Business, government and ‘green’ leaders on board with Keasbey redevelopment

by Sergio Bichao on Mar 10th | Email

Aerial map of the Keasbey redevelopment zone. The five parcels outlined in yellow are part of the planned brownfield remediation. Photo submitted by Woodbridge Township.

It was an unlikely group holding a press conference Wednesday morning announcing the latest step in the proposed redevelopment of hundreds of acres of contaminated land in the Keasbey section of Woodbridge.

Township leaders, state officials, business owners and environmentalists all agree that the clean-up of the 655 acres of polluted land must balance job and tax base growth on the one hand while providing public open space and preserving natural habitats on the other.

The site, between Industrial Avenue and the Raritan River, was designated a Brownfield Development Area, or BDA, last year. The properties -- including former industrial sites, a landfill and 31 acres owned by the township -- are eligible for up to $5 million in grants every year covering all the investigation costs and 75 percent of cleanup costs, although private companies may have to shoulder more of their own remediation costs.

On Wednesday, Mayor John E. McCormac, Woodbridge BDA Steering Committee Chairwoman Caroline Ehrlich and a representative from the state Department of Environmental Protection signed a memorandum of understanding to begin the investigation and cleanup of five properties totaling 251 acres. More parcels of land are expected to be added soon, officials said.

The agreement provides Woodbridge with a DEP-assigned case manager whose goal is to fast-track the onerous process. The steering committee of local officials and property owners is also required by the agreement.

The township wants to establish a green technology business park for companies that can recycle each other's waste products. Officials also want to make the waterfront an eco-tourist destination that will attract birdwatchers and boaters.

DEP case manager Anthony Findley, Mayor McCormac and steering commitee chair Caroline Ehrlich sign the brownfield redevelopment agreement Wednesday at Township Hall.

“There's always been this false debate between jobs and the environment and it is a false debate because you can have both,” Bob Spiegel, executive director of the Edison Wetlands Association and a steering committee member, said. “We are very, very excited by this project because it will show the rest of the remaining areas on the Raritan what can be done when you have a good balance.”

Case manager Anthony Findley said it's too soon to say how long the remediation will take or how much it will cost until the extent of the land pollution is determined.

The area was once considered ideal for hotels and conference centers, but McCormac says industrial use was better, pointing to the FedEx and Wakefern Food Corporation warehouses that were already there.

The redevelopment zone has been home to Bayshore Recycling, one of the largest recycling centers for heavy highway construction materials and contaminated soils, since 2001.

“Before global warming was a household word, this was not a very popular notion and the mayor was very supportive in listening to me,” said Bayshore president Valerie Montevalco, also a committee member.

The Keasbey area is one of two projects the township has dubbed the Woodbridge Innovation Zone. The other zone is the Pennval Road Green Technology Park in Sewaren, which the township wants to use to attract start-up businesses in the environmental industries.

“We hope by doing this we'll be able to get more grant money and more people to come in and see whats going on here in Woodbridge,” said Ehrlich, who heads the township's redevelopment efforts.

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