Most residents are familiar with Green Acres, the New Jersey open-space initiative, but not with the Blue Acres version.
Under Blue Acres, the state can buy flood-prone land when maintaining private property there becomes difficult. The land is then preserved as open space.
Last week, the state Assembly Appropriations Committee approved a bi-partisan package of bills (A3368, A3369 and A3370) that appropriates more than $123 million in voter-approved funding for a new Blue Acres initiative.
“This program allows [home and business owners] to willingly sell their homes to the state, which is crucial,” said Assemblyman John Burzichelli (D-Cumberland/Gloucester/Salem), chairman of the Appropriations Committee.
“Properties that are repeatedly prone to flooding are nearly impossible to sell,” Burzichelli explained, “nor do we want new owners to come in and subject themselves to costly, reoccurring damage.”
The money from the Blue Acres push comes from a bond approved by New Jersey voters in 2009, the Green Acres, Water Supply and Floodplain Protection, and Farmland and Historic Preservation Bond Act.
http://www.nj.com/cumberland/index.ssf/2012/11/hurricane_sandy_brings_relevan.html
Under Blue Acres, the state can buy flood-prone land when maintaining private property there becomes difficult. The land is then preserved as open space.
Last week, the state Assembly Appropriations Committee approved a bi-partisan package of bills (A3368, A3369 and A3370) that appropriates more than $123 million in voter-approved funding for a new Blue Acres initiative.
“This program allows [home and business owners] to willingly sell their homes to the state, which is crucial,” said Assemblyman John Burzichelli (D-Cumberland/Gloucester/Salem), chairman of the Appropriations Committee.
“Properties that are repeatedly prone to flooding are nearly impossible to sell,” Burzichelli explained, “nor do we want new owners to come in and subject themselves to costly, reoccurring damage.”
The money from the Blue Acres push comes from a bond approved by New Jersey voters in 2009, the Green Acres, Water Supply and Floodplain Protection, and Farmland and Historic Preservation Bond Act.
http://www.nj.com/cumberland/index.ssf/2012/11/hurricane_sandy_brings_relevan.html