What is redevelopment? According to the New Jersey Redevelopment Authority,
"Our mission is to provide a unique approach to revitalization (a) efforts in New Jersey's cities (b). We develop programs and resources to improve the quality of life by creating value in urban communities (c)."
What is smart growth? According to the Department of Community Affairs,
"Smart Growth is the term used to describe well-planned, well-managed growth that adds new homes and creates new jobs, while preserving open space, farmland, and environmental resources (d)."
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a) How do you revitalize something that was never there in the first place?
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b) This is not city space, but State and Federally protected reserve lands.
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c) These locations are near wilderness, not urban blight.
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d) As currently planned and implemented, these schemes are antithetic to the above Smart Growth goals, let alone the Pinelands Comprehensive Management Plan (CMP).
According to David N. Kinsey (2008, "Has the Mount Laurel Doctrine delivered on Smart Growth?,"
Planning & Environmental Law, Vol. 60), in New Jersey's case Smart Growth was spawned by the New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) and the New Jersey Planning Commission in response to Mount Laurel II. COAH did not apply to the Pinelands (P.L. 1987, c. 267; N.J.S.A. 13:18A-12.b. and -15) and it is the Pinelands Commission, not the New Jersey Planning Commission, who has say over the Pinelands National Reserve. Why the heck is redevelopment invoked here other than to circumvent the CMP? See my post above:
"due to existing conditions where lands have remained vacant and underutilized for a period of ten or more years [and] likely cannot be developed through the instrumentality of solely private capital."
Mount Laurel by law didn't apply here and, correspondingly, neither should redevelopment or Smart Growth. I use the past tense when relating to COAH since the program was eliminated on August 27, 2011.
S-M