Houston Chronicle

Jersey City, Kushner firm reach accord in lawsuit on political bias

- By David Porter

Jersey City has reached an agreement in a lawsuit by the company of White House adviser Jared Kushner’s family that claimed the city tried to sabotage a $900 million residentia­l tower project out of political animosity toward Kushner’s fatherin-law, President Donald Trump.

Under terms of the agreement, obtained by the Associated Press, the project will move forward and Journal Square Partners, of which Kushner Cos. is a principal investor, will release the city fromall claims provided certain benchmarks are met. The city’s redevelopm­ent authority is scheduled to vote on the settlement next week.

According to Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, the project will go forward without a tax abatement thatwas at the center of the lawsuit.

In a statement, Fulop said that, “after many years and many prior developers who left this property to stagnate, the city’s great team and Kushner Cos. have been able to set aside their difference­s and collaborat­e to reach common ground.”

The project is expected to begin constructi­on next year.

The accord could bring an end to a contentiou­s battle with roots going back six years and fought partially over social media. Journal Square Partners accused Fulop of putting “politics over principle” by violating a pledge to secure the tax break for One Journal Square, a project to build two 56-story residentia­l towers on top of retail and commercial space in a neighborho­od long neglected by developers.

Jared Kushner stepped down from running Kushner Cos. in January 2017 to become an adviser to Trump. The federal lawsuit, initially filed in 2018, alleged that the city had supported the company’s

takeover of the project in 2014 and agreed to help it secure tax abatements and other funding, only to change its tune after Jared Kushner was named adviser to Trump.

After Kushner’s sister, Nicole Meyer-Kushner, made a trip to China in 2017 in which she appeared to highlight her family’s WhiteHouse ties in presentati­ons soliciting money from investors for the project, Fulop posted on Facebook that the city would oppose any tax break.

The lawsuit alleged violations of the company’s constituti­onal rights to due process, equal protection, free speech and free associatio­n, and it claimed Fulop’s post and other comments were made to “curry favor with city residents and to harm the Kushner Cos. based on Jared Kushner’s role as a senior adviser to Trump.”

It also claimed Fulop, eager to distance himself from the Kushners and Trump during his 2017 mayoral re- election campaign in the heavily Democratic city, purposely stalled the project until the

city issued a notice of default to the developer for not meeting project deadlines. After the company sued, Fulop tweeted the Kushners “try to use the presidency to be pretend victims.”

In an emailed statement Friday, Kushner Cos. general counsel Christophe­r Smith said that “after several years of litigation, we have reached a mutually beneficial compromise with Jersey City and Mayor Fulop to set aside any lingering acrimony and clear the way for this vital addition to the Journal Square revitaliza­tion project.”

Jersey City experience­d explosive growth in the late 20th and early 21st century in its downtown near the Hudson River waterfront facing New York City. Much of itwas fueled by tax breaks that have been criticized by some as too generous to developers. After Fulop was elected in 2013, he vowed to use tax abatements more judiciousl­y and to steer developmen­t projects to other areas of the city.

In its lawsuit, Journal Square Partners claimed

the city had approved longterm tax abatements for several other projects in the Journal Square neighborho­od during the same period it was seeking to build there.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? This is the proposed site for One Journal Square in Jersey City, N.J. The project includes two 56-story residentia­l towers on top of retail and commercial space.
Associated Press file photo This is the proposed site for One Journal Square in Jersey City, N.J. The project includes two 56-story residentia­l towers on top of retail and commercial space.

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