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Englishtown residents asked for input on town's future
National design team to hold public meetings between
Oct. 22-24 BY MARK ROSMAN Staff Writer
ENGLISHTOWN -- Residents are being asked to come out and give their thoughts
about the future of the municipality to a Sustainable Design Assessment Team
(SDAT) that will visit the borough between Oct. 22-24.
According to information provided by Donna Drewes, community planner,
Municipal Land Use Center at The College of New Jersey, Englishtown was selected
by the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Center for Communities by Design
as one of seven communities nationwide to receive a technical assistance grant
under the SDAT program in 2007.
Borough Councilwomen Jayne Carr and Lori Cooke in partnership with the
Municipal Land Use Center at The College of New Jersey submitted the successful
application. Upon receiving the grant, Englishtown formed the SDAT Steering
Committee to coordinate the event.
The AIA Sustainable Design Assessment Team community assistance program will
be conducting its official visit to Englishtown on Oct. 22-24.
Officials are asking all residents, businesses, agencies, schools and
regional organizations to participate in the three-day community planning and
visioning event.
They will be asked their thoughts on:
What should the future hold for Englishtown?
What is needed to create a community that has a vibrant
local economy; values and uses its natural and historic assets wisely; and meets
the needs of residents and businesses now and in the future?
Can they be part of the solution? The program will
begin with a community wide town hall public input meeting on Oct. 22 from
7-8:30 p.m. at Borough Hall, 15 Main St.
At this meeting participants will be able to share their ideas on where the
community should or could be heading.
The week's events will finish up with the SDAT final presentation of its
findings and recommendations on Oct. 24 from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at Borough Hall.
Members of the public are invited to come and listen to that presentation at
which the future of the town will be the primary topic.
Residents and business owners may also attend any of the three daytime public
input sessions to share their ideas with the Sustainable Design Assessment Team
members. These are open sessions and participants may drop in when their
schedule permits. All meetings are scheduled at the Village Inn on the corner of
Main and Water streets: Oct. 22, 2:15- 4:30 p.m. at the Village Inn; Oct. 23, 11
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 1:30-4:30 p.m. at the Village Inn.
Topics that are open for discussion include:
Main Street and downtown Englishtown: downtown
revitalization and community design.
Transportation and land use: traffic, parking,
pedestrian safety, design and streetscapes.
Linking the town's resources: recreational assets,
historic heritage, arts, parks and lakes.
Economic development: creating a vibrant business
community, identifying the market niche for Englishtown.
Drewes said the object of the program is to have community involvement and
give residents and business owners a chance to share their ideas with experts
from throughout the United States.
"People will bring their ideas to the experts and we will springboard off of
the ideas that are presented by businesses, residents and representatives of
area organizations. The team will create a new vision for Englishtown that
incorporates the themes of sustainability, providing jobs, providing housing and
protecting the environment," Drewes said.
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