Opinions on CPIC/DDSO relationship differ


AMENIA — There has been a swirl of controversy, hearsay and rumors about Amenia’s Comprehensive Plan Implementation Committee (CPIC) and the Taconic Developmental Disabilities Services Office (DDSO) over the past few weeks.

Citizens have asked: Does the DDSO house violent criminals or sex offenders? Will the format of the facility be changed so they can be housed there? Does CPIC want the facility to close? If so, will the grounds be transformed into housing or retail space?


How it started


Amenia’s first comprehensive plan was adopted in 1991.

Since 2003, CPIC has focused on revising the plan, as well as the town’s antiquated zoning law, both of which are currently in draft form.

At a CPIC public hearing held at Amenia Elementary School on Feb. 5, Amenia resident Rick Levin called the committee’s plan "amazing," but said he has some concerns about the DDSO.

Many CPIC members said development of the property is crucial for Amenia’s future.

If the location is developed, it may reduce taxes and bring about a "renaissance" in Amenia, as Levin put it.

However, Levin said that if the center changes its format and houses criminals, such as pedophiles, it may keep people from buying a home in the area and property values may plunge.

At the Town Board’s Feb. 15 meeting, Neila Cardus, regional coordinator of the Public Employee Federation, said she took issue with Levin’s comment, as well as CPIC’s description of the DDSO’s staff, clients and the residents who live on abutting properties.

The coordinator said pages 15 and 16 of the draft plan were particularly objectionable.

The chapters contain the words "criminal action" and "delinquency," among others.

She added that the change of format which Levin spoke of was wholly erroneous and news to her.


Former councilman

weighs in


"Seven hundred jobs. Where are you going to replace that money and those benefits around here?" Amenia resident and former town Councilman Bill Carroll said about the possible closure of the state facility.

If the property is developed, he said, it would be like adding another hamlet to Amenia, which already has Wassaic to the south.

"We can’t support two hamlets," he said.

In an interview conducted at his home March 9, Carroll spent time speaking of Alan Shope, who owns a 450-acre parcel that contains Listening Rock Farm in Wassaic, as well as a parcel that abuts the state facility.

Carroll surmised that Shope wishes to buy the rest of the state property so it can be developed.

"[Shope] had it in the empire zone, but now it’s gone," he said, referring to the national program that offers personal and corporate franchise tax incentives and credits to businesses that move or start up within the zone. "He failed. Now he wants to buy the whole DDSO property to develop it."

Carrroll noted that Shope sent a letter, dated March 12, to John Mizerack, the DDSO’s director, that was copied to Gov. Eliot Spitzer, town Supervisor Janet Reagon, The New York Times, The Harlem Valley Times, The Poughkeepsie Journal, the Amenia Town Board and state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo.

In the letter, Shope states that it’s "outrageous you and your superiors in Albany refuse to be forthright to me and the other citizens of Amenia. I was appalled by the rudeness of members of your staff and your union representatives at the Amenia Town Board meeting."

However, the letter continues, the "silver lining of the situation" is that "their actions have called attention to the situation and attracted the scrutiny of state Legislature, Senate and governor’s office ... I remain hopeful that you will share with us precisely what the plans are for the future of this site."

According to Carroll, it would be a shame if the developmental disability center was closed because "the developmentally disabled get very good care down there."

At the Feb. 15 meeting, Councilman Roger Russell said the board has tried to contact somebody at the DDSO for years to check on its status, to no avail.

Not so, said Carroll.

He produced minutes from the June 17, 2004, Town Board meeting when John Mizerack, director of the DDSO, told the board "he was in attendance for public relations" and to "discuss a few items about the state campus."

The former councilman said there may be conflicts of interest, or "maybe even collusion," between members of CPIC and the Town Board and those who want to develop the property.

Carroll noted that Mark Doyle, CPIC’s chairman, was Alan Shope’s farm manager at Listening Rock from 2001 to 2004.

Additionally, Doyle’s wife, Vicki, serves on the Town Board.

Furthermore, at the board’s meeting last Thursday night, it was revealed that Levin recently made a $5,000 donation to the town of Amenia.

"You have to put the names together. It’s a circle," Carroll said. "Is Amenia in their interest or is it in their own interest?"

According to Carroll, something seems a bit fishy about the way the draft comprehensive plan was revised to address the concerns of Cardus and DDSO employees.

Cardus made her first presentation before the board Feb. 15.

CPIC met a week later, on Feb. 22.

According to Carroll, the DDSO portion of the comprehensive plan was already altered by the time of the Feb. 22 meeting.

However, CPIC didn’t meet in between those dates; the committee met on Feb. 12.

Carroll surmised that there’s no possible way the language change could have been approved by the whole of CPIC because they didn’t meet between Feb. 15 and 22.

"It certainly wasn’t discussed by CPIC because they had no meeting," he said.

Doyle wrote a letter to the editor that appeared in the Feb. 22 edition of The Millerton News.

According to Carroll, the language in that letter, which discusses the DDSO, is exactly the same as the language that was changed in the comprehensive plan.


Chairman and supervisor set record straight


From her office Tuesday afternoon, Janet Reagon, Amenia’s town supervisor, said that Levin’s donation was used to defray the cost of printing copies of the latest edition of the Comprehensive Plan, which is a massive document.

She made no bones about the fact that Levin is a developer, but he currently has no development before any board in town.

"It’s not like we could use [the donation] for anything," she explained. "It cost $20 to print, but we only had to charge people $5."

Reagon wrote a letter, dated Feb. 7, to Spitzer concerning the DDSO, which was copied to Mizerak.

"I wrote that to get people to answer our questions. We’re more than willing to have a discussion with the state. We’re not trying to get people’s jobs lost or close the DDSO down. All I want is some answers. What are they planning to do?" Reagon asked.

She added that she recently received a two-sentence letter from Mizerak.

The supervisor said she hoped the correspondence would have a bit more information.

"OK, but that’s not what we wanted to know. We want to know who is going to be treated. What are the facts?" she continued.

Reached at his home, CPIC’s chairman dispelled Carroll’s claim about a "fishy" timeline.

The altered DDSO language in the comprehensive plan was formulated and mulled over at the Feb. 22 meeting and inserted into the document at a later date.

He also stressed that CPIC is not lobbying for the state facility to be closed.

"But we are asking for cooperation. We’re absolutely not calling for closure. But we are not in favor of it developing into a prison," he said.

Doyle clarified that his ties with Shope were severed in 2004 when he was fired.

"The answer to that is a resounding ‘no,’" he said. "CPIC advocated for development in the Ten Mile River area and Alan was very much opposed to that, in fact."

As far as his wife being on the Town Board, Doyle said he and Vicki Doyle are 100 percent impartial.

"That’s the bottom line," he said, adding that if the Doyles were to profit from the development of the DDSO it would be a conflict of interest. "This case is exactly the opposite. The town would benefit from this, not us."

The DDSO will be discussed at the Town Board’s next meeting, tonight at Town Hall at 7 p.m.

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