When a town’s own former attorney files suit against the Town Supervisor, every taxpayer should stop and ask one simple question:
What is going on in Red Hook?
Albert Trezza, who previously served as Red Hook’s Town Attorney and knows exactly how municipal government is supposed to operate, has now filed a lawsuit alleging that Supervisor Robert McKeon improperly retained outside law firms to handle the Town’s battle with the Red Hook Boat Club—without the authorization required from the Town Board. According to the lawsuit, hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars may have been spent on outside counsel without the legal approvals required under New York law.
Think about that for a moment.
This isn’t political rhetoric coming from an opponent. It isn’t campaign season finger-pointing.
These allegations are coming from a former Town Attorney who understands municipal law and how local government is supposed to function.
If these allegations prove to be true, this isn’t simply poor judgment. It’s a serious challenge to the very principles of transparency, accountability, and fiscal oversight that taxpayers expect from their elected officials.
The irony is hard to ignore.
The Town’s pursuit of the Red Hook Boat Club has already been mired in controversy. Residents have packed public hearings, overwhelmingly opposing the use of eminent domain to seize private property for a proposed waterfront park. The Town has already suffered significant legal setbacks, including a court decision throwing out key zoning actions because officials failed to comply with New York’s environmental review requirements.
Now taxpayers are learning that another lawsuit has emerged—this one questioning whether the Town even had the legal authority to hire the lawyers leading this fight.
Government cannot demand that citizens follow the law while treating legal requirements as optional when they’re inconvenient.
The rules exist for a reason.
Town Boards authorize expenditures. They provide oversight. They ensure that one elected official cannot simply decide to spend taxpayer money without accountability. Those aren’t technicalities—they’re safeguards that protect every resident.
The question now isn’t simply whether Red Hook should have pursued the Boat Club.
The question is whether this entire process has ignored the very laws that govern local government itself.
How much has this fight cost taxpayers?
How much more will it cost?
How many outside law firms have been retained?
And who approved the bills?
These are fair questions. In fact, they’re questions every taxpayer should be asking.
Regardless of where anyone stands on the future of the Red Hook Boat Club, no one should support a government that appears willing to bypass established legal procedures in pursuit of its own agenda.
Public office is a public trust.
Taxpayer dollars deserve accountability.
And when a former Town Attorney is the one sounding the alarm, the public shouldn’t dismiss it—they should demand answers.