Pinelands Smart Growth, an example
This is being HOTLY debated. I have mixed feelings about it. What I would like to see is some organization put together about 5 examples of what could happen on paper, showing the worst case scenario in actual locations we are all familiar with.
TeeGate
My concern is that the Smart Growth and Redevelopment fast-track projects, making it easier to bypass customary checks and balances – especially public debate. Mason (1992, Contested Lands: Conflict and Compromise in New Jersey’s Pine Barrens) noted 17-years ago that the Pinelands Commission’s planning power was decentralizing and shifting power to local entrepreneurial interests. In the case of Richland Village decisions, the mayor and deputy mayor sit on the environmental commission, the mayor and deputy mayor sit on the planning board, the mayor sits on the economic development advisory board, the deputy mayor on the Citizens Advisory Board on Community Development, and both are on the township committee. Under redevelopment, I’m under the impression that the township committee alone chooses a developer who will fulfill their visions of multimillion-dollar ratables. They do not have to accept proposals on bid alone.
Let’s look at one aspect of the township’s largest parcel purchased (public grant money?) for the Richland project, and see where group wisdom takes us. This is information that I submitted to the township at their municipal hearing, to the township environmental commission, and to the Pinelands Commission at their hearing (excepting Richland Wetlands 5). The section in question was cleared c.1882 by J.H. Smith who ran the adjacent steam-powered sawmill, but the land was soon abandoned due to wetness. In the 1960s the site was slated for St. Augustine Preparatory School but the site was quickly switched to higher and drier ground at R.D. Wood’s estate “Red Oaks.” As long as I can remember, the redevelopment parcel has been for sale but remained unsold due to site limitations (i.e., mostly not builable) despite its frontage on US 40 and central location.
This parcel is key to the township’s redevelopment. I’ve seen plans that suggested a retirement village and a sewer plant to be located here. Recently, the land was deed-restricted (unbuildable anyway?) for the controversial off-site dilution ordinance applicable within the Richland Village Redevelopment Area. The Pinelands Commission claimed that this ordinance provides an equivalent or better level of protection than would otherwise be achieved within the Redevelopment, but the Pinelands Preservation Alliance disagrees (see PPA’s Inside the Pinelands, V.15, #3).
ATTACHED FIGURES
Richland 1 – 1931 aerial photomosaic of the redevelopment parcel, Airplane Photo Atlas Sheet #222, NJDEP Bureau of Tidelands.
Richland 2 – from above, with added wetland delineation in red line added by M. Demitroff from various sources including local knowledge.
Richland 3 – soils map of the redevelopment parcel, with added hydric soil delineation in red line and blue line for intermittent stream added by M. Demitroff as shown on Atlantic County Sheet #22, Soil Survey of Atlantic County, New Jersey (Johnson, 1978).
Richland 4 – wetlands delineated in blue from Exhibit B-3, Richland Village Redevelopment Area Aerial Photo, Richland Village: Growing Smart into the 21st Century, January 2006.
Richland 5 – hydric soils map (wet in grey) of the redevelopment parcel according to the US Natural Resources Conservation Service Web Soil Survey (current), Accessed December 22, 2008.
Are wetlands being marginalized or are they dying up? Either way, we have a problem. My point is that Pinelands redevelopment decisions are being made behind closed doors, and absent cultural or environmental surveys. The above is just one of multiple examples of problems related to redevelopment and sewering. So when Leaken invokes “smart growth” as the path forward to Pinelands clustering, Buena Borough and Buena Vista Township provide preliminary “Smart Growth” windows into how clustering of Pinelands Villages and Rural Development zones may proceed.
Spung-Man