A little good news (parks) with the bad (the gorge)
June 6th, 2007
This is very encouraging:
In what Metro officials are calling the most generous land donation they’ve ever received, Persimmon Development Group of Gresham has agreed to sell 92 acres within the East Buttes to Metro for just over $4 million – less than half of what the property is worth.
Does anyone doubt that the natural areas bond measure was not one of the most productive votes that Metro-area residents will ever make? Not only did the bond rating raise significantly more than expected, but private developers are starting to do a little gift-giving of their own. Of course, one has to look a little askew at this gift: wasn’t this development already stifled due to environmentalist concerns and pressure?
SDS Lumber Co., the owner and developer, wants to convert the 60-acre Broughton Mill to 245 units of condos, cabins and townhomes, a lodge, a restaurant and recreation facilities. The site is adjacent to Spring Creek Hatchery State Park windsurfing beach, west of White Salmon, Wash.
I suspect, though, that chances are very slim that this will move forward at all.
Related posts: Jim Smejkal guts our newest state park, Old growth versus second growth, I-933's grasping wastrels



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