Monday, March 5, 2012

Farmers Market Chickens Come Home to Roost

OP ED

      Our society has come up with too few improvements in the way it manages to govern, but it has marvelously perfected, while simultaneously coarsening, the techniques by which it insults the governed.
One of these is to simply deny the reality of the experience of its citizens, ignore their concerns and override their warnings. In a bare majority opinion, members of Croton’s planning board on January 10 encouraged the village board to approve a special permit for an indoor farmers market while voicing relatively mild concerns about parking and the impact on existing businesses.
Certain planning board members unequivocally expressed the personal opinion that an indoor farmers market within 200 feet of Zeytinia represented no competition and that adequate parking space would be available. One has to wonder how familiar they are with Croton’s checkered retailing history and whether they would express a similar opinion if someone wanted to open a hardware store a few doors from Croton Hardware.
Although the village code lists the situations in which a special permit must be obtained, it makes no mention about the scope or content of special permits. The only stipulation in the special permit granted to Community Markets, Inc., is designation of the area where employees must park. Yet nothing is said about the unloading (and re-loading) of produce from vendors’ trucks, the nature of the goods to be sold, and similar considerations.
More important, given the copious concerns expressed about economic impact and parking congestion, the village board foolishly failed to reserve the right to terminate the special permit at its discretion. Croton’s existing tax-paying merchants who deserved the village board's protection and the ignored public have again suffered from casual, tin-eared government.
One aspect of Croton's special permit process is questionable with respect to its propriety if not its legality:  Its practice of drawing up the text of a resolution of approval in advance of the special permit hearing. This ad hoc, one-size-fits-all resolution then becomes part of the special permit package handed to trustees in advance of the hearing. In other words, Croton will listen to citizens’ comments, but doesn’t give a damn about what they say. Its mind is made up in advance.
At the village board meeting of February 6, strident cautions were voiced by the public and by two trustees. Eloquently characterizing the proposed action as “parachuting in a supermarket,” trustee Casey Raskob broke ranks and joined a furious former mayor Gregory Schmidt in opposing the special permit. Trustees Galelli and Murtaugh, champs at rubber-stamping, predictably voted in favor of granting the special permit.
With the trustees deadlocked, Mayor Wiegman stepped in and voted in favor of issuing  the faulted special permit for the operation of a farmers market in the former Blockbuster store on Saturdays between February 11 and May 26, 2012. This vote makes him solely responsible for the shoehorning of a large group of unmistakably competitive retailers into this mini strip mall, already a planning abortion and a parking nightmare. In the face of this doubtful honor, one has to wonder how the mayor has the gumption to shop anywhere in Croton. Undoubtedly, voters will remember this should he have the temerity to run again.
Interviewed by Journal News reporter Robert Marchant for a March 4 story on the growing imbroglio, trustee Ann Galelli acknowledged the problem and, in a rare moment of candor for a politician, admitted responsibility. “We have to look into the nitty-gritty. We’ll explore everything, look into what’s in the leases, maybe street parking, whether there’s room for additional parking spaces.”
 “Exploring everything, looking into the nitty-gritty, what’s in the leases and whether there’s room for additional parking spaces” are the very heart of the matter. Ms. Galelli unwittingly ticked off the practical details that should have been specifically explored by the mayor and his cohorts before they rubber-stamped the now-embarrassingly toothless special permit.
As the putative author of the 2004 Gateway Law, perhaps Ms. Galelli would also oblige us and explain why that overtly anti-business law, which is still very much on the books, specifically bans parking lots anywhere in a Croton that sorely needs all the parking space it can muster.
In the meantime, bottom-line damage to local merchants and insult to the public weal continue apace every Saturday until May 26. Shame on those responsible for such a shabby, bottom-drawer performance. The only wisdom to come out of this unfortunate incident is its revelation of the doubtful protection afforded by special permits, especially those granted by tone-deaf public officials.