Skip to content

Menu

LexBlog, Inc. logo
CommunitySub-MenuPublishersChannelsProductsSub-MenuBlog ProBlog PlusBlog PremierMicrositeSyndication PortalsAboutContactResourcesSubscribeSupport
Join
Search
Close

Legislation Creating “Inter-Municipal” Land Use Boards Revised, Approved in Senate Committee

By Ted Zangari & Corey Klein on May 24, 2021
Email this postTweet this postLike this postShare this post on LinkedIn

Bill Would Now Give County Planning Boards, State Planning Commission say in “Large Warehouse” Applications before NJ Land Use Boards

A bill pending in the New Jersey State Legislature would send developers to county planning boards or the State Planning Commission for an added layer of approvals when adjacent towns object to warehouse development projects outside of their jurisdiction. The revised version of the bill, sponsored by State Senate President Steve Sweeney and co-sponsored by State Senator Troy Singleton, still gives neighboring towns a say in whether warehouse development is approved across their borders. [CLICK HERE TO READ OUR PREVIOUS POST ON THE ORIGINALLY INTRODUCED BILL.] However, instead of creating “Inter-Municipal Land Use Boards” to consider the regional impact of the proposed warehouse development when neighboring towns object, as the original version of the bill prescribed, the revised bill would require the county planning board to hold a hearing on the regional impacts of any proposed warehouse project opposed by neighboring towns. The revised version of the bill goes further and provides that when a warehouse project is proposed in a town that borders another county, the State Planning Commission would hold the hearing (instead of the county planning board) to consider the regional impacts of the proposed warehouse development. The revised legislation also removes language defining what constitutes a “retail warehouse” that would trigger the requirement for the added layer of approvals when neighboring towns object. Instead, the revised bill leaves it up to the State Planning Commission to define what constitutes a “Large Warehouse.”

Although a new layer of “inter-municipal” public bodies has been eliminated by the revised legislation, developers should be under no illusions: this proposed law would still add time and expense to the development process for a yet-to-be-defined type of warehouse project (ultimately contributing to the cost of doing business for the companies operating in the constructed buildings) and would threaten any project that is supported by the host municipality as a result of objections raised by a neighboring town.

Nevertheless, the bill sponsors are to be commended for initiating what the prime co-sponsor, Sen. Singleton, described in the Senate Budget Committee last week as a “larger conversation about regional planning” and “not pitting one town against another.”  Or as a fellow member of the Senate Budget Committee, Declan O’Scanlon, put it: “too frequently towns approve huge projects right on the border of an adjoining town that might have a bigger impact on the adjoining town than the town that’s approving it.”

But it was the Chair of the Senate Budget Committee, Paul Sarlo, who best summed-up the situation.  Sarlo, who has also served for two decades as mayor of Wood-Ridge, a municipality in the Meadowlands regional planning district, had this to say before abstaining on voting the bill out of his committee: “I kind of go back and forth…I live with the regional planning that’s done in the [Meadowlands]…there’s been some good out of that but there’s also been some very difficult decisions that have been made that impact one municipality over the other…as a mayor, I don’t know if I want the next town over to tell me what I can and what cannot do.”

Photo of Ted Zangari Ted Zangari

Ted Zangari is a Member of Sills Cummis & Gross and is a Chair of the Firm’s Real Estate Department.  Mr. Zangari also chairs the Firm’s Government Relations and Public Policy Practice and its Redevelopment Law Practice.

Read more about Ted ZangariEmail
Photo of Corey Klein Corey Klein

Corey Klein is an Associate in the Sills Cummis & Gross Real Estate Department and focuses on land use, redevelopment, zoning and related litigation.

Read more about Corey KleinEmail
  • Posted in:
    Real Estate & Construction
  • Blog:
    RedevelopNJ
  • Organization:
    Sills Cummis & Gross P.C.
  • Article: View Original Source

LexBlog, Inc. logo
Facebook LinkedIn Twitter RSS
Real Lawyers
99 Park Row
  • About LexBlog
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Contact LexBlog
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of Service
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Products
  • Blog Pro
  • Blog Plus
  • Blog Premier
  • Microsite
  • Syndication Portals
  • LexBlog Community
  • 1-800-913-0988
  • Submit a Request
  • Support Center
  • System Status
  • Resource Center

New to the Network

  • PatentNext
  • Tressler Insurance Law Blog
  • Tressler Employment Law Blog
  • Inside Global Tech
  • Proskauer Whistleblower Defense
Copyright © 2023, LexBlog, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Law blog design & platform by LexBlog LexBlog Logo