Login Profile
Get News Updates
For local news delivered via email enter address here:
Real Estate Automotive Employment Services
    Classifieds Marketplace
      Media Kit Submit Announcements
      News
      HOME
      Front Page
      GMN Photo Galleries
      Bulletin Board
      Letters
      Schools
      Sports
      Online Obituary Submission
      Featured Special
      Sections
      Monmouth County East
      Health & FItness Guide
      About Us
      Archive
      Contact us
      Services
      Advertiser Index
      Terms of Use & Privacy
      Letters August 17, 2001  RSS feed

      Red Bank needs a good dose of economic reality

      While the revitalization of Red Bank’s downtown is an accomplishment, many of the stores and businesses, which have been encouraged to locate and/or be attracted here, are incongruous with the economic realities of many of its residents.

      There is a distinct difference between the median household income of Red Bank and the median incomes of communities like Princeton and Millburn, which have seen similar downtown revivals.

      The affluence of the downtown has not spilled over into the surrounding neighborhoods; one need only to look at the potholed- pocked roads and cracked sidewalks.

      Nor has the upscale atmosphere improved the school district, infrastructure or public services.

      A healthy community must have its business interests and its public sector working in tandem. Red Bank’s image as an upscale shopping Mecca obscures the reality of what Red Bank really is.

      Until the school system and infrastructure are on par with the downtown, divisiveness will continue to exist.

      Janet MacFarlane

      Red Bank