Selectmen ratify transfer station options after the fact

SALISBURY — Several weeks after the fact, the Board of Selectmen has ratified the actions of First Selectman Curtis Rand in signing options to purchase two pieces of property for use as a possible transfer station.

Rand met in executive session with the Board of Finance in January and, after consulting with the town’s legal counsel, signed two options Feb. 26 to purchase three parcels of land from the Luke and Fitting families on the western edge of town for possible use as a transfer station. The lease on the current Route 41 site expires in 2020 and is not renewable.

The option to purchase the 17 acres of land and two homes cost $18,000 and gave the town the right-of-first-refusal to buy the properties for $2 million until Feb. 28, 2008.

Meanwhile, Rand said the town could have a healthy debate about whether the site is the proper choice and whether the price is right. After learning of Rand’s actions, Selectman Peter Oliver was highly critical of Rand’s failure to consult the other selectmen and questioned whether the expenditure of funds was legal.

Then last month Rand signed another purchase option for another possible transfer station site. The nine-month option cost $500 for the right to buy about 25 acres of the nearby Lee property for $1.25 million.

If the deal goes through, the Lees will donate almost 40 adjacent acres to the Salisbury Housing Trust for affordable housing.

Oliver, who made the motion to ratify Rand’s actions at the Aug. 7 Board of Selectmen’s meeting, offered no discussion of it. Rand appeared happy to put the matter behind him, but did offer some words.

“From my perspective, it’s been a difficult time and a challenge,� said Rand. “I appreciate there has been some consternation. We can all disagree and that’s a good thing.�

Selectman James Dresser, who seconded Oliver’s motion and will be Rand’s running mate in the November elections, said he did not “feel ratification is strictly necessary� because he thought Rand’s “actions were appropriate.�

“But as a matter of comity and professional respect, I am willing to do this,� Dresser said. He added that he has “sat on a number of boards where it is common practice to periodically ratify the actions of officers.�

The motion passed unanimously without further discussion.

• In other transfer station news, Rand said Anchor Engineering was at the Lee property last week investigating its environmental and topographical suitability as a future transfer station site.

The Hotchkiss School, which owns the current transfer station site on Sharon Road (Route 41), has again offered to pay a portion of Anchor’s fee, estimated to be about $3,000. When the engineering firm was first hired by the two-town Transfer Station and Recycling Committee several years ago to scope out potential sites, Hotchkiss contributed $3,000 toward Anchor’s $7,400 consulting fee.

Anchor is expected to present its findings on the Lee property at the next meeting of the Luke-Fitting Advisory Committee Aug. 20.

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