Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Sagaponack Schedules Vote On Forming Police Department


Publication: The Southampton Press
By Michael Wright   Aug 20, 2013 10:03 AM
Source: 27east.com


Sagaponack Village is continuing to move toward forming its own police department. The Village Board on Monday afternoon unanimously agreed to hold a special meeting on September 7 at which the final decision will be made. 

The board approved the hiring of former Southampton Village and Southampton Town Police Chief William Wilson Jr. to conduct a cost analysis of exactly what the start-up costs and potential contractual obligations would be for the village to form its own police department. Mr. Wilson will present the analysis at the September 7 meeting.

The village is considering whether to form a full-fledged police force, staffed full time, or a part-time force that only provides its own coverage on a seasonal basis or for one of three shifts per day and contracts with a neighboring force, Southampton Town or East Hampton Town are the most likely candidates, to cover the rest of the time. 

Board members said there will not be a dedicated public hearing on the proposal, since one is not required for a simple board resolution, but that public comment would be allowed at the special meeting. The board will vote on the measure at the same meeting. 

Mayor Donald Louchheim said at a specially scheduled Saturday morning meeting earlier this month that he did not want to see the village form its own police force unless there was clear, broad-based support from village residents for doing it. He did not say at this week’s meeting whether the board has decided such broad support was present or not. 

The mayor said that he met with Southampton Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst last week to discuss possible changes to the village’s police coverage contract with the town that could head-off a village move to its own police coverage, but that no offer from the town has materialized. He said that up until the September 7 meeting date, the village would listen to any offers the town may make. 

If the village were to form its own force and contract with East Hampton Town for its supplemental coverage, Southampton Town would lose some $2.3 million in annual tax revenues paid by Sagapoanck residents into the town police fund. The cuts, town officials have said, could mean several police officers would have to be laid off from the already short-handed department.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Re: Police Coverage in Sagaponack


Village of Sagaponack
P.O. Box  600   Sagaponack, N.Y. 11962
631-537-0017     Fax-537-0612
Email: sagaponack@optonline.net

Mayor Trustees               
     Don Louchheim Lee Foster       
Clerk-Treasurer William Barbour
     Rosemarie Cary Winchell Joy Sieger       
Village Attorney Lisa Duryea     
     Anthony Tohill


July, 2013

Letter to Sagaponack Property Owners
Re: Police Coverage in Sagaponack 


Dear Sagaponack Property Owner,

               The Sagaponack Village Board of Trustees will be holding an information meeting at Village Hall at 9:00 AM on Saturday August 10 to discuss police coverage in the Village and possible plans to establish a Sagaponack Police Department.

               Since Sagaponack’s incorporation, the Village Board has been acutely aware of the disparity between the annual amount paid by Village taxpayers to Southampton Town for police services and the coverage that is provided. For the past two years, the Village Board has been studying the feasibility of various options to provide, at a lower cost, a more visible police presence in the Village throughout the year, with service better tailored to the needs of our community.

               For example, in 2013 Sagaponack property owners were taxed $2.3 million for Southampton Town Police service, the equivalent of more than 10 percent of the entire Town Police tax levy. Yet for most of the year, Sagaponack is served by one officer who covers a sector that can include Bridgehampton and other portions of eastern Southampton Town. After almost six months of negotiations last year, Sagaponack persuaded the Town to assign, when possible, a dedicated officer to the Village for two of the three daily shifts between May 15 and September 15. But we are still underserved on summer weekends and holidays and for the remainder of the year.

               This is not the fault of the Town Police Department. Its staffing has been substantially reduced in recent years and it understandably has to prioritize its coverage to more populous, more commercial and higher crime areas in the western portion of the town. But unfortunately State and Town law provide no mechanism to relieve Sagaponack’s disproportionate Town Police tax burden or to require the Town to increase the Village’s share of police coverage.

               I, as Mayor, and the other Village Trustees have no desire to implement a change as significant as how police coverage is provided, even if it would deliver more coverage at a significantly reduced cost, without the support of Village residents and taxpayers. So please attend the August 10 meeting, learn about the options we have identified and why, and voice any questions or concerns you may have.

             Sincerely,
             Donald Louchheim, Mayor