New Law Guts Tamworth Racetrack Regulations

Trish Anderton's picture
By Trish Anderton on Friday, May 7, 2004.
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Critics of a proposed racetrack in Tamworth say they’re outraged by a
new state law that exempts the track from local regulations.

NHPR correspondent Trish Anderton reports.

Under state law, towns can regulate automobile tracks through what’s called a racetrack ordinance.

But the new law excludes certain kinds of racetracks from those regulations.

Specifically, it excludes the kind of private track that Club Motorsports International or CMI wants to build in Tamworth.

Steve Gaal is a member of Focus Tamworth, a local group that’s pushing
for more regulation of the CMI track.

He says a town committee spent a lot of time and money last year drawing
up a racetrack ordinance.

GAAL: When the committee goes through a democratic process as we did,
and then sort of under cover of darkness in the legislature, there’s a
bill that specifically excludes a development exactly like the kind CMI
wants to put in Tamworth, it’s very shocking.

The ordinance would have limited the amount of noise the track could make, as well as its lighting, operating hours and other details.

But the new law's lead sponsor, Republican Senator John Gallus of
Berlin, says towns don’t need special committees to control a project
like this.

He points out they can use zoning, as well as state and local
environmental regulations.

Gallus argues racetrack ordinances were originally created to address
facilities like the New Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, not
the Tamworth track.

GALLUS: This is a private facility, member only racetrack, not a
spectator sport kind of thing like loudon is so its not a burden on
municipal services and so forth.

CMI spokesman Scott Tranchemontagne argues the town ordinance simply
went too far.

TRANCH: It became a zoning ordinance that would regulate not just the
operation but the very development of the facilty, and a very very
restrictive ordinance.

But CMI’s critics reject those arguments.

They say whether the facility allows spectators or not, it’ll still be
just as loud as a public racetrack.

And David Little of Focus Tamworth says CMI had ample opportunity to air
its concerns about the ordinance.

They were at every meeting. Its not like people who support the track
didn’t have a chance to speak. It was a compromise. Nobody got
everything they wanted in that ordinance.

Little says local state representatives were never told about the bill,
so they didn’t have a chance to weigh in on it.

Those representatives could not be reached for comment.

The racetrack proposal is awaiting approval from state environmental officials.

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