Reform Monroe Township

Reform Monroe Township My name is Everett T Davis and I'm running for Council at large in Monroe Township with Brenda Brown, Yvonne Pilla and Councilman John Valentine for Mayor.

The change Monroe Township needs.

Why the decision on Tuesday nights special Planning Board meeting  doesn't matter. The problem is that the Monroe Townsh...
05/15/2026

Why the decision on Tuesday nights special Planning Board meeting doesn't matter.

The problem is that the Monroe Township Planning Board made DATA CENTERS an allowable use on the HEXA redevelopment property. That decision opened the door to this application in the first place. Even though the Township later adopted a ban, that alone may not matter.
HEXA submitted its application knowing a ban was being discussed because they had already been told a DATA CENTER was an allowable use on that property. From their perspective, they submitted in good faith based on the zoning and redevelopment rules the Township itself established. That creates a serious legal problem for the Township because HEXA will almost certainly argue in court that they relied on the Township’s own approvals and ordinances when investing time and money into this project.
If that argument succeeds, the residents lose, the Township loses, and suddenly we are facing the reality of two DATA CENTERS on the HEXA property.
In my opinion, the ban alone was never enough when it came to HEXA. If the Township truly intends to stop this project, they cannot simply hide behind one ordinance and hope the courts save them. They need to immediately begin adopting comprehensive ordinances that address every aspect of the proposed DATA CENTER operation using the very plans HEXA submitted against them.
That means ordinances involving:
○ Water usage and aquifer protection
○ Electrical infrastructure and substation impacts
○ Noise limitations
○ Diesel generator restrictions
○ Emissions and air quality
○ Building height and massing
○ Setback requirements
○ Stormwater management
○ Environmental protections
○ Traffic impacts
○ Emergency response requirements
○ Energy consumption standards
○ Cooling systems
○ Light pollution
○ Construction limitations
○ Public health protections

The Township needs to make the project impossible to construct under local law instead of pretending a single ban ordinance is enough protection.
Because if the Township simply relies on this ban and does nothing else, many residents will understandably believe this entire situation was a dog and pony show from the beginning.
I have serious concerns that making DATA CENTERS an allowable use may have involved backroom politics, promises of high-paying jobs, future contracts, or politically connected opportunities for those who enabled it. At a minimum, it is extremely difficult to believe that nobody on the Planning Board conducted even the most basic research into what a massive industrial DATA CENTER would mean for this community before approving it as a permitted use.
These facilities are not small office buildings. They are industrial-scale operations with enormous power demands, massive water consumption, backup generator systems, and long-term environmental and infrastructure impacts.
Many residents now believe this may have been orchestrated from the beginning to quietly move the project forward before the public fully understood what was happening. Once residents started paying attention and speaking out, the Township appeared to shift into damage-control mode and adopted what many see as a weak ban that could ultimately be overturned in court.
If that happens, residents will once again be left paying the price for decisions they were never honestly informed about in the first place.

05/14/2026

My speach is below without having to go through the full video to it'sstart time.

The problem is that the Monroe Township Planning Board made DATA CENTERS an allowable use on the HEXA redevelopment property. That decision opened the door to this application in the first place. Even though the Township later adopted a ban, that alone may not matter.
HEXA submitted its application knowing a ban was being discussed because they had already been told a DATA CENTER was an allowable use on that property. From their perspective, they submitted in good faith based on the zoning and redevelopment rules the Township itself established. That creates a serious legal problem for the Township because HEXA will almost certainly argue in court that they relied on the Township’s own approvals and ordinances when investing time and money into this project.
If that argument succeeds, the residents lose, the Township loses, and suddenly we are facing the reality of two DATA CENTERS on the HEXA property.
In my opinion, the ban alone was never enough when it came to HEXA. If the Township truly intends to stop this project, they cannot simply hide behind one ordinance and hope the courts save them. They need to immediately begin adopting comprehensive ordinances that address every aspect of the proposed DATA CENTER operation using the very plans HEXA submitted against them.
That means ordinances involving:
○ Water usage and aquifer protection
○ Electrical infrastructure and substation impacts
○ Noise limitations
○ Diesel generator restrictions
○ Emissions and air quality
○ Building height and massing
○ Setback requirements
○ Stormwater management
○ Environmental protections
○ Traffic impacts
○ Emergency response requirements
○ Energy consumption standards
○ Cooling systems
○ Light pollution
○ Construction limitations
○ Public health protections

The Township needs to make the project impossible to construct under local law instead of pretending a single ban ordinance is enough protection.
Because if the Township simply relies on this ban and does nothing else, many residents will understandably believe this entire situation was a dog and pony show from the beginning.
I have serious concerns that making DATA CENTERS an allowable use may have involved backroom politics, promises of high-paying jobs, future contracts, or politically connected opportunities for those who enabled it. At a minimum, it is extremely difficult to believe that nobody on the Planning Board conducted even the most basic research into what a massive industrial DATA CENTER would mean for this community before approving it as a permitted use.
These facilities are not small office buildings. They are industrial-scale operations with enormous power demands, massive water consumption, backup generator systems, and long-term environmental and infrastructure impacts.
Many residents now believe this may have been orchestrated from the beginning to quietly move the project forward before the public fully understood what was happening. Once residents started paying attention and speaking out, the Township appeared to shift into damage-control mode and adopted what many see as a weak ban that could ultimately be overturned in court.
If that happens, residents will once again be left paying the price for decisions they were never honestly informed about in the first place.

Last night I spoke before the Monroe Township Council regarding the proposed DATA CENTER application submitted by HEXA R...
05/14/2026

Last night I spoke before the Monroe Township Council regarding the proposed DATA CENTER application submitted by HEXA Redevelopment.

What makes this even more concerning is that during the second reading of the township’s DATA CENTER ban ordinance, both the Mayor and members of Council publicly stated there were no applications submitted. We now know that statement was false, as residents learned during Tuesday’s special Planning Board meeting that an application had in fact already been filed.

The township is now relying on a ban ordinance to stop this project. The problem is that earlier the township made DATA CENTERS an allowable use on the HEXA redevelopment property. That decision created the exact legal argument HEXA is now going to use against the township. Had DATA CENTERS never been made an allowable use in the first place, the ban ordinance likely would have carried far more legal weight. Unfortunately, that is not the situation we are facing.

During my remarks, I was repeatedly interrupted by Councilman Heverly, Councilman Rossi, and the township solicitor because I raised concerns about campaign donations made by developers and special interests to officials currently sitting on the dais. I believe residents have every right to question whether large political donations can influence decision-making at Town Hall. That is not a “campaign speech.” That is accountability. And that is what I was calling for and real safeguards to protect our community from DATA CENTERS.

Long before I ever considered running for office, I appeared before Council multiple times regarding the premature release of bonds connected to unfinished work in The Greens. At that time, I was not a candidate for anything nor did I have any interestwhat so ever in being one. I was simply a resident demanding that the township hold developers accountable and protect homeowners from being left with unfinished obligations.

It was only after the DATA CENTER issue emerged, and after seeing what I believe were insufficient actions and serious mistakes by township leadership, that I was approached and recruited to run for one of the Council-at-Large seats this November.

I do not want to become a politician. In fact, I detest what politics has become because too many elected officials end up serving themselves, political donors, or developers instead of the residents they swore an oath to represent.

If elected, I will not be a career politician. I will be an advocate for residents first and foremost.

I have already pledged that I will donate 80% of my council salary to local charities and community organizations, using only the remaining 20% for the tools necessary to perform my duties, such as equipment, materials, and outreach to residents.

I will never accept promises of board seats, jobs, favors, or special treatment from developers or political interests. I am running for office to protect residents, demand accountability, improve transparency, and ensure that any developer seeking to build in Monroe Township is held to the highest possible standards so taxpayers and homeowners are never left paying for the consequences of poor oversight.

If you would like to view my speech it starts at the 35:37 minute mark.

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I had zero doubt that the Planning Board’s decision to make DATA CENTERS an allowable use on the HEXA redevelopment land...
05/08/2026

I had zero doubt that the Planning Board’s decision to make DATA CENTERS an allowable use on the HEXA redevelopment land followed by their weak so-called “ban” would never be enough to stop this from happening.

I’ve said from the beginning that if Monroe truly wanted to stop DATA CENTERS, the Township would have to go back to the Master Plan and completely rewrite the industrial zoning ordinances to permanently prohibit them. That means eliminating every loophole and every pathway a developer could use to force one into our town.

Instead, what did residents get? A rushed, politically convenient ordinance designed more for public optics than real protection.

Let’s be honest: DATA CENTERS did not magically become an allowable use by accident. That language was put there intentionally. It was reviewed intentionally. And it was approved intentionally by the Planning Board.

Now residents are expected to believe the same people who opened the door are suddenly fighting to close it? I don’t buy it.

Yes, they acted like they were listening to residents once public outrage exploded, but they never mounted a serious legal or legislative fight to stop DATA CENTERS permanently. They passed a weak ordinance while leaving the Township exposed to exactly what is happening now a court challenge that could overturn the ban entirely.

This is why residents cannot sit back and assume the problem is solved.

Now the real fight begins.

Residents must hold Mayor Wolfe and every member of Council accountable to their promises. They said they would ban DATA CENTERS. Fine then do it correctly. Rewrite the ordinances. Amend the Master Plan. Close every loophole tied to heavy industrial development. Remove every avenue a developer can exploit.

And they must do it immediately.

Because if they fail to act decisively, their weak ban will collapse in court, and Monroe Township will end up with a massive DATA CENTER despite everything residents were promised.

The residents must stay united, show up, speak out, and demand permanent protections not political theater.

Who am I, and why should you vote for me?I’m not a politician. I never had any ambitions whatsoever to get into politics...
05/06/2026

Who am I, and why should you vote for me?

I’m not a politician. I never had any ambitions whatsoever to get into politics, and I never expected to be here. Like most of you, I believed my role was simple: stay informed, vote responsibly, and trust that the people elected would represent us.

But that trust only works when elected officials actually put residents first and too often, that’s not happening here in our town.

I’m running as a Republican, but I think independently. I believe in smaller, more efficient government, less bureaucracy, and cutting through red tape. I believe in the Constitution and conservative principles but I don’t believe in blind party loyalty. Common sense should come before party lines. If more elected officials worked that way, our communities would be far better off.

Local government shouldn’t be about national political fights, party loyalty, or division. It should be about one thing: serving the people who live here.

Service isn’t just a word to me it’s how I’ve lived my life. After I retired, I joined the Rotary. As a Rotarian, I’ve embraced their motto “Service Above Self,” putting others first, acting with integrity, and doing what’s right for the community prioritizing the needs of our neighbors. Having high ethical standards and finding fulfillment through aiding others. That’s exactly how I will serve as your Councilman.

I’m not doing this to build a political career. I’m not looking for the next position or personal gain. I’m running for one reason: to represent the residents of Monroe Township and to be someone you can count on when something isn’t right.

If you come to me with a concern, I won’t ignore it I’ll act on it.

If something needs to be fixed, I’ll fight to fix it.

If development is proposed, I won’t just read about it I’ll walk the neighborhoods, talk to residents, and understand the real impact.

If developers don’t meet their obligations, I’ll hold them accountable.

And if something threatens our quality of life, I’ll stand against it.

Public office is not a path to personal gain it’s a responsibility. And I take that seriously.

That’s why transparency will be my top priority.

Residents deserve to actually understand what’s happening in their town. That means:

Clear, straightforward meeting announcements

Agendas written in plain language and not legal jargon

No more hiding behind “block and lot” descriptions we need to tell people exactly where and what is being proposed

Government should be accessible, not confusing.

I will also push for real accountability:

Any elected official with a financial connection to a matter must recuse themselves no exceptions

No backdoor benefits, no using public office to serve developers or special interests

A five-year ban on council members taking jobs or board positions with companies that received township contracts

Because public service should never turn into private profit.

And every decision whether it’s a variance or a major development should be made with one simple question:

Would I want this next to my own home?

If the answer is no, it shouldn’t be forced on yours.

I moved to Monroe Township because I value its rural, residential character. Our local government should be focused on strengthening our Main Street not just adding more rooftops.

We should pursue smart business growth that enhances our community not projects that become long-term eyesores. Monroe should be a place people come to shop, dine, and spend time not just drive through.

That means:

Supporting responsible economic development

Protecting our schools from overburdening

Preserving our infrastructure

Making decisions that residents can be proud of

We must also identify and eliminate government waste, redundant positions, and any misuse of taxpayer dollars. The money this township collects is entrusted to its leaders and it should be treated that way.

We need real reform in how our local government operates.

Any developer who wants to build here should be held to the same standards a resident would face building their own home. No more overlooking failures because of political contributions or patronage.

This campaign is simple:

Residents come first. Always.

If you want a Councilman who will listen, show up, do the work, and fight for you without political agendas or personal gain then I’m asking for your vote.

Vote-By-Mail ballots are out, and now is the time to make your voice heard. When your ballot arrives, please don’t wait,...
05/04/2026

Vote-By-Mail ballots are out, and now is the time to make your voice heard. When your ballot arrives, please don’t wait, fill it out, seal it, sign it, and return it.

Vote for the Heartbeat of Monroe team:
❤️ John Valentine for Mayor
❤️ Everett Davis for Council-at-Large
❤️ Brenda Brown for Council-at-Large
❤️ Yvonne Pilla for Council-at-Large

Let’s return those Vote-By-Mail ballots and keep the pulse of Monroe moving in the right direction!

When will Mayor Wolfe and the Council answer a very simple question?A question I’ve now asked at three separate Council ...
05/03/2026

When will Mayor Wolfe and the Council answer a very simple question?
A question I’ve now asked at three separate Council meetings:
Who on the planning board and which “professionals” decided to make DATA CENTERS an allowable use on the HEXA redevelopment land?
Three separate meetings. Still no answer.
No response. No acknowledgment. Almost like the question was never asked.
Let’s be clear: a resolution “banning” data centers is not enough to keep them out of Monroe Township. If this use was quietly inserted as allowable in the first place, then the door was already opened and that’s exactly what needs to be explained.

This isn’t just about stopping one project.

It’s about understanding:
□ Why this use was allowed in the first place?
□ Who made that decision?
□ Who stands to benefit if a data center ultimately gets approved?
□ Were backroom deals made?
□ Are promises being lined up behind the scenes?
□ Are residents being told “everything is under control” only for things to change after the election?

We’ve seen how this plays out before.
If we’re serious about protecting Monroe, we need to go back to the Township Master Plan and overhaul everything with how heavy industrial uses are handled.
Not tweak it.
Not rely on symbolic resolutions.
Eliminate the possibility entirely.
Anything less is just kicking the can down the road and setting residents up to fight a losing battle later.
Residents deserve transparency.
Residents deserve honest answers.
Residents deserve honest leaders who will actually fight for them.

If you want to stop this kind of backroom decision-making in Monroe Township, then it’s time for change.

Vote for real reform.
Vote for leaders who will put residents ahead of developers and special interests.
Vote for The Heartbeat Of Monroe
Vote Valentine for Mayor and Davis, Brown, and Pilla for Council At Large because this is exactly the kind of issue we are committed to preventing in Monroe Township.

05/03/2026
Let me be absolutely clear I’m done asking.I’m done waiting. And I’m done watching residents get ignored while developer...
04/24/2026

Let me be absolutely clear I’m done asking.

I’m done waiting.
And I’m done watching residents get ignored while developers get everything they want.

I’m making this promise right now: no matter what, I will not stop fighting until this builder and all builders in Monroe Township are forced to finish properly what residents paid top dollar for.
Because this isn’t a one-off mistake.
This is a pattern.
This is how this township has been operating for years developers and special interests getting sweetheart treatment, while residents are left holding the bag when things go wrong.

I never wanted to get into politics.
But it doesn’t take long living in Williamstown to see exactly what’s happening here a system that bends over backwards for builders and then shrugs when residents are left with flooding basins, failing infrastructure, and unanswered questions.

Let’s call it what it is:
The 40-foot storage facility behind Queensferry strike one.

The data center pushed through as an allowable use on Black Horse Pike strike two.

And the premature release of Phase 1 and Phase 2 performance bonds without the work being completed or verified that wasn’t just strike three… that was a complete failure of responsibility.

That decision didn’t just “miss the mark.”
It shifted risk off the builder and directly onto the residents.
And when that happens, you don’t get excuses you get accountability.

That’s why I’m running for Council-at-Large.

And let me be clear about something else: I’m not going there to sit quietly, and I’m not going there to go along to get along.
No more rubber stamps.
No more early bond releases.
No more closed-door decisions that somehow always benefit developers and never the people paying the taxes.
Every agreement will be scrutinized.
Every obligation will be enforced.
And every official who thinks this is “business as usual” is going to be challenged publicly and relentlessly.
Because this township does not belong to developers. It does not belong to political insiders. And it certainly doesn’t belong to anyone looking to cash out and leave residents dealing with the consequences.
It belongs to the people who live here.
And if I earn your vote, I will make sure this council starts acting like it whether they like it or not.

Address

The Greens Community
Williamstown, NJ
08094

Website

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