Public comment on Chai Center postponed

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An artist’s rendering of the 16,350-square-foot building the Chai Center at Short Hills wants to put up on its property at 1 and 7 Jefferson Rd.  Photo courtesy www.chaicenter.net+ enlarge image

An artist’s rendering of the 16,350-square-foot building the Chai Center at Short Hills wants to put up on its property at 1 and 7 Jefferson Rd.  Photo courtesy www.chaicenter.net

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About 150 people, both supporting and opposing the application of the Chai Center-Shul at Short Hills before the Millburn Zoning Board of Adjustment, came to a hearing at the Hartshorn School on Jan. 30 expecting to air their views. Public comment, however, was postponed until the next meeting, Feb. 13.  Photo by Johanna Ginsberg

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Opponents and proponents of the Chai Center Shul at Short Hills will have to wait a few weeks before voicing their opinions on the synagogue’s application for permission to build.

Public comment on the shul’s request for variances, scheduled for the Jan. 30 hearing of the Millburn Zoning Board of Adjustment, was postponed after testimony — from the synagogue’s rabbi, one of its neighbors, and the town planner — ran long.

Public comment instead was rescheduled for Monday, Feb. 13, the next scheduled meeting. Individual comments on that date will be limited to three minutes per person.

Monday’s hearing was the latest chapter in the synagogue’s years-long effort to build a 16,350-square-foot building on a combined 1.8-acre lot on Jefferson Road.

The meeting had been moved from Millburn Town Hall to the Hartshorn School to accommodate the number of people who planned to comment. Instead, some 150 audience members heard hours of testimony from Ciro Gamboni, a neighbor who suggested the Chai Center would be too large for the site; Rabbi Mendel Bogomilsky; and Paul Phillips, the town planner.

Members of the board continued to press Bogomilsky on whether there will be adequate parking at the site, why he sought an exemption to a town rule requiring a religious institution to be constructed on three acres of land, and whether the congregation will not grow much larger than it already is.

In one heated exchange, board member Roger Manshel asked the rabbi, “Why haven’t you addressed the fact that the building is too big for the lot size?”

Bogomilsky responded, “I don’t know how to answer that. How does this not meet the zoning requirements?”

Manshel responded, “You don’t see anything the way the town sees it. You see everything from a different perspective and you do what you want.”

Some opponents began clapping and shouted, “Yes!”

Just then, a woman in the back of the room shouted, “Where’s Hitler today? He couldn’t come?”

“Shame on you,” an audience member shot back. “Shame on you!” the original woman responded.

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Reader Discussion

Comments

I have been a Short Hills resident since 1991 and am dead set against the shul/temple/catering hall/spiritual center on a quiet residential street. 

The rabbi and his heavily out-of-town congregants should be ashamed for playing the “Jewish card” as this is a zoning issue.

Jsbeckerman, you write:  “The rabbi and his heavily out-of-town congregants should be ashamed for playing the “Jewish card” as this is a zoning issue.”

You seem to be very ignorant of the facts.  His congregation is made up – almost entirely – by local residents.  This is the simple truth.

Mr. Beckerman, are you sure you live in Millburn-Short Hills? I’ve never met anyone who described Old Short Hills Road as “quiet”. 19,000 cars a day traverse that route and the few cars throughout the year that the Chai Center will add don’t even account to a rounding error.

You’re very vocal in your opposition to the Chai Center on many different boards. Some might even describe it as somewhat obsessive due to the frequency and intensity of your attacks. Well, we welcome and respect this demonstration of democracy in action whatever is your motivation.

I hope you’ll show the same respect to us after the zoning board realizes both the merits of the application as well as the inevitable outcomes if they decline it, and they approve the Chai Center as an authorized house of worship.

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