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gThe State Aid Game.

How does Harrison receive $6.6 million while North Arlington gets just $500,000?

 

Taxes rise 33% in NA while infusion of state support keeps Harrison increase at just 8%!

 

NORTH ARLINGTON -  North Arlington is 2.6 square miles. Harrison 1.3 square miles. North Arlington has 15,077 residents while Harrison has 14,424.  North Arlington has 6,392 households while Harrison has 5,136. 24.5% of all North Arlington households have children under the age of 18 while 33.7% of Harrison households have children under 18. 49.7% of North Arlington households are married couples while Harrison has 49.8% of households with married couples. Read More

 

7.2% of Harrison residents are Chinese. 5.6% of NA residents are Asian. 19.5% are over 65. Just 10.3% of Harrison residents are over 65. The median family income in NA is $62,483 while in Harrison it's just $48,489.

 

North Arlington borders Kearny as does Harrison. Both towns play in the same athletic league (BCSL) and are rivals in football, soccer and basketball.

 

Both communities are considering huge redevelopment proposals and while one community is from Hudson County and the other from Bergen, when it comes to state aid, they are world's apart.

 

Last summer, North Arlington's request for $1.5 million dollars in state aid was denied as excessive despite diminishing landfill fees and a legal stand-off with EnCap Holdings, the developer of record who is seeking to move forward with the construction of 1,625 units of new housing under the name Arlington Valley. While the deal has been voided by the Massa Administration, EnCap has enlisted Donald Trump to save the project and shows no change in direction as it intends to moving forward with eminent domain seizure along Porete Avenue that will eliminate some sixteen industrial & manufacturing outlets and 500 private sector jobs.

 

While both sides debate who broke the contract, many observers believe EnCap never had the financial ability to execute the agreement in place and the embattled developer has been seeking deadline extensions to sustain Phase One of the controversial proposal to remediate landfills to residential housing & retail space through North Arlington, Lyndhurst and Rutherford.

 

Having been denied state aid as well as the ability to refinance debt, North Arlington lowered the boom on taxpayers with a 33% tax increase that was caused primarily by the EnCap agreement and a failure of the borough's legislative representatives to deliver on the promise of state aid.  Because of that lack of state support, voters took out their frustration on Democratic incumbents Phil Spanola and Mark Yampaglia while State Senator Paul Sarlo won the community by a mere 60 votes despite outspending his Republican opponent 500,000-1.

 

Because state aid never materialized, Republicans seized on a 33% tax increase which catapulted Joe Bianchi & Richard Hughes to office and leaves local Democrats with a 4-2 majority after enjoying a 6-0 governing body the last three years. Despite being the only community to oppose EnCap and the deal on the table, that opposition many believe is the reason state officials have turned a blind eye to North Arlington's plea for help.

 

New Jersey, which has a $33.5 billion dollar budget apparently had room to assist Harrison, while communities like North Arlington and Rutherford were forced to increase taxes at record levels because local legislators could not, or did not deliver on the promise of serious state assistance.

 

While Harrison is under strict financial conditions to receive such an infusion in cash, the bottom-line for taxpayers was just a 8% increase in property taxes. This year's $6 million dollar aid program is $2 million more than what was received in 2006. North Arlington received $500,000 in 2007 and nothing in 2006.

 

Over a two-year period, Harrison has received $10 million dollars to North Arlington's $500,000!

 

And while Harrison moves forward with an ambitious redevelopment plan, North Arlington's taxes would have increased slightly had they received the $1.5 million they sought from Trenton.

 

While Harrison will be monitored for fiscal compliance for receiving such state assistance by the Local Finance Board, doesn't strict financial reporting and accountability bode well for taxpayers if it meant avoiding this year's tax hike in North Arlington?

 

Until North Arlington can successfully bridge it's finances in a post host fees environment to a real development plan, taxes will continue to spike no matter who's in charge of local government. Given that reality, when is North Arlington going to receive the kind of state assistance Harrison currently enjoys to fix these finances once and for all?

 





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