Politics & Government
Veteran Housing Proposed For Lakeland Complex In Gloucester Twp.
The proposed complex would go towards satisfying Gloucester Township's affordable housing obligation.

GLOUCESTER TOWNSHIP, NJ — Gloucester Township officials began paving the way for senior affordable housing for veterans in the Lakeland Redevelopment Zone Monday night.
Township Council unanimously approved a proposed ordinance on introduction that would permit the township to sell a portion of the complex at 401 Turnersville Road to the Gloucester Township Housing Authority at its meeting Monday night.
The land would be designated as veteran senior housing and/or family affordable housing, and counted toward satisfying the township's obligation to build add 1,014 affordable housing units by 2025. The public hearing and final vote will take place at the Jan. 25 meeting.
Find out what's happening in Gloucester Townshipfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The proposal comes after council approved an affordable housing complex in the Lakeland Redevelopment Area over the summer. That project was a mix of commercial property and apartments on 8 acres of land. Read more here: Lakeland Affordable Housing Complex Approved In Gloucester Township
The township is required to add 1,014 affordable housing units by 2025 under its third round obligations, according to information previously provided by Business Administrator Tom Cardis. It has already met its prior round obligation of 359 units, and is in the process of rehabilitating 135 units by 2025, Cardis said.
Find out what's happening in Gloucester Townshipfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
To meet its third round obligation, the township is implementing zoning changes that will allow it to build affordable housing in the township, Cardis said.
The obligation is set forth by the Superior Court. Affordable housing was formerly overseen by the Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) after the state Supreme Court ruled it was unconstitutional for any town to zone in a way that made it impossible to build affordable housing in that town in 1975.
COAH set quotas for each town under the Fair Housing Act in the 1980s, and towns fulfilled their obligations over multiple rounds. However, COAH stopped acting on its oversight obligations in the late 1990s.
The number of required affordable housing units in municipalities statewide has been in dispute, and often in litigation, since 1999. In 2015, authority concerning setting affordable housing requirements for municipalities throughout the state fell on the courts. Municipalities often reach agreements for the number of affordable units they need to build before a decision is handed down by the courts.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.