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BELLA DAVIS
It Depends on Your Definition of âShouldâ
Southside residents question the countyâs sale agreement that would deed public land to a developer.
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outhside residents opposing the potential sale and development of a Santa Fe County-owned open space on South Meadows Road are questioning whether county officials followed their own rules when they approved the disposal of the land. The process was âegregious,â says Helen Wunnicke, a former area resident who, by compiling information for the County Open Lands, Trails and Parks Advisory Committeeâs (COLTPAC) consideration, played a role in the county obtaining the land in 2001. Officials, on the other hand, say thereâs no established procedure on the disposal of open space because itâs so rare. That
means, by the countyâs reasoning, those officials did not break any rules. The county bought the 22-acre property two decades ago using about $1 million of 1999 Open Space and Trails general obligation bonds, with the intent of constructing a community park. The bond was fully paid off in 2018, according to spokeswoman Carmelina Hart. County commissionersâafter, some claim, offering the land to City of Santa Fe officials on multiple occasionsâquietly approved the disposal in July 2020 on a unanimous vote. (Commissioner Rudy Garcia recused himself.) A sale agreement for $1.79 million between the county and affordable housing developer Homewise could, pending city approval, result in 161 for-sale units and a roughly 6-acre park popping up on the land,
Did Santa Fe County break its own rules in South Meadows open space disposal? which sits next to the Eberline plant, a former radioactive manufacturing facility owned by Thermo Fisher Scientific. Homewise is calling the project Los Prados, as advertised on a recently-launched website. Opponents of the Homewise sale have pointed to the countyâs Open Land and Trails Plan, adopted in 2000, as evidence that the county didnât follow its rules governing such a move. The plan states that sale proposals âshould beâ subject to two public hearings at least six months apart âso the public has an opportunity to voice opinions about the sale,â and then the proposal should be submitted to COLTPAC before the commission makes a final decision. The county didnât hold any public hearings on the proposal, and COLTPAC didnât review it. COLTPAC Chairman RubĂŠn CedeĂąo told SFR at a special meeting last October that the committee was âcaught by surpriseâ after learning of the disposal more than a year after it was approved. Asked why the county didnât follow those guidelines, Hart writes in an email to SFR: âThat plan did not mandate any specific procedures be followed to dispose of open space property. Rather, through the use of the word should, it expressed a preference for certain procedures rather than a mandatory requirement.â Besides, the plan was part of the 1999 Santa Fe County Growth Management Plan, which was replaced in 2010, Hart says.
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The most recent plan is the Open Space, Trails and Parks Strategic Management Plan, which doesnât outline disposal procedures. âThe county has not adopted replacement recommendations concerning open space disposal because open space disposal is exceedingly rare,â Hart writes. The South Meadows disposal is the only instance of which sheâs aware. Hart adds that the public will have opportunities to weigh in on the proposed development as Homewise makes its way through the cityâs approval process. The case is set to go before the Planning Commission on March 3. âIn agreeing to sell the property to Homewise, the county understood that Homewise would need to secure appropriate land use, zoning, and development rights from the City of Santa Fe,â Hart writes. âIt also understood that the cityâs land use processes would involve public notification and hearings concerning the proposed uses of the property.â The dispute isnât relegated to talking points, however. The Office of the State Auditorâwhich investigates governmental waste, fraud and abuseâreceived a formal complaint about the pending sale Tuesday and has opened an examination, spokeswoman Stephanie Telles tells SFR. âCompliance with rules is something we would review,â Telles tells SFR, noting the auditor looks into all formal complaints. âWe would also review transactions at issue.â Marlow Morrison, president of the nearby Tiempos Lindos Homeowners Association, tells SFR she contacted State Auditor Brian ColĂłn via email Monday evening about the disposal. âMy neighborhood is very concerned about the ethics of this sale,â Morrison wrote in her email, which she shared with SFR. âThe sale is not final but is in final stages and can still be stopped.â
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