End COAH in 2009
By Matt Rooney | November 15, 2008
Earlier this week, I threw up a post urging Trenton Democrats and Republicans to revisit the "paid family leave" law.
Another equally important fight is the effort to stop New Jersey's Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) from destroying our communities.
The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debacle should have convinced every sane taxpayer and policymaker that government mandated "affordable" housing is a fundamentally flawed concept. No one benefits from this lame exercise in centralized social planning. New Jersey Republicans would do well to make the end of COAH a major plank in any 2009 statewide platform.
In short, Save Jerseyans, the COAH issue is a complicated problem with a simple solution: the legislature must act to end this judicially-inspired mess!
To learn more about this critical issue, please visit The Cranbury Conservative. Dan Mulligan does an excellent job of articulating a substantive case against COAH.
Earlier this week, I threw up a post urging Trenton Democrats and Republicans to revisit the "paid family leave" law.
Another equally important fight is the effort to stop New Jersey's Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) from destroying our communities.
The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debacle should have convinced every sane taxpayer and policymaker that government mandated "affordable" housing is a fundamentally flawed concept. No one benefits from this lame exercise in centralized social planning. New Jersey Republicans would do well to make the end of COAH a major plank in any 2009 statewide platform.
In short, Save Jerseyans, the COAH issue is a complicated problem with a simple solution: the legislature must act to end this judicially-inspired mess!
To learn more about this critical issue, please visit The Cranbury Conservative. Dan Mulligan does an excellent job of articulating a substantive case against COAH.



























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