The Jerusalem Post

Jersey City, where the Kushners’ worlds collide

- • By BARBARA DEMICK (Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

JERSEY CITY, NJ – Until he stepped aside from his real estate business to become a senior White House aide, developer Jared Kushner was a major player in the gentrifica­tion of Jersey City, where former railroad yards and waste sites are being transforme­d into luxury housing.

His company built a high-rise branded with the name of his father-in-law, Donald Trump, featuring a gold-hued marquee and skyline views of lower Manhattan. It was embarking on a twin-towered $800 million compound that would have dominated downtown’s Journal Square, and bidding on a 100-acre industrial site to build 8,000 homes to be marketed to Orthodox Jews.

But being related to the president is not a blessing here.

Since the presidenti­al election, Jersey City has turned sharply against Kushner. Opposition to Trump runs deep here, and the city has been taking out some of that hostility on the Kushner Cos., withdrawin­g political support for high-profile projects and shining a spotlight on the company’s business practices.

Mayor Steven Fulop, a friend of 36-year-old Kushner, abruptly yanked his support for a tax abatement at Journal Square in May. Several other Kushner projects have run into intense public opposition, with community activists accusing the Kushners of hiding campaign contributi­ons, abusing a federal program designed to promote developmen­t in poor areas, and selling visas to Chinese investors while the Trump administra­tion is cracking down on immigratio­n.

“Trump is toxic in Jersey City,” said Bill Matsikoudi­s, a lawyer and former city official who is running for mayor against Fulop.

Historical­ly steeped in Democratic-machine politics, the city now has a large population of immigrants, young profession­als and minorities. Few of them voted for Trump, who got 14 percent of the vote here in the presidenti­al election.

Plenty of people also hold a grudge against Trump because of his claim during the presidenti­al campaign – soundly debunked – that “thousands and thousands” of people in Jersey City were cheering on Sept. 11, 2001, when the World Trade Center towers came down.

“The Kushners are woven into the fabric of a lot of communitie­s in New Jersey, but the problem for them is that none of those communitie­s like Trump,” said Matt Hale, a political scientist at Seton Hall University. If you anger someone in New Jersey, he added, “You don’t get the tax abatement. That’s the transactio­nal nature of New Jersey politics.”

Fulop has said his decision to pull his support for the tax abatement had nothing to do with his friendship with Kushner, from whom he said he received no campaign contributi­ons.

The mayor’s “support or lack of support” for the project, said spokeswoma­n Jennifer Morrill, “is based on what is financiall­y best for Jersey City.”

Kushner Cos. officials have emphasized that official support for projects in Jersey City has always come not in response to campaign contributi­ons but in recognitio­n of the developmen­ts’ potential to provide tax revenue and jobs.

New Jersey can be a perilous place to do business, and developers often are expected to make political contributi­ons and form political alliances in order to get their projects off the ground.

In 2004, Charles Kushner, Jared’s father, was indicted, accused of making illegal campaign contributi­ons and tampering with a witness – his own brother-inlaw, whom he set up with a prostitute to retaliate for testifying against him. The case cemented a long-running family feud and earned Charles Kushner a twoyear prison sentence.

That left Jared, just a few years out of Harvard University, to run the company. He stepped down before taking the White House job, but retains an interest in some of the Jersey City projects, including the Trump Bay Street project, according to his financial disclosure statement.

But the political tide began to turn against the Kushners in Jersey City shortly after the presidenti­al race.

Some ordinary citizens, unhappy with Trump’s election, began voicing opposition to his son-in-law’s developmen­t footprint.

“Many of these buildings being built literally shadow over the population­s that Trump is attacking in Jersey City,” said Principal Oscar Velez at Public School 22, where immigrant pupils were in tears after the election, fearing their parents would be deported.

“Trump can’t go and spew venom about these people and Jersey City and then have an organizati­on using his name ask for tax abatements and favorable treatment,” Velez said.

The Kushners also were sharply criticized after a sales conference last month at Beijing’s Ritz-Carlton Hotel, where Nicole Meyer, Jared’s sister, appeared to drop references to the family’s relationsh­ip to Trump in an attempt to attract financing for the Journal Square project. In her speech, she mentioned a federal program that gives preferenti­al visas in exchange for investment. The Journal Square project “means a lot to me and my entire family,” she told potential investors.

Kushner Cos. hastily issued an apology. “Ms. Meyer wanted to make clear that her brother had stepped away from the company in January and has nothing to do with this project,” the firm said in a statement. But the damage was done. Fulop had already announced on Facebook that he had dropped his support for the tax abatement and other state and municipal subsidies.

Kushner Cos. also withdrew its applicatio­n to develop the 100-acre housing tract for Orthodox Jews.

The China episode cast a spotlight on the Kushners’ use of the federal visa program known as EB-5, which was designed to attract foreign investment to economical­ly depressed areas by offering green cards to people who invest at least $500,000 in places where the unemployme­nt rate is at least one and a half times the national average.

The Kushners were seeking additional financing to expand their 50-story luxury compound, Trump Bay Street, in one of Jersey City’s most prosperous neighborho­ods. The property is just a few blocks from the Hudson River and caters to young Wall Street profession­als and tech workers. The cheapest apartment rents for $2,795 a month.

To qualify for the foreign investment program, which would allow them to borrow cheaply, the Kushners submitted a map that linked the upscale neighborho­od to poor census tracts up to four miles away.

“There are many distressed urban neighborho­od in this city that need developmen­t, but not this one,” said James Solomon, a political scientist who lives in Jersey City and is one of the organizers of a group called Evict Trump-Kushner from Jersey City. “They gerrymande­red the documents to make it look like there was high unemployme­nt.”

Gary Friedland, an expert in real estate finance at New York University who has called for reforms in the EB-5 program, said the manipulati­on of census tracts was so common that “if it was not the Kushners, you wouldn’t be writing about” it. – Los Angeles Times/TNS

 ??  ?? THE SITE OF the One Journal Square luxury apartment project in Jersey City, NJ in May.
THE SITE OF the One Journal Square luxury apartment project in Jersey City, NJ in May.

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