Wyckoff's Township Committee is threading a careful needle on affordable housing: moving steadily toward meeting its state-mandated obligations while co-pursuing a legal challenge that could still upend the entire process.

At Tuesday's regular meeting, officials provided an update on both tracks. On the compliance side, the committee is on schedule to introduce and adopt the zoning ordinances required under New Jersey's fourth-round Fair Housing Act obligation[1] before the March 15th deadline — the date by which municipalities must act or risk losing their immunity from 'builder's remedy' litigation.

On the litigation side, township attorney David noted that Justice Samuel Alito of the United States Supreme Court had agreed to review a request[2] from a coalition of approximately 30 New Jersey municipalities — including Wyckoff — for an emergency stay that would pause the March 15th deadline. That request remains pending, and officials cautioned that receiving a review is not the same as being granted relief.

'We're doing both things at once,' the attorney said. 'We are fulfilling our constitutional obligation, and we are fighting what we believe are flaws in the rules and the timeline they've imposed on us.'

The committee also formally adopted the 2026 sewer charges under Ordinance 2063, establishing the rates residents and businesses will pay to use Wyckoff's sanitary sewer system this year. No public comment was offered at the hearing.

In a warmer moment, the evening opened with a recognition of Reverend Fred Provenger, a local pastor who has served the Wyckoff community for 30 years. Committee members praised his decades of contributions to civic life and interfaith dialogue.

The committee also formalized a shared service agreement with the Mid-Bergen Regional Health Commission, which recently took over the county's public health services in the area including the township's well-baby clinic program.

The committee meets next on February 24th for a special session devoted entirely to affordable housing[3] — at which the full suite of overlay zoning ordinances will be introduced.