The Hudson Town Board approved a special exception for the Hudson Boosters to develop an athletic complex aimed at addressing the area’s lack of field space for youth sports.
With Wednesday’s decision, the Hudson Boosters, a funding organization for youth sports, still needs to get its site plan approved by the board, but the group moves closer to adding multiple sports fields in the area off Highway 12 and Badlands Road. The organization wants to add five fields along with concessions and parking under the current proposal.
Parking became a topic of debate. The town board voted to require the boosters to add 378 parking stalls — 100 more than the 278 parking spaces the group proposed — once the organization has built a fourth field.
Before the vote on parking, Town Chairman Robert Fowler said more parking stalls, 384 in total, than what passed would be adequate, accounting for grandparents and parents taking cars to games and equating to around two cars per player.
Ryan Cari, a boosters member, said Fowler’s number was inflated, adding that plenty of family members don’t travel for away games.
“Both your engineer and our engineer agreed that we have adequate parking without these overflow cells,” he said of additional parking space.
The board remained unconvinced.
“With all due respect, we may just never agree on what the number is, right?” Fowler said.
The two reached a compromise on when to add the spaces. Cari said the organization could build the complex in phases, arguing that additional parking should not be required earlier on. The organization could also pivot to having just four fields and adding more parking if necessary, Cari said. Shortly after, the board voted to allow for 278 parking stalls when the complex features three fields or fewer.
“We don’t want to build up parking everywhere until we’re sure we need it,” Cari said at the meeting.
The board gave the boosters a one-year grace period to pave the parking spaces, with the possibility of an additional one-year extension if the original timeframe is not feasible.
The board also approved hours of operation for the new complex: 6:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m., seven days a week, which includes closing down after games or practices.
Another condition: the boosters organization will exercise its “best efforts” to notify its members and opposing teams of parking information. Cari agreed that the boosters would also put parking information on its website.
- The board hired Treasurer John Kromer and Clerk Nick Handlos in the wake of staff departures.
- During preliminary budget talks, Fowler said he asked Kromer to put additional money in the budget for legal fees. Kromer said he was told to plan for an additional $100,000 regarding “whether we’re going to put up a fight on the annexation of the property that the school owns.”
- More on that property: Hudson Superintendent Nick Ouellette said at a school board meeting that the annexation petition for the UU property has made it to the City of Hudson.
- During the budget discussion, Fowler said he thinks the proposed route of the annexation is challengeable. “I know for a fact that our town residents are opposed to annexation, and for good reason. I’m opposed to it,” he said.
- David Bartizal was appointed to the board, filling the vacancy left by Ken Thill. The board voted in favor of Bartizal in a meeting Sept. 24.












