SEASIDE HEIGHTS Plans for an eight-story structure with 79 residential units, a restaurant and retail at the site of the steel skeleton building on the Boulevard have taken a big step forward.
The Borough Council on Wednesday designated SSH Boulevard LLC as redeveloper for the property, which has long been an eyesore.
SSH Boulevard LLC includes Dan Matarese, owner of Danco General Contracting Inc. in Marlboro; Zach Rich, director of concrete promotion and sales for Silvi Group and a Republican who is a Hunterdon County commissioner; lawyer Douglas Steinhardt, a partner at the law firm of Florio Perrucci Steinhardt Cappelli Tipton & Taylor and former chairman of the New Jersey State Republican Committee; and Joanne Gilmore, a paralegal and local consultant who is the wife of former Ocean County GOP Chairman and Seaside Heights native George R. Gilmore.
Infiniti Energy has completed construction on a 992-kW roof mounted solar array project at a PepsiCo Bottling warehouse in Piscataway, NJ. The PepsiCo project includes 2,482 Trina 400 Watt Modules, PanelClaw FR10D Racking, 12 Chint 60kW Inverters, 2,482 TIGO Rapid Shutdown Units, and 992.80 kW DC / 720.0 kW AC.
“We are thrilled to be able to have the opportunity to work with PepsiCo and play a role in helping them achieve their sustainability goals,” said Michael Kushner, President of Infiniti Energy. “Working with an industry leader who has boldly placed investment in renewables as one of their top priorities is exciting for our entire team. PepsiCo’s Piscataway facility is a wonderful example of how both the business sector and the community can benefit from continued investment in renewables. We are proud to play a role in the expansion of solar energy, particularly in our home state.”
Ninth Circuit Reverses Lower Court Ruling on Due Process Grounds
The Los Angeles Police Department obtained a search warrant from the Los Angeles Superior Court and seized more than 400 firearms from Wayne Wright’s residence and storage unit in Ventura County in 2004. That set off a long-term legal dispute between Wright and the LAPD that resulted in a recent federal appeals court decision regarding law enforcement’s obligations before deciding to destroy seized firearms.
In
Wright v. Beck, handed down Dec. 1, the U.S. Ninth Court of Appeals reversed a lower court’s summary judgment ruling and found that a reasonable trier of fact could find that destruction of seized firearms without first providing notice to the owner is a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s Fourteenth Amendment’s right to due process.