Becker Plan Is A Better Value
Becker Plan Is A Better Value
To The Editor:
âShould the town buy Fairfield Hills?â isnât an issue any more. The important questions is âHow should the town buy Fairfield Hills â directly, or through the Becker plan?â Clearly, the Becker plan gives better value.
âControlâ isnât an issue: under Beckerâs revised proposal the town will own all the underdeveloped land. Providing for schools, ball fields, open space and light commercial development isnât an issue either, because the proposal already includes all of those. The town gets everything except those buildings it has already said it doesnât want.
The big difference is, Beckerâs proposal can do all these great things with other peopleâs money. Historic tax credits, which the town canât get, will reduce renovation costs, allowing better quality construction at a lower price â approximately a $3.75 million savings on town buildings, and room to give incentives to attract tenants like the YMCA (how much would the town have to spend to build a 50,000 sq ft gym with two pools?). Tax revenues from the buildings Becker keeps will be used in part to pay off the costs of town building improvements, so our out-of-pocket costs will be lower. Becker estimates his plan will reduce the cost for town facilities by more than $10 million.
âBuy now, even if we later decide to sellâ is not cost effective. Fairfield Hills costs $1 million a year for bare-bones maintenance, not to mention the cost of development and environmental clean-up. Thatâs a lot of dollars forever lost to athletic facilities, new schools or municipal offices, and all the other goodies Becker can provide now. And itâs his risk and his headache.
Sincerely,
Stacey Daves-Ohlin
Beacon Drive, Sandy Hook                                        November 17, 1999