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Pennywise Path is Big Leap for Affordable Housing |
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| Martha's Vineyard Times | ||||
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By: Nis Kildegaard |
July 27, 2006 |
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The Community Builders Inc. is placing modular homes on foundations almost daily at Pennywise Path, the new affordable rental subdivision off North 12th Street in Edgartown. Now that the project is actually underway, it's advancing with a speed that belies the arduous eight-year process behind it. For Fred B. "Ted" Morgan Jr., 85, of Edgartown, it's a deeply satisfying moment. Looking back across his career of more than three decades in public service, including nearly 10 full terms as an Edgartown selectman, Mr. Morgan has much to be proud of: the downtown beautification project, the preservation of Katama Airpark and the Waller Farm, the town's acquisition of the Edgartown Marine dock, the construction of the new Edgartown School.
Then there's his recent work as chairman of the Edgartown affordable housing committee on behalf of the Pennywise Path project, 60 units of mixed-income rental housing now being built on 12 acres of town land off the Vineyard Haven Road. In an interview this week, Mr. Morgan said that when he weighs this accomplishment against all the others, "It's pretty much at the top of the list for me."
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Mr. Morgan was involved with Pennywise Path from the very genesis, before voters agreed in 1998 to purchase a tract of 177 acres on the outskirts of Edgartown. Mr. Morgan recalled walking into the planning board office one morning in 1997 to speak with Christina Brown, and seeing a plot plan pinned on the wall. "I looked at it, and it was this particular area. I said, you know, it would be a shame to see that whole 180 acres developed. You had Country Acres and Shurtleff Woods on one side, Dodgers Hole, and the Ocean Heights and Arbutus Park area. Knowing full well that the town wasn't in a position to buy the property, we got together with the selectmen and decided we'd talk to the Land Bank. That's how it all came about." |
Alan Gowell, affordable housing committee chariman, and past chairman Ted Morgan Jr. look over the project. Photo by Ben Scott |
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Fred B. "Ted" Morgan Jr. |
"I think that they're not helping affordable housing advance on this Island. They make it so difficult. They're being too demanding on different aspects of these projects, and not recognizing the desperate need for affordable housing. And I think that's wrong. When you look at what's going on on this Island, when you look at what's being built on a 10,000-square-foot lot here in downtown Edgartown - every square inch utilized - it's all right for the wealthy to do what they want to do, but then when you reverse the situation and you want to provide affordable housing, they make it so difficult that sometimes you feel like throwing your hands in the air and saying the hell with it. It's so frustrating." |
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In the end, the commissioners
unanimously approved the Pennywise
Path plan in July 2004. Conditions
were imposed on everything from
lighting to the use of bug zappers,
but the scale of the subdivision was
left unchanged. The
NIMBY effect
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