Politics & Government

Cranford Twp. Committee Denies 750 Walnut Ave. Rezoning

The Township Committee voted 5-0 Tuesday to accept the Planning Board's recommendation to deny rezoning to the hotly contested property.

The Township Committee voted 5-0 Tuesday to accept the Planning Board's recommendation to deny rezoning to the hotly contested property.
The Township Committee voted 5-0 Tuesday to accept the Planning Board's recommendation to deny rezoning to the hotly contested property. (Photo courtesy of Google Earth)

CRANFORD, NJ - More than a year of testimony, outcry and applications came to an end in June when the Cranford Planning Board summarily rejected the Hartz company request rezone its property to multi-unit residential. On Tuesday, the Township Committee accepted that decision.

The Township Committee voted 5-0 to accept the Planning Board recommendation to not rezone the 750 Walnut Property.

The redevelopment has been referred to as the dragon at Cranford's gates, the monstrosity and a sign of the times, but whatever it is called, the Hartz Mountain Industries applied to build 905 apartment units on the property, which is currently a commercial zone.

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During presentations before the Planning Board Demographer Ross Haber and Cranford Public Schools' Superintendent Scott Rubin shared potential impact the development of 750 Walnut Ave.

Haber said that approximately 353 school-aged children would be brought into the Cranford Schools. Haber said 35 would be high school age, 71 would be in grades 6-8 and 247 would be K-5. Haber said that currently the schools are "fully-utilized" and therefore to accommodate the new students a new school would have to be built or the current ones expanded.

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According to Dawn Beresford, one of the founding members of Cranford Residents Against Overdevelopment (CRAO) her group had numerous concerns, specifically about the infrastructure of the town being overwhelmed by having so many new residents. Beresford said that the group began as a group of residents who live in the vicinity of 750 Walnut Ave. who were concerned about 905 apartments being built at that site.

For her part, Beresford had told Patch locally the CRAO goal was simple.

"Our main goal is to stop the Planning Board from rezoning 750 Walnut Ave," Beresford said.

Mission accomplished.

And now the vote of the governing body, official.

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