The New Jersey city of Newark has agreed to pay $27 million over 30 years to rent a piece of property that it had previously sold for $1, according to reports.
The city will also rent storage space for its court and will relocate its finance department to the new site. Meanwhile, it will rent 258 parking spots, the report added.
“This is not the Parking Authority pushing this on the city. A redevelopment agreement was passed by this council,” Anthony Mack, who is the executive director of the Newark Parking Authority, was quoted by NJ.com as saying.
He added, “We’re actually subsidizing the city as we’re constructing this.”
The agreement, however, has drawn criticism from Newark residents, who questioned why the city didn’t just keep the property itself instead of selling it to the parking authority.
“We’re paying them for something that we gave them. This is basic math, it doesn’t add up,” Newark resident Debra Salters told the news outlet.
The lot currently is home to a parking lot for municipal employees, and it is adjacent to City Hall and close to the Prudential Center in downtown Newark. Last month, according to the report, employees were told that they could not park there any longer and were relocated to places nearby.
According to state records, the property was assessed at $10 million.
The Newark City Council voted on the $27 million lease in a 5-4 vote. Councilmen Carlos Gonzalez, Augusto Amador, Anibal Ramos, and Luis Quintana voted no.
In the meeting, a resident questioned whether Council President Mildred Crump had a conflict of interesting in voting in favor of the lease because Crump’s son, Lawrence Crump, is general counsel for the Newark Parking Authority.
“How dare you?” Crump said during the meeting. “How dare you question his integrity? How dare you question mine? Why are you asking this question?”
Kenyatta Stewart, corporation counsel for Newark, told NJ.com that neither the City Council president or her son would benefit directly from the deal.
“She has nothing to gain in this situation,” Stewart said.