Ewing Nj Mayor «Instant Download»
The other is the : the crumbling industrial waterfront, the aging strip malls on Parkway Avenue, and the infamous “Ewing Circle”—a traffic rotary that residents have cursed for 50 years.
His first year was a trial by fire. Covid-19 shut down town hall. Tax revenues wobbled. And the GM site, after a developer’s bankruptcy, fell back into the township’s lap. ewing nj mayor
EWING, N.J. — On a crisp autumn morning, Mayor Bert Steinmann is doing something that would make his predecessors nervous: he’s standing in the parking lot of the old General Motors plant, smiling. The other is the : the crumbling industrial
For decades, this 170-acre stretch along the Delaware River was a symbol of Ewing’s industrial might. After the plant closed in 1998, it became a symbol of rust-belt decay—a fenced-off, contaminated ghost town in the heart of Mercer County. For nearly 25 years, every mayor promised to fix it. But it is Steinmann, a low-key Democrat first elected in 2020, who finally has a wrecking ball on site. Tax revenues wobbled
“This town was built by General Electric, by Roebling Steel, by GM,” he says. “Those companies left. But the people didn’t. My job isn’t to bring back 1955. It’s to build 2035.”
“I thought I’d be doing budgets and zoning hearings until I retired,” Steinmann admits. “Suddenly, I was the face of the town during a pandemic.”
Steinmann doesn’t pound a gavel. Instead, he pulls out a whiteboard and draws a pie chart showing the cost of a sharpshooter program versus a contraceptive dart program. He cites data from Rutgers.