Dogg,
I’m not too sure what you are trying to convey with the map link, but I'll provide annotation. It is the growth areas depicted in red that cause concern. Those are 47 Villages that cover over 26,000 acres. Imagine expanding the Hamilton-Egg Harbor Township growth area by a third, that's the amount of land set to be sewered. In comparison to the PNR, the total Village area may seem small, but culturally they are the heartbeat of the Pines. People still hunt, fish, farm, can, cut wood, and preserve a way of life in character of the area. They also contain the bulk of the PNR cultural treasures. According to the Pinelands Commission (1988: vi,
Pinelands Villages and Towns: Historic Area Delineations),
“The Pinelands settlements are Pinelands history in microcosm...Virtually the entire range of significant cultural activities - rural industries such as sawyering, ironmaking and glassmaking, cereal, truck, livestock and berry agriculture, maritime pursuits, religious, ethnic and social manifestations, political infrastructure, etc. is reflected in the physical remnant of these varied communities.”
So when Manumuskin asks about the replacement of our cultural center, the Richland Fire Hall:
Manumuskin: "That is ashame.we had several family christmas parties there as well.I live a half hour from there but the folks that ran it were real nice and the price wasn't bad so for several years in a row we rented it. Are they replacing it?"
The answer is yes and no. A modern firehouse was built, but without a social hall. Cultural surveys are waived in Richland Village, and pleas from the community to save it were ignored. It was our equivalent to Buzby's.
It's gentrification. Do you think the people moving into town-center projects, the "New Urbanism" as it's called in our redevelopment plan, have any sense of this place?
S-M