Latest News

A look back at this week in Shelter Island history
ZBA: Both yes and no on controversial house
Times/Review Newsgroup unveils Northforker.com
Goody was too good: Softball ace part of a winning team
Weekly police blotter: Six motorists ticketed
Dark skies again: Board hears from Manor, Zella and Grucci
Dougherty and Shepherd square off at Town Hall
Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board
Indie bookseller flourishing on Island
South Ferry crew quickly douses car fire

Sports

Eye on the Ball: Writer Vecsey takes sports seriously

May 23, 2013

Goody was too good: Softball ace part of a winning team

May 23, 2013

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Education

Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board

May 21, 2013

Don’t forget to vote: Polls open until 9 p.m.

May 20, 2013

The Incredible Hulk? Spider Man? Mr. Becker, is that you?

May 16, 2013

Business

Times/Review Newsgroup unveils Northforker.com

May 23, 2013

North Fork farmers say they're not the one with issues

May 19, 2013

Chamber gives Town Board date for holiday fireworks

May 16, 2013

Community

Times/Review Newsgroup unveils Northforker.com

May 23, 2013

Bucks seek housing: looking at alternatives and volunteers

May 16, 2013

Paper gobbler set to roll into town Saturday

May 15, 2013

Obituaries

Obituary: Reporter staffer David Lee Draper

May 20, 2013

Obituaries: Elmer August Kestler Jr., Lawrence William Sliker

May 9, 2013

Obituaries: Draper, Rodgers

March 7, 2013

Real Estate

ZBA: Both yes and no on controversial house

May 23, 2013

Good grief: ‘Grievance Day’ looms at Assessor’s office

May 14, 2013

High end real estate deals escalate

May 1, 2013

Opinion

Eye on the Ball: Writer Vecsey takes sports seriously

May 23, 2013

Column: When the IRS tried to muscle me

May 21, 2013

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Dougherty calls for town resolutions on St. Gabe’s

JULIE LANE PHOTO | Town Supervisor Jim Dougherty called for Town Board resolutions relating to St. Gabriel’s Retreat Center.

Town Supervisor Jim Dougherty is continuing his campaign to prevent residential development of the St. Gabriel’s Retreat Center by using town money to preserve the property as open space.

At Tuesday’s Town Board work session, Mr. Dougherty discussed minutes from a meeting last month of the Community Preservation Fund Advisory Board (CPFAB), the group tasked with targeting and vetting open space purchases, which revealed the CPFAB has no interest in St. Gabe’s.

The CPFAB is funded by a 2 percent tax on real estate transfers that goes to the town to purchase open space to preserve.

Minutes from the February 25 meeting of the CPFAB  in an executive, or members only, session stated that they “unanimously agreed to remove St. Gabe’s from the priority list.”

Peter Vielbig, chairman of the CPFAB, has maintained that St. Gabe’s is developed property with five buildings and a 1,000 foot  bulkhead that either has to be removed or maintained. And using the so-called “2 percent” money to maintain structures defeats the point of open space preservation.

At Tuesday’s work session, Mr. Dougherty said the CPFAB’s “priority list” was a “kitchen sink” list, with numerous properties on it and St. Gabe’s should be put back on it.

He called for a Town Board resolution to achieve that goal.

But Mr. Dougherty wasn’t finished. He noted that in August 2010 the Town Board passed a resolution giving the CPFAB the “leadership role in preserving St. Gabriel’s.”

The resolution notes that the property has  “prospective open space as well as a number of buildings and improvements …”

Mr. Dougherty asked for another resolution to take back the leadership role in acquiring St. Gabe’s to the town.

He also noted that the CPFAB is more interested “in pruning than acquiring open space.”

After the meeting, Mr. Vielbig, speaking about the proposed resolutions,  pointed out that his group was an advisory board and the Town Board “can do whatever they want.”

He was pleased that the issue of St. Gabe’s was receiving more discussion. “It’s good it’s coming to the fore … I think it’s very healthy for the town,” Mr. Vielbig said.

As for the supervisor’s remark about pruning, Mr. Vielbig said that was unfair. He noted that even though the Community Preservation Fund had taken in about $1 million in the last couple of cycles, it was $2 million in debt it had borrowed to acquire property.

“It’s manageable, planned  debt,” Mr. Vielbig said. “We’re all confident it can be handled. While we’re in this hiatus time, it’s a good time to look at properties we’ve acquired and how we can improve them and keep them healthy. It may be true we’re pruning, but we’re not more interested in pruning than acquiring.”