12th District Assembly members Declan O’Scanlon and Caroline Casagrande are pleased to announce the passage by the General Assembly of A- 4159, a bill that requires the State to perform an independent study on the effects of privatizing 300 housing units located on Naval Weapons Station Earle.
“This bill is so important to the safety and well-being of the people of Monmouth County,” said Casagrande. “It will give us the financial and security related answers that we didn’t get from the Navy’s Environmental Impact Study. We cannot assume that moving 300 new families, with a likely total of 1,000 new citizens, into our area will not have an impact. We also cannot assume that there are no security risks with allowing civilians unfettered access to the heart of an ammunitions depot. With all of the risks involved with such a project, it is not safe to assume anything. We need the facts, and with this bill, we will get them.”
“This has been a long time coming,” said O’Scanlon, “and I am happy to see support from the entire Assembly on this issue. In times of true fiscal jeopardy, operating with all the facts becomes even more vital. This legislation will help provide us with the answers that I believe will only confirm what myself and my colleagues already know, which is that bringing 300 new families to the area will pose a real financial difficulty for any towns asked to bear that burden. No town should be asked to take on such load without all of the facts in order.”
The bill requires the analysis to contain the following information:
*An economic impact statement including a cost benefit analysis of the increased housing units and their impact on educational costs and local services costs that may be borne by local taxpayers;
*A security analysis addressing any security issues on surrounding municipalities which will be prepared by the New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, in consultation with the New Jersey State Police and the Department of Military and Veterans’ Affairs;
*An impact statement on the adequacy of present school and municipal infrastructure to handle the increased demands resulting from the conversion to civilian housing; and an estimate regarding the increased school district and municipal costs that will be required to adequately address the anticipated increased infrastructure requirements which will be prepared by the Center for Government Services at Rutgers.
The Senate version of the bill, S-3017, sponsored by state Senator Jennifer Beck, also District 12, awaits action in the Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee.
“I am hopeful that the Senate will move this bill along in the same manner the Assembly has,” said Beck. “It’s important to recognize the potential security risks that come hand in hand with permitting hundreds of unvetted civilians access to the largest ammunitions depot on the east coast. There are always consequences and this legislation will empower us to see what the consequences of this action is likely to be.”
Let Me Count the Ways
23 hours ago
4 comments:
Am I missing something?
The State does this study, spending a significant amount of money and then what? It is notbinding on the Navy. Can't they just ignore it?
The study will not cost anything. Read the press release. It's very clear that the study will be done within the regular function of the state treasurer's job. And the Navy cannot ignore it - the DEP and DOT supercede the powers of the federal environmental agencies in this case
How does base security or impact on schools have any impact on DOT or DEP approvals?
I still do not get it. Really I am not criticizing I just do not understand the strategy. Please explain it.
Bottom line - the Department of Navy's decision to open the houses will cost N.J. taxpayers at least $500 million over the next 30 years (an unfunded mandate). If the Navy cannot meet its contract (i.e. w/the developer) deadlines for opening the unimpeded access route to the homes (it will need DEP and DOT permits), then the developer will presumably sue the Navy and the parties will settle for far less...and on the Navy's budget...and make the entire headache go away for us.
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