The source for this podcast - a Newtown Patch article plus comments - details an escalating contractual dispute between Newtown Borough and Newtown Township over the price of fire services for the upcoming year of 2026.
While the Borough is insisting the Township honor a previously negotiated "good faith" offer of $275,000, the Township's Board of Supervisors has officially countered by demanding a higher fee of $350,000. This higher demand was approved by a 3-2 vote, overriding the recommendations of the Township's own negotiating team who supported the lower number.
The majority of the Supervisors and concerned residents argue that accepting the Borough’s lower offer would force Township taxpayers to subsidize the service*, especially since some evidence from a state analysis suggests the actual rational cost is closer to $375,000.
In response, the Borough council has directed its legal counsel to formally reject the $350,000 proposal and resubmit the original $250,000 figure, maintaining that the higher rate is unreasonable.
*Services that the township provides the borough include fire and safety inspections, fire investigations, fire prevention activities, emergency management including staffing during emergencies, and other fire-emergency realted services that may be requested.
The Newtown Sewer Authority kept saying that plans are only "preliminary." Gary Sondermeyer, a former director of operations for the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, had a different opinion.
“I don’t agree it’s preliminary,” he said. “They used condemnation to buy the land. They’ve hired a financial advisor. They’ve hired a public relations firm. The next thing you know they’ll have a permit application with the state.”
Read: “Proposed sewer plant in Newtown Township inflames Middletown residents“; https://rebrand.ly/Herald_WWTP
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