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Donald J. Trump State Park

State park in New York, United States


State park in New York, United States

FieldValue
nameDonald J. Trump State Park
photoTrumpStatePark001.jpg
photo_captionEntrance sign to Donald J. Trump State Park
mapNew York#USA
map_captionLocation of Donald J. Trump State Park
coords
typeState park (undeveloped)
locationWestchester and Putnam counties, New York
area436 acre
created
operatorNew York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation
openNo

Donald J. Trump State Park is a 436 acre state park in the towns of Yorktown and Putnam Valley in Westchester and Putnam counties, New York.

The park consists of property that was donated to New York State in 2006 by the real estate developer Donald Trump. Maintenance of the park was halted in 2010 due to budget constraints, and the park today is a "passive park". Most of the buildings have been demolished; only a few foundations and the existing tennis court remain. Since 2015, there have been several calls to rename the park.

History

Trump purchased the property in 1998 with plans to build a $10 million private golf course. Totalling $2.5 million, it was purchased in two sections: Indian Hill for $1.75 million and French Hill for $750,000. The land contained significant wetlands, and development faced strict environmental restrictions and permitting requirements. He donated it in 2006 after he was unable to gain town approvals to develop the property. At that time, Trump claimed the parcel was worth $100 million. He used the donation as a tax write-off. In the press release announcing the donation, Governor George Pataki praised the gift, and Trump said, "I have always loved the City and State of New York and this is my way of trying to give something back. I hope that these 436 acres of property will turn into one of the most beautiful parks anywhere in the world."

New York State announced the park's closure due to budget cuts in February 2010. It was questioned whether the closure was necessary since the operating budget for the park was only $2,500 a year and it was maintained by workers from the nearby Franklin D. Roosevelt State Park.

An attempt to convert a portion of the park's French Hill section for use as a dog park in 2010 revealed that at least one of the park's abandoned buildings contained asbestos. By 2012, the planned dog park remained on hold due to difficulties raising funds for fences and asbestos abatement.

The park is not listed at the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation park locator, although signs along the nearby Taconic State Parkway direct visitors to Donald J. Trump State Park. During a 2015 visit by The Rachel Maddow Show, there were no signs of any recent upkeep; instead, the publicly accessible land was found to contain crumbling graffiti-covered buildings, empty map kiosks, and weed-choked parking lots.

In 2017, an article on website The A.V. Club framed the park as an "abandoned wasteland", with "muddy fields, overgrown tennis courts, and dilapidated buildings" and a swimming pool in disrepair.

Park access improvements including an asphalt driveway, gravel parking lot, entrance gates, wood fencing, and native tree and shrub plantings were noticed in 2020.

Geography

The park is divided into two sections, the 282 acre Indian Hill parcel in northern Jefferson Valley (part of the Town of Yorktown in Westchester County) and Putnam Valley (Putnam County), and the 154 acre French Hill parcel in southern Yorktown Heights, fully within the town of Yorktown. The parkland features a mix of continuous forest, open meadows, and several large wetlands. The Indian Hill section was formerly farmland but the farm houses and other buildings were all demolished by 2004. The headwaters of two streams, French Hill Brook and Dogwood Creek, originate in the French Hill section of the park.

Proposals to rename

In late 2015, State Senator Daniel Squadron introduced an "Anything but Trump Act" to change the park's name. Several suggestions for a name change were offered by elected officials. Assemblyman Charles D. Lavine suggested that the park be named for Peter Salem, an African American who served in the American Revolutionary War and is thought by some historians to have been Muslim, while the district's U.S. Representative Sean Patrick Maloney suggested that the park be named after folk singer Pete Seeger. In response, Trump suggested that New York State return the park's land to his ownership. Efforts to rename the park after Pete Seeger continued in early 2016 with a petition by activist group "People for the Pete Seeger State Park" on Change.org.

In September 2017, New York's 25th State Assembly district Representative Nily Rozic, a Democrat, suggested renaming the park in honor of Heather Heyer, who died in a vehicle-ramming attack while protesting the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. No renaming of the park has been undertaken and the proposal was largely ignored. Rozic, along with New York State Senator Brad Hoylman, reintroduced legislation to rename the park in 2018 but it did not make it out of committee. They again introduced legislation in 2019 to rename the park.

After the 2021 United States Capitol attack, there were renewed attempts to rename the park, and an online petition to rename it after Sojourner Truth (a native of nearby Ulster County) gained over 160,000 signatures. New York Assemblywoman Sandy Galef argued that the state should move forward with changing the park's name, arguing that "Mr. Trump did not sign the appropriate documents with the state, rendering any claim of breach of contract moot." Galef called for the park to be renamed in honor of former New York Republican governor George Pataki, who grew up in the area. Galef wrote, "Monuments, landmarks, and parks can hold a symbolic meaning and in this case a park named for Donald J. Trump can only represent the division he has sought to create in our country over the past four years. This division has no place in our state. Motorists have complained about the Trump signs on the Taconic for years, and we must take a stand." The effort to rename the park failed again in 2021 after not going up for a vote before state lawmakers during the legislative session.

References

References

  1. Browning, Linda. (14 June 2019). "A Failed Trump Golf Course Is Now a Dilapidated State Park – but Is It Worth $26.1 Million?". time.
  2. (April 19, 2006). "Spend a lovely day in... Trump State Park".
  3. Kilgannon, Corey. (March 3, 2010). "Trump State Park Fired. Trump Displeased.". [[The New York Times]].
  4. Young, Michelle. (November 5, 2020). "Donald J. Trump State Park's Abandoned Gilded Age Estate". Untapped New York.
  5. Peck, Jamie. (December 21, 2015). "I went to Donald Trump's shitty $100 million tax break park".
  6. (February 19, 2010). "Statements from Governor David A. Paterson and Commissioner Carol Ash on Parks Budget Cuts".
  7. Elstein, Aaron. (July 31, 2015). "The charities Donald Trump gave money to and what it says about his candidacy".
  8. Pesheva, Plamena. (June 25, 2010). "Town Board Discusses Trump Park's Dog Park".
  9. (July 7, 2012). "Yorktown Dog Park Advocates Peeved With Obstacles".
  10. NYS Office of Parks, Recreation & Historic Preservation. "State Park Search Results".
  11. Reisman, Phil. (July 2, 2015). "Reisman: Mr. Trump, take down those signs on the Taconic Parkway". The Journal News.
  12. (July 17, 2015). "Donald J Trump State Park? Not exactly.". MSNBC.
  13. Eakin, Marah. "Donald J. Trump State Park is as ugly and dilapidated as its namesake's soul". News.
  14. (May 25, 2020). "Donald J. Trump State Park – Indian Hill Section".
  15. (April 19, 2006). "Governor Pataki and Donald Trump Announce Land Gift". New York State Governor.
  16. Millward, David. (December 18, 2015). "Calls to rename Donald Trump state park in New York". The Daily Telegraph.
  17. (December 17, 2015). "New York lawmakers introduce 'Anything But Trump Act' to strip Donald Trump's name from undeveloped state park". New York Daily News.
  18. Foderaro, Lisa W.. (December 18, 2015). "Demands to Rename Donald J. Trump State Park Gain Ground". [[The New York Times]].
  19. Spector, Joseph. (December 18, 2015). "Trump on state park fight: "If they want, they can give me the land back"". The Journal News.
  20. Adler, Ben. (February 5, 2016). "A movement to make Trump Park great again — by renaming it for Pete Seeger".
  21. Miles, Frank. (September 6, 2017). "New York lawmaker aims to rename Trump park for Charlottesville victim Heather Heyer".
  22. (January 7, 2019). "State Lawmakers Again Trying to Remove Trump Name From Park".
  23. (January 26, 2021). "Push to rename New York's Trump State Park after Sojourner Truth may not succeed. Here's why". USA Today.
  24. Begun, Alain. (January 14, 2021). "Assemblywoman Galef Calls for the Removal of Trump Name from State Park". River Journal.
  25. Campbell, Jon. (June 10, 2021). "Latest effort to rename Donald J. Trump State Park falls short".
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