Pennsauken has reversed course and decided
to back a plan for Petty's Island that would
entail far less development than was originally
planned, township officials said last night.
The revised plan for this teardrop-shaped
island on the Delaware River eliminates construction
of a proposed golf course, and leaves 72
percent of the island undeveloped.
"Tonight's plan is entirely different," Mayor
Rick Taylor told a group of reporters prior
to disclosing the plan to close to 100 residents
in the Central Elementary School auditorium. "It
calls for a footprint of only 28 percent development."
That, he said, is 12 percentage points less
than the current, controversial footprint proposed
by developer Cherokee Pennsauken L.L.C. for
the island's 392 acres.
But he said the details of the new proposal,
dubbed the Conservation Development plan, were
still to be worked out, including whether a
hotel complex that was originally envisioned
would be built and the amount of housing that
would be placed on the island.
"Cherokee still feels it is a viable
project," Taylor said. "But we have
no land-use plans at the present time. All
we have is a footprint." Officials for
Cherokee or the island's owner, Citgo Petroleum,
could not be reached for comment last night.
Petty's Island was home to a pair of nesting
bald eagles when it became an environmental
and political controversy after Citgo Petroleum
offered to donate it to the state as open space
in 2004. Pennsauken officials and state Democratic
power brokers, however, wanted to develop it
as part of a $1 billion makeover of formerly
industrial waterfront. Petty's Island became
part of a 700-acre Pennsauken Township Delaware
River Redevelopment Project, which proposed
leaving 40 percent of the island undeveloped.
Former Gov. Jim McGreevey's administration
rejected Citgo's offer for the island, infuriating
environmental groups who said it was an example
of a politically connected developer, Cherokee,
trumping sound environmental judgment.
Pennsauken officials pointed out that the
island, now home to Crowley Marine shipping
terminal, would require millions of dollars
in environmental cleanup costs.
Gov. Corzine's environmental protection commissioner,
Lisa Jackson, launched a review of the situation
more than a year ago, and indicated that she
would try to strike a compromise between development
interests and those in favor of total preservation.
Township officials last night said that in
response to those concerns, they hired a private
consulting firm - Applied Ecological Services
Inc. of Bradhead, Wis. - to review the project
and make recommendations.
Contact staff writer Elisa Ung at 609-989-9016
or
eung@phillynews.com.