"DELINQUENT & PAST DUE"
EnCap Holdings owes $265,917.86 in back
taxes on 6 parcels of property while Cherokee North Arlington owes
$1,868.63 on various Saw Mill lots!
NORTH
ARLINGTON - According to a Tax Collector's notice in this week's Leader Newspapers, a sale of real property will be
conducted by North Arlington on March 26th at 12 noon.
The said
properties in question include parcels owned by Cherokee North Arlington LLC and EnCap Golf Holdings LLC, the developer currently in
litigation with the municipality over the embattled Arlington Valley project
which is opposed by just about every citizen in the borough.
According
to the notice (click
here to review), EnCap owes North Arlington nearly $270K
in property taxes for 2007 while Cherokee North Arlington owes nearly $1,900.
According
to the notice Morton
Street Holdings,
another potential development on the Belleville Pike is also delinquent to the
sum of $17,384.90.
EnCap
Golf Holdings has
six different parcels on the notice while Cherokee North Arlington has five for a total of eleven delinquent locations all
within the redevelopment zone under litigation. According to sources, the
deposition process has begun and several EnCap executives will be deposed by Borough Attorney Anthony D'Elia.
The same sources claim that Mayor Pete Massa and Council President Steve
Tanelli were deposed last week by the DeCotiis law firm that represents the
litigant, EnCap
Holdings.
In a Record exclusive this week, Donald Trump
announced plans to pitch and even larger housing development that
includes 2 million square feet of retail space without an affordable housing
component to state officials.
In the
same article, Trump proclaimed that "if this new plan isn't approved,
then we're going to build what is approved." That statement flies in
the face of the so-called goodwill the project was going to take on in the wake
of mass opposition by the people of Rutherford and North Arlington to the project.
Trump
described the current agreement with North Arlington as "ironclad"
without referencing or mentioning the litigation in process. While state
officials have tried to temper the emotions that this project has created,
Rutherford and North Arlington remain steadfast in opposition despite
mounting political pressures outside of local government.
After
Trump's proclamation of a new deal or construction of the old deal, State
Senator Paul Sarlo called the potential new plan "outrageous" and
sought to bring the stakeholders together for further consultation and input.
"Putting a gun to local government and
saying it's my way or the highway does nothing to move the project forward.
The problem is that nothing seems to change in terms of presentation and
politics. It's a developer basically demanding and pronouncing the terms while the communities remain cautious
and hostile to the plans because they've had no input," said one North
Arlington resident after reading The Record story.
"This
stinks. Who wants more housing? When does
North Arlington get a chance to have any say in these plans? When do the people
most effected by this project get a chance to speak? It's a replication of the arrogance of EnCap to simply dictate and the
municipalities follow. Those days are long gone," said another frustrated
homeowner.
"Mayor
Massa can't back down from EnCap,
Donald Trump or anyone else. These people seem to have no interest in what we
want or think. These are small towns. These are suburban communities that want to remain suburban. When are these
developers going to understand we don't want thousands of units of
housing?" questioned Councilman Al Granell, long a proponent of
overdevelopment and himself a target of eminent domain seizure.