Against the protests of residents in one of the region's
most rapidly growing municipalities, the Concord Township Board of Supervisors
voted Tuesday night to approve a plan to build 160 homes on an undeveloped
tract on the Delaware border.
The vote was a climax of a pitched battle between residents
and Woodlawn Trustees Inc., the Delaware company that owns the disputed 230
acres, now the site of horse and bicycle trails, stands of trees, and open
fields.
The parcel abuts more than 1,000 acres in Delaware and
Pennsylvania that are federally protected from development.
About 300 people attended the meeting at a middle-school
auditorium, some shouting, "You should be ashamed," after the
supervisors voted by 3-1 in favor of the plan.
"Children need open areas, and to think that it's
being taken away so that developers can get a paycheck seems really
immoral," said Chris Battin, who grew up in the township.
At the meeting, Woodlawn officials declined to comment,
but they have said that the tract had always been set aside for development.
Opposition to any development had remained resolute, with
residents staging protests and circulating a petition that garnered nearly
4,000 signatures.
The controversy over Vineyard Commons has exacerbated
tensions within a community that - like many on the outer edges of Delaware
County - has faced rapid growth and development in recent years.
Concord's population now surpasses 17,000, nearly 21/2
times that of 1990. For many residents, the tract in question was seen as one
of the last pieces of open land in a community that has a growing number of
shopping centers and restaurants.
"This is a unique tract of land and must be treated
as such," said Kevin O'Donohue, the supervisor who voted against the
proposal.
Supervisor Dominic A. Pileggi said that it was still
possible that a nonprofit group might want to buy the land, and if the bid
succeeds, the township would kick in $500,000 and the county $250,000 toward
the purchase.
Tuesday's vote marks the first definitive action on the
proposal. Woodlawn would have to submit a final plan for approval.
Source: Philly.com
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