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In Belleville, Melham wants a ‘Great Lawn,’ while some want new, ‘smart’ meters to accept coins

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OBITUARIES

OBITUARIES

By Ron Leir ronleir423@gmail.com

space of greenery at the intersection of Belleville and Franklin avenues, as a public park. The 8-acre property sits across the street from Public School No. 10 and in front of the former Garden State Cancer Center, which was sold to a New York State developer for conversion to residential apartments.

At the Feb. 14 meeting of the township governing body, Mayor Michael A. Melham said Belleville would apply for state Green Acres assistance to acquire the privately- held land but, on Feb. 28, Township Administrator Anthony Iacono disclosed to the mayor and council that before the state agency would entertain such a proposal, Belleville had to first complete and close out three other projects still in process. The township was previously awarded $484,000 to remediate a former rifle range at Joralemon Street and Hoover Avenue and turn it into a passive park; $601,000 to refurbish an old ballfield near the Second River; and $260,000 to repair a retaining wall along the riverbank, according to Iacono.

“We had considered the Second River projects part of the same application,” Iacono said. “But the state is treating them as two separate things.”

Despite the setback, Melham said the township remains committed to pursuing acquisition of the Great Lawn to expand available open space for residents.

“We’re having it appraised,” he said, with the idea of negotiating a price with the owners or, failing that, to move toward condemnation via eminent domain.

Asked whether the owners of record could be interested in using the lawn space for real estate development, Iacono said: “There’s no indication that there will be anything other than grass on that property.”

Township tax assessment records show that Lal M. Pathan, of Englewood, purchased the lawn property in 1999 for a total of $465,000. The land is subdivided into two lots. One lot, 233 Franklin Ave., is 6.53 acres and the other lot, 580 Belleville Ave., is 1.38 acres.

After taxes on the property lagged, the township placed both parcels on an accelerated tax sale last year, Iacono said. New Horizon Investment Corp., of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, acquired lien on the larger parcel for $350,000 and Azan International, Inc., also of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, bought the lien on the smaller lot for $115,000, according to township records.

Additional tax and cleanup liens, dating back to 2020, have been purchased by other parties.

Meanwhile, Alma Realty, of Long Island City, New York, is still in the process of completing conversion of the former hospital into an apartment complex since the firm purchased the property from Essex County in 2013.

“It’s probably about 95% done,” Iacono said. “We’re trying to resolve some outstanding issues with the owner.” These issues, he said, include “an arrangement for a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxation)” and “modifications to the original plan — (the owner) may be off on the number of one- and two- bedrooms approved.” He said he’d have to do further research to provide additional details.

While the township awaits the outcome of this real estate transition, there’s another part of Belleville’s landscape that’s also shifting — new parking meters being installed along the Washington Avenue shopping district corridor.

Last May, the township council authorized bonding up to $125,000 for upgraded meters and meter parts that accept only credit cards or a mobile app but no coins — a move

See METERS, Page 19

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