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Westwood Buys Three Flood-Prone Homes With Grant Money

FEMA and the DEP provided grants to the borough for buyouts after Hurricane Irene hit in 2011.

 

Updated at 3:45 p.m. Thursday

Westwood closed on three flood-prone properties last week, allowing homeowners who had been in limbo since Hurricane Irene to finally move on with their lives.

The borough closed on 55 and 46 Harding Avenue Thursday morning and 60 Harding Avenue Friday morning, according to Borough Administrator Robert Hoffmann. The purchases were made with a portion of $2,068,057 in grants, including about $1.5 million from FEMA and the rest from the Department of Environmental Protection's Green Acres program.

As a part of the buyout program, FEMA required the borough to have the homes appraised, which set the prices to be paid. Grant money was also used to cover costs like the appraisers. The amounts paid for the three homes were $324,357.87, $420,000.00 and $297,716.00, according to Hoffmann.

"It doesn't affect everybody, but for the people it does, it's just tremendous," former Councilman William Phayre said Thursday.

The borough does still have money left over, though the exact amount is pending further approval from FEMA. The money will go toward future buyouts.

A total of about $28 million was made available by FEMA and the DEP for buyouts in New Jersey after Irene.

Homes in the Harding Avenue area flooded four times in 2011. Irene was the worst of the storms, bringing more than 7 feet of water into Joe Rivers' home, he previously told Patch. Officials condemned the home, but allowed Rivers to return after temporary walls were built.

One of the former homeowners declined to comment for this article. The other two could not be reached.

Hoffmann said that two of the owners had relocated within Westwood and the third attempted to as well.

For officials, the process has not been easy. About 90 Westwood property owners signed up for acquisition or elevation in December 2011 after FEMA announced grant money would be available. The money did not become available as early as local officials had expected, and the process to meet program requirements took hundreds of man-hours. Officials had also been worried that the borough would have to pay property taxes for the sites if the purchases were made after October 1.

The houses will need to be demolished before the growing season ends, Hoffmann said. In the meantime, they may be used by the Westwood Fire Department for some drills.

For other homeowners in the flood-prone area, there is still uncertainty. Several homes remain for sale along Harding Avenue. Hoffmann said FEMA has previously planned to fund five rounds of buyouts after Irene, though only the first has occured so far.

Have a question or news tip? Contact editor Jim Leggate at Jim.Leggate@patch.com, or find us on Facebook and Twitter. For news straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter.

Related Topics: DEP Green Acres, FEMA, Flood buyouts, Flooding, Hurricane Irene, and Westwood

Concerned

9:00 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

We taxpayers paid almost 700,000 each for these homes? If so, another example of government efficiency. Please tell me what I am missing.

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Barry Black

9:54 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

That's because they're water front property! Seriously though----where did you get that information?

B@B

10:01 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Seriously. I'll sell my house tomorrow for $700,000, and I just did some remodeling.

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Jim Leggate

10:28 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

To clarify- a portion of the grant money was used to cover Westwood's expenses in the buyout program.

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Gary Conkling

11:12 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

According to NJ tax records the assesed value of these homes adds up to 991800..00 just under 1 million. Lately homes have been selling around assesed value.

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Norman M.

11:12 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

The numbers in the article are misleading. The borough did not spend all of the funds to purchase the three properties. The reporter should have asked and reported how much of the funds were spent to purchase and what the balance of the funds would be spent on.

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Sharon Haimes Schmidt

11:12 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

When prices of homes in non flood zones have dipped to $399,000, the boro should do themselves a favor and publish the breakdown of the $2 million plus that was spent.

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Alan Griffiths

3:57 pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

I am happy to see that others have a similar reaction to this as I do. I thought I was missing something. We really need to try and stop some of the outrageous local and Federal spending that is going on these days. Unfortunately I do not have a clue how we can do that. Media please help!

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B@B

4:41 pm on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Alan: Please detail what Federal spending you would like to cut, keeping in mind that Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Defense are 85% of the federal budget.

George

9:59 am on Thursday, January 10, 2013

Homeowners probably received about $1M combined, and $1.1M was administrative costs. This highlights the governments inefficient use of taxpayer dollars. Our local politicians were even frustrated with the process.

@ B@B - they all need to be revamped as they are not sustainable, we have a $16+ Trillion national debt and growing. You can add FEMA and the DEP to the list since apparently they spend $2.1M to buy $1M worth of property.

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B@B

10:03 am on Thursday, January 10, 2013

@George: Please detail how you would want to see them "revamped."

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George

1:31 pm on Thursday, January 10, 2013

@ B@B: Getting everyone to admit and understand that we have a problem would be a good start. The longer we wait, the worse it gets. But this is off topic.

What do you think of the fact that more than 50% of the buyout funds went to administrative costs, and less that 50% to homeowners?

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B@B

4:13 pm on Friday, January 11, 2013

@George: I was talking about your reference to the National debt and my reference to the major programs that comprise 85% of the Federal budget. I wanted to hear your plans for revamping them. Please indicate if you are currently collecting Social Security and Medicare or if you are within 5-10 years of retirement. I just want to know if you are advocating cutting them for yourself or only for others.

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Jim Leggate

3:51 pm on Thursday, January 10, 2013

The amounts paid for the three homes were $324,357.87, $420,000.00 and $297,716.00.

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Gary Conkling

8:57 am on Friday, January 11, 2013

One would ask what is the long term plan? If all 90 properties are bought out what would the impact be on taxes? How will it look when only a few houses are left? Putting a band aid on the problem will not make it go away.

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