The following is an Asbury Park Press report:
If projections are correct, the township will have a population of at least 90,000 people by 2010 – 30,000 more people than 10 years ago.
The population growth is fueled by relocations to the township and an explosive birth rate, said Stanley C. Slachetka, a town planner with Middletown-based T&M Associates. “By all empirical measures, you’ve had significant growth,” he said.
For every 1,000 people there were more than 44 births in 2005, which is the latest state data available. The birth rate is about four times the state average, and it is the highest birthrate in the Garden State. The births added more than 2,000 people to the town in 2005. More than 86,770 of Ocean County’s estimated 565,493 people live here.
To meet the demand of a ballooning population, township officials are considering a plan that would spell out how the town will grow over the coming decades. It focuses on making redevelopment easier for private property owners and mixed-use developments, which allow for several types of property uses – residential, retail and office space, for example – to be placed on a single piece of property.
Slachetka presented that Smart Growth plan Tuesday night before the Planning Board during the first of two “community visioning” public hearings. A second hearing is scheduled for 5 p.m. today before the Township Committee.
Support and opposition are divided along a tight demographic line. Representatives from the Orthodox Jewish community were overwhelmingly in favor of the plan, and representatives from the adult communities were typically opposed.
Lakewood’s sprawling development has been “random and disjointed,” said Rabbi Moshe Weinberg, chairman of the Lakewood Development Corp.
Weinberg said the plan would provide the “unified vision” the town has lacked. The development corporation supports the adoption of the plan, he said.
Targeted areas include a tract of land on Cedarbridge Avenue near the Lakewood Blueclaws baseball park, the downtown, land on either side of Oak Street and land west of Massachusetts Avenue. Schools and transportation hubs would link the neighborhood cores and the township’s center.
“We came here to get away from the noise, bus depots and multifamily housing,” said David Ransom, a resident in one of the township’s adult communities.
The adult community residents and other senior citizens wanted the plan to address growing traffic problems, and to slow the growth of the town. On the other side of the argument is Yanky Braunstein, the owner of ClearPoint Services LLC land surveyors, who sees the plan as a means to expand businesses.
(Source: APP)
8 Responses
BARUCH HASHEM !KEIN YIRBU!!!!
From those of us in Lakewood who know our spelling: Challenged not Challanged
Baruch Hashem to the birth rate. But Lakewood is more than challenged by the growing population; it is dangerous as the town was not structurally designed to handle the influx that developers profit from. Build out. Spread out to Brick on the eastern side, Jackson to the west, Toms River to the south, and Howell to the north. What ever happened to Twin Rivers? There is plenty of open land out there. And, please, this comment/criticism in no way is an editorial comment of the beauty and uniqueness of Lakewood as a Mokom Torah. One can have an opinion about the problems from overcrowding and still genuinely love Lakewood for all it offers us.
#2 – is there a ma’aleh to knowing your spelling?
#4 – Is there a ma’aleh to ignorance?
BTW, if anything, the numbers, including birth rate and total population are substantially under reported because of all the people who don’t officially live in Lakewood, both Spanish and Yiddish 😉
#5 – ignorance takes no effort. In the pursuit of things with no ma’alah, shouldn’t we take the path of least resistance? 😉
#2, your post is on the money. Usually, I repeat, usually, those who lacked a general education and carried on during those classes make excuses for ignorance in that area of study.
#4 its a ma’aleh not to embarrass some one