Fred Havemeyer Calls For Pine Barrens Commission To Review 'The Hills'

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Fred Havemeyer.

Fred Havemeyer.

Bill Kearns

Bill Kearns

 an East Quogue resident

an East Quogue resident

 speaks during a press conference outside The Hills property on Monday. AMANDA BERNOCCO

speaks during a press conference outside The Hills property on Monday. AMANDA BERNOCCO

Bill Kearns

Bill Kearns

authorAmanda Bernocco on Jun 23, 2017

Fred Havemeyer, a former Southampton Town Trustee who plans to seek the Democratic nomination for town supervisor in a September primary, this week called on the Pine Barrens Commission to review a proposal for a luxury golf course resort community in East Quogue.

He argued that at this point in the process, the commission should be able to say whether the proposed development, “The Hills at Southampton,” complies with the Pine Barrens Protection Act.

Mr. Havemeyer expressed his concerns to the commission—which includes Chairwoman Carrie Meek Gallagher, and members Suffolk County Executive Steven Bellone, Brookhaven Town Supervisor Edward Romaine, Southampton Town Supervisor Jay Schneiderman and Riverhead Town Supervisor Sean Walter—during the public comment portion of its most recent meeting on June 21.

“I went there to wave a flag over there, like, ‘Hey, this is here. This is happening,’” Mr. Havemeyer said.

The commission did not respond to Mr. Havemeyer at the meeting—which is common practice when someone speaks during the public comment portion.

Mr. Schneiderman said on Thursday, June 21, that it’s still too early in the process for the commission to make a ruling on the application filed by the Discovery Land Company of Arizona for The Hills. The company seeks special zoning to build 118 residential units, along with an 18-hole golf course, on 600 acres along Spinney Road in East Quogue.

He said the application, which seeks Southampton Town Board approval of special zoning called a planned development district, won’t be in the hands of the Pine Barrens Commission until the Final Environmental Impact Statement, or FEIS, is deemed complete by the Town Board. The town has not received the FEIS yet, though Mr. Schneiderman said he expects it to arrive by the end of June.

“There is no application in front of the Pine Barrens Commission,” he said. “At some point there will be.”

Mark Hissey, vice president of Discovery Land Company, said on Monday that he expects the document to be re-filed with the town by the end of the week.

Mr. Havemeyer, along with other critics of the project, say that such a high-density development should not be constructed in the Pine Barrens. The land targeted by the development features 5-acre residential zoning—the strictest in the municipality.

“It’s an atomic bomb waiting to go off in Southampton,” Mr. Havemeyer said of the application.

The same demands were made by actor Alec Baldwin of Amagansett last summer in front of about 140 people in Riverhead. He also argued that the Pine Barrens Commission should reject the proposal because of its potential effect on the environment.

Mr. Havemeyer said it’s vital for the commission to make a decision. “If they vote in disfavor, that’s the end of the project,” he said. “It’s a very serious thing and the Pine Barrens Commission has a very serious job.”

At a separate press conference held on Monday along Spinney Road, near the entrance to The Hills property, Bill Kearns of East Quogue, a longtime critic of the project, applauded Mr. Havemeyer for stepping up and challenging Mr. Schneiderman.

“Havemeyer is a man who’s been in government, he’s been on the East End forever,” said Mr. Kearns, who lives off Spinney Road. “He spearheaded the sport-fishing movement many years ago and, in doing that, he came to realize that fresh water, clean water and maintaining [fishing] stocks are most important … in terms of the future of the East End.”

Mr. Kearns added that Mr. Havemeyer’s dedication to the environment, and staunch opposition to The Hills, are why he should be the next town supervisor.

At Monday’s event, Mr. Havemeyer said he wants to see the Hills property preserved or a reduced-impact alternative adopted—one that is more restrictive than the one proposed by Discovery Land and calls for 118 clustered single-family houses and no golf course.

“The groundwater has already become ground-zero for nitrogen contamination, which produces harmful algae blooms and resulting brown and red tides, compromising Weesuck Creek and Shinnecock Bay,” he said.

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