HARRISBURG - A Commonwealth Court judge said Monday that
he could decide this month if Dranoff Properties' controversial mixed-use
development in Ardmore can proceed.
The project, which would replace the township's Cricket
Avenue parking lot with an eight-story residential tower, stores, restaurants,
and a parking garage, has generated sustained opposition from some residents,
who say it is too dense for downtown Ardmore. It has the backing of Lower
Merion Township, the Montgomery County Redevelopment Authority, and the state,
which granted $10.5 million in redevelopment funds.
The latest, and possibly last, legal challenge to the
project was filed in August by the Save Ardmore Coalition, a group of taxpayers
who argue that the state grant should be revoked because the plan no longer
includes improvements to the Ardmore train station as proposed when the
legislature approved the funds in 2007.
If President Judge Dan Pellegrini allows the case to
proceed, it could imperil a project beleaguered by years of delays and facing
an April deadline to break ground before the $10.5 million grant expires.
Attorneys for the township, the commonwealth, and Dranoff
argued that the suit should be thrown out because the coalition does not have
standing to challenge the decisions of government agencies.
Deputy Attorney General Lucy Fritz told Pellegrini that
allowing this challenge would "open the floodgates" for any taxpayer
to challenge any grant.
"There are thousands and thousands of RACP
applications that the Office of the Budget is currently reviewing," she
said. "The legislature has invested us with the discretion to oversee this
program. . . . You would be eviscerating that discretion."
Pellegrini said the issues in this case are unlike any he
has heard. If he gets beyond the question of standing, he said, it would come
down to interpreting what the legislature meant when it approved the grant for
"costs related to the redevelopment of the Ardmore train station."
"They can define ['related to'] any way they want to
define it. But they didn't," Pellegrini said.
John S. Summers, the attorney representing Lower Merion
and the RDA, said the project meets the job creation and economic stimulus
requirements for the RACP program and would be transit-oriented development.
The coalition argued that adding a few new parking spaces
- 35 of them, currently proposed for a maximum of four hours - might serve the
new stores and restaurants but won't help commuters or the dilapidated train
station.
"You can't have parking for a transit center if the
transit center isn't being built," said Mark Freed, the coalition's
attorney. "It's morphed into a residential and commercial
development."
If no settlement is reached, Pellegrini said, he expects
to issue a ruling within two weeks.
Source: Philly.com
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