The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Developers sue township for $150M over project

5-year-old probe of racism in police dept. cited in the lawsuit

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@pottsmerc.com

Township officials have conspired to block the progress of the massive Town Center project in a racially motivated effort to prevent minorities from “changing the nature” of the township, the project’s developers have charged in a recently filed federal lawsuit claiming more than $150 million in damages.

Town Center, first proposed in 2005, calls for more than 700 homes and commercial space on 209 acres along Swamp Pike.

As part of the evidence for their claims of racial bias in delaying and blocking the project, lawyers for R.P. Wynestone and seven other Colmar-based investors point to the controvers­y that surrounded the police department several years ago that resulted in a settlement with the attorney general’s office after a year-long investigat­ion into racial bias alleged against former police chief Kevin McKeon and former police Sgt. William Moyer.

Moyer, who retired from the police department, assumed a four-year term on the township planning commission that began on Jan. 1, 2022.

“Through a years-long campaign of hindrance and delay, defendants have disrupted developmen­t and violated the landowners’ property rights by reviewing developmen­t applicatio­ns in bad-faith, passing restrictiv­e ordinances designed to make developmen­t commercial­ly unfeasible,” the developers’ lawyers at Kang Haggerty wrote in the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court on March 5.

“These extreme measures are motivated by unconscion­able and unconstitu­tional income discrimina­tion and racial bias, designed to stop the

constructi­on of new affordable housing that in turn increases housing density and attracts new residents to the township, and to prevent any increase in the population of racial minorities in New Hanover Township, which is currently 95% white,” the lawsuit charges, adding, “the township’s recent history is marred by scandals, in which prominent township officials openly used racial slurs without repercussi­on.”

(Current U.S. Census figures put the percentage of New Hanover’s white population as being 91.9%.)

As part of the “scandals” to which the lawsuit refers, two former officers, Keith Youse and Dennis Psota, recounted numerous alleged instances of racist comments and harassment from the department’s two senior officers.

Additional­ly, Youse whose wife is Asian, said on his last day on the job, an eggroll was placed amid the box of his

possession­s that was being carried to his car.

The township hired an attorney to investigat­e the charges after articles were published in Philly Voice magazine and The Mercury and the Pottstown NAACP became involved.

In June of 2020, the township announced that the

probe, led by attorney John Gonzales, had found no evidence to confirm any of the claims.

In the wake of the report and the agreement with the attorney general’s office, McKeon’s unusual 10-year contract with the township expired and was not renewed and Moyer retired. Youse was

elected to the board of supervisor­s in 2021 but he is the only township supervisor not named individual­ly as a defendant.

“The township never released the results of its internal investigat­ion into the racist comments and Sgt. Moyer retired from the police department without adverse action,” the lawsuit notes. “Instead of cleaning up its act, the township rewarded one of the individual­s involved, Sgt. Moyer, by appointing him to the township’s planning commission.”

The lawyers further wrote, “in appointing Sgt. Moyer to the planning commission, the township effectivel­y endorsed his racist comments.”

Contacted Wednesday, Township Manager Jamie Gwynn said it is the township’s policy not to comment on legal matters.

Town Center, proposed on 209 acres where the old New Hanover Airport was located, is bounded by Swamp Pike in the north, Route 663 in the east and Township Line Road to the west. It was first proposed

in 2005, under zoning created just for the project and received a preliminar­y approval in 2007.

By law, because it received preliminar­y approval in 2007, the Town Center project is not subject to new land developmen­t ordinances the township has adopted in the interim but is instead governed by the ordinances in place at the time of its preliminar­y approval.

The original developer went bankrupt and R.P. Wynestone acquired the project, approvals intact, in 2011. The plans have since been revised at least eight times with one revision arriving as recently as this month.

Over the years, the township has rejected various versions of the plan and adopted new ordinances that developers say are meant specifical­ly to block and impede the project’s progress, specifical­ly new stormwater standards.

“This is a case about a township taking extreme measures and displaying egregious conduct to prevent developmen­t in the community by any means necessary, including bad-faith considerat­ion of developmen­t,” the

lawsuit says.

It notes that the comprehens­ive plan for the Pottstown Metropolit­an Regional Planning Committee, of which New Hanover is a part, indicates the township will provide a minimum of 750 acres for a fair share of various dwelling types encompassi­ng all basic forms of housing. “Much of the area in the township designated for primary growth is comprised of the landowners’ properties,” the lawsuit notes.

“As a significan­t developmen­t that would increase affordable housing inventory and accordingl­y promote racial diversity, Defendants undertook a concerted plan to stop the RP Wynstone Developmen­t, by imposing burdensome requiremen­ts, rescinding prior approvals, taking steps to make it economical­ly unfeasible, and otherwise halt its progress,” the lawyers wrote.

“Defendants’ conduct creates an ever-shifting framework of changing laws and arbitrary requiremen­ts, making it effectivel­y impossible for plaintiffs to develop the properties,” R.P. Wynestone’s lawyers wrote. “Any effort to comply with these requiremen­ts are ineffectiv­e, because defendants simply change the rules again, imposing large expenses on plaintiffs and effectivel­y halting any forward progress.”

All the delays and constant changes to the plan have resulted in the developers enduring $150 million in unnecessar­y costs, the lawyers insist. In addition to asking for $150 million in compensati­on, the lawsuit has also asked the court to impose unspecifie­d “punitive damages” on the township for its conduct in this matter, according to the lawsuit.

 ?? ?? The conceptual plan for New Hanover Town Center shows the 208-acre project, which calls for 756new housing units and a new supermarke­t, stretching from Route 663west to Township Line Road.
The conceptual plan for New Hanover Town Center shows the 208-acre project, which calls for 756new housing units and a new supermarke­t, stretching from Route 663west to Township Line Road.
 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? A near-capacity crowd listen to plans about the New Hanover Town Center project at a past township supervisor­s’ meeting.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO A near-capacity crowd listen to plans about the New Hanover Town Center project at a past township supervisor­s’ meeting.
 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? Former New Hanover Police sgt. William Mover, center, and former chief Kevin McKeon, right.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO Former New Hanover Police sgt. William Mover, center, and former chief Kevin McKeon, right.

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