DEC oversees gas station clean up

Millerton Square Plaza update

NORTH EAST — Last week, The Millerton News reported on activity taking place at the Millerton Square Plaza on Route 44, home to the last grocery store the town has had. That was back in 2019, when the Millerton Fresh Market closed; for many years before that, Grand Union was the only grocery store in town.

The closure of the Fresh Market three years ago marked the beginning of a “food desert” in the Millerton/North East community. The absence of such a business has been of the utmost concern to residents, business owners, local officials and even plaza owner Joseph “Skip” Trotta himself.

Trotta confirmed in February his now-vacant strip of stores was under contract to be sold; since that time, the few remaining businesses have either closed or relocated.

While he wouldn’t reveal the name of the buyer, Trotta did share in February he was optimistic about a grocer coming to town. He said the prospective buyer “work[s] with shopping centers” and it’s his or her “intention is to put a supermarket in there.”

In the roughly six months since then, however, there’s been no word on the sale being finalized. Trotta also said he was unwilling to answer any more questions from this newspaper about the status of the sale or of the plaza.

It was reported back in February that the buyer’s primary hesitancy was the independently-standing gas station island — long deserted — which has remained in the plaza’s parking lot for “as long as I can remember,” according to North East Field Building Inspector/Code Enforcement Officer Michael Segelken.

The buyer was reportedly waiting for Trotta to only have the gas station removed and the gas tanks remediated before being willing to commit to a sales contract.

And so the community waited, anxious to finally have a grocer fill the gap left in the wake of the Grand Union and Millerton Fresh Market’s departure, and to have local shopping available once again. That’s essential for a village like Millerton, which has residents without transportation who count on being able to walk to do their food shopping.

While there are no applications currently on file for the plaza in the town of North East, with either the Planning Board or the building inspector, passers-by have likely seen the site’s been abuzz with activity for the past few weeks.

According to Segelken, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) is in charge of the work being done in the plaza’s parking lot. Segelken said the gas station is being remediated, with the gas tanks being removed to ensure the site is environmentally sound.

“The DEC usually oversees it, especially to check the surrounding ground, whether [any materials] leaked or not, if there’s any contamination,” said Segelken. “The brook, Kelsey Brook, is just behind the supermarket building, so it’s something I would say they would like to keep an eye on.”

Segelken, who lives in town, said DEC monitors have been on-site for the past month or so, making sure the private company hired to do the remediation work is doing so properly.

“As far as I know, they’re just [working] at the gas station, which has been ripped up,” he added. “I believe [the digging was] just where the tanks were.”

When asked how much earth had been dug up, Segelken said that “depends on how big the tanks were,” noting that “the DEC oversees it because they’re with the state government, so they supersede us. We didn’t issue any permits… not for this job… ”

North East Planning Board Chairman Dale Culver explained his board has not been involved in the remediation project at all, nor was it involved with the plaza’s 2011 attempt to lure Hannaford in to replace Grand Union. He explained if a project solely calls for interior work, as bringing Hannaford to the Grand Union space likely would have, it’s the building inspector’s domain versus the Planning Board’s.

“We have no say on the insides of buildings,” Culver clarified. “If you own a commercial building and it’s zoned properly, you don’t need to talk to us. As long as you don’t change the outside circumference or any of the outside of the building, you don’t have to come to us. If you’re opening a business inside we have nothing to say; you only need site-plan approval if work is being done on the [exterior] site. Inside is not the site, outside is the site.”

Culver said he wanted to state the difference clearly for readers. Trotta commented in last week’s issue that he “had a written agreement with Hannaford to come into the plaza” in 2011, also telling this newspaper during the Aug. 15 interview Culver “voted against it.”

Culver said that would have been impossible, because as Trotta said last week, he “had no need to come to us; the Millerton Fresh Market didn’t come to us.”

Culver further said the gas station remedation going on right now is standard fare, as is the DEC’s involvement.

DEC representative Stephanie Mossey was unable to  get back to the newspaper for comment before press time.

Segelken noted he hasn’t heard of “any extended plans” for the plaza.

“It would be nice to get a grocery store back in town, but I haven’t heard anything,” he said. “Hopefully, though…”

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