| Issue #33, November
10, 2006 |
By Debbie Tuma

Swapping Montauk Oceanfront
Allows Trump at Jones Beach
Amsterdam Beach State Park,
a 122-acre pristine oceanfront beach in Montauk that was recently
acquired jointly by the state, county and Town of East Hampton,
is now being divided as part of a swap involving something that’s
going on at Jones Beach State Park.
New York State is looking to swap
six acres of this Montauk beach area in exchange for being allowed
to expand the parking area for a new restaurant located at Jones
Beach State Park. As a result, the state looked at Montauk and has
asked East Hampton Town to look at putting six acres of this oceanfront
park under federal jurisdiction.
George Gorman, Regional Director
of New York State Parks on Long Island, explained that under the
Federal Land and Water Conservation Fund Program, if any parkland
is taken from one park, it needs to be replaced in another park.
He said at Jones Beach State Park, plans have been underway to replace
the deteriorated restaurant that was demolished in 2004. Proposals
for a new restaurant were considered, and the one which was selected
was a proposal by Steven Carl, owner of Carlisle on the Green at
Bethpage State Park, who got financing from Donald Trump to build
a new restaurant and catering facility called, “Trump on the
Ocean.” Construction for this new facility, which will be
a partnership between the two developers, should begin in about
six months, and it is expected to open by 2009.

Gorman said, “We’re
expanding the parking field at Jones Beach to accommodate this new
restaurant, and also an 18-hole golf course, and we needed to find
other parkland to make up for the use of this land.” He said,
“All of our parks are under this “Land and Water Conservation”
agreement. We picked Amsterdam Park because it is our latest acquisition,
and so far, no development is being considered for it, and we expect
it to remain as it is, except for possibly some parking access in
the future.”
He said the Town, County and State
are still developing a management plan for Amsterdam Beach State
Park, but that it “should remain a passive parkland.”
This park at Amsterdam Beach,
which totals 122 acres, is located along the ocean, nestled between
Shadmoor State Park and Rheinstein Estate Park to the west, and
Camp Hero State Park to the east. It is also close to the Nature
Conservancy’s Andy Warhol Visual Arts Preserve.

Gorman, who has seen this property
first-hand, said, “It’s a beautiful woodland area with
bluffs, rocks and beachfront property, but right now there is no
public access or parking. There may be in the future. Now it is
used primarily by fisherman, hikers, and naturalists. Down the road
we might need more access.”
Bob DeLuca, President of the Group
For the South Fork, an environmental protection organization located
in Bridgehampton, said he hoped Amsterdam Beach State Park would
be preserved. “It is clearly a significant parcel and an important
acquisition to be protected for its wetlands, ocean beaches and
endangered species. Its recent acquisition was a success story,
and we just want to make sure this swap doesn’t endanger its
future,” he explained.
DeLuca said, “It’s a
partnership acquisition, between the state, county and town, so
we want to make sure everyone is on the same page about its future.
My greatest concern would be if anything would open up its potential
for development, but I’ve only recently learned of this “swap
idea,” so I need to learn more.”
So far, the monetary division of
the Amsterdam Beach acquisition has resulted in $4 million being
contributed by New York State, $5.5 million by Suffolk County, and
$7 million by the Town of East Hampton, which included over $6 million
from the Community Preservation Fund, and about $1 million from
a Federal grant.
This oceanfront land was jointly
acquired by these government entities after its owners planned to
subdivide it into house lots. Several auctions were cancelled as
negotiations proceeded. It is surrounded by over 2,400 protected
acres to the east, west and north. On October 19, The East Hampton
Town Board also approved a $9 million acquisition for a 26-acre
piece of land west of Amsterdam Beach, called “Amsterdam Beach
II.”
Meanwhile, as Donald Trump and Steven
Carl build their proposed restaurant and catering facility in Jones
Beach State Park, some controversy has resulted over a fear about
it being too big. But Gorman said this week that, “This restaurant
meets the regulations and they plan to also keep its historic character
intact. It is being designed like the restaurants that we previously
had there.”
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