Residents and CLEAN oppose 'stealth quarry bill'
December 12, 2002
Region: A group of local residents and CLEAN staff traveled to Trenton in
December to fight a newe "stealth" quarry bill. The bill, A2699, and its Senate
counterpart S2106 would allow non-conforming uses (businesses in place before
local zoning laws restricted them from the area) to expand their use, intensity
and output as long as they did not expand their buildings. For nearly 200
quarries in the state of New Jersey, this would mean the opportunity to operate
on a 24-hour basis without allowing local municipalities to regulate their
activity.
This bill is especiallly troubling in light of the fact that sponsors hid
its intent by cloaking it in the non-conforming use priniciples of municipal
land use law, a back-door approach to quarry expansion. Previous quarry bills
typically included language that identified the bill as benefiting quarry
or mining interests.
During a hearing before a Senate committee, testimony by Ringwood resident
and long-time quarry activist Ann Benedetto prompted one of the bill's sponsors,
Senator Robert Singer, to state that he would exempt quarries from the bill.
Ms. Benedetto wisely demanded that the offer be put in writing. But moments
later in a dramatic reversal, Singer returned to the hearing room to state
this his co-sponsor would now allow quarries to be removed, confirming everyone's
suspicion that the bill was designed with quarries in mind. Shortly thereafter,
the committee released the bill without recommendation, allowing the full
senate an opportunity to vote on it in a future session, but without mandating
senate members vote for the measure.
The group, joined by Ringwood Borough officials Allan Van Eck, Richard Clemack
and Walt Davison, stayed to urge Assembly members to oppose the bill which
was scheduled for a vote later that day. Asm. Paul Sarlo, the Assembly sponsor
with ties to the quarry industry, was unable to garner the votes needed for
approval and pulled the bill from the floor at the last minute. The bill will
likely reappear in coming months, and CLEAN will be there to fight it.