🏛️ Board Of Trustees
Croton OKs $6M for 100-unit affordable housing project
The Croton Board of Trustees authorized an intermunicipal agreement for up to $6 million in Westchester County funding for the 100-unit affordable housing project at 1 Croton Point Avenue and scheduled a November 2026 public referendum on a volunteer EMS service award program. The board also approved $296,741.70 in voucher payments, sunset the Housing Task Force, and set public hearings for December 17 on alternate Planning/ZBA members and unsafe building lien procedures.
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The Croton-on-Hudson Board of Trustees took a major step forward Tuesday night on the village’s largest affordable housing initiative, unanimously approving an agreement that could channel up to $6 million in Westchester County funding toward infrastructure for the 100-unit development at 1 Croton Point Avenue.
The resolution authorizes Village Manager Bryan Healy to enter an Intermunicipal Developer Agreement with the county and WBP Development LLC. Under the agreement, the village acts as a pass-through fiscal agent for the Housing Implementation Fund money at no cost to the village, with infrastructure construction subject to competitive public bidding.
“Approximately eleven months since we approved the Special Permit, I am glad to see this moving along,” Mayor Pugh said.
Healy added that the closing date for the adjacent parcel at 1-3 Croton Point Avenue is scheduled for next week and that the state has officially approved AHOP funding for the project.
In another significant move, the board set a November 2026 referendum for residents to decide on a Volunteer Ambulance Worker Service Award Program for Croton EMS. The defined benefit plan would allow volunteers to earn a $30 monthly service award per year of service (up to 40 years) beginning at age 60, along with pre-entitlement death and disability benefits. The estimated 2026 cost is up to $35,000, or about $2,700 per volunteer member.
Trustee Simon, who introduced the resolution, said he was happy to see the program move forward to a public vote.
The meeting also saw the official sunsetting of the Housing Task Force, which was constituted in 2020 and delivered its final report in November 2021. Trustees credited the task force with shaping village policy on accessory dwelling units, tenant protections, and transit-oriented development.
Residents used the public comment period to express concerns about growth and traffic. Debi Braddick of Young Avenue urged the board to consider the traffic impact of the LOT A development and to share potential uses for Gouveia Park. Ed Riely of Truesdale Drive objected to the proposed height of the LOT A building and argued against allowing alternate members on the Planning and Zoning boards.
In other business, the board awarded an $11,250 generator maintenance contract to Gentech Ltd., approved a $10,000 communications plan evaluation by Enormous Creative of Peekskill, and amended the Maple Commons fee agreement with Regan Development. Trustee Slippen abstained from the Maple Commons vote.
Village Manager Healy reported that AT&T has been issued a permit to install an antenna on Village Hall and has agreed to replace the building’s generator—a swap he described as a significant cost savings. The village is also exploring speed mitigation measures for Glengary Road, including 15 mph signs and speed monitoring devices.
Residents should mark their calendars for two upcoming public hearings on December 17 at 7:00 PM: one on a local law to create alternate members for the Planning Board and ZBA, and another updating unsafe building lien procedures. A bike skills training session will be held this Saturday at Village Hall from 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM.
◆ Meeting Index
Topics Discussed
affordable housingEMS volunteer benefitsHousing Task ForceMaple Commonspublic hearingsbudget amendmentsgenerator maintenancetraffic safetyPlanning Board alternates
People
Paul Pugh — Mayor
Bryan Healy — Village Manager
Joshua Subin — Village Attorney
Genette Toone — Village Treasurer
Trustee Simon — Trustee
Trustee Nicholson — Trustee
Trustee Politi — Trustee
Trustee Slippen — Trustee
Frank Balbi — Superintendent of Public Works
Ed Riely — 110 Truesdale Drive
Debi Braddick — 23 Young Avenue
Stacey Nachtaler — Trustee-Elect
Emiljana Ulaj — County Legislator
Locations
Stanley Kellerhouse Municipal Building, Van Wyck StreetHastings and Young Avenues43-45 Maple Street1 Croton Point Avenue1-3 Croton Point AvenueLOT AGouveia ParkGlengary RoadDobbs ParkOssining Public Library
Dollar Amounts
$222,757.72 — General Fund vouchers
$19,018.23 — Water Fund vouchers
$5,891.02 — Sewer Fund vouchers
$46,470.55 — Capital Fund vouchers
$2,604.18 — Trust Fund vouchers
$11,250 — Gentech Ltd. generator maintenance contract
$35,000 — Estimated 2026 annual cost for EMS Service Award Program
$2,700 — Estimated cost per EMS volunteer member for Service Award Program
$2,750 — Estimated annual cost to administer EMS Service Award Program
$20,000 — Annual fee from Regan Development for Maple Commons
$6,000,000 — Westchester County HIF funding for 1 Croton Point Ave infrastructure
$10,000 — Enormous Creative Phase 1 communications plan evaluation
$34,720 — Santella Welding contract not-to-exceed amount
$1,652.81 — Budget transfer for Silver Lake/boat basin staffing
$7,493 — NYS and Local Retirement System budget amendment
$30,257.23 — Police overtime reimbursement budget amendment
$3,919.05 — Police Manual Redesign budget amendment via PERMA grant
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