国产麻豆

Camden Mayor-Elect Frank Moran grew up in the Cramer Hill neighborhood, two blocks away from the site of the Harrison Avenue landfill.

The city鈥檚 municipal dump was the closest thing to green space for kids in Cramer Hill, he said; a mountain of garbage that stood between them and the banks of the Delaware and Cooper Rivers.

When Moran and his friends wanted to go fishing, they had to forge trails with their bikes through the brush along the way.

鈥淚 played in this place,鈥 he said. 鈥溾楾he dumps鈥 is what we called it when I was a kid.

鈥淲e made what we could of this circumstance growing up.鈥

But now, after a decade of multi-agency planning, and thanks to a $25-million allocation from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP), 鈥渢he dumps鈥 will be transformed into a 62-acre waterfront park in the next two years.

Outgoing NJDEP Commissioner Bob Martin said the project has been a priority for his eight-year tenure under Gov. Chris Christie, and that the agency 鈥渨anted to make sure that we finished this and we moved it forward鈥 before he left office.

鈥淲e spent over $26 million of hazardous discharge site remediation money to help clean up the site you鈥檙e standing on as part of the Kroc Center,鈥 Martin said Wednesday at a press conference announcing the project.

鈥淧robably the most important thing to us is the emphasis of the quality of life; making sure there is a future for the children of these neighborhoods,鈥 he said.

After the remediation is complete, the Cramer Hill waterfront park will feature one mile of stabilized shoreline along the banks of the Delaware and Cooper Rivers, freshwater tidal wetlands, a fish pond, and recreational trails throughout.

Most of all, it will give residents of the neighborhood access to the Camden waterfront for the first time in 70 years. Moran called it 鈥渁n opportunity to enjoy the recreation that鈥檚 to come.

鈥淭his is going to give you a view of the Philadelphia skyline; all those benefits that really develop the soul of an individual,鈥 he said.

Camden County Freeholder Carmen Rodriguez, who also grew up in Cramer Hill, said she hadn鈥檛 known the neighborhood had any body of water until she was in college.

鈥淭here was no waterfront,鈥 Rodriguez said. 鈥淚t didn鈥檛 exist. We have beautiful places [in Camden] that we just cannot access.鈥

Rodriguez, a former science teacher who oversees bilingual education for the Camden School District and is the liaison to the county health department, drew a direct line between the city鈥檚 environmental issues and the instances of asthma among its children.

In converting brownfield sites to usable space, she said Camden is preserving its youngest citizens鈥 futures.

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