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BREAKING NEWS: Appellate court rules Belmar can't take Freedman's 
Bakery for redevelopment

Posted by the Asbury Park Press on 07/11/07

BY ERIK LARSEN 
COASTAL MONMOUTH BUREAU 

 
BELMAR — Freedman's Bakery is not "blighted'' and cannot be forced 
to participate in the borough's planned downtown redevelopment 
project, putting at risk a $500 million proposal to virtually remake 
the downtown, a state appellate court has ruled.

"Freedman's Bakery is not a blighted area even if its design is not 
optimal for its 
commercial purposes,'' the court ruled in a 10-page unanimous 
decision issued by Judges Ariel Rodriguez, Donald G. Collester Jr. 
and Thomas N. Lyons.

The decision was distributed to attorneys Tuesday and made public 
today. Freedman's had argued that the borough, "performed no 
analysis that the internal operation of Freedman's Bakery was a 
detriment to the public health safety and welfare.'' The court 
agreed, saying the borough had made insufficient showing that the 
criteria had been met.

The borough has pinned its future economic hopes on the downtown 
redevelopment plan, where an increasing number of vacant storefronts 
have become an all-too-familiar sight along Main Street. Freedman's 
is located at the corner of Eighth Avenue and Main Street.

Paul Fernicola, an attorney for Bowe and Fernicola in Red Bank, 
represented Freedman's in the case and said the Belmar Planning 
Board had made up its own definition of blighted in order to execute 
its redevelopment agreement with Gale Co. of Florham Park, the 
borough's master developer.

"What was the public detriment? When you really focus on what they 
said, their argument was that the internal production facilities 
weren't up to modern design standards,'' Fernicola said. "Modern 
design standards? Because the plant isn't producing 150 doughnuts 
per second? Seriously, the Borough of Belmar is going to tell the 
Freedman family how to do conduct their business?''

Mayor Kenneth E. Pringle said he is not surprised about the 
Appellate Court decision in light of the recent Paulsboro decision, 
but said he would not comment in detail until he had a chance to 
read the decision.

Indeed, the Paulsboro was cited in the court's decision Wednesday. 
Last month, the state Supreme Court unanimously ruled that property 
not being "fully productive'' does not alone satisfy the criteria to 
condemn it as "blighted'' and take it under eminent domain power 
delineated in the state's 1992 redevelopment law.

The court ruled against Paulsboro, which had deemed 63 acres 
alongside a creek was not used to full economic potential and 
condemned the land so a builder could buy it to use one small corner 
as part of Paulsboro's larger redevelopment plan. New Jersey's 
constitution "does not permit government redevelopment of private 
property solely because the property is not used in an optimal 
manner,'' the state's high court ruled.

State Public Advocate Ronald K. Chen noted in a friend of the 
Paulsboro court brief that Drumthwacket, the governor's mansion, 
qualifies for redevelopment under the broad interpretation of not 
fully productive that Paulsboro - and Long Branch - have been using. 
The justices agreed, saying that "blight,'' according to the 
constitution, is "deterioration or stagnation that negatively 
affects surrounding areas.''

Pringle said the borough's attorney believed the borough could set a 
standard that would meet the legal threshold to meet the blighted 
criteria, but he acknowledged that the Paulsboro case had made the 
borough's argument more difficult.

When asked if this decision would adversely impact the borough's 
overall redevelopment plans, Pringle answered: "I don't think so.''

Belmar downtown redevelopment project, known as the Belmar seaport 
village plan, is an ambitious proposal, which involves razing and 
rebuilding much of Belmar's downtown from 10th Avenue along Main 
Street and the Shark River.

Fernicola said his client is not opposed to Belmar's redevelopment 
plans and wants to be a willing partner, but that in negotiations 
with the Gale Co., the master developer always behaved as if they 
had the upper hand.

Fernicola said there is no doubt in his mind that Belmar would have 
used eminent domain to take his client's property if the courts had 
permitted the borough's definition of blight to stand.

"We were coming to the table with Gale, but when they sat down with 
us, they presented appraisal reports with this attitude, "we have 
the redevelopment designation, we have the redevelopment agreement 
with the borough,'‚'' Fernicola said.

"They just don't have the ability to condemn property .‚.‚. Now, the 
playing field is 
level,'' Fernicola said.

 




 
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