MAMAKATING—The town of Mamakating recently passed zoning changes meant to help protect the Basha Kill Wildlife Management Area, but a watchdog group remains concerned about the effects on the nature preserve of proposed developments.
“If everything around the Basha Kill was developed, this would be an island, not allowing for any habitat connectivity,” said Paula Medley, president of the Basha Kill Area Association (BKAA).
An 800-member nonprofit, the association keeps a close eye on Basha Kill’s 3,000 acres, which are mostly wetlands but also include some uplands, and on the surrounding properties. Basha Kill provides a habitat for deer, grouse, wild turkey, fox, beaver, muskrat, raccoon, rabbit, skunk, mink, and opossum; for over 220 species of birds, including ospreys, eagles, and wood ducks; and for 30 species of fish.
Medley pointed out some developments that she is concerned could adversely affect the health and future of the preserve: the Wurtsboro Airport and Seven Peaks owned by Shalom Lamm, the Shawanga Lodge owned by David Flaum, and the Thompson Education Center, formerly known as China City of America.
Master Plan Zoning
Medley said that for the past 18 months Mamakating has been working to synchronize its zoning code with the town’s master plan. The town’s master plan, which was adopted in 2001, envisions a town that will draw tourists to the Basha Kill, which takes up 3,000 acres of the town. “It’s almost the whole town of Mamakating,” Medley said.
Town Supervisor Bill Hermann said the town wants to build an economy that is eco-tourist-based. “It’s low impact on the environment—you hike the canal trail, you hike around the Basha Kill, you go looking at birds, you’re on the search for a picture. That leaves a very light footprint on the environment.”
At the July 28 meeting of Mamakating’s Planning and Zoning Office, several new zoning amendments were approved. The new regulations aim to reduce density—large residential developments will not be permitted. However, large property owners can challenge the changes.
If a landowner with more than 20 percent ownership in a targeted district challenges the change, the board needs a super majority—four out of the five board members—to override the challenge. Overall, Medley’s organization was satisfied with the amendments that passed.
Problematic Development
A successful challenge came from Shalom Lamm, owner of the Wurtsboro Airport. The land around the airport is zoned light industrial, and Lamm wishes to develop Commerce Park with warehouse buildings on it. Medley said the airport has long, narrow parcels that stretch from the headwaters of the Basha Kill to the base of the Shangam Ridge.
The Medley group wanted a 500-foot buffer with reduced zoning that they call mountain greenbelt. “If you have light industrial office going all the way up to your resource, that’s always going to be a conflict,” Medley said.
The zoning amendment proposing the mountain greenbelt buffer for this property failed. “Unfortunately, I believe that there could be some politics involved here,” Hermann said.
Seven Peaks, a 650-acre luxury residential development, is planned on the northern ridges above the wetland. Hermann said he visited more than 100 residents near the development and all had the same complaint.
“People were showing us backyards being washed out and driveways demolished,” he said, with the damage appearing after the initial construction of the road and model home began. “I’ve seen it. I’ve witnessed the water coming down the mountain.”
The BKAA sees many problematic areas in the Seven Peaks development for the lower wetlands: steepness of the slopes, stormwater drainage, and emergency access.
Hermann said that homes on the ridge might be required to dig deeper wells where once a 400-foot well reached the aquifer, now an 800-foot well is needed.
The five-acre properties would have big yards that need to be watered and possibly swimming pools. “The ridge is not really an appropriate location for any of that intense development,” Medley said, citing concerns about the fragility of the aquifer on the ridge.
Katherine Beinkafner, a hydrogeologic consultant for the Basha Kill Association, said in a letter to the editor published by Shawangunk Journal that neither Commerce Park nor Seven Peaks “shows a level of sensitivity or compatibility with the natural surroundings or the ‘gorgeously scenic setting’ described by Mr. Lamm.”
Lamm has not responded to several requests by Epoch Times for comment.
Thompson Education Center
The BKAA is keeping a close eye on the Thompson Education Center in nearby Thompson. Medley said the drainage from that 560-acre site goes right into Mamakating and is part of the Basha Kill watershed. Of the Thompson Center’s 560 acres, 200 are wetlands.




