Coeymans Creek Wildlife Management Area

In the mid-1990s, Albany purchased several large parcels of land in Coeymans across from the LaFarge Cement Plant on Coeymans Creek for purposes of constructing a regional landfill. Ultimately, these lands were sold to the state for purposes of public hunting grounds.

There are 358 acres of state land that can be accessed via Old Ravena Road and Stylabrick Road, providing access to the Coeymans Creek behind the cement plant, along the Thruway.

https://andyarthur.org/coeymans-creek-wma

Coeymans Creek WMA – Tax Map of Surrouding Parcels

Studying the tax map of Coeymans Creek WMA. While the entrance under the Thruway from NY 144 is barricaded off and says "Authorized Entry Only" it looks like this is public road and the public may use it per the Albany County Tax Maps. Click on parcels to bring up individual ownership.

Coeymans Creek

I am going to have to do a new Coeymans Creek Wildlife Management Area map now that I’ve explored it some more. I was hoping to see the bigger east parcel but it’s going to have to wait until water levels are down and I have my rubbers on. I also want to overlay the Albany County tax map to better understand access to the parcel.

That Property Down In Coeymans

albanyweblog.com: That Property Down In Coeymans

Of all the ridiculous messy stinking problems that former mayor Jerry Jennings left current City of Albany Mayor Kathy Sheehan to clean up when she took over City Hall, disposing of the three adjacent parcels of land owned by Albany in the Town of Coeymans in the southern part of Albany County has perhaps been the most persistently odorous. Well into her second term, Mayor Sheehan continues to spend way too much time trying to find some way to dispose of this frightful waste of City taxpayer money. Perhaps the mayor’s efforts may finally be heading for a sanitary resolution, unfortunately we can’t yet say for sure.

Now, I don’t want anybody’s eyes to glaze over, so here’s the quick read teal deer version of the history behind this sordid mess. Shortly after taking office as mayor in 1994, Jennings started buying up 363 acres of fallow farmland, woodland and wetlands in Coeymans with City of Albany taxpayer money so that he could plant a gigantic garbage dump that he expected would be enormously profitable. That’s right, a garbage dump. Anticipating those profits, he eventually paid three Coeymans landowners the ridiculous sum of $5.2 million of taxpayer cash for land that was worth maybe, at most, half a million dollars. Maybe. What landowner would refuse such inflated offers? Of course they sold him the land.