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ANJEC
Is
ANJEC a state or local government agency?
ANJEC
is not a government agency. ANJEC is a private non-profit educational
organization. Our mission is to promote the public interest in
natural resource protection, reclamation and sustainable development
and to support environmental commissions working with community
officials and concerned citizens. Our programs are funded through
grants from foundations, memberships and contributions and contracts
with the state of NJ.
Development and Open Space
How can ANJEC help us protect open space in our community?
There's this beautiful meadow, forest, wetlands and/or stream
that is very special and should be preserved for future generations.
If
your town has an environmental commission, we'll put you in contact
with the chair. Local environmental commissions are generally
well informed on open space preservation techniques. Whether there's
a commission or not, the ANJEC Resource Center will also provide
you with information and contacts on local, state and non-profit
programs for open space protection and funding as well as advice
and guidance.·
- Click
here for further information on
environmental commissions
- Click
here to contact ANJEC for additional
information
How
can ANJEC help us stop our municipality from approving an enormous,
horrible development that will destroy a special place in our
community?
If
your town has an environmental commission, we'll put you in contact
with the chair. Local environmental commissions are generally
well-informed about local ordinances and involved in development
review through their representation on the Planning Board. If
the proposed development is consistent with the town's zoning
and development ordinances (for example restrictions on development
on steep slopes), Master Plan and State Planning Area designations,
it will probably be very difficult to stop. The ANJEC Resource
Center will provide guidance, information and contacts to help
you force the developer and the municipality to address any inconsistencies
or special circumstances (like endangered species habitat, wetlands
and tree preservation) that should be addressed.
- Click
here to contact ANJEC for additional
information
Environmental Commissions
Our commission was just established a few months ago. What
should we be doing?
A
Commission's first job should be to put together an Environmental
Resource Inventory (ERI), a document that uses maps and text to
describe the municipality's most important natural resources,
for example geology, soils, rivers, streams, lakes, and reservoirs,
aquifers, farms and forests, wetlands, wildlife habitat, public
open space. The ANJEC Resource Center can help with training,
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) computer mapping, and suggestions
for funding the study. The ERI will help the Commission and the
municipality identify important areas for preservation whether
through acquisition or regulation. It can be a very helpful tool
in gaining support from local officials and citizens for preservation.
- Click
here to view an online copy
of the Resource Paper that describes the elements, sources of
data, and process for putting together an Environmental Resource
Inventory
- Click
here to contact ANJEC for additional
information
How
can I contact the environmental commission in my municipality?
You
can call your Town Hall and ask for the name and phone number
of the chair or contact the ANJEC Resource Center at 973-539-7547
or resourcecenter@anjec.org.
I'd
like to serve on my municipality's environmental commission. How
can I become a member?
Under
state law, the mayor appoints all environmental commission members
to staggered three-year terms. Contact the commission chair to
see if there are any openings. Attend commission meetings, get
to know the current members and the issues. Offer your services
to help the commission on a specific project. Let the chair, the
mayor and anyone you might know on the government body know that
you are interested in becoming a commission member.
My
town doesn't have an environmental commission. How can I get one
started?
To
establish an environmental commission, the governing body needs
to pass an ordinance using the state enabling legislation (N.J.S.A.
40:56A et seq) So you'll need to have the support of the mayor
and a majority of the members of your municipality's governing
body. The ANJEC Resource Center will provide you with sample ordinances
from other municipalities that have commissions as well as information
on the benefits of having an environmental commission, and advice
on ways to get the information out. It is very important to build
a constituency for a commission among citizens in your community.
- Click
here to contact ANJEC for additional
information
- Click
here to view an
online copy of the Resource Paper that describes the powers,
responsibilities and benefits of an Environmental Commission
and includes a copy of the state enabling legislation and a
sample local ordinance
What's the difference between and Environmental Commission
and an Environmental Committee?
Generally
an Environmental Commission is established by ordinance. This
means that if for some reason the governing body decides to abolish
the Commission, it has to pass another ordinance - which requires
public notice and a public hearing and provides an opportunity
for citizens to support the Commission's continued existence.
Under
the state enabling legislation (N.J.S.A. 56A et seq) a member
of the Environmental Commission also sits on the Planning Board.
Given the power of municipalities to control land use through
zoning and development review, the Commission's seat on the Planning
Board offers an opportunity to gain support for strict environmental
standards, a Master Plan and zoning ordinances that incorporate
open space and natural resource preservation.
Environmental
Committees are usually ad hoc groups appointed by the governing
body on a yearly basis. So, a majority of the governing body can
abolish the Committee or appoint a whole new group of members,
by resolution with no public notice and no public hearing. Environmental
Committees generally have no representation on the Planning Board.
- Click
here to contact ANJEC for additional
information
- Click
here to view an
online copy of the Resource Paper that describes the powers,
responsibilities and benefits of an Environmental Commission
and includes a copy of the state enabling legislation and a
sample local ordinance
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