From the campaign of Pat Quattrocchi
Candidate for Union County Freeholder
September 1, 2005
Eminent Domain: A Threat To Private Industry
As a child growing up in Union
County, it seemed as though the Garden
State Parkway had always been
there cutting a broad stripe through
Clark, Cranford and Kenilworth as it
wound it’s way south past the sand pits
in Perth Amboy and north to my Aunt
Virginia’s house in North Arlington.
I vaguely recall sitting in the back seat of the family’s Nash listening to
the grown-up conversation up front, which would usually turn to the graves
that were moved near Bloomfield to make way for the “super highway.”
Shivers would run down my spine at the eerie thought of driving over what
was once a cemetery and now is the parkway. Though the Nash is gone
and Aunt Virginia moved to Florida years ago, the thought of the government
taking land for what is termed the public good still gives me shivers.
Since the recent Supreme Court decision some weeks back, Eminent
Domain has frequently made headlines with stories about mobile home
parks considered a blight on the landscape, Mom and Pop stores in the way,
retirees transplanted from the old homestead and small manufacturing
companies and their employees being faced with closure and job loss.
However, there is a new twist to the old story. Simply put, the court has
ruled that private property can be forcefully acquired by a government
entity and turned over to a private developer for just about anything if it
is in the best interest of the community’s economic development
— all at fair market value of course.
Most of us can understand making room for a highway exit ramp or new
firehouse; but the thought of our community giving a piece of our backyard
tomato garden to a new Home Depot or Target Store just doesn’t sit
too well — nor should it.
I doubt that the average county homeowner need be concerned, but
as a candidate for county office, I probably should be paying attention
to an Eminent Domain situation, which is bubbling up in the City of
Linden. The municipality has been attempting to pass to a private developer
several hundred acres in the Tremley Point section of the city.
Part of the private property is owned by the firm ISP and the other part is
owned by DuPont. Neither company is willing to give up what they own. It
comes as no surprise that the developer’s legal representation is
being provided by state Senator Ray Lesniak, whose district just so happens
to border the properties that the city has been trying to take over.
Now, the latest development is that the Union County Improvement Authority
has entered the fray and took over this eminent domain project from
the City of Linden last month. The Improvement Authority is an arm of
our county government with the Executive Director, Charlotte DeFilippo,
on the county payroll. It stands to reason that this would make the county
the responsible party at some level. It should also be pointed out that
Lesniak’s firm, Weiner Lesniak of Parsippany, has in the past represented
other developers who also wanted to build on this very same property.
Interesting to say the least when one considers that Senator Lesniak is
a powerful Democratic State Senator and Ms. DeFilippo is the chair of the
Union County Democratic Party.
Eminent Domain is a most unpleasant way to promote the economic development of any municipality or county — but relax folks, the family home is safe as it appears that certain high profile individuals in Union County may have much larger fish to fry; now this gives me the shivers.
To learn about the Republican Candidates for Freeholder, Patricia Quattrocchi, Stu Kline and Al Dill visit our website unioncountygop.org or call the Republican Committee of Union County at (908) 789-0200.