School board member says Woodbridge mayor’s Colonia Country Club plan is right move

by Sergio Bichao on May 11th | Email

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following opinion was submitted by school board member Ezio Tamburello of Colonia.

When people typically hear the phrase "eminent domain," the fear is inherently that Big Brother is stealing an underutilized piece of property and turning it over to some fat-cat developer in the hopes of everyone getting rich.

In the case of the Colonia Country Club nothing could be further from the truth. If anything, you could call it reverse-eminent domain; government purchasing of a property to protect the interests of the neighborhood and to preserve the quality of life for everybody in the area.

I've been paying close attention to these proceedings and any logical person should come away with the same conclusion I did: that the township of Woodbridge is absolutely correct in trying to protect the golf course from the large-scale developer that has contracted to purchase it. If that means using open-space money to keep the golf course "green" forever, than that is money the township must spend.

Think about it, the principal owner of Cheever Development Corporation is buying 104 prime acres of real estate so 98 people can play golf? For $6.2 million? None of the math makes sense, and to their credit almost 30 club members have left the club since January.

Again, any logical person paying close attention should realize that there are too many loopholes in the current sales contract; like the lack of members or lack of liquor license, etc, that would allow the developer to either build on that site or keep the township wrapped-up in lawsuits for many years. Either way, the homeowners and taxpayers of Woodbridge lose if the developer gets his way.

If the Colonia Country Club is sold for development our local quality of life would be ruined, our schools couldn't manage the amount of new students, the flooding could be unbearable, our roads couldn't handle the traffic and the negative impact would be felt financially in every section of town. The mayor's battle against the developer is worth the fight.