

6 Fish. I'm with Buckhurst Fish &

7 Jacquemart; we are planners who have

8 coordinated the Draft Environmental

9 Impact Statement. And Pill Cerniglia

10 is the architect who is going to

11 briefly describe the site plan.

12 I'd just like to take two or

13 three minutes of your time -- that's

14 it -- to describe where we are.

15 Because I think the public sometimes

16 wants to just get a sense of where we

17 are in the process.

18 This is not our chart. It's

19 just a chart that we blew up from the

20 State Department of Environmental

21 Conservation, and it just describes

22 very briefly the State Environmental

23 Quality Review time frames. Which is

24 what this SEQR stands for.

5

1 We were here one year ago

2 today, November 30th, for the scoping

3 session, and your scoping, which

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

4 scopes out on Environmental Impact

5 Statement, is just an outline of it.

6 The Board took care with the scoping.

7 I know we revised it before it was

8 finalized by the Board. And you

9 finalized it in I believe about March

10 of 2006. And then we prepared a Draft

11 Environmental Impact Statement, which

12 is in this time frame here. There's

13 no real time frame for the DEIS,

14 because the Applicant has to prepare

15 that. We prepared it and submitted it

16 to you June 30th of this year. And

17 then you had David Stolman of

18 Frederick Clark, who is represented

19 here, your engineers review it.

20 We have got all of your

21 comments, which your attorney

22 coordinated. And you initially

23 rejected our first draft, if I may use

24 that term. And we revised it based on

6

1 comments that the Board made. We

2 re-submitted the document to you. And

3 then in October you accepted the

4 document for public distribution. So

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 5 the document is now on the web site.

6 It's been distributed to what are

7 called involved agencies, that's any

8 other agency that has any permitting

9 authority over the project. And it's

10 been -- we made about I guess

11 altogether about 40 copies of this.

12 So I hope that it's been available to

13 all of you. Again, it's on the web

14 site.

15 So that is where we are this

16 evening. But this evening's hearing

17 would be followed by what's called a

18 Final Environmental Impact Statement.

19 So all of your comments tonight, our

20 job will be not to answer them

21 tonight, or we'd be here for an

22 awfully long time, but to answer them

23 in writing in the Final Environmental

24 Impact Statement. But tonight is the

7

1 night for the public to be heard on

2 three things really. There's a Site

3 Plan involved, which Phil is now going

4 to describe. There's a Special Permit

5 involved to allow the use Dharmakaya,

6 a Buddhist Hermitage use. And there's

Page 6

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

7 the Draft Environmental Impact

8 Statement. So those are the three

9 items that the public hearing is being

10 held on: Site Plan, Special Permit

11 and the DEIS. And because the Site

12 Plan is important, I'm going to want

13 to turn this to Phil to describe it

14 briefly, and then I'll briefly

15 describe the contents of the DEIS.

16 MR. CERNIGLIA: Thanks,

17 Frank.

18 As Frank just mentioned,

19 concurrently with the DEIS submission

20 were applications made for a Special

21 Use Permit, which is under the Board's

22 review for the entire use of the

23 property. So the first plan that I

24 present to you briefly will be in

8

1 regards to the Special Use Permit. I

2 think this is a plan -- if everybody

3 can see it -- that everybody is quite

4 familiar with by this time.

5 Essentially this is the

6 property. Old Inn Road is up in this

7 direction; Cragsmoor Road is down

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 8 here. The property entrance is

9 proposed to be off Cragsmoor Road.

10 That is the main and only entrance for

11 this project, other than the Town's

12 requested emergency entrance which

13 will occur off of Old Inn Road. But

14 that will be used only in times of

15 emergencies. The site will be

16 utilized through Cragsmoor Road.

17 The various centers: You

18 come in, there will be a welcome

19 house. This large complex is really

20 not that large. It is a Bodhisattva

21 Dharma Center with a green area in

22 front. Alongside is four residences

23 called Sanga residences. The

24 Bodhisattva Dharma Center will be the

9

1 main group meeting place on the site.

2 The Sanga residences will be

3 residences which will house staff and

4 students who will go through a

5 practice of meditation before they

6 enter into the Naropa Center and out

7 of the Naropa Center. So it is kind

8 of a staging area for that. The

9 Naropa Center are these two buildings

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

10 here.

11 That is the long-term

12 version of the meditation retreat

13 experience at the site. It is a place

14 where retreats will be for as long as

15 three years. So that's why it's

16 necessary to have the Sanga residences

17 as a place where they transition in

18 and out.

19 Back in this direction, this

20 is a well house. It's of utilitarian

21 function. This is the guest teacher's

22 house. Every so many years there will

23 be some guest teachers who come from

24 abroad and stay here. And then the

10

1 main Rinpoche or teacher for this

2 complex will eventually live here.

3 That is the teacher's house. That is

4 the only building out of the entire

5 complex which will have access off of

6 Old Inn Road, no different than any of

7 the residences there now. So it will

8 function just the same.

9 And then the last complex,

10 which I will focus on in a second,

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 11 which is part of our Site Plan

12 submission for Phase 1 is the Milarepa

13 Complex. That has again kind of a

14 common welcome house area. It has two

15 residential buildings. The largest

16 building I brought an elevation

17 tonight to show you. Is where those

18 group meditations will occur. There's

19 a library and also another residence,

20 and then a smaller version of the

21 Naropa are the long-term retreats

22 behind Milarepa. Those retreatees

23 would be in those facilities for as

24 along as a month.

11

1 Another thing I would like

2 to point out, the site is designed to

3 try to preserve as much of the

4 existing vegetation and ecology as

5 possible. You can see this green area

6 around here is a buffer area which

7 basically illustrates all the existing

8 vegetation will remain.

9 As with any construction of

10 course there is going to be

11 disturbances. But Dharmakaya is

12 prepared to provide fairly extensive

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

13 new landscaping to heal any

14 disturbance that the land might

15 experience during the entire buildout

16 of the project.

17 So again, this is regarding

18 the entire buildout for which the

19 Special Use Permit has been submitted.

20 The second part of that

21 application is the Site Plan. This

22 is, as I mentioned, the Milarepa

23 Center, which is Phase 1. Again, you

24 can see the extensive vegetation in

12

1 more detail here. Not only to create

2 privacy amongst, between the buildings

3 but to also buffer what is going to

4 happen here from the neighbors.

5 And if I just might add

6 again, you've heard it before, what's

7 going to happen here is not

8 celebrations, noise. The theme of

9 this is quiet meditation, learning

10 through meditation. Which no matter

11 how you cut it is a quiet process.

12 And then the last board,

13 this is as I mentioned the largest

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 14 building of the proposed Milarepa

15 Center. It houses the group

16 meditation space under this large roof

17 area. On this side is a library.

18 There is some utility spaces in

19 between, bathrooms and utility rooms.

20 And then on this side are residences

21 for the teachers that will be

22 conducting meditation studies in the

23 Milarepa Center.

24 The idea is to create

13

1 architecture which is consistent with

2 the local area, and use of materials.

3 We have stone, we have clapboard

4 siding. We have very low-profile

5 building massing. So we're trying to

6 in all ways possible conform to the

7 existing character of the

8 neighborhood.

9 FEMALE SPEAKER: What's the

10 square footage of that building?

11 MR. CERNIGLIA: This

12 building is about 6,000 square feet.

13 That's the largest building.

14 MALE SPEAKER: In this

15 complex that you're having can only

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

16 hold 240 people at the maximum amount

17 of time?

18 MR. CERNIGLIA: I'm now

19 going to -- the way the program is

20 meant to run tonight, per the Planning

21 Board is that we are not going to

22 answer questions. We are going to

23 listen to your questions. We are

24 going to answer them in a formal way

14

1 when we write the FEIS.

2 So the last part of this

3 presentation is to turn this over to

4 Frank, who will talk about some of the

5 planning -- the plan studies that have

6 been conducted.

7 MR. FISH: I just want to

8 briefly mention again, I think it's

9 until December 13th, everyone has --

10 if you have additional questions you

11 don't raise tonight or someone

12 couldn't be here, you can raise them

13 through December 13th on the Draft

14 Environmental Impact Statement.

15 Our obligation, there's a

16 stenographer here, we'll get an entire

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 17 stenographic record. Basically the

18 Dharmakaya team is here, John

19 Henderson is here representing them.

20 Counsel, legal counsel, Jennifer Van

21 Tuyl, the attorneys who worked on

22 this.

23 So what we're -- what I

24 would like to just summarize very

15

1 briefly and then please direct any

2 comments or questions again to the

3 Chair of the Board, is that this is

4 what the contents of the Draft

5 Environmental Impact Statement are.

6 The Board went through these in the

7 Scoping Session and asked us. This is

8 sort of by state law set up in these

9 seven categories, but the one that is

10 the critical one I think most people

11 would be interested in is this Chapter

12 IV, where we have to describe the

13 environmental setting, the impacts of

14 development and then any mitigation

15 measures that result from those

16 impacts. And you can see, it goes A

17 through L. I'm not going to read them

18 all. But I think some are very

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

19 important -- I won't say -- they are

20 all very important, but they start off

21 with land use and zoning, community

22 character, goes through the natural

23 environment of the site, including

24 stormwater, surface water, traffic

16

1 issue, which Charles sells has

2 studied, -the civil engineers here,

3 community facilities, fiscal and

4 social/economic impacts, which

5 something that your planners had asked

6 us to look at from Frederick Clark.

7 Cultural resources and noise. So all

8 of those categories are in the EIS for

9 your examination. Again, it's online,

10 and there's extra copies.

11 So that is our presentation.

12 We just wanted to say briefly where we

13 are in the process; that we are not

14 finished. That this is the moment to

15 hear from the public. Our obligation

16 is to answer your questions formally

17 in that Final Environmental Impact

18 Statement. So tonight is your chance

19 to be heard on the Site Plan, the

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 20 Special Permit and this Draft

21 Environmental Impact Statement. We

22 will then answer those questions and

23 submit a Final Environmental Impact

24 Statement to the Board, which they'll

17

1 review for completeness again.

2 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: I would

3 like to explain to the public, so far

4 this is what we have received from

5 them on the DEIS.

6 Everybody here we'll allow

7 three minutes. You should be able to

8 ask your questions in three minutes.

9 And I didn't say start.

10

11 (Laughter.)

12

13 I didn't have a signup sheet, because

14 I didn't think it was necessary. But

15 maybe I made a mistake. You'll raise

16 your hand. You'll get your three

17 minutes, ask whatever questions you

18 want. Please keep it orderly and

19 respect everybody else's opinion. I

20 don't know what the opinions are or

21 anything else.

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22 You must give us your name;

23 we have to have that for the record.

24 First one is this gentleman in the

18

1 plaid shirt.

2 MR. McKENNY: Jim McKenny.

3 I'm the president of the Cragsmoor

4 Association, and I would like to thank

5 Chairman Lonstein and the members of

6 the Board for hosting this and having

7 us tonight.

8 I don't want to take up too

9 much time tonight since there are so

10 many individuals here who want to

11 speak. The Cragsmoor Association and

12 indeed all of the citizens of

13 Cragsmoor take this proposal very

14 seriously.

15 To that end the association

16 has hired a lawyer, who is here

17 tonight to make a presentation to you.

18 As well as a number of experts who are

19 evaluating the DEIS. Some of the

20 experts are here tonight, but most

21 will be submitting their comments in

22 writing following this public hearing.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 23 I urge everyone here,

24 whether they speak or not, to submit

19

1 their thoughts in writing so the Board

2 can evaluate them appropriately.

3 I'd just like to take a

4 minute of your time to explain the

5 general feelings of the Cragsmoor

6 residents about this project. In

7 short, it's just too big and not in

8 keeping with the residential and

9 historical nature of our hamlet.

10

11 (Applause.)

12

13 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Hold it

14 hold it hold it. Please, please,

15 please. Let the man speak.

16 MR. McKENNY: There are only

17 four or five somewhat large buildings

18 in Cragsmoor, two churches, a library,

19 Sam's Point Visitor Center and the

20 firehouse. All of them no larger than

21 some of the homes in Cragsmoor. The

22 churches and the Visitor's Center are

23 less than 3,000 square feet. The

24 largest building in Cragsmoor arguably

Page 18

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

20

1 is the firehouse, approximately 5,000

2 square feet, including the area where

3 the trucks are parked. This is

4 1800 -- there is an 1800 square foot

5 meeting room which can accommodate up

6 to 120 people by the fire regulations.

7 Imagine what a corporate

8 campus sized facility at 78,000 square

9 feet with one building supposedly of

10 17,000 square feet could become. It

11 would swallow up all of Cragsmoor, 470

12 odd and some not so odd residents.

13 Our concern is not that there will be

14 20 individuals at this complex

15 studying on three-year retreats. But

16 the potential to vastly overwhelm our

17 small community with this huge

18 facility which could serve a vast

19 number of people.

20 Our concerns then are about

21 all of the environmental and impacts

22 that result, especially the scale of

23 the complex, the threats to our water

24 supply and the inappropriateness of

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21

1 such a large corporate campus in and

2 near our historic community, which has

3 been designated as a State and

4 National Historic District. The

5 facility needs to be smaller. The

6 community needs to be protected from

7 being overwhelmed by the potential of

8 this project to expand and engulf the

9 community.

10 Please keep Cragsmoor what

11 it is, what it was, that caused it to

12 be listed as a National Historic

13 District. Thank you for hearing our

14 concerns about our town and the care

15 you're taking with this project.

16 And I would like to

17 introduce David Gordon, who is our

18 attorney, and I would like him to have

19 at least his three minutes.

20 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: You read

21 yours. You did it right on time.

22 Hand it over. Okay, Mr. Gordan.

23 MR. GORDON: Thank you, Mr.

24 Chairman. I am an environmental

Page 20

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

22

1 attorney, and I've been working with

2 the Cragsmoor Association and

3 representatives of several other civic

4 groups. I'll try to be as brief as

5 possible. Of course as an attorney it

6 is a challenge. I'll do my best.

7 I'll point out, first of

8 all, we fully respect the opportunity

9 to submit written comments in two

10 weeks, and we will do so both on my

11 own with respect to the legal and the

12 SEQR comments. And also we have a

13 number of technical consultants who

14 the group has hired, as Jim said,

15 about taking this project seriously.

16 We are looking very seriously at many

17 of the technical aspects related to

18 water, planning, consistency with the

19 hamlet, viewshed and many others like

20 it.

21 I just want to go through

22 some of the preliminary findings very,

23 very quickly if I can. I'll be as

24 brief as possible.

23

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1 First with respect to

2 zoning. The site is in the RC3A

3 district, which is essentially

4 residential, but it allows houses of

5 worship with a Special Use Permit.

6 Mr. Chairman, members of the Board,

7 this is not a house of worship as

8 contemplated in the Zoning Code. This

9 is a sprawling complex. It's more

10 like a corporate campus or sprawling

11 multi-family housing complex than it

12 is a house of worship. We know what a

13 house of worship is. It is a church,

14 synagogue. It can be a Buddhist

15 temple. The denomination doesn't

16 matter, but it is typically a single

17 building or one or two buildings.

18 This is not that. This is not what's

19 contemplated in the Zoning Code. The

20 reason is clear, this does not fit in

21 the hamlet of Cragsmoor, and the

22 zoning recognizes that.

23 For that reason as a SEQR

24 matter in terms of impact it is

24

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

1 thoroughly inconsistent with the

2 community character as Jim described

3 and other folks here will tell you as

4 well.

5 Many of the studies in the

6 impact statement are wholly deficient.

7 We are going to be submitting written

8 statements indicating the deficiencies

9 in the traffic studies. There are

10 just technical data problems. They

11 didn't take the proper counts. They

12 avoided the high season of traffic in

13 Cragsmoor. They under estimated the

14 growth in the area, because they only

15 looked at the growth Wawarsing and not

16 in the overall area, and several

17 others as well.

18 We have with us tonight a

19 consultant who looked at the ecology

20 and habitat issues. The short message

21 is the conclusions in the

22 Environmental Impact Statement about

23 the impacts on biological resources

24 are at least in the preliminary draft

25

1 we put together worthless. Too little

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 2 information is provided to support any

3 conclusions regarding impacts to the

4 project. The background research and

5 on-site survey simply ignored many of

6 the times during the year, again

7 similar to the traffic studies when we

8 would be seeing many of the threatened

9 species.

10 In particular, the EIS only

11 identified three rare species on the

12 site. And this is just an astonishing

13 result, given the fact that we are

14 here the southern tip of the northern

15 Shawangunks, which is essentially a

16 center of rare endangered species and

17 habitats, and The Nature Conservancy

18 will be submitting a statement to that

19 effect as well.

20 We have hired to

21 hydrologists to examine the hydrology

22 of the project. This is critical

23 especially with respect to the size.

24 The more water that this facility

26

1 uses, the less water that is going to

2 be available for the rest of

3 Cragsmoor. And the hydrology is

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

4 indicating that the water is going to

5 be drawn down substantially.

6 One of the two hydrologists

7 that we have brought on is here

8 tonight and she will be speaking a

9 little bit later on.

10 With respect to the

11 viewshed. This is perhaps -- and I

12 don't mean to prejudice any of these

13 other impacts -- this is perhaps the

14 most important one. You have your

15 responsibility is to protect and to

16 require a study of what may be the one

17 of the most important viewsheds in

18 this area of New York State. This is

19 the southern tip of the northern

20 Shawangunks.

21 I was shocked when I saw the

22 EIS and in fact the most significant

23 viewshed impact of this site is going

24 to be from Bear Hill, which is

27

1 essentially right next door to the

2 site, just lightly above it and to the

3 west no more than a quarter mile away.

4 The EIS completely ignores this

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 5 viewshed impact. Let me say that

6 again. Completely ignores it. They

7 go out onto Bear Hill, and they say we

8 got a view to the south and a view to

9 the southwest, that won't be affected.

10 We say we are not going to bother with

11 the view to the east, because we are

12 off the path. They cite a sign that

13 says keep on the path a half or

14 quarter mile back near the parking

15 lot. Basically telling people not to

16 scramble off the bath in order to get

17 to the vantage point, which is a world

18 class vantage point. Because of this

19 they have completely ignored this

20 singular critical asset to this

21 community, which in many ways defines

22 at least one aspect of what it is like

23 to live in Cragsmoor.

24 One final impact which is

28

1 ignored, is the alternatives. They

2 only list three alternatives. One is

3 no action, which of course no

4 developer is ever interested in

5 pursuing. One is to basically build a

6 housing investment, which is an

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

7 interesting alternative, and clearly

8 one they are not interested in. The

9 other is alternative site. They never

10 look at the possibility of as to

11 whether or not their purposes of

12 establishing a meditative retreat can

13 be accomplished by anything less than

14 a 17-building 78,000 square foot

15 facility. Or that it can be

16 accomplished by a slightly different

17 footprint.

18 And they haven't done any

19 viewshed analyses, this is absolutely

20 critical. There is no information in

21 the EIS whether this can be done,

22 whether they can accomplish their

23 purposes by anything smaller, which is

24 exactly what's needed in this

29

1 situation.

2 Finally, there is no

3 indication in the EIS of the potential

4 for growth of this site. And the

5 potential that this retreat will

6 ultimately attract more people from

7 all around the world, and grow to be

Page 27

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 8 even larger than it is and more of an

9 infringement on life in Cragsmoor than

10 it is. We will be presenting

11 information on that at a later date.

12 I want to make two other

13 final points. And I know, Mr.

14 Chairman, time is short.

15 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: You're

16 over your three minutes. Go ahead.

17 MR. GORDON: First, you've

18 been presented in the EIS a statement

19 of federal law which essentially says

20 there's a law that protects religious

21 institutions. The law says you

22 cannot -- as you -- you are allowed

23 and you have a responsibility to do an

24 environmental analysis which protects

30

1 the residents of Cragsmoor from undue

2 environmental impacts at this site.

3 The responsibility is to treat the

4 religious institution the same as you

5 would treat any other institution.

6 And that's what the people in our

7 researchers and commenters are doing.

8 If this were a corporate campus you

9 would be looking at the size very,

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

10 very carefully. And under federal law

11 and state law your responsibility is

12 exactly the same here. There is no

13 special dispensation or special waiver

14 of zoning rules because of the federal

15 law.

16 Finally, I noticed with

17 respect to the SEQR timeline that was

18 put up, the one thing that wasn't

19 there is a Supplemental Environmental

20 Impact Statement. Every one of the

21 impacts that I've cited would be

22 sufficient to require a Supplemental

23 Environmental Impact Statement to be

24 certain that you are viewing the

31

1 significant impacts of this site.

2 That would change the timeline

3 substantially. That wasn't this

4 there. In my view that's the

5 responsibility of this Board and

6 that's what we will be explaining in

7 our comments on December 13.

8 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

9 you.

10

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 11 (Applause.)

12

13 This lady in the front in

14 the pink shirt. Give us your name

15 please. You had your hand up twice

16 MR. GORDON: This is

17 Katherine Beinkafner; she is one of

18 our hydrologists.

19 MS. BEINKAFNER: I think I

20 need ten minutes, and I'll talk fast.

21 Can we use that? My assistant is

22 passing out some relevant copies.

23 There are five pages that go together.

24 And everybody on the Board should have

32

1 a copy of that. The consultants can

2 have some, and make sure the audience

3 gets some too.

4 First of all, what I would

5 like to do is take a few minutes and

6 describe what the consultants for the

7 Applicant did and then how do we

8 figure out if there's an impact on

9 neighboring wells. And then what is

10 the impact on the hamlet of Cragsmoor.

11 Our first graph is

12 production well No. 1 on the site, and

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

13 it shows -- first of all, there is

14 drawdown of the pumping well No. 1 and

15 then recovery. They pump for three

16 days, they recovered for six days.

17 Maximum drawdown was about 29 feet

18 after the three days of pumping.

19 After six days of recovery, we still

20 have three feet left we didn't

21 recover. Normally you pump for three

22 days, you recover for three days and

23 you're back to zero. They were not in

24 this case. When pumping well 2 was

33

1 pumped for only 24 hours, this is

2 looking at what was going on at

3 pumping well one, you get 8 feet of

4 drawdown. For two wells that are

5 only -- well, that are actually 250

6 some feet apart, that is a fair amount

7 of drawdown considering the first well

8 was being pumped at 50 gallons a

9 minute. The second well was being

10 pumped at 24 gallons per minute. That

11 was for one day, 24 hours. Even after

12 like four or five days of recovery,

13 you still don't have complete recovery

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 14 in that well.

15 This is looking at

16 production well No. 1, the one we just

17 looked at the record for. Normally

18 what we do, we try to predict what

19 will happen over time. To predict

20 what happens with time you use a

21 logarithmic scale for the time. In

22 other words, you're condensing the

23 scale, the time later on as time would

24 go on, and you would project a

34

1 straight line. Or my colleague, Paul

2 Rubin, actually wants to project it on

3 a curved line which even accelerates

4 the decline. So out here saying that

5 we are pumping at 50 gallons a minute

6 for three days, and out here after one

7 day. Well, I think I got these mixed

8 up, but anyway, it is equal to seven

9 days at 7 gallons a minute or when we

10 get out here it is equal to 70 days at

11 7 gallons a minute after ten days and

12 so forth. Now, that's saying that

13 with continued pumping this well

14 doesn't show any stabilization.

15 Normally when you're pumping

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

16 away the water declines, and then it

17 becomes stable for a long period of

18 time if you just kept pumping and

19 pumping. Say we pumped for six days

20 instead of three days. So what's

21 going on is there's no stabilization.

22 As you keep pumping, you're going to

23 have continued drawdown and even with

24 the time the pump is turned off you're

35

1 not going to recover as much as you're

2 drawing it down. In other words, the

3 well discharge is exceeding the

4 recharge of nature to that well. Even

5 when you look at production well 2,

6 which remember was only 24 gallons a

7 minute instead of 50, it doesn't

8 recover. That is really significant.

9 Then how do we figure out if

10 there's an affect on a neighboring

11 well? I just took the data from the

12 well at 71 Old Inn Road, which is

13 about 600 feet away from the pumping

14 well. And these little doobies here,

15 you can barely see them, they are like

16 an inch long on this scale, that's

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 17 when the homeowner is using the water

18 for whatever, running the dishwasher,

19 running the clothes washer, whatever.

20 This affect is the effect of three

21 days of pumping that well 600 feet

22 away. It is drawdown of about 15

23 feet. And likewise, this second blip

24 is when the recovery or the pumping of

36

1 the second well for the shorter test.

2 And again, this well doesn't recover

3 either after six days of recovery.

4 And again, it doesn't recover after

5 the 24-hour pumping test either. This

6 is a serious problem. This is really

7 indicating that given time this well

8 has the capability of draining a lot

9 of the water out of the aquifer there.

10 I just wanted to take a few

11 minutes just to describe the

12 condition. On the map in purple I've

13 got the site here. And the two wells,

14 No. 1 and No. 2. This little orange

15 line, the 1800 foot contour, if you

16 think of that it's where the hamlet of

17 Cragsmoor is. It is kind of a

18 plateau. And we know it is a plateau

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

19 sitting on top of a mountain. The

20 only water that's there to recharge

21 the aquifer has to come straight down

22 from the sky. Here in Ellenville,

23 where you're down in a valley you can

24 get water that comes from the

37

1 mountains down into the valley to get

2 more water. But when you're on top of

3 a mountain, you don't have that

4 luxury. You only have the rain that

5 lands on top of this plateau. And

6 then most of it probably flows down

7 toward the pumping well at this site.

8 These red lines actually show from

9 well No. 1 out to the two wells that

10 showed the most substantial drawdown.

11 Both of them are on Old Inn Road. One

12 was No. 45 or 49, I don't recall

13 which, Dunburg. The other one was No.

14 71 that I showed in the graph.

15 So these lines kind of just

16 show the trend of the direction where

17 this well can have dramatic effects.

18 This is normal -- he on the Shawangunk

19 Ridge --

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 20 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Excuse

21 me, you spoke almost ten minutes. Can

22 you please wrap it up. I'd appreciate

23 it.

24 MS. BEINKAFNER: Okay, one

38

1 more thing.

2 MALE SPEAKER: If you don't

3 mind, I think some of us would give up

4 minutes just to have this information.

5 She's hitting some really good numbers

6 here, so...

7 MS. BEINKAFNER:

8 Cross-section: This is like cutting

9 down through the mountain. It is a

10 black line on the map and this is a

11 cross-section through that area. So

12 the ground surface is there. You can

13 see where the roads intersect. North

14 is on this side. South is on that

15 side. So the top of this is actually

16 the topographic surface, and then

17 these are the elevations going down

18 into the earth.

19 This is the well at the

20 site. And the blue is the water table

21 fairly close to the surface. It's

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

22 about 27 feet right there at that

23 well. So I kind of drew it parallel

24 to the ground surface. I suspect it's

39

1 a little lower when you get up into

2 the flat area. The test, if we're

3 pumping the well here we have a little

4 bit of drawdown for this test. But

5 this well, because it is 405 feet deep

6 and at the time of the pumping the

7 well pump was actually at 350 feet.

8 If you kept it there, theoretically,

9 you could draw down the entire water

10 table in this area.

11 The other thing that we

12 don't know anything about is what

13 happens over on the way downhill to

14 Cragsmoor Road? All those houses have

15 shallow wells. None of them were

16 accessible for testing. A lot of them

17 are buried or they are under something

18 and we concentrated on getting points

19 in bedrock wells. So we don't know

20 what will happen if you continue to

21 pump here, how would you affect the

22 wells down gradient.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 23 The other point is this test

24 was done under optimum conditions.

40

1 According to the report there was 18

2 inches of rainfall in the month of

3 October, prior to this test. That's

4 an out and out lie. We have never had

5 that much rain or at least that was at

6 Mohonk, assuming maybe we get the same

7 amount of rain on this end of the

8 ridge. I don't know. But certainly

9 that would indicate that this was

10 under good conditions.

11 What happens if we have

12 drought? There just is not sufficient

13 water there. The aquifer is very

14 fragile. The first thing I noticed

15 when we were out in the field and I

16 was looking to see what was going on

17 is this is a very broad cone of

18 depression. It's not just a little

19 cone of depression. It is very broad.

20 It goes way up past Old Inn Road, and

21 I have no idea how much further it

22 goes. But I know that there's some

23 impact beyond there.

24 I would say if the Applicant

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

41

1 really wants to, if they could maybe

2 do a test over again. Maybe monitor

3 more wells up in this area and to the

4 north. Maybe look at the shallow

5 wells down on Cragsmoor Road. I don't

6 know whether -- because the drawdown

7 is only to this point, and these wells

8 would be down here. I don't know if

9 you can affect them.

10 But I did notice the house

11 on Clark Road did have some measurable

12 effect after the test. And I think

13 what it is, is when you're busy

14 pumping away here you're disturbing

15 the natural flow of groundwater. So

16 that three days later the water that

17 would be coming down the hill isn't

18 there, because it went into this well.

19 The other thing is that as

20 far as I know the septic system is

21 down on the lower side of the

22 property, so the argument that oh, we

23 are going to put the water back into

24 the ground really isn't going to be

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

42

1 very helpful because they are going to

2 be putting it down on this side of the

3 property but pumping it out from

4 underneath the center. And what's

5 going to happen, it will just go on

6 down and feed the water table down in

7 this area, but will probably have no

8 effect back where the well is, nor

9 will it have any recharge effect back

10 in the hamlet. I think those are all

11 the things I had to say.

12 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

13 you.

14

15 (Applause.)

16

17 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Yes.

18 MALE SPEAKER: I'm very hot.

19 Do you think you could open the door

20 in the back?

21 MR. BARBOUR: I'm ecology

22 here.

23 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Your

24 name, sir?

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43

1 MR. BARBOUR: I'm Spider

2 Barbour. I'm their ecology expert.

3 Okay, three minutes.

4 Well, I'm grateful to Dave

5 Gordon for introducing what I have to

6 say and saving me the first two pages

7 of this long-winded narrative. A lot

8 of this is going to be my written

9 comments, so I don't need to go into

10 it in great detail.

11 But what's wrong with the

12 ecological surveys? Two things

13 basically. One that they didn't cover

14 the entire growing season, in fact,

15 left out the large middle of the

16 growing season from mid June to late

17 August, which in a high, cold place

18 like the Shawangunk Ridge is the most

19 important part of the growing season,

20 spring starts late up there. Fall

21 comes early. So that's the part you

22 really need to look at to find all the

23 species, to find especially the rare

24 species. This is the reason why the

44

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

1 survey had so few species in terms of

2 flora and fauna.

3 If you look at that flora

4 and fauna section, it looks like you

5 were in some sort of biological

6 desert, where hardly anything was

7 growing or crawling around.

8 The other problem is that

9 the requirement of SEQR that you send

10 a request to DEC and the New York

11 Natural Heritage Program for the

12 records of rare species on their list

13 in or to evaluate which species are

14 likely to occur there was -- I don't

15 know what went wrong, but I've seen

16 this before, they come back with three

17 species. And really, if you look at

18 the Shawangunks and what you might

19 expect to find on this site, because

20 that's where it is, up on the ridge,

21 you'll fine at least 20 State rare

22 plants and 15 State rare animal

23 species that they should have known

24 about for sure. And they should have

45

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

1 done an assessment in terms of the

2 site's conditions and resources as to

3 the likelihood of any of these species

4 occurring there. And they especially

5 missed the ones that are pretty much

6 exclusive to the Sam's Point part of

7 the ridge.

8 MALE SPEAKER: Would you

9 give an example?

10 MR. BARBOUR: Sure. One of

11 them is the Arctic Rush, another one

12 is the Appalachian Sandwort, which is

13 right on the rocks, and it describes

14 bedrock outcrops all over this site,

15 and there is absolutely no search for

16 this rare plant. The one rare plant

17 that they actually seemed to have

18 mentioned in the DEIS, which is the

19 Mountain Spleenwort, which is a little

20 fern that grows on the cliffs. That

21 one they managed to find at least in

22 the reference for it in the records

23 for the rare plants in the State.

24 So this really needs to be

46

1 rejected. As Dave was saying, you can

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 2 come to a lot of conclusions, but you

3 can't come to conclusions when you

4 have no information. How can you come

5 to any conclusion when there is just

6 no data to support one conclusion or

7 another? And that's the problem with

8 this thing basically, with that study

9 is that it really wasn't done at the

10 right time of year, and they didn't

11 even have the information of which

12 species that they should be looking

13 for.

14 Other than that, another

15 really important species, this is a

16 species that DEC pays an awful lot of

17 attention to, takes very seriously,

18 that's the timber rattlesnake. Now

19 the Shawangunks have quite a lot of

20 timber rattlesnake dens, including one

21 that's about two and a half miles from

22 this site. Rattlesnakes have been

23 seen around the mountain up there, on

24 Sam's Point Road and on the Sam's

47

1 Point Preserve. So we know that the

2 rattlesnakes move into that area

3 during the summer.

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4 Also, this hill and the

5 slope below it, Bear Hill, Randy

6 Deckert, a rattlesnake expert and a

7 friend of mine whose authority and

8 expertise I can certainly vouch for

9 says -- and he's the one who should

10 know because he's been everywhere and

11 he knows all the dens. Bear Hill has

12 never ever, ever been searched for

13 rattlesnake dens. And it has all the

14 characteristics, south and southwest

15 facing slopes, the steep slopes with

16 the rocks, these are the conditions

17 that are really perfect for

18 rattlesnake dens. So given the fact

19 it's in a very wild area, very

20 undisturbed, it is quite like likely

21 there could be a rattlesnake den on

22 Bear Hill.

23 How am I doing for time?

24 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Keep

48

1 going.

2 MR. BARBOUR: Okay, thanks.

3 Let's see what else I didn't cover.

4 Oh, this is an example of

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 5 really inadequate identification of

6 species is when you find a species

7 list where things are identified only

8 to genus. And some examples are worse

9 than others. The case of sedges, the

10 main genus of sedge is karex. There

11 are hundreds of species in New York

12 and 70 -- 70 of them are on the

13 Natural Heritage List of Rare,

14 Threatened and Endangered Species. In

15 this plant list from this survey there

16 is only one species of karex

17 identified. Probably the most common

18 one or the one that's most familiar to

19 people, which is the tussock sedge.

20 Now, there are plenty of other species

21 of sedges up there, I can guaranty you

22 that, because I've been up there and I

23 found, you know, a dozen at least.

24 And including at least one rare

49

1 species that's on the list, at least

2 at Sam's point. I don't think I've

3 ever been on this particular site.

4 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Hold it

5 a minute. We have got to change the

6 tape. Okay, thank you.

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7 MR. BARBOUR: All right.

8 Take two. I really want to mention

9 this, because this is the thing like I

10 just laugh my butt off. I mean I hate

11 to, you know, put people down or

12 anything, but I mean some of these

13 things are really amazing.

14 On the list of plants I

15 found this thing yellow buttercup, the

16 Latin name hibbertia hypericoides.

17 Hibbertia refers to some botanist

18 named Hibbertus, named after.

19 Hypericoides means resembling St.

20 Johns Wort. I had never heard of this

21 plant. Now, when I find something

22 I've never heard of in New York that

23 somebody found, it just -- I go wow,

24 what's this. And so I could not find

50

1 it in any flora. I couldn't find it

2 in the New York checklist, Mitchell

3 and Tucker '97. I couldn't find it in

4 Flora of North America. I went on the

5 web. That's what you do when your

6 references just don't help you. It's

7 an Australian plant in the family

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 8 called dilanade. The family, a whole

9 family, this entire family of plant is

10 not represented in North America at

11 all. It's not -- as far as I can

12 determine, it's not sold by any

13 nurseries. If this occurred there,

14 this would be a monumental discovery.

15

16 (Laughter.)

17

18 I suspect that it's a mistaken

19 identification. So I'm thinking, and

20 I've got pictures of this thing on the

21 web sites that describe it. It looks

22 an awful lot like a plant called

23 shrubby cinquefoil. Shrubby

24 cinquefoil is a plant that grows

51

1 almost exclusively in fens. A fen is

2 a rare type of wetland that is the

3 home of the endangered bog turtle.

4 Now, what did they find and how in the

5 world they ever tracked it down to be

6 this Australian thing, I don't know.

7 But what it sounds to me is that maybe

8 what they found was shrubby

9 cinquefoil. That would be a great

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10 discovery in itself, because it's an

11 indicator that the habitat, wherever

12 they found it, could support bog

13 turtle. So here's an intriguing

14 little tidbit. I don't know what it

15 means, and that's highly speculative

16 what I just say, but it's possible.

17 The other thing they could

18 have found is actually a St. Johns

19 Wort called shrubby St. Johns Wort.

20 But that has a really strange flower

21 that doesn't really represent the

22 five-pointed flower of the Australian

23 yellow buttercup.

24 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Don't

52

1 look at me.

2

3 (Laughter.)

4

5 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: We have

6 had a long discussion many a time with

7 Paul Medley over these rattlesnakes.

8 I know where you're coming from there.

9 Will you wind it up for us.

10 MR. BARBOUR: I can say that

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 11 bog turtles are seldom found up on

12 high mountainous ridges.

13 FEMALE SPEAKER: Are

14 copperheads on the endangered species

15 list?

16 MR. BARBOUR: Copperheads

17 are species of special concern.

18 FEMALE SPEAKER: We found

19 two on our property just below us.

20 That's why I ask that question. And

21 we did not kill them, for the record.

22 MR. BARBOUR: Okay, I'm

23 grateful.

24 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Sir, are

53

1 you done?

2 MR. BARBOUR: I just want to

3 make one thing clear about copperheads

4 and species of special concern,

5 recently the New York State

6 legislature acted to put the special

7 concern species under the same level

8 of protection as the threatened and

9 endangered species. So that's

10 something. If somebody tries to tell

11 you that the special concern species

12 are of no concern, that's not right.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

13 Thank you.

14 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: You're

15 very welcome.

16

17 (Applause.)

18

19 This young fellow with his hand up in

20 the air

21 MR. SHERMAN: Hi, I'm Henry

22 Sherman. I live on Route 8. I moved

23 to Cragsmoor because I work for

24 corporate America. And I know what it

54

1 is like to go from a mom and pop store

2 -- and a lot of people know me here

3 because I sold them a lot of things --

4 to a corporation. This community is

5 not ready for a corporation. In every

6 place I've lived in I've watched town

7 boards allow corporations to come into

8 their communities to taxpayers and

9 people that want to have a family,

10 like me, because I don't have any

11 kids, but I have kids coming, and you

12 want to have a good school system. It

13 took years for Ellenville school

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 14 system to turn around, because they

15 were the worst. They were the pits.

16 I'm not going to lie, you guys have

17 done a great job. I have nephews,

18 nieces and cousins that go to that

19 school.

20 You're allowing this

21 corporation to come in and they don't

22 want to contribute. You're giving

23 them a ten-year reprievement, correct,

24 you're not answering questions, but I

55

1 read everything. You're not charging

2 them tax for ten years. You're going

3 to let them slide. I'm just saying, I

4 got a letter in the mail. It is not

5 just that. They don't want to

6 contribute. They want to buy. You

7 want to build the Concord Hotel in the

8 middle of Cragsmoor. It doesn't fit.

9 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Excuse

10 me, for the record, when they bought

11 this property, nobody was aware what

12 it was for. It was bought previously,

13 then they come with this plan.

14 MR. SHERMAN: Oh, I

15 understand a hundred percent, that's

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16 what they do. That's what they do.

17 MR. LITTLE: I think you're

18 supposed to be asking a question. I

19 haven't heard any question. Just

20 editorial. That's not what we are

21 here for.

22 MR. SHERMAN: My question

23 for the Board is simple. You don't

24 have the road frontage. The road

56

1 facilities. You don't have the water

2 means.

3 I'm only 38 years old I

4 haven't been around a long time, but I

5 moved there because I fell in love

6 with my wife. I moved there because

7 of the community. My question to you

8 is do you want to ruin that community

9 with corporate America? Because a

10 church is a corporation, okay. And

11 they are saying eight times a year

12 you're going to have a max amount of

13 people of 240 at this facility.

14 Everybody knows and the Cragsmoor Fair

15 there's 200 people you can't get to

16 the Post Office because the road is

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 17 blocked up for two miles. I got to

18 walk with my wife to go to Cragsmoor

19 Post Office. It is time. It is time

20 for our board to stand up an say no?

21 Go down to 209 on the left and buy a

22 piece of property down there. It is

23 time for you guys to do this. It is

24 time for some community board to stand

57

1 up and say no.

2 I have nothing against

3 religion. Build a church. That's

4 fine. They already own the house on

5 Bear Mountain, they bought it. Okay,

6 or Bear Ridge, whatever it is. I

7 don't know what it is. But it is time

8 it say no. These people have a lot of

9 time and a lot of investment than I

10 do. And I know what it is like to

11 come from a place that's over

12 populated and it is time to sell your

13 house that you owe $200,000 on, and

14 you can't sell it because people don't

15 want to bring their kids there because

16 it is too busy. I'm in that jam right

17 now.

18 I'm a hard-working man that

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

19 pays my taxes and I owe nothing. It

20 is time for the Board to say no. I

21 think everybody will agree here. It's

22 time to say no.

23

24 (Applause.)

58

1

2 MS. CHRISTIANA: I just want

3 to clarify it is a time for comments.

4 It's not only questions. Everyone can

5 comment on the DEIS and Site Plan and

6 Special Use Permit. So I don't want

7 you to think if you don't have a

8 question, you can't speak.

9 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Lady

10 with her hand up first.

11 MS. WAGNER: Okay, I'm going

12 to speak for three minutes regarding

13 comments from the nature Conservancy.

14 But I also would like to read

15 something on behalf of Chuck Davidson

16 after that. So I'm requesting three

17 more minutes.

18 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Your

19 name please.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 20 MS. WAGNER: My name is

21 Heidi Wagner. I am the preserve

22 manager for the Sam's Point Preserve,

23 which is managed by the Eastern New

24 York Chapter of the Nature

59

1 Conservancy. And I am a resident of

2 Cragsmoor. I am joined tonight by my

3 colleague Cara Lee, the Conservancy's

4 Director for our Shawangunk Ridge

5 program.

6 The Nature Conservancy is an

7 international conservation

8 organization dedicated to the

9 preservation of the diversity of

10 plants and animals and their habitat

11 worldwide.

12 TNC has had a long

13 involvement in the protection of the

14 Shawangunk Ridge and is responsible

15 for the management of Sam's Point

16 Preserve and Cragsmoor. We and our

17 conservation partners have invested

18 millions of dollars in conservation of

19 sensitive lands of the Shawangunks.

20 In addition to the extraordinary

21 biological values of the area, Sam's

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22 Point Preserve and the Shawangunks are

23 considered one of the region's most

24 important recreational areas because

60

1 of the dramatic cliffscapes, vistas

2 and hiking opportunities. At the

3 highest point along the Shawangunk

4 Ridge, Sam's Point and the surrounding

5 area represents the most biologically

6 unique area of the entire ridge. It

7 is home to the rarest natural

8 community in the northern Shawangunks,

9 the globally unique dwarf pitch pine

10 barrens. This community is ranked

11 G1-S1 by the New York Natural Heritage

12 Program which indicates the highest

13 level of global and state rarity.

14 The preserve is also home to

15 four other rare natural communities,

16 several rare plants and three rare

17 animals. Of all the protected natural

18 areas on the ridge, which total close

19 to 40,000 acres, Sam's Point Preserve

20 and the surrounding area is the most

21 intact and unfragmented portion of the

22 Shawangunk landscape.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 23 The Mahamudra Buddhist

24 Hermitage development project is

61

1 proposed in a forested natural area

2 that is part of this ecologically

3 important landscape. At this time we

4 are reviewing the Draft Environmental

5 Impact Statement for the Hermitage

6 proposal and are working with the

7 Cragsmoor Association in identifying

8 issues that may need further

9 evaluation before the DEIS should be

10 considered complete. Tonight we would

11 like to raise several issues for your

12 early consideration.

13 Number one: Consistency

14 with zoning. Wawarsing residential

15 conservation 3A zone is essentially

16 residential but allows houses of

17 worship with a Special Use Permit. We

18 would ask whether a residential

19 compound particularly of the scale

20 proposed is what is contemplated or

21 allowed by zoning.

22 Number two: Suitability of

23 proposal. The DEIS compares the

24 impacts of the proposal with possible

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62

1 as-of-right development and conclude

2 that the Hermitage proposal will have

3 lower impacts than a standard

4 subdivision. We would suggest that

5 as-of-right development is a poor

6 measure of what would be suitable

7 because of the sensitivity of the

8 site. We would remain concerned about

9 the proposed disturbance of 39 percent

10 of the site which would result in

11 permanent loss of habitat, erosion and

12 stormwater impacts. The impacts on

13 ground and surface waters.

14 Number three: Use of a

15 conservation easement. Due to the

16 sensitivity of the site and the

17 concern of residents in Cragsmoor

18 about the potential for additional

19 development on the site, we urge the

20 Planning Board to consider

21 requiring -- requiring a conservation

22 easement on the undeveloped portion of

23 the property to assure that

24 undeveloped land be protected in

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63

1 perpetuity. This could be done

2 without hardship to the landowner and

3 can be triggered by either the

4 building permit or some other measure

5 of the project's progress.

6 Okay, that's the end of that

7 part.

8 Now, I'd just like to read

9 this on -- this is a totally different

10 approach, but it talks about what we

11 all feel and he says it so well, I

12 needed to read it to everyone.

13 A Hermitage that is.

14 Cragsmoor is a rare example of a

15 balanced, comprising, environmental,

16 historical, social, architectural and

17 spiritual elements. Cragsmoor is a

18 geological sanctuary millenniums old

19 where today people visit to revive

20 their spirit and gain perspective from

21 its vivid displays of nature and

22 harmony.

23 Cragsmoor is a reflection of

24 the inspiration that Hudson River

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64

1 School artists experienced. Cragsmoor

2 is an ancient pristine fauna, flora,

3 lakes, streams and the delicate

4 balance of their existence for

5 contemplation.

6 Cragsmoor is the community

7 that is to a great degree has taken on

8 the responsibility of caretaker.

9 Cragsmoor is a spiritual

10 place that has evolved naturally, and

11 passionately, and meaningfully.

12 Cragsmoor is an

13 environmental stronghold, an ecosystem

14 near the tipping point.

15 Cragsmoor is the present

16 experiencing the past, not just a

17 memory in books.

18 Cragsmoor is a place that

19 has kept its integrity through

20 discipline, restraint and concern --

21 not personal agendas.

22 Cragsmoor is like a rare

23 bird that should be deemed a protected

24 species.

65

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1 I can understand why the

2 Mahamudra Hermitage wants to situate

3 in such a special and mystical place:

4 Because of what Cragsmoor is. What

5 Cragsmoor is is because of what

6 Cragsmoor isn't.

7 It isn't foul water and

8 earth quality that can't support its

9 pristine habitat.

10 It isn't an imbalance of

11 people to environment.

12 It isn't a place of stress.

13 Cragsmoor is an example of

14 defining possible bills and

15 responsibilities. Cragsmoor depicts

16 the axiom less is more. I believe one

17 Hermitage on the mountain is all that

18 it can support. Chuck Davidson.

19

20 (Applause.)

21

22 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: This

23 lady over here.

24 MS. GRACE: My name is Karen

66

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1 Grace, and I live in Cragsmoor. I'm

2 in the lower section. I'm at 43

3 Cragsmoor Road.

4 Presently on my property a

5 couple years ago I came to the town

6 board because I wanted to put a shed

7 up. I had limited space on my

8 property to do it, due to the fact

9 that there is severe runoff and my

10 property is so wet that I could not

11 just put a shed anywhere. I had to

12 get a variance in order to do it to

13 put it right close to my neighbor's

14 property. Thank you to my neighbor,

15 they allowed me to do that and the

16 Board.

17 Over time I've been there

18 for 22 years. I find that when we get

19 rainfall, when we get snow my property

20 gets two feet of water in its front

21 yard that my neighbor's child can

22 drown in. I don't mean to sound like

23 I have an attitude, but this has been

24 a fight for me for 22 years. I cannot

67

1 get drainage on my property. But a

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 2 four-year-old child can go out in two

3 feet of water when this occurs every

4 so often during weather and storms and

5 potentially drown.

6 Right above where I am is

7 where this proposal is to land. Well,

8 if I already have runoff problems, my

9 concern is with the vast buildings and

10 vast population for that area, that

11 when I first moved up there had a

12 residency of 260 people and I think

13 what I understand now is 420. Well,

14 it has since doubled in that time.

15 And as more population has occurred, I

16 find more runoff problems where I get

17 water in my basement that I did not

18 get 22 years ago.

19 My question to this board is

20 how can anyone even consider such a

21 vast project? Thank you.

22 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

23 you.

24

68

1 (Applause.)

2

3 next, gentleman on the side here

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4 MR. ROCK: Yeah my name is

5 Bernard Rock. I'm a year-round

6 resident of Cragsmoor. My problem is

7 the opposite I'm afraid, because my

8 well runs dry if I'm not careful. I

9 have a 30-foot shallow well, hand dug,

10 probably built sometimes in the 1930s.

11 Beautiful. But if I'm not careful

12 during the months of July, August and

13 September, I don't have water.

14 And I'm going to be very

15 brief. I'm concerned -- I am

16 profoundly concerned that this project

17 is going to affect my water. Thank

18 you for listening.

19 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Lady

20 there. Your name please.

21 MS. MATZ: My name is Sally

22 Matz. I'm president of the Cragsmoor

23 Historical Society, and we want to

24 thank you for providing this evening

69

1 for us. The Historical Society Board

2 has reviewed the DEIS and is very

3 concerned with the propose

4 development's adverse impact on the

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 5 setting of the two National Register

6 listed residential buildings, that is

7 the home of Richard Harts and Elaine

8 Caldwell and the home of Bernard Rose.

9 And the historic open spaces between

10 that also National Register listed

11 property.

12 Specifically, the proposed

13 teacher's house is presently shown in

14 the site to be sited in the historic

15 open space within the viewshed of the

16 former Cragsmoor Inn and in close

17 proximity to the two aforementioned

18 historic residences.

19 The DEIS acknowledges that

20 the proposed building is in the

21 historic district but makes no case as

22 to why the building could not be sited

23 elsewhere, so the open views could be

24 protected and the privacy and setting

70

1 of the two historic residences could

2 be maintained.

3 The DEIS does not

4 acknowledge the adverse impact, and

5 thus is in error. The Applicant

6 presumes, based on comments in other

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7 parts of the DEIS, that later

8 contextual design decisions would

9 mitigate the adverse impacts. This is

10 not a wise approach. We believe that

11 finding another location for the

12 teacher's house is the obvious

13 solution. New construction in the

14 listed historic district is avoidable,

15 and easily mitigated by redesigning

16 the site in this portion of the

17 development. As sited, the proposed

18 building constitutes an adverse impact

19 on the historic district.

20 The Board of the Historical

21 Society would be pleased to meet with

22 the Applicant's consultants to

23 consider options that would remove or

24 mitigate these adverse impacts on the

71

1 registered districts.

2 In summary, the Cragsmoor

3 Historical Society believes that there

4 are prudent and feasible alternatives

5 to the proposed siting of the teachers

6 house and urges the Planning Board to

7 request a plan revision that protects

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 8 the integrity of the historic district

9 and the setting of the two affected

10 historic residences.

11 The Historical Society is

12 also concerned with a proposal by the

13 Cragsmoor Fire District seeking a

14 substantial upgrade to the Inn Road,

15 possibly requiring the removal of the

16 national register listed stone entry

17 gates at Cragsmoor Road. Presumably

18 this request is based on the need to

19 have fire trucks pass anywhere along

20 the road. Such an upgrade would bring

21 a significant adverse impact on the

22 district.

23 If a second access road is

24 needed for the project to meet safety

72

1 standards, then we suggest a study of

2 alternatives, including a new second

3 access road that could be dedicated to

4 emergency access.

5 Lastly, the historic

6 character of Cragsmoor, both within

7 and beyond the National Register

8 district boundaries is one that blends

9 cultural resources, open spaces,

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10 vistas, local ecosystems and

11 reforested areas in a pleasing

12 balance. The proposed development is,

13 we believe, a compatible use for the

14 land in concept, but we are concerned

15 that the intense use of the site,

16 mostly as a result of traffic brought

17 by significant periodic visitation and

18 by significant water and septic

19 requirements threatens that balance.

20 The society asks the Board to protect

21 the resources and community character

22 by asking the Applicant to reduce the

23 scale of the project as a matter of

24 buildings, roadways, parking lots and

73

1 landscape modifications desired are

2 out of balance with the surrounding

3 community. The Historical Society

4 will continue to review and discuss

5 the proposal and provide these and

6 additional comments, if necessary, by

7 the close of the public comment

8 period.

9 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

10 you.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 11

12 (Applause.)

13

14 MS. RADL: My name is

15 Maureen Radl. I'm a 30-year resident

16 of Cragsmoor. I am vice president of

17 that Historical Society and very proud

18 of it. And also vice president of the

19 Friends of the Shawangunks.

20 And because of those

21 affiliations I take a very serious

22 interest in any development on the

23 ridge in general and Cragsmoor in

24 particular. And I have attended many,

74

1 many meetings like this. And I wanted

2 to thank the Board as well as the

3 applicants for the way all of the

4 meetings on this topic have been

5 conducted, with a great deal of

6 respect for each other. And I hope

7 that all of the meetings on this topic

8 will continue in the same way. The

9 tone is one of cooperation, seeking

10 understanding, and I hope that

11 continues and will result in a project

12 that we can all live with.

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13

14 (Applause.)

15

16 I personally welcome the

17 Dharmakaya. I feel a kinship to their

18 deep respect for the rare beauty and

19 spiritual quality of the mountain.

20 When I look at the photographs on

21 their web site of the beautiful land

22 they have acquired I know they have

23 chosen it for the very same reasons

24 that have inspired us to fight long

75

1 and hard to protect this extraordinary

2 setting. Cragsmoor, as you have heard

3 several times from several experts, is

4 a fragile environment, which can only

5 permit a limited number of people to

6 sustain life on this narrow plateau

7 without disturbing the delicate

8 balance with nature.

9 At the moment many of us

10 feel that we may be at the brink of

11 over stepping our limits. That is why

12 we're concerned about this building

13 project, which is by far the largest

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 14 would have been proposed for this

15 hamlet.

16 When the center was

17 originally described to the community,

18 we visualized a much smaller footprint

19 with a few small structures, primarily

20 designed to accommodate three-year

21 retreats. Now the proposed

22 centerpiece will be a meeting hall

23 larger than any structure in

24 Cragsmoor. The combined number of

76

1 residents and the staff who will stay

2 at the center for long and short-term

3 retreats is quite large in proportion

4 to the number of people who reside in

5 the hamlet, without even considering

6 the number of people who will also be

7 present on festival days and probably

8 remain for those weekends. These

9 factors still raise serious concerns

10 regarding the overall scale of the

11 project, occupancy load, water

12 consumption and runoff, sewage,

13 traffic, parking, fire protection,

14 land conservation, viewshed impacts,

15 loss of tax revenue and impact on the

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16 Cragsmoor Historic District.

17 With a project of this

18 nature on only 90 acres, I'm afraid

19 that ten years from now those

20 beautiful rolling hills and magical

21 woods that presently appear on the web

22 site will be covered with so many

23 buildings, parking lots, roads,

24 utility structures and large meeting

77

1 halls to accommodate hundreds of

2 people that its pastoral quality will

3 be lost forever.

4 So I would like to request

5 that the Planning Board examine this

6 DEIS with the greatest of care and

7 work closely with the Applicant to

8 find ways to mitigate its impact on

9 the area.

10 And I would like to offer

11 just four suggestions, four

12 recommendations to make the center

13 more compatible with the community and

14 its surroundings.

15 First of all, reduce the

16 overall size of the project by 40 to

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 17 50 percent. Second, avoid disrupting

18 the viewshed from the east side of the

19 Bear Hill Preserve that looks down

20 upon the area designated for the

21 Guru's house. This is in the historic

22 district as was just mentioned and is

23 characterized by very wide spaces

24 between residences. It should remain

78

1 that way.

2 Third, designate a specific

3 amount of money in lieu of taxes to be

4 paid annually to the Cragsmoor

5 Volunteer Fire Company to cover the

6 cost of protecting the center and the

7 increase in our population.

8 And fourth, as has already

9 been mentioned, create conservation

10 easements on all lands which will not

11 be used in the project proposal.

12 When these suggestions are

13 carried out, I'm sure you'll find more

14 people who will graciously welcome the

15 Dharmakaya as valuable neighbors in

16 our community. Thank you.

17

18 (Applause.)

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19

20 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Who is

21 next? This gentlemen here.

22 MR. GRACE: Good evening.

23 Audience, members of the Board. My

24 name is William Grace. And I live

79

1 down on Lower Cragsmoor Road. My wife

2 has already spoken to you about the

3 sewage -- not the sewage but the

4 runoff, the storm runoff. And looking

5 at this map on basically down here by

6 discharge point D and they indicate a

7 nominal increase in the runoff. And

8 unless something will be done about

9 adding more culverts or something, I

10 mean I'll have an indoor pool in my

11 house.

12 With that said, I just want

13 to also state that I'm a short-timer

14 here. I've only been here 22 years.

15 We bought up here because we just

16 loved the area. My wife actually

17 lived in the house next door when I

18 first met her. I said I could live up

19 here, and we moved into the next

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 20 house. But it is a long story. But

21 what I wanted to say is I commute to

22 Morgan, New Jersey every day, and I'm

23 getting near the point I'm hoping to

24 look to retirement soon. I spent 22

80

1 years up here and put a lot of money

2 an effort to make my house as nice as

3 it is. You may notice the nice

4 flagpole out front. I plan to retire

5 up here and plan to retire what

6 because of what this community is now,

7 not what this thing may become.

8 And I also want to let you

9 know I enjoy coming home on the

10 weekends and feeding my birds and

11 watching the coyote run through the

12 backyard. And I know we have bear

13 because I had my suet feeder ripped

14 down many times. These are the

15 reasons I enjoy this area and that's

16 why I've stayed here 22 years and

17 hopefully, God willing, will stay here

18 another 22 years.

19 And I am not in favor of

20 this proposition. Thank you.

21

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22 (Applause.)

23

24 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Next.

81

1 Gentlemen against the wall, go ahead.

2 MR. NOLAN: Thank you. My

3 name is Dick Nolan, and my wife and I

4 live at the intersection of Clark Road

5 and Cragsmoor Road, about two tenths

6 of a mile south of the planned

7 project. And I've got a number of

8 comments, but I'll keep it very brief.

9 I'm not going to reiterate things

10 already said.

11 First of all, I said your

12 sat in your position one time on the

13 Dutchess County Planning Board, and I

14 realize you're in a tough position and

15 you're going to wind up getting a lot

16 of grief over this no matter which way

17 you go. It is difficult for a town to

18 deal with subject matter experts that

19 come in like this. They give you the

20 thousand pages, and as a result of

21 tonight you're going to get 500 more

22 pages that now explain all the things

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 23 that were brought up tonight. So it's

24 a difficult position.

82

1 If there's a way to -- and I

2 also realize that your hand are tied

3 in a lot of cases. You cannot just

4 decide to do things because you want

5 to do it. I understand that. If you

6 have a way, if this Special Use Permit

7 can be denied, I think that would be

8 great. That would probably stop it

9 dead in its tracks. If it is not, and

10 it moves forward, I've got just a

11 couple comments.

12 One. I read on the web

13 site, and I didn't read all of it,

14 because I have a job like you guys do,

15 I'm sure nobody has enough time to

16 read everything provided. But they

17 had an archeological study done, and

18 it went through phase 1, and then they

19 recommended it had to go to phase 2

20 because the likelihood of some type of

21 ancient man artifact or whatever were

22 moderately present. That's what they

23 said. So they dug, what I read, like

24 212 holes with a shovel, decided that

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83

1 it doesn't have to go forward. That's

2 it. That's the end of that.

3 Now, what I'm asking, if it

4 does move forward, and I hope it

5 doesn't, it may be behoove the town to

6 require the town hire an architect or

7 an archeological expert at their

8 expense and have him on site doing all

9 excavation.

10 Because I think between

11 bulldozers, excavators and backhoes,

12 they are going to move a lot more dirt

13 than 212 shovelfuls. I think it would

14 be in our best interest to have

15 somebody there all the time.

16 I'm also concerned on water,

17 based on where we are, I'm not an

18 expert in water or hydrology at all.

19 My well is two-tenths of a mile

20 downhill. I also read in the best

21 that I can understand it, that water

22 isn't a problem as far as they are

23 concerned. Now we already heard

24 tonight in the battle of the experts

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84

1 that it is a problem. But according

2 to them it's not.

3 Now, if that's true, maybe

4 they can bond or post a bond that

5 would fix anybody's well within a

6 reasonable distance of this project

7 that goes dry as a result of this

8 project. Now, if their position is

9 absolutely this is no issue, then I

10 don't know why they would post a bond

11 to do it. My guess is they won't put

12 their money where their mouth is and

13 they'll decline to do that. But that

14 will be a good indication to me that

15 it is not as much of a non-issue as

16 they may make it.

17 I got one final point. I

18 can't figure out in all of this that

19 who is the legal entity that somebody

20 would go after when and if they don't

21 do what they are supposed to do. And

22 hopefully somehow when we go through

23 this, is there going to be an entity

24 that's somewhere in the United States

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85

1 that the town can go after if they

2 either need to execute some kind of a

3 bond or they need to do anything or

4 get them to do something that they

5 haven't done? I don't know that we'd

6 be real successful chasing somebody in

7 Nepal. That's all I have. Thank you

8 very much.

9 (Applause.)

10

11 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Lady

12 there.

13 MS. LESSICAN: Hi, I'm Joan

14 lESSICAN. I'm an adjacent property

15 owner and year-round resident in

16 Cragsmoor, and I've been here a very

17 short time, less than five years.

18 But I will say I do have

19 water in my basement. I am on the

20 southern slope of the prospective

21 development. And I as many people

22 have spoken am very concerned with the

23 issue of runoff, of water, of the

24 change in population and what the

86

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1 expansion over the years may be. I'm

2 very concerned about the forest being

3 divided and the danger to the flora

4 and fawna that exist there. And I'm

5 also very concerned with the visual

6 impact.

7 I go to Bear Hill very

8 often. And from the plans that we've

9 seen tonight I see really a

10 slaughtering of that 91-acre forested

11 land where I live right below that.

12 Based on what I've heard

13 tonight, I do have some questions

14 specifically for the Board, which are:

15 Can the wells below the site

16 be studied? Mine was not dug up at

17 the time because I was on my way to

18 work, and we discovered that it had to

19 be dug out and I couldn't get my boots

20 and shovel it out. It's the third

21 well on my property, so water has been

22 an issue in the past. And based on

23 what our hydrologist has pointed out,

24 there's likely going to be a great

87

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1 impact on the water.

2 Can the runoff be studied?

3 I too have a very muddy yard for a

4 great part of the year. What will the

5 affect of such a large campus be on

6 the runoff to those of us on the

7 southern slope?

8 Can the wildlife be studied?

9 As spider Barbour has suggested, that

10 it has not been studied appropriately.

11 And I also did see that

12 there has not been an adequate visual

13 impact study from Bear Hill. What

14 will that eastern view be once that

15 corporate headquarters is built?

16 So from my perspective, I

17 would like more studies done before

18 this development be even considered.

19 Thank you for your time.

20

21 (Applause.)

22

23 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: All

24 right, who is next?

88

1 MR. BENTON: Good evening.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 2 My name is Blake Benton. Thank you,

3 Board Members, Mr. Lonstein.

4 I've lived in Cragsmoor for

5 40 years. We have three generations

6 that lived in the house, family home.

7 I also have a contiguous piece of

8 property as well as a couple of other

9 pieces of property in Cragsmoor.

10 And speaking on community

11 character and the potential

12 development, in the DEIS they cited

13 several other sites that they

14 mentioned that were similar Buddhist

15 centers of worship. And I looked into

16 those Buddhist centers of worship, and

17 I found a common thread throughout all

18 of those centers, and that they were

19 the tip of the iceberg. They are

20 continuing to build out multimillion

21 dollar projects annually. And the

22 integrity of the communities that they

23 are based in have been completely

24 disturbed by -- or I wouldn't call it

89

1 disturbed, because I think originally

2 what they set out to do, be weekend

3 retreats -- and this is a quote from

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4 their site, they turned out to be --

5 one of them has a factory on-site --

6 off-site that is supported by the

7 community. And another one states

8 that they are going to build a

9 100-foot tower that can be seen from

10 the road that is a lightning rod, in

11 their words a lightning rod for

12 gathering.

13 So what we have is I think

14 we have a community on one hand that

15 wants to welcome a person with

16 moderation. And on the other hand I'm

17 very concerned about the potential

18 down the road for serious development

19 based on the examples that they cite

20 in the DEIS. I think that we are

21 really seeing the tip of the iceberg

22 with this development.

23 And I think the members of

24 this Board have an opportunity to

90

1 exercise moderation in this

2 development and to limit the capacity

3 of this group to disturb our community

4 and the community character that we

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 5 have.

6

7 (Applause.)

8

9 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

10 you. Your name plies.

11 MS. WEAVE: My name is Diane

12 Weave. I'm a resident of Cragsmoor

13 ten years or so now. I want to

14 address, as some before me have, the

15 water issue. Because that's a really

16 concrete issue that will affect a

17 great many of us in a very real way.

18 I own my house, and I really

19 can't afford at this point to have it

20 rendered worthless by the water supply

21 being gone. It would be a terrible

22 tragedy for anybody to whom this

23 happens to have their lifetime

24 investment in their home wiped out.

91

1 And I want to go on record

2 as saying that I think that one of the

3 obligations of the Planning Board

4 would be to really look closely at the

5 water issue, to make certain that

6 those of us who already live there,

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7 who already have investments are

8 protected from what could be a fiscal

9 disaster for us. Thank you.

10 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: The

11 woman in the middle back there.

12 MS. HOFF: Barbara Hoff,

13 Cragsmoor.

14 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Stand

15 please.

16 MS. HOFF: I would like to

17 also remind the Board that the village

18 of Ellenville also gets their water

19 from the top of the mountain. In case

20 that wasn't included in the water

21 study.

22 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

23 you.

24 MS. MULLER: My name is Lucy

92

1 Muller. And what I'm concerned mostly

2 about is the traffic. We only have

3 one road into Cragsmoor. And are they

4 going to bring buses in? What kind of

5 traffic will this bring? I think it

6 will be pretty bad.

7 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 8 you. Lady there. In the back.

9 MS. DITAR: What Lucy was

10 saying --

11 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Your

12 name, please.

13 MS. DITAR: What? My name

14 is Ruth Ditar. I've been a Cragsmoor

15 resident for about 50 years.

16 The proposed road that they

17 are going to go in to the left, say

18 coming up Cragsmoor Road and turning

19 left there is on a curve. Unless

20 there's a traffic light, which would

21 be the first in Cragsmoor, I just

22 can't imagine how you would avoid an

23 accident from the people coming down

24 with not seeing the people turning

93

1 left to go into the residences.

2 I mentioned this before at a

3 previous meeting, and so at this time

4 I would like to find when I can find

5 the answer to this.

6 Also, the next concern I

7 have is for the fire department. What

8 plans do they have for the fire

9 department? Do they have one of their

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10 own? Or are they planning to support

11 ours? And how will the trucks get in?

12 We recently had a disastrous

13 fire in Cragsmoor, and I don't see how

14 our little wonderful fire department

15 could take care of this large

16 community. Thank you.

17 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: You're

18 welcome.

19

20 (Applause.)

21

22 MR. PETERS: I'm (inaudible)

23 Peters, I'm a life-long resident of

24 Cragsmoor. I'd just like to tune in

94

1 on the moderation issue. Somebody at

2 the beginning said they were here just

3 a year ago, and I remember being here

4 then, and I spoke about just the

5 thought I had about a big business

6 coming to the area and how that made

7 me feel. And I mentioned Wal-Mart.

8 Little did I know, it seemed like

9 something large coming to a small

10 community. On a regular basis our

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 11 population will be a third more. On

12 an event weekend it will be 50 percent

13 more.

14 Now look at your communities

15 and just imagine what kind of a change

16 that is. In my business it's like we

17 say we're putting ten pounds of

18 potatoes in a five-pound bag. It's

19 very hard to squeeze them in. So I

20 think the train has already left the

21 station, and that it's on its way, but

22 it has to be moderate. We can accept

23 possibly a real scaled-down version of

24 this, but the size as it stands now I

95

1 think is much too large. Thank you.

2

3 (Applause.)

4

5 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Who is

6 next? Right next to Dickie.

7 PHIL: My name is Phil

8 (inaudible). I would like to address

9 the environmental impact of the

10 neighbor. So far as I can tell the

11 impact statements have been done more

12 or less in bad faith. They have

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13 misrepresented the effect on water,

14 flora and fauna, the effect on the

15 view.

16 They have upscaled, not down

17 graded the size of the community since

18 it was first brought up. And they are

19 obviously now planning to build a

20 community within a community but not a

21 part of the community. And to my way

22 of thinking that is so antithetical to

23 everything Cragsmoor is. It is kind

24 of like a pimple on pure skin. It

96

1 sticks out and doesn't look good.

2 Another thing, if you pass

3 this Special Use Permit you'll be

4 force feeding a tape worm in the

5 community of Cragsmoor. And that

6 scares the hell out of me. I don't

7 want a neighbor I don't trust. And I

8 don't trust people who misrepresent

9 things the way these people have. And

10 that's all I have to say.

11

12 (Applause.)

13

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 14 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Next.

15 MS. GRACE: Can I have an

16 opportunity one more time?

17 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: No, not

18 till everybody has been heard. Who

19 wants to be next?

20 MS. MULDOON: Catherine

21 Muldoon. I've lived in Cragsmoor for

22 about 25 years. One of the reasons I

23 came, because I know the Dharmakaya is

24 coming, also because of the

97

1 spirituality and what the mountain

2 offers us. But I think if we look at

3 the historical aspects of the hamlet,

4 the people of Cragsmoor and people who

5 live in Cragsmoor were influential in

6 purchasing the Bear Hill Preserve as a

7 community. We all bought that and

8 then we re-opened it as a preserve so

9 people could come and visit and walk

10 the vistas.

11 We were also extremely

12 instrumental in getting the Sam's

13 Point area --

14 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Got to

15 change the tape. Sorry. Okay, go.

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16 MS. MULDOON: We were also

17 extremely influential in the entire

18 ridge line of Sam's Point connecting

19 over to Mohonk. Those 4,000 acres we

20 went to battle to preserve that from a

21 wind farm. And I think now basically

22 what we are all saying is I think the

23 Dharmakaya looking at the spirituality

24 of the mountain is great, and if they

98

1 could scale down their facility, that

2 would be certainly worthwhile.

3 But I think as a group of

4 the Cragsmoor people, we have

5 preserved our maintain top at a

6 financial cost to many of us. And we

7 would like to continue to preserve it,

8 but in our preserving of the Cragsmoor

9 hamlet we have also preserved it for

10 the entire community and the town of

11 Wawarsing.

12 So we would like you all to

13 look at what the hamlet offers. We

14 are on the ridge. We are the only

15 community that has a community of

16 houses on top of the ridge. As we all

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 17 know, there's a big thing of Save the

18 Ridge on every instance from New Paltz

19 all the way down, and everything in

20 Cragsmoor we consider to be part of

21 the ridge. And I think we have

22 preserved it over many years, and I

23 think we still need it do that.

24

99

1 (Applause.)

2

3 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Next,

4 who is next? Who wants to be heard?

5 The lady what wanted to be

6 heard again.

7 MS. GRACE: Again, my name

8 is Karen Grace. Some people here

9 brought up points that live in the

10 lower southern part of Cragsmoor where

11 I do, where water is an issue, and I

12 brought up the point of water on my

13 property, excess water in my front

14 yard.

15 However, I would like to

16 state and have it be clear that just

17 because I get two foot of water during

18 rain and snowstorms, there has been

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19 three wells on my property, because

20 two went dry.

21 FEMALE SPEAKER: Me too.

22 MS. GRACE: So that's prior

23 to any of this excess usage. And a

24 lot of other people here have also

100

1 brought up that point and I want to

2 bring that up.

3 One of the things I noticed

4 recently is factors in wildlife.

5 Where I can look outside, and I've

6 been able to enjoy coyote running

7 through my backyard. Some people may

8 not enjoy that, but I do. The bear.

9 It has been in my backyard, has ripped

10 apart my suet feeders, has damaged my

11 neighbors bird feeders, has ripped up

12 brand new shrubbery and done lots of

13 damage. But it is part of nature and

14 it belongs here, and we as people keep

15 removing the habitat for our wildlife.

16 Because I don't know, I guess we think

17 we are better than them. Well, I'm

18 for the animal, and if it means that I

19 should die, then God let it be. I'd

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 20 rather let the bear live.

21 So these are factors I do

22 have concerns with. Like everybody

23 else, I love Cragsmoor, and we are

24 there for a reason. A nice scaled

101

1 down project is something that is

2 greatly needed. And I would like to

3 state that I have nothing against

4 religion of any sorts. I'm all for

5 it. But keeping in scale with the

6 community is of greater importance.

7

8 (Applause.)

9

10 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Anybody

11 else? I just seen a hand go up.

12 Please stand up.

13 MS. ROGERS: My name is

14 Linda Rogers. And although my husband

15 and I have owned property in Cragsmoor

16 for 30 years, we have only recently

17 retired. And those who have spoken

18 before me spoke eloquently of

19 Cragsmoor, and I will let their words

20 speak for me. I have written you a

21 long letter, long past my three

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22 minutes, so I tried to condense it.

23 Mr. Chairman and members of

24 the Planning Board, I thank you for

102

1 this meeting. It is important to this

2 community that we be heard. I'm going

3 to comment on about six areas. The

4 size of the applicant's project,

5 water, visual impact, finance and

6 independent consultants, and lastly

7 board diligence.

8 I'm going to read because

9 I'm not a good free speaker. 78,000

10 square feet, 16 to 17 buildings,

11 upwards of 102 people and parking

12 places for approximately 112 cars on

13 91 acres is very large for Cragsmoor.

14 The Applicant makes

15 reference to a Vermont location.

16 Please note that the location is 500

17 acres and many fewer people.

18 The Applicant has given us a

19 four-phase project in the DEIS, spread

20 over ten years and maybe more. The

21 report states there will be no

22 fragmentation. Fragmentation in my

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 23 mind implies digging up the ground for

24 all the buildings, the roads, the

103

1 parking, the water, supplies and the

2 sewers. There will indeed be

3 fragmentation. The Board should

4 consider creating possibly an escrow

5 account for the mending and complete

6 repair of the terrain for each phase

7 of the project, should the Applicant

8 ever abandon any part of it, at least

9 there would be finances to repair the

10 ground. This project is very large

11 for Cragsmoor. Water, hydrology tests

12 completed in 2006, a year of

13 considerable rainfall by the Applicant

14 indicates sufficient water for the

15 project. But consider global warming,

16 years of undetermined weather,

17 possible severe drought, less or no

18 life sustaining water for the

19 homeowners of Cragsmoor. The

20 professionals and the independent

21 consultants have covered that better

22 than I.

23 Visual impact. The DEIS

24 neglected and described far too

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104

1 narrowly the visual impact southeast

2 from Bear Hill. Although I feel the

3 DEIS is in my words a vast volume and

4 over my head in many areas, I did

5 spend many hours looking at it and

6 studying those maps.

7 We have photographs taken

8 just this past week which clearly view

9 71 Old Inn property as well as

10 additional Cragsmoor Historic District

11 land and south towards the Phase 1

12 development. The Milarepa Center of

13 six buildings. Because of this

14 omission a supplemental DEIS should be

15 required.

16 Please be reminded that Bear

17 Hill was and still remains a favorite

18 location for artists. Historically

19 Charles Curran and I believe Arthur I.

20 Keller painted from these rock

21 properties.

22 Finance and independent

23 consultants. I would inquire as to

24 whether this Planning Board has found

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105

1 this to be an overwhelming project and

2 has employed outside, independent

3 consultants focused entirely and only

4 on this DEIS as provided by SEQR.

5 This project is of monumental size and

6 although I realize many New York State

7 agencies have been requested to

8 comment, I ask you if you clearly

9 understand?

10 Cragsmoor residents are

11 already speaking with independent and

12 skilled consultants, and I believe it

13 appropriate to ask this Planning Board

14 to require the Applicant to pay these

15 professional fees. The proposed cost

16 is beyond the ability of Cragsmoor

17 residents and the figures rise daily.

18 Diligence. You may or may

19 not welcome this proposed DEIS

20 challenge, nevertheless, it is on your

21 watch. A ten-year project is long,

22 and we will all, every one in this

23 room, be ten years older. But you are

24 our Planning Board and are the

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106

1 individuals called upon to review this

2 DEIS and to make long-lasting

3 decisions that will greatly impact the

4 quality of life in Cragsmoor, the

5 fragile and natural beauty of

6 Cragsmoor and the Historic District of

7 Cragsmoor.

8 This project as now proposed

9 is simply too large and impacts too

10 greatly on the community and the land

11 it will occupy. Thank you very much.

12

13 (Applause.)

14

15 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Yes,

16 sir.

17 MR. MEILY: Hi my name is

18 Walter Meily.

19 I just would like the

20 Planning Board to consider impact of

21 the noise and construction equipment

22 for ten or more years.

23 Also, the majority of

24 Cragsmoor's population is north and

107

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1 east of this site of the construction

2 site. As we all know Cragsmoor Road

3 is the primary road that most

4 residents use to commute in and out

5 for goods and services, to and from

6 work. Will the residents of Cragsmoor

7 now be forced to use alternate roads

8 being South Gully and Vista Maria,

9 considerably narrower and do not have

10 painted lines and are treacherous

11 roads, as everyone knows who has

12 driven them. The potential for

13 accidents is higher. The residents

14 might try to avoid using Cragsmoor

15 Road for the reason to avoid the

16 construction, the trucks, possible

17 deterioration of the road itself due

18 to the construction and increased

19 traffic. Thank you.

20

21 (Applause.)

22

23 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Anybody

24 else? Did you speak yet?

108

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1 MR. KRAFT: Not yet.

2 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Go

3 ahead.

4 MR. KRAFT: My name is Jeff

5 Kraft, and I haven't heard addressed

6 they want to increase the community by

7 one third to 50 percent at the

8 potential of lowering property values

9 or affected by water tables and

10 everything.

11 What's the tax base for this

12 area, and can we afford to increase

13 the population and the wear and tear

14 on the roads and the community at the

15 detriment of taxes?

16 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

17 you. Next. Lady right here.

18 MS. DUNN: Yeah, I'm Irene

19 Dunn. I live in Cragsmoor. My

20 question is: Is the Board going to

21 look into the strong business

22 component of the Hermitage and their

23 tax exempt status? And will that be

24 in anything that you put out for us to

109

1 see?

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 2 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Okay.

3 For the record, we have professionals

4 here that do the work for us. We have

5 Dave Stolman here from Clark

6 Associates from planning. We have

7 Dawn here, she is from our engineer

8 and surveying company who does that

9 work. Of course we have Marylou

10 Christiana here who is our lawyer. We

11 don't do it ourselves. We hire

12 professionals. Because I'm not a

13 surveyor, and I'm not a lawyer and I

14 just try to run the meetings right.

15 Yes, ma'am.

16 MS. BEINKAFNER: Hydrologist

17 Katherine Beinkafner.

18 I would say with respect to

19 that you really need to hire a

20 hydrogeologist. Because an engineer

21 is not a hydrogeologist. In my

22 experience I've seen very few

23 engineers who really have a mastery of

24 hydrogeology and pumping tests and all

110

1 the rest of it related to the water

2 problem.

3 Another question I had is

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4 the scoping document, how would one

5 obtain that? Because part of my job

6 is to review the DEIS, but I need to

7 also be able to compare it against the

8 scoping document.

9 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: We have

10 one in town hall, right? Yes, we have

11 it in town hall. Come down here and

12 look at it.

13 MS. BEINKAFNER: So I could

14 call up Barbara and get a copy?

15 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: She can

16 set you on the right track. She's

17 very good that way.

18 Man in the back.

19 MALE SPEAKER: I've spoken

20 already once before, but my wife is

21 yielding her time. And my son will

22 yield his.

23 I just want to reiterate the

24 other site cited in the DEIS was

111

1 already mentioned that one of them was

2 500 acres. It is actually 540 acres

3 with less people on it currently. But

4 with a $3.2 million buildout plan for

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 5 this year, and ongoing growth taking

6 place. And another one of the places

7 that they cite is 600 acres. Well,

8 we're 91 acres, and they are asking

9 for as much or more than some of the

10 sites two to five times the size of

11 our site.

12 So it seems to me that they

13 are cramming it down our throat as a

14 community. And that's a pretty rough

15 way of putting it, but we've been back

16 and forth and at every meeting. The

17 level has increased, the potential for

18 further development, rather than

19 subsided in some sort of

20 reconciliation to us.

21 So I think the FEIS, the

22 final will just use our words against

23 us. Come back with more rhetoric, and

24 hand us back what we already have:

112

1 Something that's too big for our

2 community.

3 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Thank

4 you.

5

6 (Applause.)

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7

8 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: This

9 meeting really continues until

10 December 13. You can write your

11 letters or whatever else you want and

12 get it into the town.

13 This night, tonight, is not

14 the end of this public hearing.

15 MS. CHRISTIANA: If you want

16 to close it after the written comments

17 on December 13th, though you should

18 have a motion to close the DEIS

19 portion of the public hearing, other

20 than for written comments, which must

21 be may by December 13th. Then you can

22 hold open the Site Plan Special Use

23 Permit portion.

24 MS. VAN TUYL: We would

113

1 agree with that. Because the DEIS

2 portion of the hearing has to be

3 closed to allow the comment period to

4 run.

5 MR. GORDON: Mr. Chairman,

6 could I be heard for a moment on this

7 question?

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 8 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Go

9 ahead.

10 MR. GORDON: As I have

11 mentioned, we have hired a number of

12 consultants over the last couple of

13 weeks to look into these questions. I

14 feel very optimistic and confident

15 that we can get our comments in by the

16 13th. There may be an issue that

17 arises where further information is

18 needed. I know that one of our

19 hydrologists is looking for certain

20 background data, and we are only now

21 hiring an engineer to look at the

22 substantial runoff issues.

23 So I was wondering if there

24 would be a possibility if one of these

114

1 situations does arise, which I'm

2 hoping it doesn't, to petition you for

3 an extension of the written comment

4 period at that point?

5 MS. CHRISTIANA: If at this

6 point you'd like to make a longer

7 comment period, you may do that. The

8 13th is really the minimum you should

9 go out with. But you can choose a

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06

10 longer date if you want to.

11 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: 21, make

12 it 21 days? Don't make any difference

13 to me.

14 MS. CHRISTIANA: That is a

15 decision of the Board.

16 MR. LITTLE: Would it be

17 better to extend it or --

18 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Well, we

19 won't have a chance. We won't have a

20 meeting to extend it. Better off

21 doing it now.

22 MS. CHRISTIANA: The 13th of

23 December.

24 MS. O'BRIEN: How long of a

115

1 period of time do you think you would

2 need?

3 MR. GORDON: The 13th is two

4 weeks from today. I would hope if we

5 did end up needing more time, for

6 example the stormwater engineer, that

7 it wouldn't take any more than another

8 meeting period for you, a couple

9 weeks, two or four weeks, whatever

10 your next meeting would be.

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 11 MS. VAN TUYL: When is the

12 December meeting?

13 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: 26th.

14 MS. VAN TUYL: We have no

15 objection to extending the comment

16 period to December 26th. We think

17 that this is a process where

18 everybody --

19 MR. STOLMAN: That sounds

20 like a good idea.

21 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Okay, it

22 is going to be the 26th, after there's

23 a motion.

24 MR. LITTLE: I make the

116

1 motion.

2 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Motion

3 by Little. Seconded by O'Brien. To

4 extend the comment period to the 26th,

5 which is the day after Christmas. So

6 get your comments in. Any discussion

7 on that motion?

8 On the vote. O'Brien.

9 MS. O'BRIEN: Yes.

10 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Little.

11 MR. LITTLE: Yes.

12 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN:

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13 Constable.

14 MR. CONSTABLE: No.

15 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: Lonstein,

16 yes.

17 Matichuk.

18 MS. MATICHUK: Yes.

19 CHAIRMAN LONSTEIN: See

20 that's a democratic process. Okay,

21 you've got until the 26th.

22 (Whereupon, the hearing

23 adjourned at 8:59 p.m.)

24

117

1 C E R T I F I C A T I O N

2

3

4 I, Karen Schmieder, a

5 Certified Shorthand Reporter, Certificate

6 No. 768, and Notary Public, do hereby

7 certify that I recorded stenographically the

8 proceedings herein at the time and place

9 noted in the heading hereof, and that the

10 foregoing transcript is true and accurate to

11 the best of my knowledge, skill and

12 ability.

13

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Public Meeting Transcript 11 30 06 14 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have

15 hereunto set my hand this 29th day of

16 December 2006.

17

18 KAREN SCHMIEDER, CSR, RMR 19 Registered Diplomate Reporter

20

21

22

23

24�

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