From time to time, a familiar suggestion comes up:
It sounds simple. But in reality, it’s not a viable option—and it wouldn’t fix the problem even if it were.
The Town Still Owes Money
The Ledges was built using a 30-year municipal bond, and that debt is still being paid.
- About $320,000 per year in debt service
- Final payment in 2029
Source: Town of South Hadley Weekly Wrap-Up (Aug. 9, 2024)
Even if the town sold the property, that debt doesn’t disappear. Any sale proceeds would first go toward paying it off.
The Course Itself Isn’t Losing Money
It’s important to separate two things:
- Operations
- Debt
On operations, The Ledges is in the black—it covers its day-to-day costs through fees and revenue.
The annual cost people point to is the bond, not operating losses.
The Land Is Legally Restricted
The Ledges was developed with state recreation funding, including PARC and Self-Help grants.
That triggers strict rules under Article 97 of the Massachusetts Constitution :
- The land must remain in recreational use
- It cannot be sold for development without state approval
What is Article 97?
In plain English: Article 97 protects public land that has been set aside for recreation or conservation. Once land falls under those protections, a town cannot simply decide to sell it off for private development.
To change its use, the town would generally need a 2/3 vote of Town Meeting, a 2/3 vote of the Massachusetts Legislature, and usually some form of replacement land of equal value and purpose.
Detailed state policy is outlined here:
Selling It Would Take Years—If It Happened at All
To sell The Ledges for development, the town would need:
- A 2/3 Town Meeting vote
- A 2/3 vote of the State Legislature
- State environmental approval
- Replacement land of equal value and use
This process is rare, complex, and often takes years.
It Wouldn’t Solve the Budget Problem Anyway
Even in a best-case scenario:
- A sale is one-time revenue
- The town’s deficit is ongoing and structural
The Budget Task Force identified the real drivers.
The Debt Exists Either Way
The town owes the bond whether the course is open, closed, or sold.
Closing or selling The Ledges doesn’t eliminate the obligation—it just removes a revenue-generating asset.
- Bond payments run through 2029
- The course is operationally self-supporting
- The land is legally restricted
- A sale would be complicated, slow, and uncertain
- It would not fix the town’s budget gap