Opinion

Thu
24
Aug
News Staff's picture

Opinion

An Engaged CommunityIn the past few years, several ordinances have been considered by the Township Council that will pave the way for the construction of multi-story buildings comprising dozens of housing units. Most, if not all, of these ordinances were part of an effort to fulfill the township’s affordable housing obligations (read our FAQ article in this edition of the Tribune for more information about this issue). Some of these ordinances were met with more pushback than others. Many of them were approved, while the few that were not approved typically had more public objections, in the form of a handful of upset residents or a lawyer hired on their behalf in an attempt to halt or alter the proposed plan.But never before have we seen the kind of organized opposition to a project that is currently occurring with the former Bottle King site on South Livingston Avenue near Mt. Pleasant Avenue. An ordinance was on the Township Council agenda earlier this summer that, if passed, would clear the way for developers to construct a 276-unit rental property on the site. Of those 276 units, 15 percent would be for low and moderate income tenants, the state minimum requirement on rental properties.Nearby residents were less than pleased about this, to put it mildly. Town officials, the Council, and likely the developers, as well, almost certainly anticipated what has now become requisite pushback to these types of developments prior to their approval. But what has occurred has been significantly more than the typical resistance.Staying up-to-date and actively engaging with the business of the town is no easy task. Here at the Tribune, it is our job to do so, but for most residents, it requires spending precious free time scanning through drab documents, attending meetings, and organizing with their neighbors. It is not easy, and it is not fun.For that reason, we tip our caps to the residents of Arden Road, Sherbrooke Parkway,Audubon Road, and the surrounding area for forming a collective and putting in the work to affect change in town. Weeks into their battle, they remain motivated and educated, coming to the most recent Council meeting with a detailed and well thought out list of requests for the project. Rather than simply demand it not happen – a request that is unlikely to be fulfilled – they asked for things such as improved traffic patterns and limiting the building’s ...

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