Paterson 2030 Initiative

The New Paterson Abatement Model

A legal, performance-based, and transparent municipal operating system that converts tax abatements, PILOTs, redevelopment incentives, and public approvals into measurable jobs, local contracts, workforce pipelines, transportation access, small-business growth, public reporting, and long-term municipal value.

Not anti-development. Pro-performance.

Paterson should welcome serious development and treat responsible developers as partners in rebuilding the city. When public value helps make a project possible, the public should receive measurable return. The new model keeps development moving while helping developers produce stronger neighborhood, workforce, and quality-of-life outcomes.

Project-specific feasibility Public benefit scorecard Quarterly reporting Conflict-screened implementation
30% Resident labor-hour target, subject to availability, trade rules, and documented good-faith compliance.
20% Eligible local vendor participation goal, scaled by project size and vendor capacity.
4x Quarterly public reporting on jobs, vendors, training, transportation, and reinvestment.
1 Low-risk pilot before citywide adoption. Prove it, publish it, then scale it.
Executive Standard

Public incentives should produce public value.

The New Paterson Abatement Model creates a clear rule: major public incentives should not be approved on project feasibility alone. They should be connected to measurable outcomes residents can see, track, and evaluate.

The current weakness

Traditional abatement discussions often focus on whether a project can be built and what payment the city will receive. That is necessary, but not enough. Paterson also needs to know whether the project produces jobs, resident opportunity, small-business participation, training, transportation access, and long-term community value.

The new standard

  • Every significant incentive receives a baseline fiscal and public-benefit review.
  • Every qualifying project submits an Economic Impact Plan before approval.
  • Every major PILOT or redevelopment incentive includes an Economic Impact Agreement.
  • Every commitment is scaled to project size, feasibility, and public benefit.
  • Every non-confidential outcome is reported through a public dashboard.
If Paterson gives a public advantage, Paterson should receive a public return.
Plain-English Framing

What this is — and what this is not.

This section is designed to prevent confusion, protect the policy from political attacks, and help residents, developers, attorneys, and officials understand the purpose of the model.

What this is

  • A performance standard for publicly supported development.
  • A partnership model that helps responsible developers align project feasibility, profit, and long-term public value.
  • A way to connect abatements to jobs, contracts, training, transportation, services, reinvestment, and reporting.
  • A project-specific model that adjusts requirements based on feasibility and public incentive value.
  • A pilot-first system that scales after outcomes are measured.
  • A transparency tool that lets residents see whether promises were kept.

What this is not

  • It is not anti-development.
  • It is not a separate tax.
  • It is not a blank check to any private organization or nonprofit.
  • It is not a one-size-fits-all mandate on every project.
  • It is not a political punishment tool against developers.
  • It is not designed to deter responsible investment, delay good projects, or make development financially impossible.
Visual System Diagram

How the abatement becomes visible public value.

The model is simple: public support should move through a written partnership, produce immediate neighborhood care and long-term economic outcomes, then report results back to residents.

01 Public Incentive

Abatement, PILOT, redevelopment support, or public approval.

02 Developer Partnership

Feasibility, fair return, negotiated obligations, and clear expectations.

03 Quality-of-Life Initiatives

Neighborhood care, resident access, civic build support, trades exposure, and visible public benefit.

04 Economic Outcomes

Jobs, vendor spend, workforce pathways, access planning, and reinvestment.

05 Public Dashboard

Residents see non-confidential performance data and compliance status.

06 Stronger Paterson

Cleaner blocks, stronger corridors, better trust, and measurable public return.

Developer Partnership Standard

Build with developers — not against them.

The New Paterson Abatement Model is not designed to chase away investment. It is designed to help serious developers build projects that are financially viable, publicly defensible, easier to support, and more valuable to the neighborhoods around them.

The partnership principle

Developers should be able to earn a fair return for taking risk, financing construction, managing complex approvals, and delivering needed projects. The city should also be able to ask a fair question: when a project receives a public advantage, how will that advantage improve Paterson beyond the developer’s bottom line?

This model answers that question through negotiation, feasibility review, clear targets, transparent reporting, and project-specific obligations — not through hostility, guesswork, or blanket punishment.

The message to developers

Paterson wants builders, investors, housing partners, commercial operators, and redevelopment teams who are serious about the city’s future. The goal is to make public incentives easier to defend because the benefits are visible: jobs, safer blocks, active corridors, stronger local businesses, cleaner properties, better access, and measurable neighborhood improvement.

1

Protect project feasibility

Requirements should be scaled to project size, financing reality, market conditions, construction cost, public incentive value, and long-term fiscal benefit. A deal that kills the project helps no one.

2

Improve public support

Developers gain a stronger public narrative when residents can see the project’s local jobs, vendor spend, workforce pathway, streetscape value, safety impact, and service access.

3

Reduce political friction

A transparent scorecard and Economic Impact Agreement can reduce suspicion by showing exactly what the city negotiated, what the developer committed to, and how performance will be measured.

4

Create smoother compliance

The model should give developers clear templates, reporting schedules, cure periods, provider networks, and good-faith standards so compliance is predictable instead of chaotic.

5

Build neighborhood value

Strong projects should improve the surrounding quality of life through active ground floors, lighting, cleanliness, safer walkability, access planning, local services, and business participation.

6

Make profit and public value compatible

The strongest deals do not treat profit and public benefit as enemies. They align project success with citywide outcomes so development becomes a shared win.

The goal is not to punish developers for making money. The goal is to make sure public incentives help Paterson make progress.
Immediate Quality-of-Life Initiatives

Four fast-moving partnerships residents can feel before the abatement runs its full course.

The long-term value of an abatement may take years to measure. These immediate initiatives create earlier public value without turning developers into a replacement for city government or forcing every project into the same financial structure.

1. Paterson Neighborhood Care Partnership

A physical quality-of-life layer focused on trash hotspot removal, curb tidiness coordination, project-site debris responsibility, walkability reporting, corridor appearance, and dashboard tracking.

Go to Neighborhood Care

2. Paterson Development Access Partnership

An access-based partnership that gives residents a clear doorway into project updates, opportunity notices, job/vendor interest pathways, public-benefit education, and quality-of-life reporting.

Go to Development Access

3. Paterson Civic Build Partnership

A voluntary, feasibility-based pathway for developers to support civic and recreational infrastructure through in-kind construction capacity, trade coordination, material support, or project collaboration.

Go to Civic Build

4. Paterson Resident Trades Exposure Initiative

A supervised, safety-compliant exposure pathway connecting residents to construction awareness, infrastructure understanding, workforce orientation, and civic maintenance participation.

Go to Trades Exposure
One initiative improves the condition of the blocks. One improves the resident’s access to opportunity. One helps visible civic infrastructure move faster where partnership is feasible. One helps leave behind exposure, awareness, and civic participation capacity.
Immediate Quality-of-Life Service

Paterson Neighborhood Care Partnership.

Tax abatements and PILOTs can take years before residents feel the full fiscal benefit. The Neighborhood Care Partnership creates an immediate, visible public-benefit layer while the long-term agreement runs its course.

The basic rule

For major publicly supported developments, the city may negotiate a project-specific Neighborhood Care Plan covering the surrounding impact area. The plan should be scaled to the project, reviewed for feasibility, and structured to supplement — not replace — normal municipal services.

The goal is not to make developers responsible for the entire city. The goal is to create a visible quality-of-life return in the immediate area where the public incentive and neighborhood impact meet.

The impact zone

A standard Neighborhood Care Plan may cover a quarter-mile radius around the project area, or a smaller/larger radius based on project size, street layout, pedestrian impact, construction activity, commercial corridor conditions, and municipal review.

What residents should feel in the first 90 days

Once a Neighborhood Care Plan is activated, residents should begin seeing visible, trackable improvements before the long-term financial benefits of the abatement are fully realized.

  • Mapped trash hotspots within the agreed project impact zone.
  • Recurring curb-condition checks near the project area.
  • Documented cleanup, reporting, or coordination actions.
  • Clear separation between neighborhood support and project-site debris responsibility.
  • Lighting, walkability, sidewalk, and obstruction issues reported through the proper city channels.
  • Public dashboard updates showing what was inspected, resolved, pending, or placed into cure status.
  • Visible corridor appearance improvements where feasible.
  • Resident-facing proof that the public incentive is producing public value now — not only years later.
1

Trash hotspot removal

Replace one-time cleanup language with a long-term trash hotspot removal standard within a quarter-mile radius of the project area. This can include recurring inspection, documentation, removal coordination, and dashboard reporting for persistent litter, illegal dumping, overflowing public trash points, and visibly neglected corners.

2

Curb tidiness support

Instead of promising broad bulk pickup for every resident, the plan should focus on curb tidiness: proper set-out education, scheduled curb-condition checks, coordination with city bulk pickup rules, reporting of improper dumping, and targeted assistance where project activity contributes to curbside disorder.

3

Project-related debris control

Developers should remain directly responsible for construction debris, contractor waste, site cleanliness, dust controls, fencing conditions, sidewalk obstruction management, and any bulk or debris generated by the project site itself.

4

Walkability and lighting reports

The plan can include reporting of broken lighting, unsafe sidewalks, blocked pedestrian paths, missing signs, damaged curbs, and other issues that affect daily resident movement around the project area.

5

Corridor appearance

Where appropriate, the agreement may include sidewalk sweeping, trash receptacle coordination, graffiti reporting or removal, planter maintenance, street-edge beautification, and support for cleaner commercial corridors near the project.

6

Public dashboard tracking

Residents should be able to see non-confidential metrics: hotspot inspections, resolved conditions, reported dumping locations, curb tidiness actions, site-related debris issues, and open quality-of-life concerns.

Service Area
Improved Wording
Why It Is Stronger
Long-Term Control
Clean Block Response
Trash hotspot removal and corridor cleanliness support within a quarter-mile radius of the project area.
Makes the obligation measurable, geographic, and long-term instead of vague.
Recurring inspections, documentation, removal coordination, and dashboard reporting.
Bulk Pickup Support
Curb tidiness and bulk set-out coordination for the impact zone, with direct project-site debris responsibility where applicable.
Avoids making developers responsible for unrelated household bulk while still improving visible curb conditions.
Education, reporting, coordination with city schedules, and targeted assistance only where appropriate.
Project-Site Waste
Construction debris, contractor waste, project-generated bulk, and site-related disorder remain the developer’s responsibility.
Separates neighborhood support from direct project accountability.
Site inspections, contractor controls, cure notices, and compliance reporting.
While the abatement helps the project stabilize financially, the Neighborhood Care Partnership helps the surrounding community stabilize physically.
Immediate Quality-of-Life Service

Paterson Development Access Partnership.

Publicly supported development should not feel like something happening behind closed doors. The Development Access Partnership creates a clear resident-facing pathway to understand the project, access opportunity notices, follow public benefits, and participate in the process without placing unrealistic financial burdens on developers.

The basic rule

For major publicly supported developments, the city may require or strongly encourage a project-specific Resident Access Plan. This plan gives residents a structured way to receive updates, register interest, attend access sessions, submit development-related concerns, and understand how the abatement is intended to benefit the public.

This is an access and coordination model — not a guarantee of jobs, housing, contracts, or private benefits. It creates a fair doorway into opportunities that already exist or may be created by the project.

The message to developers

The goal is not to make developers carry the whole city. The goal is to make sure residents have a real doorway into publicly supported development. Clear access improves trust, reduces rumors, strengthens public support, and helps developers document good-faith outreach.

What residents should access in the first 90 days

Once a Resident Access Plan is activated, residents should be able to find basic project information, register interest, and understand where opportunities and public-benefit updates will appear.

  • A public project access page or city-approved information channel.
  • A resident opportunity sign-up for project updates, jobs, vendors, leasing alerts, and public meetings.
  • A designated Resident Development Navigator, liaison, or access contact.
  • Plain-language explanation of why the abatement was granted and what public benefits were negotiated.
  • Developer Access Session dates or milestone-based public updates.
  • Construction-impact notices before major project phases.
  • Quality-of-life concern reporting connected to the project impact area.
  • Dashboard connection showing commitments, updates, and non-confidential outcomes.
1

Resident Opportunity Registry

Residents can register to receive notice of project-related opportunities, including construction jobs, permanent jobs, apprenticeships, vendor opportunities, commercial space alerts, affordable housing updates where applicable, and public meetings.

2

Developer Access Sessions

Developers participate in scheduled or milestone-based public access sessions to explain project timelines, upcoming opportunities, construction impacts, public-benefit commitments, and how residents can stay connected.

3

Project Opportunity Notices

Notices are issued at key phases such as construction start, subcontractor/vendor needs, hiring windows, leasing/application periods, commercial space availability, and public-benefit reporting updates.

4

Resident Development Navigator

Each qualifying project identifies a point of contact, liaison, city channel, or compliance partner who can direct residents to project information, opportunity notices, reporting channels, and dashboard updates.

5

Public Benefit Education

Residents receive a plain-language explanation of how the abatement works, what was negotiated, what the developer committed to, how outcomes will be tracked, and what happens if commitments are missed.

6

Dashboard Connection

The access partnership connects directly to the public dashboard so residents can see project updates, public-benefit commitments, access-session activity, opportunity notices, and non-confidential performance data.

Access Tool
Improved Wording
Why It Is Fair
Resident Benefit
Opportunity Registry
Residents receive structured access to project-related notices and legally compliant consideration pathways.
It does not guarantee jobs, units, or contracts; it organizes access to information and opportunity.
Residents know where to sign up and how to stay informed.
Access Sessions
Developers participate in scheduled updates tied to project milestones and public-benefit commitments.
It creates communication without turning developers into social-service agencies.
Residents hear directly about timelines, impacts, and upcoming opportunities.
Project Notices
Project phase notices explain jobs, vendor needs, leasing windows, construction impacts, and reporting updates.
It is low-cost, predictable, and supports good-faith outreach documentation.
Residents stop relying on rumors and start receiving clear updates.
If public support helps move a project forward, residents should be enabled to understand, access, and participate in the process.
Immediate Quality-of-Life Service

Paterson Civic Build Partnership.

Publicly supported development already mobilizes construction crews, trade specialists, project management systems, equipment, subcontractors, and material coordination. The Civic Build Partnership creates a structured pathway for portions of that construction capacity to support visible quality-of-life infrastructure where appropriate and feasible.

The basic rule

For qualifying projects, the city may invite, encourage, or negotiate a project-specific Civic Build Partnership as part of the broader public-benefit discussion. This is not a blanket requirement and should not be treated as a new tax or automatic construction obligation.

Participation should be negotiated, project-specific, feasibility-based, legally compliant, transparently documented, and structured to supplement — not replace — normal municipal capital responsibilities.

The message to developers

The goal is not to force developers to become public works agencies. The goal is to identify opportunities where active development capacity can help accelerate neighborhood improvement through coordinated civic construction partnerships.

What residents may see early

When a Civic Build Partnership is feasible, residents may see visible improvements to public-facing spaces before the long-term fiscal value of the abatement is fully realized.

  • Recreation center renovation support or buildout coordination.
  • Basketball court, playground, athletic field, or youth-space upgrades.
  • Lighting, fencing, sidewalk, seating, or public-space improvements.
  • Construction staging, project management, or site-preparation support where appropriate.
  • Material sourcing coordination or in-kind construction assistance.
  • ADA access upgrades, landscaping, or pedestrian corridor improvements.
  • Public dashboard tracking of agreed civic build participation.
  • Visible proof that development can help strengthen public spaces, not only private structures.
1

In-kind construction support

Where feasible, participation may include labor hours, project management assistance, site preparation, concrete work, framing support, paving, fencing, lighting, landscaping, or other construction-related capacity.

2

Recreation implementation

Civic Build may support recreation center renovations, playground rehabilitation, basketball courts, athletic fields, youth spaces, senior recreation upgrades, fitness areas, or community room buildouts.

3

Material and equipment coordination

Developers may help coordinate supplier relationships, donated or discounted materials, equipment access, staging support, or subcontractor coordination when it does not undermine project feasibility.

4

Neighborhood infrastructure

Participation may support sidewalks, lighting, fencing, landscaping, ADA improvements, pedestrian corridors, public seating, plazas, corridor beautification, or public-space enhancements.

5

Voluntary partnership structure

The model should preserve developer feasibility by using voluntary, suggested, negotiated, or incentive-aligned participation instead of rigid blanket obligations across every project.

6

Public tracking

Any agreed civic build support should be documented through the public dashboard, showing the project, type of support, estimated value where appropriate, status, and completion updates.

Build Tool
Improved Wording
Why It Is Fair
Resident Benefit
In-Kind Support
Developers may participate through construction services, trade coordination, materials, equipment, or project management where feasible.
It uses existing development capacity without requiring a one-size-fits-all cash contribution.
Public projects may move faster or cost less.
Recreation Projects
Civic build support may help recreation centers, courts, playgrounds, fields, youth spaces, senior spaces, and community rooms.
It connects development to public spaces residents use daily.
Families see tangible neighborhood upgrades.
Feasibility Review
Participation remains project-specific, negotiated, legally reviewed, and supplemental to city capital planning.
It avoids overburdening developers or replacing municipal responsibility.
The city gains a practical partnership tool without deterring investment.
Development should not only build private structures. Where feasible, it should help strengthen the public spaces people live around every day.
Immediate Quality-of-Life Service

Paterson Resident Trades Exposure Initiative.

Publicly supported development projects already mobilize skilled trades, infrastructure expertise, equipment coordination, and operational knowledge. The Resident Trades Exposure Initiative creates a structured pathway for residents to observe, learn about, and engage with infrastructure and construction-related career pathways in a safe, supervised, and legally compliant environment.

The basic rule

For qualifying projects, the city may encourage or coordinate project-specific resident trades exposure opportunities where feasible, voluntary, safety-compliant, legally appropriate, and operationally practical. Participation should never be interpreted as a requirement to create a trade school, guarantee employment, bypass licensing standards, or expose residents to unsafe construction activity.

The initiative is intended to provide supervised exposure, awareness, and pathway development — not professional licensing, guaranteed employment, or unsupervised construction participation.

The message to developers

The goal is not to shift workforce-development responsibility entirely onto developers. The goal is to create structured opportunities for residents to gain exposure to civic infrastructure knowledge, construction awareness, project coordination, and practical quality-of-life improvement systems that already exist around active development.

What residents may see in the first 90 days

When feasible and safely coordinated, residents may begin seeing structured exposure opportunities tied to infrastructure awareness, civic maintenance participation, and workforce orientation.

  • Trade-awareness sessions or supervised infrastructure demonstrations.
  • Beautification and civic-maintenance participation events.
  • Safety-compliant project walk-throughs or contractor introductions.
  • Orientation events explaining how infrastructure systems are repaired, maintained, and coordinated.
  • Exposure to civic infrastructure basics such as sidewalk workflows, pothole repair processes, landscaping, fencing, drainage awareness, and corridor maintenance coordination.
  • Project logistics and construction coordination awareness.
  • City-approved workforce pathway referrals where appropriate.
  • Public dashboard tracking of approved exposure sessions and participation activity.
1

Infrastructure awareness

Residents may receive exposure to how pothole repair, sidewalk workflows, drainage systems, corridor cleanup, landscaping, fencing, lighting, and public-space maintenance are coordinated.

2

Trade-awareness exposure

Exposure opportunities may include awareness sessions related to concrete work, framing, paving, site logistics, project coordination, safety culture, subcontractor systems, and infrastructure operations.

3

Supervised participation

All participation should remain supervised, safety-compliant, legally reviewed, operationally appropriate, and consistent with OSHA standards, licensing requirements, insurance obligations, and site-safety protocols.

4

Workforce pathway connection

Where appropriate, the city may connect interested residents to workforce-development programs, union information, certification pathways, beautification initiatives, civic-improvement projects, or infrastructure participation opportunities.

5

Civic participation growth

The initiative helps develop a resident infrastructure participation network capable of supporting neighborhood improvement, beautification efforts, corridor care, and citywide quality-of-life initiatives over time.

6

Non-employment-guaranteed structure

Exposure opportunities shall not be interpreted as guaranteed employment, professional certification, contractor status, union placement, or authorization to perform licensed trade work without the legally required qualifications.

Exposure Tool
Bulletproof Wording
Why It Is Safer
Resident Benefit
Trade Exposure
Residents may participate in supervised, safety-compliant exposure and awareness opportunities where feasible and legally appropriate.
Avoids implying mandatory employment, certification, or unsafe labor participation.
Residents gain awareness of infrastructure and trade pathways.
Project Walkthroughs
Project walkthroughs and demonstrations remain voluntary, supervised, operationally appropriate, and subject to safety review.
Protects developers from uncontrolled site-access obligations.
Residents gain real-world understanding of development systems.
Workforce Pathways
The initiative may support awareness and referral pathways without guaranteeing jobs, placement, certification, licensing, or contractor status.
Protects against labor-law, licensing, and employment-liability concerns.
Residents gain structured access to future opportunities and civic participation systems.
Development should not only leave behind buildings. It should help leave behind knowledge, skills exposure, and stronger civic participation.
Conflict-Free Implementation

The model must belong to Paterson — not to any one organization.

Local capacity matters. Paterson has nonprofits, training providers, transportation operators, service organizations, contractors, small businesses, and neighborhood institutions that can help execute a stronger development model. But public implementation must be neutral, transparent, and legally defensible.

Conflict-Free Implementation Standard

No public incentive, developer contribution, workforce contract, transportation contract, training agreement, vendor opportunity, community-benefit payment, dashboard contract, or service agreement shall be directed to any private entity, nonprofit, campaign-affiliated organization, public-official-affiliated organization, candidate-affiliated organization, or related party without full disclosure, legal review, and a fair, open, competitive, or otherwise legally compliant selection process.

The model may identify examples of qualified local capacity, but public implementation must be neutral, transparent, conflict-screened, and independently reviewable.

Qualified provider network

Workforce, transportation, health, small-business, data, legal, and compliance partners should be selected through objective qualifications and documented need.

Open opportunity system

Local businesses and organizations should have a clear pathway to register, compete, qualify, report, and participate.

Independent review

Related-party concerns should be screened before any public-facing implementation or developer-funded agreement is executed.

Operating System

Five tools turn the idea into a working municipal process.

The goal is not to make every project harder. The goal is to make every significant public incentive more measurable, more transparent, and more useful to Paterson residents.

01

Baseline Fiscal & Public-Benefit Review

Before approval, the city identifies the project’s expected taxes, PILOT payments, public costs, infrastructure impact, jobs, vendor opportunities, housing outcomes, corridor effects, and long-term fiscal value.

02

Public Benefit Scorecard

Projects are scored against measurable categories: municipal revenue, local hiring, workforce pipeline, vendor participation, transportation access, affordable/community value, environmental impact, and reporting capacity.

03

Economic Impact Plan

The developer submits a plan explaining how the project will produce local benefit, which obligations are feasible, what partners are needed, and how compliance will be documented.

04

Economic Impact Agreement

The city and project entity execute enforceable terms covering local hiring targets, vendor goals, training pipelines, transportation planning, reporting, cure periods, penalties, and public dashboard obligations.

05

Quarterly Dashboard & Annual Certification

Non-confidential performance data is published quarterly. The developer submits an annual certified Economic Impact Report to show whether commitments were met, missed, cured, or modified.

Tiered Requirements

Not every project should carry the same burden.

The model should scale. A small storefront improvement should not be treated like a large PILOT-backed redevelopment. Bigger public benefit should require bigger public return.

Tier
Project Type
Core Requirement
Economic Obligation
Reporting
Tier 1
Small improvements, storefront upgrades, limited exemptions.
Basic application, project description, and good-faith local vendor consideration.
Minimal compliance; no major contribution requirement.
Completion confirmation and basic project outcome summary.
Tier 2
Mid-size commercial, mixed-use, corridor, or redevelopment projects.
Economic Impact Plan, vendor participation plan, workforce outreach, and access plan.
Negotiated community-benefit contribution or fixed public-benefit obligation where feasible.
Semiannual or quarterly reporting based on project complexity.
Tier 3
Large projects, long-term abatements, PILOTs, major redevelopment incentives.
Full Economic Impact Agreement with KPI enforcement and public dashboard.
Scaled local hiring targets, vendor goals, training pipeline, transportation plan, and negotiated reinvestment contribution.
Quarterly dashboard and annual certified Economic Impact Report.
Public Benefit Scorecard

Measure the deal before approving the deal.

The scorecard gives Paterson a repeatable way to compare projects, negotiate stronger terms, explain approvals, and show residents why a public incentive is justified.

Category
Question
Strong Evidence
Risk Signal
Recommended Control
Revenue
Does the project strengthen the tax base or PILOT revenue over time?
Clear fiscal forecast with post-agreement tax impact.
Low payment with unclear long-term benefit.
Independent financial review and public fiscal summary.
Jobs
Will residents access construction and permanent jobs?
Labor-hour target, job types, wage range, and hiring timeline.
Jobs mentioned but not tracked.
First-source hiring, good-faith documentation, and cure plan.
Vendors
Will Paterson businesses participate in project spending?
Eligible contract list, vendor outreach, and spend target.
Large spend leaves the city without local participation.
Vendor registry, bid notices, documentation, and capacity assistance.
Workforce
Does the project connect to training and placement?
Training partner, credential needs, interview commitments, and placement reporting.
No pipeline between residents and actual jobs.
Qualified provider network and workforce MOU.
Access
Can residents understand the project, access opportunity notices, and reach project-related pathways?
Resident Access Plan, opportunity registry, developer access sessions, project notices, and dashboard connection.
The project creates opportunity, but residents do not know where to go, who to contact, or what is available.
Resident Development Navigator, plain-language public-benefit education, quality-of-life reporting channel, and milestone updates.
Quality of Life
Will residents feel visible improvement, civic participation, and public access while the abatement runs its course?
Neighborhood Care Plan, Resident Access Plan, Civic Build Partnership options, Resident Trades Exposure Initiative, hotspot map, curb tidiness protocol, and dashboard tracking.
Long-term public benefit is promised but no immediate neighborhood improvement, resident access, or civic-space impact is visible.
Quarter-mile impact zone, recurring inspections, site-debris accountability, resident access pathway, civic build feasibility review, and municipal coordination.
Transparency
Can the public see whether promises were kept?
Quarterly dashboard and annual certification.
Commitments disappear after approval.
Public dashboard with privacy-safe summary data.
Contract Framework

The Economic Impact Agreement is the enforcement engine.

The Economic Impact Agreement should be used as a municipal-grade attachment or companion agreement that turns public-benefit promises into measurable, reportable, and enforceable obligations.

Economic Impact Agreement — Core Clauses

By and between the City of Paterson and the redeveloper/project entity, subject to legal review and project-specific negotiation.

1. Purpose Establish enforceable economic performance obligations in exchange for public financial benefit, including tax abatement, PILOT, exemption, redevelopment approval, or other municipal incentive.
2. Proportionality Obligations shall be scaled according to project size, incentive value, feasibility, project type, public cost, and documented public benefit.
3. Resident Workforce Target Establish a project-specific Paterson resident labor-hour target, supported by first-source hiring, documented outreach, contractor reporting, and availability-based waivers where appropriate.
4. Permanent Jobs Identify permanent jobs connected to operations, property management, maintenance, security, retail, services, vendors, and project-related activities, with resident outreach and reporting.
5. Workforce Pipeline Require coordination with qualified training providers selected through neutral, transparent, and legally compliant processes where project-related hiring demand exists.
6. Local Business Participation Require documented good-faith efforts to award eligible contracts, services, procurement opportunities, and recurring vendor work to qualified Paterson-based businesses.
7. Transportation Access Require a transportation access plan for workers, residents, seniors, service users, or corridor users connected to the project, scaled to actual need.
8. Community Benefit Contribution Where legally appropriate and financially feasible, negotiate a fixed annual public-benefit contribution, workforce-readiness contribution, compliance contribution, or project-specific reinvestment payment.
9. Reporting Require quarterly compliance reports and an annual certified Economic Impact Report documenting hiring, wages, vendor spend, workforce participation, transportation access, service delivery, and contributions.
10. Enforcement Use cure notices, corrective action plans, enhanced reporting, liquidated damages where lawful, benefit review, future incentive disqualification, or other remedies approved by counsel.
11. Transparency Publish non-confidential performance metrics through a public-facing Economic Impact Dashboard while protecting private, personnel, proprietary, and legally protected information.
12. Conflict Compliance Prohibit directed related-party benefit without disclosure, legal review, and a fair, open, competitive, or otherwise legally compliant process.
13. Developer Partnership Preserve project feasibility, fair developer return, financing reality, and construction practicality while aligning the public incentive with measurable quality-of-life, workforce, vendor, access, and neighborhood outcomes.
14. Neighborhood Care Plan Where appropriate, require a project-specific plan for trash hotspot removal, curb tidiness coordination, site-related debris control, corridor appearance, walkability reporting, and public dashboard tracking within the agreed project impact zone.
15. Resident Access Plan Where appropriate, require or encourage a project-specific resident access pathway for project updates, opportunity notices, public-benefit education, developer access sessions, designated contact information, quality-of-life reporting, and dashboard connection.
16. Civic Build Partnership Where feasible, invite, encourage, or negotiate voluntary in-kind construction support, trade coordination, material assistance, equipment access, or project collaboration for recreation, public-space, or neighborhood infrastructure improvements, subject to legal review and project-specific feasibility.
17. Resident Trades Exposure Initiative Where operationally appropriate and legally compliant, encourage supervised, voluntary, safety-compliant resident exposure opportunities related to civic infrastructure awareness, construction systems, beautification participation, workforce orientation, and project coordination, without guaranteeing employment, certification, licensing, contractor status, or unsupervised site participation.
Safer KPI Language

Strong targets. Legally smarter wording.

The model should be firm without creating unnecessary legal risk. Use targets, first-source hiring, documented outreach, trade-specific rules, workforce availability waivers, and cure plans instead of rigid blanket mandates.

Metric
Recommended Standard
Evidence Required
Cure / Control
Construction hiring
30% Paterson resident labor-hour target, subject to good-faith compliance, qualified worker availability, trade rules, and approved waivers.
Certified payroll, contractor reports, residency verification, referral records.
Corrective action plan, added outreach, workforce partner intervention, enhanced reporting.
Permanent jobs
25% Paterson resident hiring target for eligible permanent jobs where project operations support hiring demand.
Job descriptions, interviews, hires, wages, retention data, outreach records.
First-source hiring extension, training alignment, recruitment cure plan.
Local vendors
20% eligible local vendor participation goal, scaled by available contract categories and local capacity.
Bid lists, vendor outreach, contracts, invoices, payment confirmation.
Vendor registry outreach, unbundled contract opportunities, capacity support.
Workforce pipeline
Training, interview, and placement pipeline connected to actual project job demand.
Provider MOU, trainee enrollment, completions, interviews, placements.
New provider match, training timeline adjustment, hiring forecast update.
Community contribution
Negotiated fixed annual contribution or project-specific public-benefit payment where lawful and feasible.
Agreement schedule, payment records, fund/admin records, public summary.
Late fee, cure notice, revised payment schedule, benefit review where approved.
Public Dashboard

Residents should not have to guess what a deal produced.

Every major incentive should have a simple public-facing dashboard that shows non-confidential outcomes in plain language.

Project StatusApproved / Active
PILOT / Incentive TermProject-specific
Public Benefit Score0–100
Local Labor Hours% reported
Paterson Vendor Spend$ reported
Workforce Participants# trained
Permanent Jobs# tracked
Transportation AccessPlan status
Resident Registry# enrolled
Access Sessions# held
Project Notices# issued
Trash Hotspots# resolved
Curb TidinessActions logged
Civic Build SupportStatus
Recreation/Civic Projects# supported
Trades Exposure Sessions# held
Resident Participation# engaged
Compliance StatusOn track / Cure

What the public sees

Project status, approval date, incentive type, public-benefit commitments, local hiring progress, vendor spend, workforce outcomes, cure status, and annual certification status.

What remains protected

Personal identifying information, private employee records, protected business data, confidential financial details, legally privileged information, and proprietary documents.

Pilot-First Strategy

Start with one project. Prove it. Then scale.

The lowest-risk path is not a citywide mandate on day one. The smarter path is a controlled pilot with one new development, one abatement renewal, or one corridor-based project.

1

Select one pilot

Choose a project where the city can negotiate measurable public value without delaying needed development.

2

Set baseline metrics

Document current projected taxes/PILOT, jobs, vendor opportunities, transportation needs, public costs, and community benefit.

3

Negotiate the EIA

Attach scaled obligations to the project through an Economic Impact Agreement or formal agreement exhibit.

4

Launch dashboard

Publish quarterly non-confidential metrics so residents can see whether public benefits are being delivered.

5

Evaluate results

Compare projected outcomes to actual outcomes and identify legal, administrative, workforce, and developer concerns.

6

Scale responsibly

Use pilot findings to update the application, scorecard, ordinance language, and future negotiation standards.

Risk Register

Opposition-proof the model before opponents define it.

A strong policy anticipates objections. This model should be able to answer residents, developers, attorneys, city staff, unions, small businesses, and fiscal watchdogs.

Developer partnership concerns
Concern: requirements may increase project complexity or make deals harder to finance.
Response: frame the model as partnership, not punishment; use tiers, feasibility review, negotiated terms, and pilot-first implementation.
Control: proportionality clause, developer roundtables, cure periods, and project-specific financial analysis.
Workforce availability gaps
Concern: not enough residents are ready for certain trades or jobs.
Response: use first-source hiring, training pipelines, and documented availability waivers.
Control: workforce registry, training partners, and cure periods.
Local vendor capacity
Concern: local firms may not be ready for large contracts.
Response: unbundle contracts, create vendor readiness support, and track outreach.
Control: vendor registry and documented good-faith effort.
Administrative burden
Concern: city staff may lack capacity to monitor deals.
Response: use applicant-funded review, templates, dashboards, and targeted pilot scope.
Control: compliance officer role and standardized reporting forms.
Conflict concerns
Concern: public benefits could be steered to insiders.
Response: conflict-free implementation standard and public provider selection rules.
Control: disclosure, legal review, competitive process, and public reporting.
Real Paterson Example

Use real projects to show what better deal design looks like.

This model should not attack development, affordable housing, or developers. It should show how public benefit could be structured, measured, and reported when a project receives a major public advantage.

Example project

A publicly reported 74-unit affordable housing project in Paterson with an approximately $36.6 million project cost and a reported 30-year tax abatement approval.

Policy issue

Where local hiring, vendor spend, workforce training, transportation access, or reinvestment data is not publicly visible, the public cannot easily judge the full economic return.

Model upgrade

The city could attach a project-specific Economic Impact Agreement requiring measurable public-benefit outcomes, quarterly reporting, and privacy-safe dashboard metrics.

Category
Traditional Model
New Paterson Model
Projected Benefit
Tradeoff
Public incentive
Abatement supports project feasibility.
Abatement remains available but tied to measurable public outcomes.
Public benefit becomes proportional to public support.
Developer accepts stronger compliance terms.
Construction jobs
Jobs may occur but local labor outcomes may not be publicly tracked.
Resident labor-hour target, first-source outreach, and reporting.
Residents gain access to construction income.
Requires contractor coordination and verification.
Permanent jobs
Permanent job outcomes may not be structured into approval.
Operations, maintenance, services, property management, and vendor jobs are identified and tracked.
Post-construction employment pathways become visible.
Some housing projects have fewer direct permanent jobs, requiring service/vendor integration.
Vendor spend
Local business participation may be informal.
Eligible local vendor participation goal and documented outreach.
More project spending circulates locally.
Requires vendor readiness and fair procurement practices.
Transparency
Public sees approval but not always performance.
Quarterly dashboard and annual certification.
Trust increases because promises can be checked.
Requires compliance infrastructure.

Public example: this section is based on publicly reported information about a Paterson affordable housing project involving 74 units, an approximately $36.6 million project cost, and a reported 30-year tax abatement. The purpose is not to criticize the project, affordable housing, or the developer, but to show how future public-benefit reporting could be strengthened.

Adoption Package

What Paterson would need to make this real.

The webpage should lead toward an executable package. This is where the campaign moves from ideas to government-ready implementation.

Policy tools

  • Ordinance amendment or policy resolution.
  • Developer application addendum.
  • Public Benefit Scorecard.
  • Neighborhood Care Plan template.
  • Resident Access Plan template.
  • Civic Build Partnership template.
  • Resident Trades Exposure template.
  • Tiered incentive schedule.
  • Conflict-free implementation rules.

Contract tools

  • Economic Impact Agreement template.
  • Reporting exhibit.
  • Cure and default schedule.
  • Community-benefit contribution schedule.
  • Dashboard data-sharing terms.
  • Civic build participation exhibit.

Public tools

  • One-page public explainer.
  • Dashboard prototype.
  • Resident opportunity registry prototype.
  • Civic infrastructure partnership map.
  • Resident trades exposure pathway prototype.
  • Real-project simulation.
  • Community meeting script.
  • Annual impact report template.
Decision Tree

A simple approval logic for officials and residents.

This decision tree makes the model easy to understand. If a project asks for public financial benefit, it should answer public-benefit questions before approval.

1

Does the project need public financial benefit?

If yes, require a financial feasibility review and public-benefit analysis. If no, process under standard development review.

2

Does the project produce measurable public outcomes?

If no, require an Economic Impact Plan before approval. If yes, define the outcomes in writing.

3

Are the obligations proportional and feasible?

If no, recalibrate the terms. If yes, attach them to the agreement.

4

Can the public track performance?

If no, approval should require dashboard reporting. If yes, publish non-confidential quarterly metrics.

Reference Framework

Public sources that support the structure.

These references should be used by the page editor, policy team, and counsel when building the final ordinance, application addendum, public benefit scorecard, and Economic Impact Agreement.

New Jersey Long-Term Tax Exemption Law

Use for financial agreement structure, exemption duration, and annual service charge framework.

View reference

Paterson Code — Tax Exemptions and Abatements

Use for application requirements, employee information, project benefits, tax estimates, and governing body review.

View reference

Paterson Code — PILOT Escrow Deposits

Use for applicant-funded professional review, economic analysis, consultant opinions, document preparation, and inspections.

View reference

NJ DCA Municipal Tax Abatement Toolkit

Use for municipal handbook, PILOT forecasting model, database/viewer, and reporting templates.

View reference