For Immediate Release: July 11, 2006
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
CORZINE RETREATS FROM WAR ON SPRAWL — Series of Actions Signal Builders’ Lobby Trumps Clean Water Rules
Trenton — In the six months since assuming office, the administration of New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine has quietly taken a series of policy steps that signal a change of direction from promised efforts to restore clean water and combat urban sprawl, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). These actions appear to belie key campaign pledges made by then-Senator Corzine during his 2005 campaign for governor.
During that campaign Corzine called for repealing the so-called “Fast Track” law that speeds issuance of development permits and for strengthening water quality protections. Instead of the following through on those promises, the Governor filled the “Czar” position created by Fast Track and –
“Even DEP concedes that sprawl is the number one environmental threat facing the state but one would not know this from its actions,” commented New Jersey PEER Director Bill Wolfe, pointing to the recent DEP Report, “Environmental Trends 2005,” which found that:
“Of all stressors to the environment, conversion of undeveloped land may pose the highest ecological risk to New Jersey’s environment and people…physical alteration of habitat, a consequence of land use change, is one of the most compelling ecological problems…”
In addition to its policy U-turns, the Corzine administration has put a number of environmental actions on hold:
“Now that the budget battle is over and the Delaware River’s floodwaters have again receded from Trenton, it is unclear whether the Corzine administration will ever step up to the plate and re-engage the War on Sprawl,” Wolfe concluded.
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Read the DEP “Environmental Trends 2005” Report
Listen to DEP Commissioner’s Testimony in Support of Fast Track:
Assembly Tuesday 4/25/06 – @ time: 1:06:30, Senate – Monday 5/1/06 – @ time: 19:20
See DEP’s refusal to designate portions of the Raritan River Tributary as “C1”
View Gov. Corzine’s extension order on sewer/septic rules
Look at continuing delays on: Flood Hazard Rules, Septic and Sewage protections, Stream Protections
Revisit the appointment of builders’ lobbyist as top environmental regulator
New Jersey PEER is a state chapter of a national alliance of state and federal agency resource professionals working to ensure environmental ethics and government accountability.