News Department

DCA grants awarded to 10 local governmental entities to help Hurricane Ida-impacted areas become more resilient to natural disasters

NEW JERSEY – The New Jersey Department of Community Affairs (DCA) Friday announced the award of $34.47 million in Resilient Communities Program grants to 10 local governmental entities to help them make public infrastructure more resilient to current and future natural disasters.

The grants are administered by DCA’s Division of Disaster Recovery and Mitigation and are funded with federal Community Development Block Grant-Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) monies that the State received from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for Hurricane Ida recovery initiatives.

“With climate change making New Jersey more vulnerable to destructive storms and flooding events, my administration is taking steps to better protect lives, property, and infrastructure from natural disasters,” said Governor Phil Murphy. “We are confident that initiatives like the Resilient Communities Program will help local governments as they work to safeguard neighborhoods and families from harm.”

“Based on our work in the aftermath of natural disasters like Hurricane Ida and Superstorm Sandy, DCA recognizes that New Jersey communities must be proactive in preparing for future disasters by strengthening local infrastructure. Because infrastructure projects are expensive, the Resilient Communities grants will help ease the cost burden for communities participating in the program,” said DCA Acting Commissioner Jacquelyn A. Suárez. “We are confident the grant awards announced today will result in more durable infrastructure so that communities can recover more quickly when disasters occur.”

Municipalities, counties, special districts, and federally recognized tribal governments were eligible to apply for up to $5 million in grant funding if they are located within the counties that HUD and the State identified as most impacted and distressed by Hurricane Ida, including Bergen, Essex, Gloucester, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Morris, Passaic, Somerset, Union, and Warren. Applications were due by December 20, 2023.

Examples of projects include structure elevation; construction or reconstruction of infrastructure; installation of public works and other facilities; structural retrofitting; infrastructure retrofits; property demolition; dry floodproofing; and property acquisition and relocation.

Applications were scored based on whether they incorporated such Resilient Communities Program priorities as:

  • Mitigates flooding risk to public infrastructure, people, and property;
  • Protects and benefits disadvantaged communities;
  • Is a cost-effective solution to natural hazard risk;
  • Promotes resiliency through ancillary or triple bottom line benefits (social, environmental, and economic benefits);
  • Considers climate change and future conditions;
  • Leverages federal, state, and local partnerships;
  • Is designed and scoped with public input and meaningful stakeholder engagement;
  • Can be feasibly implemented and completed within the budget and timeframe required;
  • Incorporates nature-based solutions; and
  • Is ready for construction to begin within a short time.

The following are the Resilient Communities Program grant recipients:

 Grant Recipient Project Description Award Amount
Carteret Borough  Bio-retention facility for stormwater management  $4,107,675
Flemington Borough  Academy Street stormwater management  $1,145,000
Greenwich Township
(Warren County)
 New municipal complex construction $5,000,000

 

Guttenberg Town  JFK Boulevard East stormwater management  $1,480,605
Hudson County  Penhorn Creek pump station upgrades  $5,000,000
Kingwood Township  Replacement emergency services building  $4,158,252
Manville Borough  Property acquisition, stormwater management, and siren $5,000,000

 

North Arlington Borough Flood resilience along the Passaic River

 

 $721,600
Passaic City  Stormwater management with new floodwater pump station $5,000,000

 

Sayreville Borough  Melrose pump station stormwater management  $2,859,780

Grant award determinations are provisional, pending the submission and approval of project-specific deliverables.

All projects must be completed within three years of execution of a grant agreement with DCA.

DCA’s Division of Disaster Recovery and Mitigation promotes the long-term resilience of New Jersey’s communities by supporting initiatives to fortify housing, businesses, and infrastructure against severe weather events and flooding damage. The Division is also the grant manager for the Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Fund (SFRF) and the Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund, allocated to New Jersey through the American Rescue Plan Act.

In addition to disaster recovery and mitigation, DCA offers a wide range of programs and services, including local government management and finance, affordable housing production, fire safety, building safety, community planning and development, historic preservation, and information privacy.

For more information about DCA, visit https://nj.gov/dca.

Jay Edwards

Born and raised in Northwest NJ, Jay has a degree in Communications and has had a life-long interest in local radio and various styles of music. Jay has held numerous jobs over the years such as stunt car driver, bartender, voice-over artist, traffic reporter (award winning), NY Yankee maintenance crewmember and peanut farm worker. His hobbies include mountain climbing, snowmobiling, cooking, performing stand-up comedy and he is an avid squirrel watcher. Jay has been a guest on America’s Morning Headquarters,program on The Weather Channel, and was interviewed by Sam Champion.

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