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FRANKLIN TWP ENVIROMENTAL COMMISSION REQUEST PRESERVATION

By Barbara Halpern – Franklin Township/Glouc. County Enviro Commission Chairwoman

Published Week of Jan. 17-23, 2019 Sentinel of Gloucester County Print Edition

In November 2018, the Franklin Township Environmental Commission came before the township committee to ask the township to preserve a list of township owned properties for recreation and open space, by adding them to the ROSI (The recreation and open space inventory).  By adding properties to the ROSI they will be deed restricted as a group.  This method of preservation avoids the costly problem of deed restricting individual properties.   This method of preservation can only be done while we have an open application with the state Green Acres Grant program.  It is an opportunity that may not come again in our lifetime.

The list of properties we are asking the township to preserve seems like a large number but in reality most of the properties are very small.  We asked the township committee to work with us to review the list property by property to discuss any concerns regarding addition of any specific properties being recommended for preservation.  If the township committee is not able to do so we ask that they defer to the Environmental Commission expertise and accept our recommendation.

Our township Environmental Commission members who vetted these properties for preservation have decades of professional experience in planning, land preservation, site plan review and environmental health.  We have lived here in Franklin Township for more than 3 decades and are qualified to assess the open space preservation needs of our community.

The properties that were chosen for preservation fall under one or more of the following criteria

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Greenway is the area adjacent to a waterway.  Greenways protect stream and lake water quality by buffering it from encroaching development and storm water runoff.  They provide corridors for wildlife, which allow for movement of wildlife across a fragmented landscape.  They also have the potential to accommodate multi-use trails that can connect parks, wildlife management areas, school grounds, and municipal sites.

 

 

Those parcels that fall within a particular Greenway are listed by block and lot in the OSRP. Because the Township already has ownership of these parcels, we do not need to purchase them.  Instead, our open space funds can be utilized to acquire other important parts of the Greenways.  Thus, parcels within the Malaga Lake, Scotland Run, Iona Lake, Still Run, Little Ease, and Marsh Lake Branch Greenways are recommended for retention and as part of the ROSI.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1. Reducing flooding from storm water runoff. Keeping our lakes and streams clean.  Storm water pollution is the number one source of water pollution.
  2. Maintaining/improving air quality
  3. Keeping air temperatures lower during the summer heat/ providing energy savings
  4. Maintaining healthy wildlife habitat
  5. Providing mental and physical health benefits to residents
  6. Increasing property values
  7. Protecting drinking water quality and quantity

 

Land preservation keeps taxes low.  Businesses will not lower or keep taxes as low.  Preserved land requires no services, no increase in schools, no mandated affordable housing burden, and in most cases little or no cost to the Township. Preservation of properties avoids expensive problems that will cost taxpayers to fix.  Nature can do much to protect our air, water and health if we save enough of it.  No one wants a future of expensive and less than effective water filters that cannot remove all contaminants from our drinking water, or a future of having to build expensive infrastructure on the taxpayers’ dime.

 

Placing these properties on the ROSI costs the Township nothing because they are already owned by the Township. It ensures that a small amount of the Township is permanently saved from the economic, health and environmental effects of deforestation and development.

 

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