Skip to content

A town square for an unsquare town

redbankgreen

Standing for the vitality of Red Bank, its community, and the fun we have together.

LAWSUIT TO COST BOROUGH $125,000

51-monmouthThe former police station, with the Relief Engine Company firehouse attached at right, is on both state and national registers of historic places. (Click to enlarge)

Public comment on a proposed settlement of a long-simmering dispute over the former Red Bank police station was temporarily halted Wednesday night after a resident questioned whether the issue had been properly advertised.

But not before borough officials outlined the terms of the deal with the Community YMCA that will cost borough taxpayers $125,000 over five years — and not before residents began castigating it as a no-win deal for the town.

“We are not getting anything in return,” Hudson Avenue resident Steve Fitzpatrick told the mayor and council. “We’ve given money away and we’re going to give more money away. We have nothing to show for it at all.”

“It just seems weird that we’re going to be paying money to get rid of this,” said Ben Forest, of Locust Avenue. “I mean, how did this happen?”

Borough officials, however, countered that rather than getting nothing from the deal, the town was getting a 99-year lease on the attached Relief Engine Company firehouse, related parking spaces and Veterans’ Memorial. The $125,000, they said, is to reimburse the Y for renovations made to the firehouse nearly a decade ago, soon after a predecessor nonprofit, Kidsbridge, acquired the entire property from the borough for $1.

In court papers, the Y had maintained that the borough’s contractually agreed-to share of the renovation costs was nearly $600,000, said John Bonello, a Long Branch lawyer hired by the town to handle the case.

“There was a chance we could have lost” at trial, he said. “This compromise took that into consideration.”

Under the terms of the settlement, the Y may sell the property to its neighbor, St. James RC Church/Red Bank Catholic High School, but with a title restriction that prohibits it from ever being sold to a for-profit or commercial enterprise. The exterior of the historic structure also can’t be altered “without prior approval of the Borough of Red Bank,” according to a proposed resolution that would have memorialized the deal but was tabled.

The settlement, if approved, would put to rest one of two issues over which the Y and the borough have locked horns in recent months: whether the agency can legally sell the 118-year-old Italianate building. At the heart of the matter was a question of whether the provisions of a so-called “reverter clause” that was dropped during sale negotiations in 1999 were still in effect, giving Red Bank the power right to block a sale by the Y, which put the building on the market for $2.55 million in February 2008. Bonello contended the missing clause was superceded by state statute, which he said protected the borough’s right to reclaim the building should the Y try to sell it to a for-profit entity.

The other suit, filed by the Y after a zoning and other officials shot down a planned expansion of the institution’s Maple Avenue health facility earlier this year, moved toward resolution last week, when a scaled-back version of the expansion won zoning board approval.

The 51 Monmouth settlement appeared headed toward a vote until Fitzpatrick, raising a host of objections, argued that last night’s meeting was taking place just five days after a public notice of the session ran in the Asbury Park Press. State statute requires two week’s advance notice, he said.

After a 35-minute closed-door discussion among council members, Mayor Pasquale Menna announced that the governing body, while disagreeing with Fitzpatrick’s reading of the law, would err on the side of caution and table the matter until two-week notice could be given. The settlement will probably come up at the council’s first regular meeting in January, said Administrator Stanley Sickles.

Fitzpatrick, though, had already launched a critique of the pact, even though its terms are publicly available only in outline in the form of a resolution. He argued that the borough was “relinquishing” an asset without compensation.

“We already relinquished it 10 years ago,” Bonello replied, adding that, had the borough tried to take back the building, courts would have surely required the town to pay the Y some or all of the more than $2.7 million it had invested into the decaying structure.

“All we’re paying for is what went into the firehouse,” Sickles added. “We’re protecting a public purpose for 99 years. So where’s the problem?”

Lisa Christian, the Y’s new executive director, declined to say how much the Y expected to get for the property. Because of the pending litigation with the borough, “we haven’t signed everything yet,” she told redbankgreen, though the Y is expecting to partner with St. James “so we can keep the community going in and out of that building.”

After the meeting, borough officials declined to make copies of the proposed settlement available to reporters. They said the document would be available at borough hall after the ad for the next meeting  on the settlement runs. Here’s the resolution: 10-257draftresolution

Remember: Nothing makes a Red Bank friend happier than to hear "I saw you on Red Bank Green!"
Partyline
SMALLS FOR MAYOR?
We at redbankgreen remain neutral in political affairs and never make endorsements. But we have to say Borough Clerk Laura Reinertsen’ ...
CRASH ON LEIGHTON
The driver of this car was headed north on Leighton Avenue when they it hit an SUV pulling a work trailer headed in south in the opposing la ...
CAR VS STREET SIGN
The driver of this Mercedes hopped the curb and toppled the street sign at the corner of South Pearl and Drs. James Parker Boulevard Wednesd ...
SKETCHES OF RED BANK BY LOCAL ARTIST MICHAEL WHITE
Sketches of Red Bank scenes have been floating around on social media and we thought they deserved some spotlight. First appearing in our fe ...
POLE DOWN
Utility pole falls on English Plaza shop Forge after being struck by SUV shortly before noon. No injuries reported, though 86-year-old drive ...
YO, ADRIAN!
It’s a tough turn for our hero as Rocky Balboa is relegated to the curb for trash pickup on Locust Avenue. We’ll have to go back ...
“EL PALOMO” IS IN THE HOUSE
Jesus Rios, a mariachi singer who performs under the stage name “El Palomo” (The dove) pauses for a moment before entering a bac ...
CROC SPOTTED IN RIVER
Frighteningly hideous and green, a solitary Croc lurked ominously amid the flotsam and foam in the Navesink River alongside the Red Bank Fir ...
KISS ICON REFLECTS ON BROADWALK
A Swarovski crystal-bedazzled self-portrait painting of Paul Stanley, longtime singer and guitarist for the rock band Kiss peers out from a ...
CHISELIN’ AWAY
Marcelo Garcia Lopez works with hammer and chisel on a new feature for his flower garden on Shrewsbury Avenue: a hollow in a carved log in w ...
STORM CLEANUP CONTINUES
  Saturday’s storm sent a tree toppling on this house on Bank Street, damaging the roof. Workers Wednesday could be seen removing ...
SNAPPING IN THE BREEZE
RED BANK: Blustery winds had the flags in Riverside Gardens Park snapping Monday evening.
POWER LINE DOWN
Red Bank firefighters were on scene at Manor Drive dealing with a live power line Monday afternoon. There was no immediate report of fire. T ...
TAR BEACH SOLSTICE
Aldo Quiroz of Ocean Township came ready with his beach chair and found a shady spot to spend his lunch hour in a parking lot off Broad Stre ...
GOING GREY
Workers painting the stone facade of the PNC Bank at the corner of Broad and Harding Thursday morning. An upgrade? Maybe it’s just pri ...
COFFEE & WILDLIFE
RED BANK: The best wildlife show in town can be taken in from a waterfront bench outside the public library, and it's totally free.
FAWNING OVER HER BABY
A mother deer and her fawn were spotted between a row of garages on Hudson Avenue and some trees alongside the Broad Street parking lots. Re ...
EVENING ESCAPE
RED BANK: Sailors in Monmouth Boat Club's weekly racing series found tranquil conditions on the Navesink River Tuesday evening.
PEAK COLOR ON BROAD
RED BANK: A year after they were installed, downtown mini gardens have added to "transformational" improvements, says business owner.
RED BANK: FAIRIES MOVE IN ON WHITE STREET
Red Bank: Girl scouts turns tiny parking lot plot of dirt into a "magical girls sparkle garden."