SNA results updated

Here are the SNA results, updated with links to the Post editorials and columns:

The second-place award for column writing for my Dispatches column was for:

The honorable mention for best editorial writing was earned for:

In addition, Rick Sinding, editor of The Princeton Packet, won first place for editorial writing in the larger circulation category, while Ilene Dube, editor of Time Off, won first for best entertainment/lifestyle section.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Changing housing priorities

I’m not exactly sure where The Star-Ledger gets its numbers for today’s editorial on affordable housing, but anyone who knows the communities of Cranbury and Monroe knows that another 4,590 housing units will never be built in Cranbury and that 12,200 are not anywhere on Monroe’s horizon.

The error, unfortunately, undercut what otherwise would be a strong argument for change in the way the state plans for affordable housing. The editorial essentially endorses legislation introduced by Assembly Speaker Joe Roberts that would ban regional contribution agreements — or the provision that allows towns to pay other communities to take on up to 50 percent of their obligation. The Roberts bill, as the Ledger points out, “would offer an alternative to RCAs by setting aside $15 million a year — money earmarked for affordable housing — to continue efforts to rehabilitate housing in cities and elsewhere. And, while the bill would ban RCAs, it encourages towns to come up with other methods to provide realistic opportunities for affordable housing, including donating land, providing tax abatements and using state and federal funds.”

There is some legitimate concern among urban mayors, because ending the RCA arrangement would mean an end to what has been a necessary flow of cash into the state’s cities. But it is, in many ways, dirty money because it perpetuates a widening income gap — low- and moderate-income housing gets built in the cities, while McMansions get built everywhere else, forcing not only the poor but many middle-income people out of towns like Cranbury.

Behind Roberts’ bill is a recognition that as long as there are two New Jerseys — one rich, one poor — the state is in trouble. New Jersey has the fourth-most segregated schools in the nation. Much of that is driven by housing patterns, and RCAs have contributed to the problem. The poor are concentrated in the cities not by choice but because there are simply too few alternatives.

That’s why the rehabilitation fund is so important. It potentially could offer an alternate source of funding for mayors in Jersey City, New Brunswick and other urban centers to repair existing housing without making them complicit in the artful dodge that RCAs create.

According to New Jersey Future, a nonprofit group that has long pushed for affordable housing, 12 municipalities have more than 50 percent of the statewide inventory of low- and moderate-income housing. Remarkably, some 246 municipalities have absolutely no affordable housing. Worse yet, there is virtually no affordable housing in areas where there is job growth.

The reason that the RCAs have remained in place so long are manifold.

Fear, prejudice and even legitimate concern about controlling municipal costs — poor people often require more services — have caused towns to resist their legal obligation to provide affordable housing.

There also is concern about the impact that affordable housing has on development — early efforts by most towns included the builder’s remedy, which required increased housing density — and the subsequent impact it has on local schools and on the elimination of open space.

Those are the two arguments generally made in Cranbury and Monroe — arguments that hold far less water than officials in those towns might be willing to admit. The experience in South Brunswick, where the township has made it a point of policy to keep all affordable units within its borders, has been a good one. That said, there have been rumblings about South Brunswick doing RCAs — from some school board members and some Republican candidates for council.

That’s why the bill may have some difficulty getting through the state Legislature (if it does get through, expect the governor to sign it — he already has announced that he wants to put limits on RCAs).

So let the conversation begin.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Shameless plug

OK, so I’m blowing my own horn, but I took two awards for the The South Brunswick Post in the annual Suburban Newspaper Association contest (national contest): honorable mention for editorial writing and second place for column writing.

More on this when I get back to the office — I’ll include links to the awards.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Doing the limbo on the Monroe ballpark


A baseball stadium that had been proposed for Monroe appears a no-go. Or, perhaps it remains a live proposition — I guess it depends on whom you talk with.

We talked (meaning The Cranbury Press) with the township, who says the ballpark is off the table, and Steve Kalafer, owner of the Somerset Patriots and prospective owner of the new Monroe team, who says it is still alive.

But we didn’t talk with Jack Morris of Edgewood Properties, who owns the site. It’s not because we didn’t try. We probably left a dozen messages at either his real estate firm or the PR firm that represents him starting on Tuesday — but as of late Thursday, we hadn’t received word back.

So, the ballpark plan, as our headline says, is in limbo.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

Council needs to be cost conscious

South Brunswick Township Manager Matt Watkins is going to unveil his budget to the Township Council on Tuesday (the manager writes the budget under this form of government, and the council reviews and revises it). Specifics on the spending plan will not be available until then, but we are hopeful that the manager will opt for the most conservative of budgets.

Our suggestion is to find a way to keep spending flat. Admittedly, that is not an easy task. But the township has been spending more than it has been taking in over the last few years, a trend that needs to be reversed if the council is to keep local taxes managable.

Just as importantly, the council needs to reduce its reliance on surplus — its savings. It is OK to use surplus as revenue in a budget, provided you know that you will be generating at least as much new surplus as you use over the coming year. The opposite has been the case in recent years, and it has resulted in several larger-than-desired tax increases.

Doing both of these things does not necessarily mean the township can avoid a tax increase — reducing surplus use will mean reduced revenue, which would have to be made up another revenue, most likely taxes — but it will help put in place a more solid budgetary foundation for the future.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick