Albany Times Union

Terramor pulls glamping plan

Company withdraws Catskills applicatio­n after facing strong community opposition

- By Susan Farkas and Phillip Pantuso

SAUGERTIES — Terramor, the luxury division of Kampground­s of America, on Wednesday withdrew its applicatio­n to build a glamping complex on 77 acres off state Route 212 between Saugerties and Woodstock after significan­t opposition from the community.

The about-face was a surprise to town leaders and the organized group of residents who have been fighting the proposal for more than a year. Terramor sought to build 75 raised tents — each with its own toilet, shower and fire pit — along with a 4,000-square-foot restaurant and events center, wellness tent, lodge, Olympic-size swimming pool with cabanas, maintenanc­e building and employee housing in the forest just south of Glasco Turnpike.

The company’s request for a special use permit was met with unanimous opposition from 22 speakers at a Jan. 17 informatio­n meeting, and Terramor was due to present counter-arguments to the Saugerties Planning Board on Feb 21. Instead, it withdrew its applicatio­n in a short letter that contained “no specifics whatsoever,” according to Town Supervisor Fred Costello via the Daily Freeman, which first reported the news.

Terramor’s neighbors feared air and water pollution, groundwate­r depletion, noise, traffic on already over-burdened roads, pesticide use, “violation of community character,” and a drop in their property values. They organized Citizens Against Terramor, raised money for a lawyer and hydrologis­t and launched a petition that garnered more than 35,000 signatures. In recent months, the group attracted support from local environmen­tal groups such as the Sierra Club, Catskill Mountainke­eper and the Woodstock Land Conservanc­y, as well as the Woodstock Jewish Congregati­on after it learned that Terramor’s initial plans called for treated wastewater to be dumped in their sacred pond.

Terramor’s attorney cited “internal business decisions” as the reason for withdrawin­g the applicatio­n. Jenny Mccullough, Terramor’s senior director of marketing and operations, said no final decision had been made about the Catskills location — which was only one of several under considerat­ion for a Terramor resort.

“After careful evaluation, the Catskills property is not meeting our criteria across several key benchmarks, especially with increasing­ly high costs of developmen­t in this market continuall­y impacting performanc­e metrics,” she said.

Asked whether local antipathy was a deciding factor,

Mccullough said, “The opposition was heard but they weren’t decisive.”

But Susan Paynter, president of Citizens Against Terramor, is celebratin­g. “I’m so happy, I’m pinching myself,” she said. She was girding for a two-year battle and is relieved that it’s over.

National implicatio­ns of local control

Paynter believes Citizens Against Terramor’s win is a victory for citizen activism that may inspire others to resist developmen­t in their neighborho­ods. Where Terramor claimed to be a campground — allowable in a residentia­l area — Paynter and her allies saw a five-star resort. The company claimed its tents were temporary structures, but Paynter said that tents with wooden floors, plumbing, granite countertop­s and queen beds cannot be rolled up like traditiona­l tents.

Town Supervisor Costello agreed. He told the Daily Freeman that Terramor was neither a campground nor a resort. “One of the projects the Comprehens­ive Plan Committee is working on is to better define hospitalit­y uses,” he said. “It would have been an easier planning exercise if we could have described them in a more definitive way.”

Paynter believes zoning codes across the country may have to be rewritten to accommodat­e glamping.

Mccullough said no decision has been made on the future of the property, but one thing is certain: Terramor will not resubmit its existing proposal.

As for Citizens Against Terramor, the group still has to raise money to pay their consultant­s. Then they plan to try buying the property for a nature preserve.

“Looking at the bedrock, wetland and endangered species, it is well suited to be a nature preserve,” Paynter said. “It’s perfect for carefully laidout walking trails … But before all that, we’re having a big party!”

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