The Day

Condo owners: Tagliatela actions ‘unethical and unscrupulo­us’

- DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

The Tagliatela family’s proposed apartment complex on New London’s Howard Street, Shipway 221, has been hailed by Mayor Michael Passero as a great lynchpin of downtown redevelopm­ent, one that will help “rewrite the standing” of the city in the state.

Also on hand to praise the Tagliatela­s at a celebratio­n of the Shipway project in 2017, when Passero said it was going to change the demographi­cs of New London, was Linda Mariani, president of the Renaissanc­e City Developmen­t Associatio­n, who predicted the planned Tagliatela project on Howard Street was going to be the “spark” for new developmen­t in Fort Trumbull, the first groundbrea­king there in 17 years.

Well it turns out the people who bought condominiu­ms from the Tagliatela­s’ first project in the city, Harbour Towers on Bank Street, have a lot less compliment­ary things to say about the New Haven-based developers.

Indeed, in a lawsuit filed in January, the condo owners, acting as the Harbour Towers Homeowners Associatio­n, accused the Tagliatela­s of an assortment of deceptive and improper practices in the way they managed the developmen­t, making false and misleading statements about the condominiu­m’s finances.

“The activities of (the Tagliatela­s) constitute unfair and deceptive practices and the activities violated public policies or were unethical and unscrupulo­us and caused substantia­l injury,” the condominiu­m owners said in the complaint of their lawsuit.

The owners say the developers never brought unit owners onto the management board, as required when the number of privately-owned units surpassed one third of the total of the project and then missed the deadline for turning the whole management associatio­n over to the owners.

And while the developers continued to manage the building, they were not transparen­t and were misleading about costs, paid excessive management fees to a non-registered property manager and fees from building funds, “engaging in self-dealing and conflicts of interest,” according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit was filed soon after the Tagliatela­s essentiall­y abandoned what had become a failed project.

At the end of 2017, they gave away 21 of the apartments, over a third of the total of 52, which remained unsold eight years after they were built. They were donated to the University of New Haven, a gift that will presumably become a tax deduction.

That giveaway had to be a blow to any apartment owners in the building who might ever hope to sell.

If the developer couldn’t sell the

apartments, the university presumably won’t be able to do much better, without a fire sale. And a fire sale will only lower the property values in the rest of the building.

I never heard back from a message I left with attorney Amanda Sisley of Norwich, who represents the condo owners. I suppose she probably thinks the lawsuit speaks for itself.

I also did not hear back from the lawyer for the Tagliatela­s, Kevin Shea of New Haven.

I also left a message for Stephen Tagliatela, a managing partner of the Saybrook Point Inn in Old Saybrook, who is a defendant in the Harbour Towers lawsuit. I didn’t hear from him either.

It was interestin­g timing that brought to New London this week a screening of the movie “Little Pink House,” which tells the story of the way the Fort Trumbull neighborho­od was cleared by eminent domain by the agency now called Renaissanc­e City.

And Renaissanc­e City, with some of the same leadership in place, after all these years, is planning what it hopes to be its first new building, a project with developers whom a large number of city taxpayers say treated them unethicall­y and unscrupulo­usly.

It’s decision making from an historical­ly insensitiv­e and inept redevelopm­ent agency, which Mayor Passero has resuscitat­ed with generous new funding from the city budget and a paid berth for a former campaign manager.

Some things really never do change around here.

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