Suburban Appraisals Dumped In W. Rock Woods
by Thomas MacMillan | February 16, 2009 12:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (10)
Usually you can’t tell who dumps trash illegally in the woods by the Westville Manor projects. Last week some teens found a load with an out-of-town company’s name all over it — and details about people’s homes in towns far away.
Fourteen-year-old Andre Cowles lives with his mom in Westville Manor, a public-housing development in the shadow of West Rock. On Thursday afternoon, he was walking with two of this friends when they spotted boxes of papers strewn through the woods just off of Wayfarer Street. The trash turned out to be pages and pages of documents from Statewide Appraisal Services, a real estate appraisal company based in Ansonia.
Curious and disturbed by the trash, Andre walked up the street to get assistance from Solar Youth. The youth development and environmental organization has its headquarters in Westville Manor.
Joanne Sciulli, executive director at Solar Youth, helped Andre and his friends clean up the papers and stack the boxes by the side of the road.
Altogether, Andre and his friends had discovered about ten boxes’ worth of appraisal order forms and appraisal reports for residential properties all over Connecticut. The documents covered a broad time period, from the 1990s all they way up to 2006.
It wasn’t the first time Andre had seen trash dumped in the woods in his neighborhood, and he wasn’t too happy about it. Click the play arrow above to watch Andre explain what happened and how he felt, in a video made by Sciulli.
“They feel like they can toss this stuff here just cause it’s the ghetto,” Cowles said on Saturday. “They think they can just do whatever they want.”
Sciulli said she has seen trash dumped in the woods for the last 13 years, since she first moved her organization into the neighborhood. “People do it all the time,” she said. “Usually it’s construction waste,” like roofing shingles, which can’t be traced.
Dumpers just assume no one in the neighborhood is going to care, said Sciulli.
Often they’re right. Sciulli said that people in Westville Manor are so accustomed to it that they often don’t speak up.
Andre and his neighbors “have every right to live in a community that feels good, that looks good,” Sciulli said.
Investigation
When they found the documents on Thursday, Sciulli and Andre looked up Statewide Appraisal Services on the internet. They tried to call the company, but the phone number on Statewide’s website didn’t work.
On Friday morning, the New Haven Independent located the correct phone number and contacted Tony Mavuli, the president of Statewide Appraisal. Mavuli said that he had “no idea” how his company’s documents ended up in the woods off Wayfarer Street. “We had everything pretty much shredded” when they moved from West Haven to Ansonia in 2006, Mavuli said.
Mavuli did acknowledge that he “might’ve mistakenly left behind” some boxes in the basement or the attic of his old offices in West Haven, a building that he still owns.
“I didn’t dump them,” Mavuli said. “I’m sorry somebody did it. I’m not the one who dumped there.”
Asked if the documents are confidential, Mavuli said, “No not really. It’s all public record.”
Later on Friday, Mavuli called to say that he had picked up the boxes off of Wayfarer Street. He said that he was trying to find out who was responsible. He said he suspects that his tenant in West Haven found the boxes in the basement and dumped them in West Rock.
Told that Mavuli had cleaned up the trash, Andre said, “I feel that’s OK. I hope they don’t do it again.”
Police?
“Something like that we would definitely get the police involved in,” said Department of Public Works Chief of Operations Jeff Pescosolido, when informed about the dumping.
But police spokesperson Officer Joe Avery said that it’s difficult to prosecute illegal dumping without an eyewitness. “If nobody saw them do it, there’s not a lot we can do about it.” Avery said that even if the trash has somebody’s name all over it, it’s easy to deny responsibility for dumping.
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Comments
Posted by: William Kurtz | February 16, 2009 12:21 PM
Maybe I'm naive, but I don't understand why people bother carting their trash--especially boxes of paper--all the way out to wherever to dump them in the woods. Say what you will about high property taxes in this area, but at least we get good trash service. In West Haven that even includes monthly bulk pickup. It's far easier to stack your garbage neatly by the curb, people.
If it was Mr. Mavuli's West Haven tenants who dumped those boxes, not only were they unforgivably rude, but foolish as well.
Posted by: robn | February 16, 2009 12:42 PM
heck I used to pat myself on the back for picking refuse out of the gutter and the sidewalk in front of my house but this kid is awesome!
New Haven needs more good solid citizens like Andre Cowles
Posted by: Nan Bartow | February 16, 2009 2:34 PM
Kudos to Andre Cowles and his friends. Andre deserves an award from the City Of New Haven for being a good steward of the land and for publicizing the illegal dumping. Thanks to Joanne Sciulli and to Solar Youth for helping him deal with this important issue.
Posted by: ParkStTaxPayer
| February 16, 2009 2:40 PM
when neighbors like Andre Cowles pick up trash, they increase the value of the properties surrounding that area. Cleaning up "trouble" areas show those passing through that dumping won't be tolerated.
That Andre felt Solar Youth not only would help him address the problem, but also empower him to create change in his neighborhood is wonderful news for the City of New Haven. "Those meddling kids" (to quote from the Scooby Doo show) are getting results right here in New Haven!
I also pick up trash around my apartment building, and rip down those huge styrofoam ads people nail to the utility poles on my street (the paper ads go too!). Every little bit helps, and in the grand view, caring about "a little wrapper on the sidewalk" can translate into caring about bigger problems such as broken windows, reporting drug dealers, etc.
The quality of life issues start with litter; you're never too old or young, too rich or too poor to pick up some trash, even if it's not your neighborhood!
Posted by: Brian V | February 16, 2009 7:18 PM
AWSOME JOB!!!
Great kid & great organization!
Posted by: lance | February 16, 2009 10:46 PM
ParkStTaxPayer, I don't think there is such thing as property values in the projects, they live there for free...on my dime.
And they all have a flat screen, psIII, hbo and a wii.
Posted by: Jorge | February 17, 2009 4:39 AM
If they are appraisal reports, there is definetely confidential information there like the value of peoples homes. The owner of the company is in violation of ethical standards. The owner should have immediately gone to pick up the trash & dispose of properly himself.
Posted by: CEE | February 17, 2009 9:20 AM
Lance-
Although you may be correct in the fact that residents will be unable to increase property value. You are totally wrong in thing that people that live in housing projects live there for free. As an individual that grew up in the projects I witnessed my parents paying rent on a monthly basis dependent on their income. Let's not be too ignorant in our statments.
Posted by: Wicked Lester | February 17, 2009 11:48 AM
Jorge,
Property assessment is public record.
Posted by: Lance | February 17, 2009 4:04 PM
Sorry Cee.... let me amend that...."free or almost free".
Not that there's anything wrong with that... (how do I make italics on here :-)
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