FOX Enterprise correspondent Jeff Flock reviews on a New Jersey household farm vulnerable to being seized by the native authorities, and the way the Trump administration might intervene to assist cease it.
A longtime household farm in Cranbury, New Jersey, is vulnerable to being seized by the city by way of eminent area.
The scenario with the farm owned by brothers Christopher and Andy Henry, which has been of their household for 175 years, lately drew discover from U.S. Division of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins.
Rollins mentioned on X final week that she was “wanting into this case instantly,” including, “We should defend household farms in any respect prices.
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“Whether or not the Maudes, the Henrys or others whom we’ll quickly announce, the Biden-style authorities takeover of our household farms is over,” she wrote in a subsequent June 17 put up. “Whereas this specific case is a metropolis eminent area problem, we @usda are exploring each authorized possibility to assist.”
Rollins additionally mentioned she had been “on the telephone” with Andy Henry.
Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins within the Oval Workplace as President Donald Trump indicators government orders on the White Home on April 9, 2025. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Pictures / Getty Pictures)
The farm is beneath risk of seizure by Cranbury Township after a city committee signed off on a measure that may pave the best way for eminent area seizure, NJ.com reported.
Cranbury Township is taking a look at presumably constructing state-mandated inexpensive housing on a big portion of the farm’s land, in accordance with the outlet.
The Henry brothers have reportedly been preventing to stop the seizure of the farm for months.
The household farm, which is now leased out for cattle farming, has belonged to Christopher and Andy Henry for over a dozen years. They’ve poured $200,000 into the property and declined affords of as much as $30 million made by builders in that point, NJ.com reported.

The Henry farm is being leased out for cattle farming. ( / iStock)
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Whereas advocating to maintain their farm, the Henry brothers have mentioned its proximity to warehouses wouldn’t make it a great place to assemble inexpensive housing and that there are higher websites elsewhere. Their legal professional, Timothy Dugan, has additionally argued the transfer contradicts the city’s work to protect agricultural land within the space.
FOX Enterprise reached out to Cranbury Mayor Lisa Knierim and Dugan for remark.
Andy Henry informed FOX Enterprise correspondent Jeff Flock that the city’s transfer “completely shocked us.”
Officers have indicated a good market worth can be provided to the Henry household within the occasion of eminent area, per NJ.com.

Trump admin joins combat to avoid wasting 175-year-old household farm from native authorities
Requested about that, Andy Henry informed Flock his household “do not even wish to promote it” however mentioned the city “would supply us rather a lot lower than a warehouse developer would.”
Knierim is in search of an eminent area takeover of the farm as a result of it will stave off builders pursuing costly “builder’s treatment lawsuits,” in accordance NJ.com.
She has additionally mentioned nobody “is in favor of eminent area” or “needs to see a farm disappear” up to now, NJ.com reported.
Andy Henry informed Flock that Rollins “mentioned she’d make a couple of calls” when she spoke with him.
“She did acknowledge that this isn’t a federal problem, however she’s attempting to assist in any manner she might,” he mentioned.
Cranbury Township is positioned in north-central New Jersey. The city itself is residence to a number of thousand folks, with Middlesex County, the county it falls inside, having a bigger inhabitants of over 890,000.
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