New Jersey Business Owners Sue City of Perth Amboy Over Bogus Blight Designation
Two business owners are suing the city of Perth Amboy for using eminent domain to seize their property based on unsubstantiated allegations of blight.

Perth Amboy, New Jersey, is trying to seize the property of two businesses. Now, these business owners are suing the city.
On Wednesday, Honey Meerzon, an owner of a four-unit apartment building in Perth Amboy, and Luis Romero, whose family-owned Quick Tire shop has operated for over 40 years, announced that they've filed a lawsuit against the city for its arbitrary and capricious designation of blight in a bid to seize their properties using eminent domain.
Reporting by Reason's Christian Britschgi details the flimsy allegations of blight leveled by the city—minor litter, stray cats, and building proximity—as reasons to seize the properties.
Flanked by dozens of residents holding signs in support of Meerzon and Romero, Robert McNamara, deputy litigation director at the Institute for Justice (I.J.), which is representing the business owners in the case, accused the city of using "an outrageous and bogus" blight designation to clear the way for a $110 million city-backed redevelopment project. New Jersey law limits the use of eminent domain to clear public uses, not for economic redevelopment that benefits private developers.
As part of their dispute, Meerzon and Romero point to factual errors in the city's blight study, including incorrectly drawn property lines and misrepresentations about alleged safety hazards. During the press conference, I.J. Litigation Fellow Bobbi Taylor noted that if Perth Amboy's criteria were upheld, it could lead to countless property seizures based on similarly scant declarations of blight.
Meerzon, whose parents fled religious persecution in the Soviet Union, spoke at the press conference about the irony and injustice of facing property seizures in a country her family believed would protect their investments and rights. "This isn't about public need, this is about private greed….We've invested over $150,000 in upgrades…we've kept the property up to code and never received a violation," she said.
Romero, whose family fled from Cuba, echoed Meerzon's sentiments, saying, "What happened in my country in Cuba is happening here; the only thing right now is it's happening legally."
The lawsuit, filed Wednesday, seeks to overturn the city's blight designation. Whether they go to trial depends on the city, Taylor told Reason. "If they see our lawsuit and they reconsider and want to lift the blight designation, then that's great for our property owners. But if not, there will be a court hearing. Hopefully, we'll get to present evidence and the court will rule."
Despite repeated attempts by Meerzon and Romero to negotiate improvements or resolve concerns directly, city officials have remained unresponsive.
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Nice little business you had there; what a shame something happened to it.
(next time, maybe you should donate to the proper politician?)
Russians and Cubans you say?
Several years ago the City I live in refurbished an old baseball park. They declared it a historic landmark because a farm team of the Yankees used to play there. Supposedly Babe Ruth played there during one of his barnstorming tours. It's a nice Park and has some decent games. (usually High School or College) To the South there is a park that has a minor league team and is doing pretty well. To make a long story short, some local developers convinced the City Council (it didn't take much) to declare the surrounding neighborhood to be blighted. Their reason is a creek that runs through there and occasionally overflows it's banks. I was offered an excellent deal to buy the house that I lived in at the time, nobody would touch it for a mortgage because of the blight designation. They were afraid to finance it for $50,000 and then have the City take it using Eminent Domain and pay $15,000.