
The town of Manchester authorized two nonbinding agreements at a special meeting last Friday that will both conserve a flood prone area and allow needed housing at another site.
Under one part of a memorandum of understanding, Blackacre LLC โ which owns the flood prone plot on Richville Road โ agreed to come to the table to formalize a deal to donate the eight-acre property proposed for a housing development to the town. A local developer Paul Carroccio, who was consulting with Blackacre LLC, had planned to construct housing on the site.
The town also agreed to work toward a lease agreement to sell undeveloped land sandwiched between a highway and an abandoned airport to a company owned by Carroccio for the construction of housing and other mixed use development.
The proposed priority housing project highlights the tension between pressing issues faced by the state to push for more housing and plan for natural disasters.
The project proposal unleashed a torrent of local opposition and sparked questions regarding the application of new legislation to exempt some development from the stateโs land use review process.
Manchester town manager Scott Murphy said he is glad the town and developers have kickstarted the public comment period so agreements can be formalized within 90 days. After acquiring an easement to conserve the land in perpetuity, the town plans to transform the eight acres on Richville Road into a community resource for recreation and agriculture, Murphy said.
Ed Gotgart, one of the neighbors who opposed the initial site, said the change of course was a โwin-winโ for the town and developers. People should not live on a flood hazard overlay district, Gotgart said, but they should be able to use the land for recreation. Plus, the town seeking a conservation easement means the view of โmagnificent Mount Equinoxโ will be preserved, he said.
Annette Smith, executive director of Vermonters for a Clean Environment, aided Richville Road neighbors who mobilized against the initial housing proposal. While in favor of a conservation easement on the property, Smith cautioned the town against setting up any recreation structures on the land that may exacerbate flooding.ย
Murphy said the town had previously sought requests for proposals to develop the undeveloped plot on Airport Road, but acknowledged that extending the water and sewer lines on the site will cost the town $4 to 5 million. Once an agreement is finalized, Carroccio plans to offer $1 million toward the town project.
Of the 60 acres on Airport Road under current town ownership, no more than seven acres will be sold to a third party. Another seven acres is currently conserved for agriculture. The remaining 46 acres could be developed by Carroccio if the parties come to a final agreement.
In the short term, Carroccio said he plans to construct four to eight of the so-called โworkforceโ housing units on the Airport Road property, but he said the site could hold over 200 units, including 50 workforce housing units.
Workforce housing is defined in the Manchester Town Plan as โreasonably priced housingโ that is not subsidized, but is targeted toward individuals, families and younger people who want to afford housing in the community they work in.
Carroccio said that Manchester does not have housing stock that is affordable for people with moderate incomes that are too high to qualify for subsidized, affordable housing projects.
Dom Penges, a neighbor who opposed the original Richville Road development proposal, said the new housing site proposal appears to be a โbetter one.โ
โIt’s a nice, beautiful, flat piece of ground close enough to town, but without any hazardous flooding issues,โ Penges said โI think if they did it properly โ if they come up with guidelines that they could have the developer stand by โ I think it would be a great asset for the town.โ


