The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

New Jersey buys 700th flood-prone home — but none on ocean

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TOMS RIVER, N.J. » New Jersey says it has bought its 700th home under a program to acquire and demolish houses in flood-prone areas.

But nearly seven years after Superstorm Sandy, not one of those purchases has been along the ocean.

The state Department of Environmen­tal Protection announced the milestone Tuesday, the purchase of a home in South River in Middlesex County.

The clusters of homes bought thus far have mainly been along rivers, and some have been on or near bays, both of which are also floodprone.

The environmen­tal protection agency did not respond to a request for comment on why no oceanfront homes have been bought under the Blue Acres program.

But it has in the past said there have been no willing sellers in those areas. The program is strictly voluntary.

“The Blue Acres Program remains an important component of the state’s strategy to make New Jersey more resilient to storms and flooding by giving willing sellers of flood-prone properties an opportunit­y for a fresh start,” DEP Commission­er Catherine McCabe said in a news release.

It uses federal and state funds to acquire and demolish clusters of residentia­l properties in flood-prone areas and permanentl­y preserves the land as open space for recreation or conservati­on purposes.

The agency says the program has acquired homes in Sayreville, South River, Woodbridge, Old Bridge and East Brunswick in Middlesex County; Manville in Somerset County; Pompton Lakes in Passaic County; Newark in Essex County; Rahway and Linden in Union County; Lawrence and Downe townships in Cumberland County; New Milford in Bergen County; Ocean Township in Monmouth County and Pleasantvi­lle in Atlantic County.

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