HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP: Redevelopment of Scotch Road a poor proposition for officials

Date:

Share post:

To the editor:
Thursday, June 22, 2017, is a date that will live in infamy in Hopewell Township. For on that day, at its regular 7 p.m. meeting, the Hopewell Township Planning Board will vote to recommend to the township committee that both east side and west side of Scotch Road are areas in need of redevelopment. And the demise of the Scotch Road area will result forever.
Step by step, Scotch Road gets closer to massive development. Less than six months ago, the planning board voted to recommend that the township committee re-zone the east side under the guise of protecting the west side. At the most recent planning board meeting on May 25, the public was told, for the first time, that because the planning board recommended to re-zone the east side, the cornfield that is the west side became eligible to be denoted an area in need of re-development. But for the planning board’s ill-conceived action, the west side would not be in the crosshairs.
And those township power-brokers that could stop the relentless march to massive development are, in reality, the very ones who are promoting the overdevelopment of Scotch Road.
Why else would the township committee have asked the planning board for expedited consideration?
Remember the Planning Board’s 2014 failed attempt to create a “destination” on both east and west Scotch Road called Jacob’s Creek Village? This year’s version should be called Jacob’s Creek City. It will be a destination, alright, a destination to public betrayal.
Harvey Lester
Titusville

Stay Connected

1,226FansLike
1,976FollowersFollow

Current Issue

Latest News

Related articles

Hit the ‘trail’ and learn about New Jersey’s Black history

by Jay Watson, Co-Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation James Still always wanted to become a doctor, but as...

Saving money, helping the climate, aiding justice

by Alison Mitchell, Co-Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation Interested in saving money on home energy bills? How about...

Migrating birds from the tropics returning to New Jersey

by Jay Watson, Co-Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single...

‘We need both natural lands and playgrounds, sports fields’

In calling for the "preservation" of "half" of New Jersey's land (https://centraljersey.com/2024/05/06/an-urgent-call-to-preserve-half-of-new-jerseys-land/), Jay Watson and the New Jersey Conservation...