>From today's NYT. Newark finally gets its, how come AP doesn't?

June 1, 2006
Booker Praises Freeze on No-Bid Sales of Newark Property 
By TINA KELLEY
NEWARK, May 31 — A state judge has temporarily frozen the sales of 
city-owned properties that had not been offered for public bidding, 
a decision that Mayor-elect Cory Booker called "a tremendous victory 
for all of Newark."

Mr. Booker, who sought the restraining order, said on Wednesday that 
it affected "dozens if not hundreds" of properties. 

The administration of Mayor Sharpe James has been selling land for 
$4 per square foot or less to private developers who planned to 
build one- to three-family houses, then sell them on the open 
market. Mr. Booker, who is to take office on July 1, called the 
plan "nonsensical" and "a last-minute fire sale." 

"The city has been shortchanging its citizens of millions if not 
tens of millions of dollars," Mr. Booker said, adding that such 
money could have been spent on police officers, schools and 
improvements to the city's infrastructure.

Mark Alexander, a lawyer for Mr. Booker, said that the lawsuit named 
WLB Realty and that a principal owner of the firm, the Rev. Levin B. 
West, had contributed more than $4,000 to Mayor James and other city 
officials since May 2005. Mr. Alexander said Mr. West is prohibited 
from obtaining a no-bid real estate contract under pay-to-play laws 
that require political contributors to participate in open bidding 
processes.

The temporary restraining order, issued by Judge Patricia K. 
Costello of Superior Court in Essex County, remains in effect until 
June 15, when the judge will hear further arguments in the lawsuit. 
It was filed on Tuesday by Mr. Booker and several citizens and names 
Mayor James, the City Council, officials responsible for development 
and more than a dozen developers as defendants. Efforts to reach Mr. 
West on Wednesday were unsuccessful.

Land in Newark is being offered for between 4 and 40 times the 
city's price, said Vito A. Gagliardi Jr., one of a team of lawyers 
and real estate experts Mr. Booker said were working on the suit 
without pay. One of the defendants in the lawsuit was in the process 
of buying 14 properties, Mr. Gagliardi said, adding that the pace of 
the sales increased after Mr. Booker was elected May 9 in a race 
against a former deputy mayor, Ronald L. Rice.

Mayor James interpreted the ruling as an affront to home rule. "We 
will immediately appeal this pinnacle of judicial and political 
ongoing interference with Newark's and any municipality's right to 
govern itself during a century-old process of transition," Mr. James 
said in a statement.

The city's lawyer, Joanne Watson, said in a statement: "The City of 
Newark is of the firm position that it has conducted itself within 
the confines of state law when it authorized the sale of city-owned 
properties to private developers. The governing body is clearly 
vested with the authority to adopt legislation which transfers city 
property to developers."

Mr. Booker called the property sales "an affront to our moral 
standards," adding, "I say this is a moral crime and a missed 
opportunity." 

"This is the beginning of a fight to change the practices and 
policies of this city," Mr. Booker said, adding later, "If people 
are going to say I'm pugilistic, so be it."

The mayor-elect spoke at one of the properties in question, a weedy, 
glass-strewn lot near the intersection of McCarter Highway and Route 
78. Under the city's plan, that lot of about 4,800 square feet, 
could be sold for about $19,200.

Deborah Boone-Coy, a lifelong resident of the city and a plaintiff 
in the suit, criticized what she called the low prices the city 
offered to private developers.

"If that were available to others," she said, "you would have 
streams of people that want to have access to that opportunity."









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