Dunehampton, New York

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ira Rennert's mansion would have been in Dunehampton.  It is now in Sagaponack, New York[citation needed]
Ira Rennert's mansion would have been in Dunehampton. It is now in Sagaponack, New York[citation needed]

Dunehampton is the name of a village that was proposed in 2003 to be incorporated along 5 miles (8.0 km) of Atlantic Ocean beach between Southampton (village), New York and Wainscott, New York.

The village would have included 200 houses, 1,730 acres (7.0 km²), taking in Julie and Channel Ponds at the western edge of Southampton Village and much of Sagg Pond to its eastern end at the border with East Hampton (town), New York.

The village proposal was aimed at having a say over development of the beach and in particular a response to beach erosion attributed to groynes at Georgica Pond in East Hampton.[citation needed]

The proposal met stiff resistance from the communities of Water Mill, New York, Bridgehampton, New York and Sagaponack, New York because they feared the village would impose strict parking rules on the beaches cutting them off from the ocean.

One of the most prominent residents on the narrow strip are Humvee tycoon Ira Rennert.

The petition to form the village was filed with the Southampton Town Clerk Patrick A. Heaney on July 3, 2003. Residents of Sagaponack filed incorporation papers with the clerk on October 2, 2003. The two villages overlapped on the eastern portion of Dunehampton. Healy ultimately ruled that Dunehampton's application was not valid because it lacked the necessary number of signatures. Sagaponack's incorporation moved forward.[citation needed]

Subsequent court cases have upheld the decisions.[citation needed]