Maxwellandson,
Housing subdivisions are no friend of small homebuilders or residents. Clustering, Smart Growth, and Redevelopment are all Pinelands Commission endorsed mechanisms that will make it even more likely that mega-developers will find it profitable to exploit the Pinelands National Reserve. Their expanded presence in no way helps to preserve, protect, and enhance the natural and cultural resources of the Pinelands National Reserve.
If we must stimulate economic development in the Pinelands, then at least do it in a manner that benefits Pinelands residents, not politicians. Clustering projects should include provisions that encourage the hiring of local contractors who buy from local purveyors, hire local laborers, and keep the revenue stream flowing within the community. Small builders don’t have to bulldoze every tree in site to turn a profit, and are flexible enough to incorporate green methodologies.
“The regulations and standards it [ i.e., the Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan] contains are designed to promote orderly development of the Pinelands so as to preserve and protect the significant and unique natural, ecological, agricultural, archaeological, historical, scenic, cultural and recreational resources of the Pinelands” (Pinelands Commission). Wouldn’t it make more sense to entrust this critical job to local stakeholders? I finish with one particularly salient point – small businesses can’t afford teams of lawyers to circumvent Pinelands rules and regulations.
Spung-Man