Highlands Issue – Julia Somers to speak at next Democratic Meeting Dec 17

December 5th, 2008

Whether or not Bernards Township should opt in to the Highlands Regional Master Plan has become an important issue, and we are opening this up for discussion at our December meeting – at 6:30 p.m. on December 17 at the Bernards Township Public Library, 32 South Maple Avenue, Basking Ridge. Julia Somers, Executive Director of the NJ Highlands Coalition, a non-governmental organization that supports the Regional Master Plan, will make a presentation at the meeting.

Here’s some background on the issue, and an invitation to join us for this discussion:

On November 11 the Bernards Township Committee voted to not start a year long review of the merits of “opting in” to the Highlands Regional Master Plan [RMP]. If the committee changes its mind and votes to start the review, the township may at the end of 2009 opt in or not. There will be no obligation either way. But the committee must act before December 31 of this year to start the process.

Bernards has a history of go-it-alone thinking and this decision fits the pattern. Some of us expect that more good will come from participating in the Highlands RMP than not, and that a thorough review should be made. The committee’s decision on November 11 was made on the basis of some questionable assertions of by the township engineer, and without adequate consideration of long term outcomes. [See article in the Bernardsville News on November 20 ]

Julia Somers, Exec Dir of the NJ Highlands Coalition, a non-governmental organization that supports the RMP, will make a presentation at the regular meeting of the Bernards Democratic Municipal Committee on December 17. Please come and learn more about this important subject. Then let the Township Committee know what you want them to do.

Bill Allen, November 30, 2008

We would also like your help in publicizing this event. We believe this issue is of interest to all residents regardless of political persuasion, and we are opening the meeting to everyone. Please help us spread the word, and get a good cross-section of our citizens to attend.

Local Isolationism May Cost Bernards in the Long Run

November 29th, 2008

It seems from the latest edition of the Bernardsville News that our Township Committee has rejected the idea of joining other towns in implementing the Highlands Regional Master Plan. (See article here.)

In what has clearly become a pattern of “going it alone,” the TC turned down the offer to “opt in,” even though merely sending a nonbinding “letter of intent” would have given the town an additional year to come up with a viable COAH plan. It did however apply for a $15,000 grant to study the implications of joining.

This led to the following bizarre exchange, as reported in the newspaper:

Committeeman John Malay suggested sending a letter of intent as a way to buy the township time. Committeewoman Mary Pavlini agreed.

But Committeeman Scott Spitzer said he did not wish to send a letter if the committee had no intention of opting in.

“We shouldn’t act on a loophole but on what we think is right, instead of going along with this ruse,” Spitzer said.

Committeewoman Carolyn Kelly agreed. “I just don’t trust everybody,” she said. “Every time we discuss this, we hear different things. I don’t think anything that comes out from COAH or Highlands has any credibility.”

After Carpenter joined Spitzer and Kelly against sending a letter of intent, the committee briefly discussed the fate of the $15,000 grant from the state, which the township has yet to receive.

Carpenter said he wasn’t necessarily in favor of giving the money back. Spitzer joked that it could help fund the litigation against COAH.

This seems to me to make it pretty clear that none of the Committee members are really looking at this with an open mind, from the standpoint of long term benefit to Bernards Township, or even in some cases with any degree of integrity. Since the Committee has seemingly already made up its mind – based on some questionable arguments by Township Engineer Pete Messina – it seems disingenuous to continue to go after the grant.

So Malay and Pavlini were not above sending a clearly misleading letter in order to buy time to avoid dealing with COAH, and Carpenter is not above keeping the money even though he has no intention of honoring the intent of the grant. It may even be, given Spitzer’s wry comment, that one or two of the members are starting to wonder whether suing to avoid the town’s COAH obligations is really worth it.

If the COAH formula is truly flawed, as the town’s lawsuit alleges, then why not go back to the Council with a recommendation for a better one? The idea of trying to settle intergovernmental affairs – especially a dispute over rules designed to bring about a minimum of equity and housing assistance to the needy in each area – through the courts seems, on the face of it, a poor one, and likely to produce the worst possible outcome.

In an adversarial relationship, each side hardens its position and seeks to defeat the other by any possible. Only one side can win. The winning side then risks hubris, while the losing camp loses self-respect and translates this into an enduring resentment, which is readily returned. The TC feels COAH is trying to foist more low-end development on the town; the Council feels that wealthy towns like Bernards are simply irresponsible. And both are at least partly right.

But to reject both the town’s responsibility for more affordable housing (or try to find “technical” ways around it) and the opportunity to join in an environmentally-responsible regional master plan, is indicative of the knee-jerk, head-in-the-sand attitude of our local politicos. Because there is one-party rule, the level of debate never rises much above snide comments and backroom deals. Whether these help or harm the community may not be apparent for a while, but the lack of transparency and of accountability will always produce negative outcomes in the long term.

Jonathan Cloud, November 22, 2008

Postscript: We received a number of comments on this via email, which we’re posting into a single entry following this post. Julia Somers, Executive Director of the NJ Highlands Coalition, has agreed to speak at our meeting on December 17 (6:30 p.m. at the Public Library, 32 South Maple Ave., Basking Ridge) – all are welcome.

What seems clear is that the Township Committee has thus far reacted irrationally, based on faulty information, and we would like to see them reconsider their position.

Paying for Reform

November 28th, 2008

If we think about the challenges facing the new Obama Administration, at the top of the list has to be prioritizing the actions that are desperately needed, in so many different areas, and integrating them into a coherent strategy that will put the country back on track, that will get the economy going again, and will once again inspire both sacrifice and greatness.

 

Should the administration move first on health care, or on the environment, or on housing, or on the economy? Clearly the answer is that it has to do all of these. The question most often asked in the media, though, is how to pay for it.

 

In some ways this is a strange question, because it is the government that issues the means to pay for things in the first place. But we maintain the polite fiction that it is run like a household, and really ought to balance its budget (except when it shouldn’t). Underneath this is the fear that government will continue to issue money until it causes inflation, and we’ll all be pushing around wheelbarrows of worthless dollars.

 

Of course this is nonsense.

 

If the money that the government prints it uses to invest in infrastructure, in science, in health care, and in addressing the challenges of climate change, it strengthens rather than weakens society and the economy. Spending more money means creating new jobs, putting America back to work (and most importantly back to productive work that does not harm but rather restores the global ecosystem), unleashing creativity, and engaging passion. In this context, balancing the federal budget becomes again an interesting challenge, a long-term goal, based on growing the economy. This economic growth must however be based on the principles of sustainability; we need to make a shift from an extractive economy to a renewable, self-sustaining one. The issue is not whether or not to spend money; the issue is where to spend it, to get the most sustainable growth per dollar invested. And we need to think in terms of the long-term return on investment as well, to see this investment as being on behalf of all future generations as well as our own.

 

This also implies, to some degree, a new approach to economics. It is more than life-cycle costing, valuing environmental services, and incorporating such externalities as greenhouse gas emissions, though it includes all of these. It must be rethought based on the presupposition that the the goal of the economy is to accelerate fairly-distributed abundance, and not simply to increase the already highly concentrated wealth that exists today. And even the wealthy will gladly pay for a return to economic growth and prosperity.

 

The role of government, then, is help organize people productively and profitably to produce that which is in the society’s long-term best interest. By assisting and supporting the development of sustainable communities, businesses, and families, government fulfills a role that can be embraced by liberals and conservatives alike, that puts the economy at the service of its citizens and inspires them to create more wealth, by creating more value, more innovation, and more self-sufficiency.

 

(First posted at http://jonathancloud.com/?p=56, November 13, 2008.)

Welcome to Our New Site

November 27th, 2008

Our new site has all the information of the old one, plus a variety of Democratic voices in our blogs, event listings and calendar, an invitation to subscribe to our regular email communications – and the opportunity for you to participate.

 

The number of Democrats in Bernards Township doubled this year, as voters turned out in droves to vote in the February presidential primary. Turnout for the June 3 primary was of course much lower, but just as significant: we wrote in two candidates for Bernards Township Committee, Bill Allen and Bill Kimzey, and elected nearly 40 district representatives – who in turn helped put in place a new county organization to help us win in this year’s critical elections. Peg Schaffer and Zenon Christodoulou are the new chair and vice-chair respectively, and they are bringing together party representatives across all of Somerset County’s 21 towns.

 

  • For the latest updates on the local campaign, go to KimzeyAllen2008.org.
  • To view a calendar of local Democratic events, go here.
  • To see the latest news, and post your comments, go here
  • To join the Bernards Township Young Voters site, go here.

 

Stay tuned for more updates and links to more sites and tools. If you’d like to get involved, please email us at jcloud@bernardsdemocrats.org to be added to our mailing list.