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Warehouse fight continues in Warren County, NJ – NJ Spotlight News

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Planning officials in White Township, Warren County last week deferred a decision on a plan to build 2.8 million square feet of warehousing on local farmland, a bitterly contested project that epitomizes a statewide fight between developers of the giant buildings and affected communities. 
The plan by Jaindl Land Development of Allentown, Pa. has been under discussion in the largely rural community since June 2019, and although its size has been more than halved from an early proposal of some 6 million square feet, it is still fiercely opposed by hundreds of residents who argue that it will choke local roads with truck traffic, develop some 600 acres of farmland, generate stormwater runoff, and industrialize a rural corner of the state. 

Developers and the business groups that represent them argue that New Jersey’s ongoing surge in warehouse construction creates jobs in a state economy that is heavily dependent on the sector and is a legitimate response to a shift to online shopping that drives strong demand for warehouses and the land they are built on. 
Demand is also fueled by a flood of imported consumer goods arriving at the Port of Newark and Elizabeth, which now handles more containers than any in the U.S. New Jersey’s network of roads and rail lines, and by its geographical position, give logistics companies easy access to millions of customers in the populous Northeast market.  
Warehouse construction across the state continued strong in the first quarter of 2023, according to industry reports. One, from the commercial real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield, said there were 12.5 million square feet of warehouse space under construction. Strong demand continues to push rents higher, according to Newmark, another real estate company. 
The boom has sparked strong opposition in communities including West Windsor in Mercer County, Allentown in Monmouth County, and Piscataway in Middlesex County. All are fighting their own anti-warehouse battles which have included lawsuits and acrimonious public meetings where opponents accuse planning officials of caving in to the demands of rapacious developers. In many communities, opponents argue that planned warehouses would snarl traffic, create flooding, worsen air quality and ruin their quality of life. 
In White Township, public expectations that the local planning board would finally decide on the Jaindl application drew some 250 people to a public meeting last Tuesday evening. But they were disappointed when for the second month running, the panel delayed consideration of the plan, this time until its Aug. 8 meeting. 
‘Based on my understanding, the board was concerned about the lack of movement in the application, and that lack of movement has come to an end, and we will be moving ahead with all dispatch, beginning with the August meeting.’ — Anthony Sposaro, an attorney for the developer 
Even then, more than four years after the Jaindl plan was unveiled, the board is unlikely to decide whether to approve or deny the project, because the next meeting will see just the start of formal presentations by both sides, said Anthony Sposaro, an attorney for the developer. He predicted it will be “some months” before the process has advanced to the point where the board can make a decision. 
Sposaro said the board decided not to consider the application last week because Jaindl has not yet formally presented its case, and representatives were not present for the second month running, but that they would attend the meetings starting in August. 
The board previously said it would consider denying the project “without prejudice” — meaning that a developer can return with a new application — if the Jaindl team continued to stay away from the meetings, Sposaro said. But he predicted that it will no longer make that decision because the developer will be present from the August meeting until the process is finished. 
“Based on my understanding, the board was concerned about the lack of movement in the application, and that lack of movement has come to an end, and we will be moving ahead with all dispatch, beginning with the August meeting,” he told NJ Spotlight News. 
But if, when the process concludes, the board issues any kind of denial, it can expect to be sued “without any doubt,” Sposaro said.  
He blamed opponents for slowing the process by asking “repetitive, irrelevant” questions at public meetings, and he accused the chairman of the planning board, Tim Matthews, of giving opponents too much opportunity to speak out against the project.  
Township officials did not return phone calls seeking comment.  

Tom Bodolsky, vice president of Citizens for Sustainable Development, a White Township group that opposes the warehouse project, said the planning board missed a “golden opportunity” last week to deny the project without prejudice. He said the board “mysteriously modified” the agenda six days before the meeting to say there would be no discussion of the Jaindl matter that night — a decision that apparently went unread by many of the meeting’s attendees. 
“We had 250 people there last night who attended the meeting thinking there was going to be a decision. Jaindl doesn’t show up. In my opinion, the board should drag an applicant in to explain why they should carry this matter,” he said, referring to the deferral until August. 
If approved, Jaindl will build two warehouses on about 600 acres of undeveloped land for which the developer paid about $12 million, Sposaro said. 
The application complied with the town’s “light industrial” zoning that was in effect when the plans were filed but would not do so now that the town has significantly reduced its building density in new zoning that became effective since the application, Sposaro said.  
While warehouse critics across the state complain that their communities will be overwhelmed by truck traffic, the problem would be worse in White Township because trucks serving its warehouses would have to travel some 10 miles down county roads to get to Interstates 78 or 80, the nearest highways, critics say. 
Sposaro acknowledged that the warehouse would generate more traffic, but he argued that county roads will be able to cope with it because they were designed to go from one county to another. 
“Will there be more traffic? Yes. Will there be some impact on levels of service — which is how traffic consultants measure the impact — there will be some, but the reality is that these are county roads. They provide links to interstate highways, and that’s why they exist,” he said. 
‘There are more and more local communities that are organizing and mobilizing, and are aware of these warehouse proposals now, and are fighting them.’ — Pete Kasabach, New Jersey Future 
Jim Gilbert, a former chair of the State Planning Commission, said the White Township project “so completely exemplifies dumb growth versus smart growth” by being on a rural site far from the interstate highways that logistics companies need. 
Warehouses should be located near road, rail and port arteries but are increasingly being sited in rural places like White Township because land is scarce or too expensive in places that would make more sense for warehouse operators, Gilbert said. 
“The developer will go out and buy the cheapest land he can get, and if it’s in the middle of a cornfield, he will do that,” Gilbert said. “What you have in White Township is the most ludicrous selection, and it’s done by a very aggressive and powerful development group who just couldn’t care less about what’s best for the state.” 
Public opposition to the White Township plan is growing as more and more people, especially retirees, understand the effect it will have on the community, said Julia Somers, executive director of the Highlands Coalition, a nonprofit. 
“Members of the retirement community are turning up in droves because it’s a beautiful part of New Jersey but it won’t be any more,” she said.  
As warehouse developers scramble for land across the state, government officials and land-use advocates have urged municipalities like White Township to proactively change their zoning before applications are made so that land that they want to protect from warehouses cannot be used for that purpose. 
But state officials show no appetite for diluting towns’ power over land use in a state where a tradition of home rule is strongly defended. A report from the State Planning Commission’s executive arm last year recommended ways in which municipalities can anticipate and respond to warehouse applications, but state officials stressed they have no power to impose planning regulations on towns. 

In the Legislature, a bill by former Senate President Stephen Sweeney would have required municipalities facing warehouse applications to seek a buy-in for their plans from neighboring towns. But the bill died in the last legislative session. Several other bills were introduced in 2022 by lawmakers under pressure from residents to control the runaway pace of warehouse construction. 
Pete Kasabach, executive director of New Jersey Future, a nonprofit that advocates for “smart growth,” said the long-running clash of a warehouse developer and the community in White Township appears to reflect what’s happening around the state. 
“The dynamic right now is what you see there,” he said. “There are more and more local communities that are organizing and mobilizing, and are aware of these warehouse proposals now, and are fighting them.” 
The lesson for developers, Kasabach said, is to think more about where they want to build warehouses, and to try to build alliances with community members early in the process. 
Smart growth in the warehouse industry means they should be placed near highways and rail lines, and not along country roads, Kasabach said. “Anything that is placing large warehouses that generate a lot of truck traffic outside of that logistics network is a bad idea,” he said. 
Jon Hurdle, a freelance writer who regularly reports on water and other environmental issues, is part of the NJ Spotlight COVID-19 reporting team. Jon can be contacted by email at jonhurdle@gmail.com.

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"Fight Club" author Chuck Palahniuk on new novel "Not Forever, But … – CBS News

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Man Who Lost Ear In 'No-Rule Fight Club' Thinks He Is 'Lucky' – News18

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Curated By: Buzz Staff
Trending Desk
Last Updated: November 21, 2023, 15:32 IST
Delhi, India
The winner of this no-rule game receives Rs 2 lakh. (Photo Credits: YouTube)
A recent Channel 4 documentary titled “UNTOLD: The Secret World of Fight Clubs" delves into the shocking and underground trend of bare-knuckle fighting prevalent across the UK. The documentary exposes the gritty reality of these no-rule brawls, featuring participants like Alex Etherington, who not only took part in such a brutal event but also lost his ear in the process. Etherington, who now keeps his detached ear in a jar, shares his firsthand experience, providing insight into the world of these unrestricted fighting rings.
In an underground fight club documentary by Channel 4 titled “UNTOLD: The Secret World of Fight Clubs" a shocking trend of bare-knuckle fighting across the UK was exposed. The documentary reveals the gritty reality of these no-rule brawls. Among the participants was Alex Etherington, who took part in this disturbing trend fight, and lost his ear. He now keeps his detached ear in a jar. Etherington recounted his experience with these unrestricted fighting rings.
Speaking to the Sun, Alex said, “I felt lucky to get on King Of The Streets. It’s quite sought after. I only got on it because my friend vouched for me. It got half a million views on YouTube and I got around 7,000 followers on Instagram overnight. I didn’t know what was going to happen because it was my first No Rules fight. I couldn’t really have a game-plan really. I didn’t know what to expect."

Alex Etherington faced Bachir ‘Bash’ Fakhouri in the fight and recalling the fight, he said, “He was desperate for a win as he’d come off a few losses. Ten seconds in, he bit my ear off. I didn’t know it had come off at first. Blood was trickling down my face. He wouldn’t let go of my hair. I ended up getting whiplash from it. He was going for my eyes." Eye gouging is permitted during the fights, although according to Alex, they’re typically halted before the pressure causes any harm.
Alex went to the hospital after the fight where doctors informed him that his torn ear couldn’t be reattached as “it wasn’t a clean cut. There was a risk of infections too, so there was no chance. It’s quite a big chunk, about the width of your pinkie finger." Despite the severe injury, the fighter expressed that it doesn’t bother him. Upon returning home, Alex showed his girlfriend, Fizza Khan, the torn ear, who insisted he keep it. Interestingly, Alex decided to store his piece of ear in a jar filled with an alcohol solution, following advice from someone and placed it in the kitchen on a shelf.
Meanwhile, Alex Etherington refrains from disclosing his fight earnings but the estimated payouts are around £2,000 (approximately Rs 2 lakh). He clarified that fighters receive compensation only when the win and highlighted that the amount isn’t enough to become a full time fighter. For Alex, engaging in this activity wasn’t about establishing a career but rather fulfilling a bucket list wish. He expressed satisfaction due to lack of rules and limitations, describing the experience as a taste of genuine freedom that left him excited for weeks after the fight.

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Monty Williams rips Pistons for lack of 'fight' during skid – ESPN

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Detroit Pistons coach Monty Williams called out his team for its lack of “fight” after another blowout loss, saying his players are not honoring “the organization and the jersey.”
Williams delivered a brief but passionate statement to reporters Monday night after Detroit’s 126-107 home loss to the Washington Wizards in a matchup of the NBA’s two worst teams.
It was the fourteenth consecutive loss for the Pistons (2-15), who now own the NBA’s worst record and have not won a game in a month. The lowly Wizards (3-14), who had not won since Nov. 8, shot 51% from the floor and had seven scorers in double figures against the Pistons, who have lost three of their past four games by a least 19.
“That wasn’t fight on the floor,” Williams said. “That wasn’t Pistons basketball by any stretch of the imagination. That’s what this is — we have to have people that honor the organization and the jersey by competing at a high level every night.
“I’m not talking about execution, just competing. That wasn’t it, and that’s on me.”
In a postgame media session that lasted only one minute, Williams opened by saying he was “very” disappointed with the loss and described the Pistons’ overall spirit in the game as “poor.”
Williams told reporters before the game that the Pistons held a players-only meeting Friday, saying that “accountability” was a key talking point and that he loves working with the young roster.
But Williams was much harsher in his tone after the loss.
“It’s just a level of growing up on this team, maturity, understanding what game-plan discipline is — all the stuff we talk about all the time,” he said. “It’s enough talking.”
Third-year forward Isaiah Livers said he agreed with Williams’ assessment.
“There are a lot of little things we can talk about, but we just didn’t play hard,” Livers said. “Every team has roles, and it feels like none of us are playing our roles to the best of our abilities.”
Star guard Cade Cunningham, who admitted last week that the Pistons are “bad” in a candid assessment of the team, told the Detroit Free Press that he and his teammates are making mistakes because they are “not physical enough or not aggressive enough.”
“We all wanna win really bad,” Cunningham told the Free Press. “Everybody’s doing it out of the spirit of that — wanting to win, wanting to do what’s best for the team.
“I think we need more aggressive mess ups. Where we’re struggling right now is slip ups where we’re not physical enough or not aggressive enough. That’s what we need to lean towards instead of trying not to press.”
The 14-game losing streak ties the second-longest in Pistons franchise history, and their schedule does not get easier in the short term. After Wednesday’s home game against the Lakers (10-8), the Pistons travel to New York the next day to face the Knicks (9-7) before returning home Saturday to host the Cavaliers (9-8).
If they cannot win one of those games, the Pistons will be in danger of approaching the longest skid in their history — a 21-game losing streak that bridged the 1979-80 and 1980-81 seasons.
“We play great stretches, and then we’ve had crazy bad stretches where we dig ourselves in too deep of a hole,” Cunningham told the Free Press. “That’s it right there — it’s just holding each other accountable and when we do feel it start to slip, having the mental stamina to stay together, stay connected.”

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