By Michael Miller
Staff Writer
pressofAtlanticCity.com
New Jersey
is closer to fulfilling a 2010 promise to find suitable public riding space for
dirt bikers and all-terrain vehicle enthusiasts.
Lawmakers that year increased fines for illegal riding from
$75 to $100 and required a registration fee for dirt bikes and ATVs. But the
law first required the state Department of Environmental Protection to identify
at least one suitable riding location before imposing the new rules.
Last month, the DEP bought the former Mount Pleasant Sand
and Gravel pit off Route 610 in Woodbine for $393,000. The 63-acre property was
a former motocross track that was converted into a paintball course in 2007.
The state plans to solicit bids to lease the land to a
private operator as New Jersey's
first public riding park.
"This is an ongoing effort by the DEP to identify
appropriate places for riders that will protect the environment as well,"
spokesman Larry Hajna said.
Maurice
River Township,
too, is inviting the DEP to look at its woods and marshes for a possible riding
park, Mayor Kathy Ireland said.
The township is collaborating with the state Pinelands
Commission and the DEP's Green Acres Program to find a suitable place that
might include a campground or other facilities to make the park a destination
for out-of-state riders.
"It's in the works, but there's nothing definite. Hopefully,
it would bring in a source of revenue and give local residents a safe place to
ride," the mayor said. "We have enough area. It's about finding the right one
that won't disturb wildlife. We have two or three areas identified as
possibilities."
Neighbors in Dennis
Township said a public
park can't open soon enough.
Local riders continue to make life miserable for neighbors
in the South Dennis section of the township, residents Gary Gibson and Walt
Noll said.
The two men said their properties on Gravel Hole Road were vandalized when
someone splashed orange road paint on their lawn decorations, trash cans and
mailboxes. They suspect they were targeted for reprisals because of their
outspoken criticism of their neighbors' riding.
"I have nothing to prove it," Noll said. "I've been here 12
years and this was the first time my house has been vandalized."
The two men recently met with the Woodbine station commander
for the New Jersey State Police to talk about their complaints.
"Police said they would beef up enforcement, but they said
the township needs to enact ordinances to help them do a more effective job,"
Noll said.
The Dennis Township Committee appointed a subcommittee last
year to look at compromises that would keep the peace while providing freedom
for local riders on private property. Noll said the committee has dragged its
feet on pursuing changes such as stiffer public-nuisance ordinances.
"We're not anti-ATV. But a neighbor has to be reasonable
when he decides to ride. You have babies who are trying to sleep and swimming
pools that get soiled from all the dust," Noll said. "That's not being
neighborly. But people don't care."
Off-road enthusiast Dale Freitas, of Burlington Township,
said he is skeptical a riding park will ever pass muster with
environmentalists. For years, he lobbied the state for public riding space as
the head of the New Jersey Off-Highway Vehicle Association. But lately he said
he has been discouraged by the lack of progress.
"I'm exhausted. I feel like I'm banging my head against a
wall. I'm convinced the environmentalists aren't going to let anyone build a
park," he said. "No matter what they do, it's just not going to happen."
Freitas said he suspects fewer people in New Jersey are buying and riding ATVs and
dirt bikes because of the sagging economy. But once the economy picks up, more people
will be looking for places to ride, he said.
"It's better to come up with a solution now before the
activity picks up again," he sai