Immigration

Newport yet to gain control of EB-5 ‘pit,’ must deal with contamination

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

by Daniel Duric, for the Newport Dispatch

NEWPORT — More than a decade after Vermont’s largest financial fraud left a hole in the middle of downtown Newport, Mayor Rick Ufford-Chase says a plan is taking shape to finally fill what residents have long called simply “the pit.”

In a recent question-and-answer session, Ufford-Chase acknowledged the frustration that has built up around the empty block, even as he tried to put a more optimistic spin on it.

“I prefer to call it the development opportunity block,” he said. “But we all hate it, and we all want to know what’s going to happen to it.”

The lot has sat vacant for more than 10 years, a casualty of the EB-5 investment scandal that ensnared developers across the region. Business people with ambitious plans for the block, the old Bogner ski apparel building in Newport and projects tied to the Jay Peak and Burke Mountain ski resorts were unable to complete the work they had envisioned, the mayor said, and Newport’s downtown lot was among the projects left unfinished.

The city does not yet control the property. It remains in the hands of the federal courts, where a court-appointed receiver is working to bring a sale to a judge. The receiver’s mandate, Ufford-Chase said, is to recover as much money as possible “so that they can pay back some of the defrauded investors from the EB-5 scandal.”

Gaining control is only the first step. The mayor said officials expect contamination on the site and will need to conduct Phase I and Phase II environmental studies, then clean up whatever they find, before the city can sign an agreement with a developer. He estimated it could take three to five years to break ground on a major project, most likely housing built above ground-floor commercial space.

Paying for it is the harder question, and the one Ufford-Chase said he hears most. As an empty lot, the block generates a fraction of the tax revenue a developed property would, and the mayor was blunt about the financial obstacles.

“The math just doesn’t math in a lot of instances,” he said.

Building out the downtown would require new water and sewer lines along Main Street, a new streetscape and additional parking, all of which carry significant costs. The city plans to pursue a mix of grant money it would not have to repay and borrowing that would be paid back through the higher tax revenue a finished development is expected to produce.

The goal, Ufford-Chase said, is “to do this in a way that does not end up hitting the Newport taxpayers in their own wallets.”

He framed the project as a chance to rebuild Newport as the commercial center of Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom, with an emphasis on serving local residents rather than catering only to visitors.

“We are not just building a downtown for outsiders,” he said.

The key, the mayor argued, is getting more people to live downtown, since local foot traffic is what keeps shops in business. He said the plan calls for additional housing and a walkable, pedestrian-friendly center that residents will enjoy.

The tourists, he added, will come too. Newport’s lake already draws visitors, and “we can always use their support as well.”

Here’s the full video, where the mayor addressed these questions:


Discover more from Vermont Daily Chronicle

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

5 replies »

  1. Here’s an idea for the Newport pit: preserve it as a historic landmark and install a plaque naming it the Patrick Leahy Memorial Hole.

    If we’re going to name airports and public buildings after politicians, then perhaps we should also commemorate their negative legacies as well.

    For more than a decade, the pit in downtown Newport stood as a monument to broken promises, failed oversight, and the collapse of the EB-5 dream that was sold to the people of the Northeast Kingdom. Investors lost hundreds of millions of dollars. Families and businesses were left waiting for prosperity that never came. An entire region paid the price.

    Senator Patrick Leahy was the nation’s strongest champion of the EB-5 program and the Newport pit remains one of the most visible reminders of what can happen when political promises collide with inadequate oversight and fraud.

    Perhaps that hole is the most fitting monument of all, not as a tribute, but as a warning that public officials should be remembered for the real-world consequences of the policies they champion.

  2. CONTAMINATION????? Good luck finding a buyer. How much is the receiver being paid to oversee this site????? Comment from Richard Day.

    • Most likely lead and asbestos contamination from the old buildings that were demolished.

    • We already take the state’s garbage and half of the state’s inmates. We’re very tired of being the state’s dumping ground.

All topics and opinions welcome! No mocking or personal criticism of other commenters. No profanity, explicitly racist or sexist language allowed. Real, full names are now required. All comments without real full names will be unapproved or trashed.