Pennington establishes advisory committee on redevelopment

Date:

Share post:

The Pennington Borough Council has officially created a new advisory committee to assist the borough on potential redevelopment of properties.

The council gave their greenlight on the advisory committee after approving the measure at the governing body’s meeting on Aug. 5.

- Advertisement -

“The Council retains full authority,” Mayor Jim Davy said of redevelopment measures. “The Planning Board does not have the authority under the redevelopment law. But our intent and purpose are to have the application prepared in such a way it goes before the council and planning board.”

Members of the new advisory committee will only address items or matters that Pennington Council members or the mayor request. They are not allowed to address any matter on their own without a specific request given to the committee by council or the mayor.

Committee members advisory scope on housing and redevelopment would include investigations, approval of redevelopment designations, redevelopment plans and agreements, proposed tax abatements, and financial agreements, according to the resolution.

The committee is going to be comprised of two members of council, two members of the planning board, and the borough administrator and borough planner.

At a meeting in July, Borough Planner Jim Kyle had said that a smaller subset of the council and planning board is helpful to initially work on ideas for redevelopment plans.

Public input would also occur at the committee’s meetings.

The new advisory committee comes as Pennington Council has designated the Blackwell property and Pennington Landfill as an area in need of redevelopment.

They seek the same with a Route 31 property (2 Route 31 – Chill Properties LLC) and have authorized the Pennington Planning Board to conduct a preliminary investigation.

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow

Current edition

Current Edition – Hopewell Valley News

Related articles

Understanding Liver Cancer and the Role of SIRT in Treatment

By Samuel J. Greene, MD The American Cancer Society estimates that over 41,000 new cases of liver cancer will...

Rethinking stormwater management for a resilient future

by Jay Watson, Co-Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation Across the world, precipitation events are changing our lives and the landscapes around us....

County holds programs for Red Ribbon Week

The Somerset County Municipal Alliance Network is holding multi-platform programming through Oct. 31 to encourage people to live substance free as...

County Trunk-or-Treat returns

The spooky season is here, and the Burlington County Sheriff's Office, the County Commissioners and the Special Services...