We’ve been had yet again.
In May, after months of conflict and standoff, it seemed the Planning Commission had assured its right—explicitly–to someday review the Lakeside project for consistency with the County Comprehensive Plan as required by Maryland law (Environment Article 9-506) properly, free of the taint of misrepresentation. Lakeside had already gotten underway dishonestly in 2021 based on falsehoods and misrepresentations, so it was a difficult compromise that the Planning Commission had reached with the County Council, one that assured that the Commission would indeed evaluate Lakeside, but only later, when MDE considers permitting an enlargement of the new wastewater plant, nominally when the 400th home is built.
But even that compromise agreement is now out the window. Due to the Talbot County Council’s total inaction over the summer, the Lakeside developer has permanently escaped even that distant constraint. Again, citizens’ interests have been betrayed, and Maryland law has been evaded. And the Council did absolutely nothing to protect the County from the developer’s maneuvers.
It is a long and complicated story, and few will be inclined to read the detailed background presented below. Indeed, some Council Members are surely counting on Lakeside exhaustion, on the impenetrable complexity of it all, on the distraction of a Presidential race, to insulate them from ever being held to account, now or in the future.
Well, the details are not essential to understanding the central point: since January of 2023, various actions and omissions by three members of this Council—Callahan, Haythe and Stepp—have assured that the Planning Commission never has been, and apparently never will be, in a position to honestly evaluate Lakeside for its consistency with our Comprehensive Plan as required by law. That is a test it would fail.
Set forth below is the story of how the County’s last potential restraint on Lakeside was gutted.
Dan Watson
The Talbot Integrity Project
MDE’S MANDATE:
Last year, after much public uproar and a lawsuit by the Talbot Integrity Project (“TIP”), the Maryland Department of Environment (“MDE”) belatedly recognized that Talbot County had made serious errors in approving the Trappe Area Sewer Service Map that permitted the development of Lakeside. MDE finally acknowledged—as did the Town of Trappe and Talbot County—that contrary to representations made by the applicant to the Planning Commission and everyone else, prior to 2020 the Lakeside land was always “unprogrammed” and had never been slated for development by the County in any way. Indeed, MDE’s sewer permits granted in 2006–and put forth as conclusive evidence of County approval long ago–had been improperly issued.
As a consequence, in April 2023 MDE directed the County to issue a new Sewer Service Map to correct errors; like any sewer map, a corrected map could not be adopted by the County Council unless the Planning Commission first certified it as “consistent with the County Comprehensive Plan.” That has always been the key—the Planning Commission’s certification of “consistency.”
After two attempts to sidestep the Planning Commission altogether were thwarted, on September 12, 2023, Council Members Keasha Haythe and David Stepp introduced Resolution 348 (“R348”) proposing, as respects the Lakeside property, re-adoption of the exact Sewer Service Map that was put forth by the developer and adopted by the Council in 2020 based on false pretenses. (The only sewer classifications changed were for properties unrelated to Lakeside.)
Many citizens—and TIP of course—strenuously objected to R348 because the Planning Commission still had NEVER been permitted to give Lakeside an honest review for consistency with the Comp Plan untainted by falsehoods. In fact, Lakeside fails that evaluation in many, many obvious ways. At the same time, everyone (TIP included) recognized that, corrupted process or not, Lakeside was underway with over 100 homes built (still, a far cry from the 2501 proposed.) The Commission faced a genuine conundrum.
THE COMPROMISE:
Seeking some workaround, in November Ms. Mielke and Mr. Lesher introduced “Amendment 1 to Resolution 338” providing that whenever MDE considers permitting an expansion of the new wastewater plant serving Lakeside (understood to mean after 400 homes), at that future point the Talbot County Planning Commission would then have to review Lakeside to determine whether or not the project is consistent with the County Comp Plan. (The original R338 had not been acted on since its introduction ten months earlier because, absent the language added by Amendment 1 regarding a finding on consistency, it was really toothless.) The Lakeside developer and Town of Trappe were adamantly opposed to R338 and especially to Amendment 1 requiring a new finding of consistency.
The Planning Commission, with the support of the Public Works Advisory Board (“PWAB”) quickly found Amendment 1 to R338 to be consistent with the Comp Plan; at long last, it would allow for a review of Lakeside–the first one ever–even though not until long in the future. At least it was something, however long delayed. If Amendment 1 was adopted, so the reasoning went, then approving the developer’s map per R348 arguably could be reasonable, since at the 400th home there would finally be a review for consistency…that is, before all 2501 homes and a big shopping center went forward.
The developer and Town of Trappe of course hated the idea, and so the Lakeside supporters on the County Council delayed action on Amendment 1, clearly hoping that the developer’s map (R348) could be adopted first, in which case those three (Callahan, Haythe and Stepp) could reject Amendment 1 to R338 with impunity.
When it became clear that the County Council did not intend to move on Amendment 1 to R338, the Planning Commission simply had to act. The PWAB, after several meetings, had unanimously found R348 unacceptable. The Planning Commission, too, held its hearing and on April 2, 2024, it certified that the Sewer Service Map embedded in R348—as to Lakeside, the exact map put forth by the developer and adopted under false pretenses by the Council in 2020—was NOT CONSISTENT with the Talbot County Comp Plan.
There you have it folks: Lakeside found inconsistent with the Comp Plan–meaning the County Council could NOT adopt the Lakeside map. The project was stopped dead in its tracks—for a moment.
In reaction to that stark reality, the County Council at its very next meeting reluctantly brought up the oft-deferred Amendment 1 to R338 for a vote, and approved the thing. In turn, at its next meeting on May 1st, the Planning Commission moved to reconsider its vote on Lakeside’s consistency with the Comp Plan. It reversed its earlier finding, certifying that the developer’s map was consistent with the Comp Plan.
In other words, to avert the tense drama of Planning Commissioners stopping Lakeside in its tracks in direct challenge to the three-member majority on the Council backing Lakeside, the Planning Commission accepted the workaround provided by Amendment 1. The Commission would be empowered to review consistency later (envisioned to be when the 400th home was built). Acceptance of the Mielke/Lesher compromise meant crisis averted.
At its very next meeting Ms. Haythe moved adoption of R348, and with votes from Callahan and Stepp the developer’s original plan first approved in 2020 on a foundation of falsehood and misrepresentation was again adopted. (Lesher and Mielke voted nay.)
THE COMPROMISE NULLIFIED
It is here that the latest betrayal begins.
All of these Resolutions represent amendments to the County’s Comprehensive Water and Sewer Plan, and under Maryland law such changes are not final until approved by MDE. The sordid saga of Lakeside over two-plus decades reveals MDE consistently favoring the Lakeside project, the illegal permits of 2006 being only the most dramatic example. Now, here in 2024, apparently influenced by lobbying from the developer’s advisors and by our County Council’s total inaction, MDE again gutted protections afforded Talbot citizens under Maryland law. Here is what happened:
Ten days after the County Council adopted Amendment 1 to R338, lawyers for the developer and Town of Trappe sent to the Secretary of MDE a 7-page letter making argument after argument as to why MDE should disapprove that Resolution, including the Amendment 1 workaround. (A copy went to Talbot County Attorney Patrick Thomas.)
For three months the Talbot County Council and County Attorney did absolutely nothing—ZERO—to defend its legislation, to counter the arguments asserted by Lakeside lawyers, to explain to MDE the importance of the compromise embedded in Amendment 1 to R338, or to lobby for approval of R338. Its deafening silence in the face of the well-connected developer’s lobbying was outrageous, another betrayal of the citizens of Talbot County and more directly, a betrayal of the PWAB and the Planning Commission that had agreed to rescind its finding that Lakeside is INCONSISTENT with our Comp Plan only because of the compromise provided by Amendment 1 to R338.
In a Spy letter on June 17th, TIP called on the County to speak up, while warning that the Council, where Callahan, Stepp and Haythe have always supported Lakeside, might refuse to act. And silence is what we got. Pete Lesher tried to raise the issue at one meeting, but action was deferred and the issue was never again mentioned over six meetings. On June 24th TIP sent MDE a 4-page letter (plus exhibits) in an effort to counter bogus arguments by the Lakeside lawyers. The Talbot Preservation Alliance also submitted comments. But the County Council and County Attorney, whose standing with MDE would be significant, did nothing.
To the lasting benefit of the Lakeside developer, on August 7th MDE gutted R338 by removing the Amendment 1 language from R338, while at the same time approving R348 and the developer’s map for Lakeside. MDE did not disapprove R338 entirely, a dramatic action that would have been seen as very controversial. Instead, MDE artfully “modified” R338 (which is in its power under the law), making just a few changes including deletion of the one sentence that was added by the Council under Amendment 1.
(Arguably the Planning Commission could have then rescinded its certification of the Lakeside map on the legitimate basis that MDE’s deletion of the agreed-upon precondition–that the Commission was expressly empowered at least to review it for consistency later—was unquestionably a surprise. But the Commission had no stomach for such draconic action at this late point.)
MDE’s gutting of R338 by deleting the Amendment 1 language ended any pretense that the approval of Lakeside will comport with Maryland law. And so it ends. Not with a bang, or even with a whimper…but in utter silence.
Disgraceful.
Richard Allison says
I do apreciate the in depth analysis, and the work that TIP has done to ensure integrity in the process. There is one major issue that TIP ignores, without Lakeside Trappe has no revenue or funds except for grants from the governement to support an aging and crumbling infrastructure. I am sure that the TIP organization has every intention of finding an alternative to the Lakeside development for Trappe to be prosperous. Unfortunately their efforts did not ever consider the people in TRappe, our dire financial issues, the aging infrastructure or the fact that property values had been mostly stagnant until Lakeside. The devlopment brings a streetsweeper to Trappe, additional revenue for water supply, and a larger tax base for future income. All of this is a positive for a small community with no large business base, manufacturing of any kind or even a sustainable cottage industry base.
I must admit when I first arrived and built here in Trappe, I was of the opinion that Lakeside was not a good development. After living in Trappe and seing first hand our financial and infrastructure issues my mind has changed, as has my view of TIP. I am pretty well convinced that the focus of TIP although publicly an organization for ensuring integrity in development processes, it real mission was very much a “not inmy backyard” initiative led by those with no stake in the town of Trappe. Therefore I must ask, where has TIP been with the other developments in and around Easton and Talbot county?
Dan Watson says
Glad you’ve been interested in following closely, Mr. Allison. Many gave up long ago.
First, as to the NIMBY issue, you may not know that I personally live in the Aveley neighborhood just off the St. Michaels Road, about 15 miles from Trappe. And there is no secret that TIP has no other members than myself. Many hundreds of supporters (940 petitioners in fact), but no one else responsible for TIP’s positions. And I’m not even in the Choptank watershed.
No doubt there are plenty of opponents of Lakeside motivated solely by classic NIMBY concerns; they just don’t like the thing. But I assure you that from the outset and to this very day, MY problem is the illegality and corruption behind Lakeside. In 2020 the falsehoods and misrepresentations were unrecognized. Important people worked very hard to deny the truth and keep it from being known, to shut down any inquiry. But with time and effort–and hundreds of thousands of contributed dollars (not mine) spent on lawsuits–the truth of Lakeside’s improper approval in disregard of Maryland law has come out. And yet backed by the votes of Callahan, Haythe and Stepp, the developer still gets away with it. What is the matter with us?
I did come to understand the plight of Trappe citizens seeking solutions to their own problems (article cited below). But the Faustian bargain it struck with Rocks (and Rocks’ partner at the time, Rauch) in disregard of County citizens and the law was never justified. And based on my 40 years in the business, I’m sure, the citizens with get short end of the stick in the end.
Dan Watson
Google Talbot Spy, “Lakeside And The Town of Trappe,” November 16, 2021
Willard T Engelskirchen says
So, the thought is that Lakeside will bail out Trappe. Do not hold your breath.
Barbara Denton says
Lakeside should never have been approved. You do not approve an illegal development to save a town whose time is over with today. Times changed and the industry that Trappe depended on went away. We the county citizens will now be saddled with paying for a dilapidated sewage system, new schools as White Marsh is already overcrowded, more road infrastructure and massive amounts of traffic on Route 50 which is already overcrowded. We used to get some relief when the season ended for the Ocean City traffic but no more! Lakeside is not in anyone’s backyard. It is across a major highway and accessibility from the Town of Trappe is not easy. What a poor excuse for not obeying the law. All of Talbot County will pay for this in many ways. We expect our government to do the lawful and right thing. We cannot expect this from our current Council.
Kent Robertson says
Open letter to Talbot County Council
I have followed this issue closely for over a year now, and have been to meetings of the County Council and Planning Commission. I have heard a lot from Mr Watson that sounds legitimate. I have read the MDE rulings and the Planning Commission’s findings. I have seen the reports of pollution in Trappe Creek and beyond.
I have not heard one word from Councilmen Stepp or Callahan, or Councilwoman Haythe about WHY they vote the way they do. I have even spoken personally to Dave Stepp, and gotten nowhere in understanding why he votes the way he does. I have seen nothing from the Council refuting what Mr Watson has been saying publicly.
Please, County Council members, elucidate your reasoning behind the apparent stonewalling of what appear to be legitimate arguments for more oversight. You leave us citizens, by whom you were elected, feeling that there must be something we don’t know. We are left to speculate, which always leads to rumors and innuendo that is not in your or the County’s best interests.
I think I speak for most citizens of Talbot County, when I ask for complete transparency about this and other issues that come before the Council. We want you to follow the County’s long-term plan and preserve our rural way of life. Mega-projects like Lakeside need the utmost scrutiny. We see what looks like the Council turning a blind eye to our comprehensive plan, and fear that what ever has caused that departure will continue with future projects of similar nature. We fear that you are leaving our way of life unprotected from wanton construction that benefits a few people at the expense of the masses.
Just tell us WHY?
Michael Davis says
Dan, you fought the good fight. Many thanks are due you. Sadly, being right has nothing to do with winning. Money does. Never, ever, underestimate the power of money on the political process.
I feel Lakeside is all about money for the developer, all his subcontractors, and politicians who enable it. At some point, the cost of Lakeside is going to land on the taxpayers of Talbot County. Money will be required for more schools, changed roads, adequate waste water treatment, increased resources for public safety, just to name a few requirements. But by then, the developer will be long gone. As will the political supporters of Lakeside.
Tom Mitchell says
Time to move on, bury the negativity and look forward to all the positive happenings in the beautiful and historic town of Trappe.