WOLFSON, J.S.C.
I. Statement of the Case
The Township of Monroe filed this declaratory judgment action, pursuant to the authorization provided by the Supreme Court of [568]*568New Jersey in In re Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:96 and 5:97 by N.J. Council on Affordable Housing, 221 N.J. 1, 110 A.3d 31 (2015), (hereafter “Mount Laurel TV”) seeking a judicial declaration that its housing plan is presumptively valid and, if it is not, to determine what modifications are necessary to bring Monroe into compliance with its constitutional obligation to provide affordable housing.1
Before me is a motion filed by the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs (“DCA”) seeking leave to intervene and to file a counterclaim, which seeks a full accounting of Monroe’s affordable housing trust funds and an order requiring the turnover of these funds to the DCA, based on the Township’s purported failure “to spend or commit to spend” those monies within the period prescribed by N.J.S.A 52:27D-329.2(d) and -329.3(b). For the reasons set forth below, the DCA’s motion to intervene and file a counterclaim is DENIED.
II. Procedural Posture and Facts
a. The July 2008 Amendments to the Fair Housing Act
In July 2008, the Legislature amended the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”) to codify what was otherwise the judicially recognized authority of municipalities to impose affordable housing development fees upon developers and expressly permitted COAH to authorize certain municipalities to collect development fees and payments-in-lieu of construction fees from developers. N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2, -329.3. To ensure that the funds would actually be used toward the construction of affordable housing and would not be “stockpiled” indefinitely by the municipalities, the amendments to the Act require that a municipality spend or commit to expend the fees/payments-in-lieu within four years of the date of collection. Id. Importantly, however, the amendments further provide [569]*569that a municipality may not spend or commit to spend the fund monies unless and until it has obtained COAH’s approval of its spending plan. N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(a). A municipality that fails to spend or commit to expend its trust fund monies within the four-year period “shall be required by [COAH] to transfer the remaining unspent balance” to the New Jersey Affordable Housing Trust Fund (the “State Fund”). N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(d).2 The Legislature directed COAH to promulgate regulations regarding the establishment, administration, and enforcement of the expenditure of affordable housing development fees by municipalities — i.e., what actions would sufficiently constitute “commitment of funds” by a municipality-whieh it never accomplished.
Clearly, since the time of the 2008 amendments to the FHA, COAH gradually ceased to operate. In or around March 2012, Governor Chris Christie released the 2013 fiscal budget, which included “an amount not to exceed $200,000,000 of monies received in the ‘New Jersey Affordable Housing Trust Fund’” to be deposited in the General Fund as state revenue. FSHC commenced litigation to stop the seizure of the funds, resulting in an Appellate Division decision enjoining “COAH or any other part of the executive branch from engaging in any further attempt to seize affordable housing trust funds,”3 and directing that “the use and disposition of those funds will hereafter be decided, in the first instance, by Mount Laurel — designated trial judges.” In re Failure of the Council on Affordable Hous. to Adopt Trust Fund [570]*570Commitment Regulations, 440 N.J.Super. 220, 225, 112 A.3d 595 (App.Div.2015) (“The Trust Fund Decision ”).4
b. Relevant History of Monroe’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund
At all relevant times, Monroe was a “participating” municipality before COAH. On or around December 29, 2008, the Township adopted its Third Round Housing Element and Fair Share Plan as well as its Trust Fund Spending Plan, and submitted both to COAH for substantive certification. As a result of filing its petition, the Township was permitted to continue to impose and collect development fees in accordance with the approved ordinance and applicable regulations. N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(a); N.J.A.C. 5:97-8.1, -8.3. However, because COAH had not approved Monroe’s affordable housing or spending plans, the Township was statutorily prohibited from spending or committing to spend the funds collected. N.J.S.A 52:27D-329.2(a) (“A municipality may not spend or commit to spend any affordable housing fees, including Statewide non-residential fees collected and deposited into the municipal affordable housing trust fund, without first obtaining the council’s approval of the expenditure”) (emphasis added). COAH never approved Monroe’s affordable housing or spending plans, rendering Monroe, under the statute, unauthorized to spend or commit the funds in its affordable housing trust.
In May 2012, apparently in response to the inclusion of municipal affordable housing trust fund monies in the State’s 2013 fiscal budget, Monroe passed an ordinance authorizing the Township Council to create an irrevocable affordable housing trust, whereby all collected fees would be held by the Township Council for the [571]*571sole purpose of developing affordable housing in accordance with the Township’s spending plan. Concurrently, the Township adopted an amendment to its Third Round Housing Element and Fair Share Plan to include a municipality-sponsored project and two new overlay zones and also adopted an amendment to its Affordable Housing Trust Fund Spending Plan. On May 31, 2012, an affordable housing irrevocable trust was executed on behalf of Monroe, and on June 29, 2012, the Township’s Council, as trustee, opened two bank accounts at TD Bank and deposited the funds therein.5
Notwithstanding COAH’s failure to approve the spending plans submitted by Monroe in 2008 (as supplemented in 2012), COAH requested, on July 24, 2012, a “certification” as to the status of Monroe’s municipal fund and demanded a turnover thereof. The Township responded by letter dated August 9, 2012, certifying that the funds had been “deposited” in an “irrevocable” trust.
On August 10, 2012, the Supreme Court granted FSHC’s application for emergent relief and entered an order restraining COAH from “demanding or receiving affordable housing trust funds,” because these requests were being made unilaterally by COAH’S Executive Director without any approval by the COAH board.6
On May 1, 2013, COAH determined that the Township had failed to timely commit or expend $10,732,103.58, and demanded the forfeiture and transfer of all unspent affordable housing trust funds that had been collected between July 18, 2008, and March 31, 2009. The Township rejected this demand.
[572]*572On June 7, 2013, an “Interim Supplemental Order” was entered by the Appellate Division in the Trust Fund Litigation.
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WOLFSON, J.S.C.
I. Statement of the Case
The Township of Monroe filed this declaratory judgment action, pursuant to the authorization provided by the Supreme Court of [568]*568New Jersey in In re Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:96 and 5:97 by N.J. Council on Affordable Housing, 221 N.J. 1, 110 A.3d 31 (2015), (hereafter “Mount Laurel TV”) seeking a judicial declaration that its housing plan is presumptively valid and, if it is not, to determine what modifications are necessary to bring Monroe into compliance with its constitutional obligation to provide affordable housing.1
Before me is a motion filed by the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs (“DCA”) seeking leave to intervene and to file a counterclaim, which seeks a full accounting of Monroe’s affordable housing trust funds and an order requiring the turnover of these funds to the DCA, based on the Township’s purported failure “to spend or commit to spend” those monies within the period prescribed by N.J.S.A 52:27D-329.2(d) and -329.3(b). For the reasons set forth below, the DCA’s motion to intervene and file a counterclaim is DENIED.
II. Procedural Posture and Facts
a. The July 2008 Amendments to the Fair Housing Act
In July 2008, the Legislature amended the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”) to codify what was otherwise the judicially recognized authority of municipalities to impose affordable housing development fees upon developers and expressly permitted COAH to authorize certain municipalities to collect development fees and payments-in-lieu of construction fees from developers. N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2, -329.3. To ensure that the funds would actually be used toward the construction of affordable housing and would not be “stockpiled” indefinitely by the municipalities, the amendments to the Act require that a municipality spend or commit to expend the fees/payments-in-lieu within four years of the date of collection. Id. Importantly, however, the amendments further provide [569]*569that a municipality may not spend or commit to spend the fund monies unless and until it has obtained COAH’s approval of its spending plan. N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(a). A municipality that fails to spend or commit to expend its trust fund monies within the four-year period “shall be required by [COAH] to transfer the remaining unspent balance” to the New Jersey Affordable Housing Trust Fund (the “State Fund”). N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(d).2 The Legislature directed COAH to promulgate regulations regarding the establishment, administration, and enforcement of the expenditure of affordable housing development fees by municipalities — i.e., what actions would sufficiently constitute “commitment of funds” by a municipality-whieh it never accomplished.
Clearly, since the time of the 2008 amendments to the FHA, COAH gradually ceased to operate. In or around March 2012, Governor Chris Christie released the 2013 fiscal budget, which included “an amount not to exceed $200,000,000 of monies received in the ‘New Jersey Affordable Housing Trust Fund’” to be deposited in the General Fund as state revenue. FSHC commenced litigation to stop the seizure of the funds, resulting in an Appellate Division decision enjoining “COAH or any other part of the executive branch from engaging in any further attempt to seize affordable housing trust funds,”3 and directing that “the use and disposition of those funds will hereafter be decided, in the first instance, by Mount Laurel — designated trial judges.” In re Failure of the Council on Affordable Hous. to Adopt Trust Fund [570]*570Commitment Regulations, 440 N.J.Super. 220, 225, 112 A.3d 595 (App.Div.2015) (“The Trust Fund Decision ”).4
b. Relevant History of Monroe’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund
At all relevant times, Monroe was a “participating” municipality before COAH. On or around December 29, 2008, the Township adopted its Third Round Housing Element and Fair Share Plan as well as its Trust Fund Spending Plan, and submitted both to COAH for substantive certification. As a result of filing its petition, the Township was permitted to continue to impose and collect development fees in accordance with the approved ordinance and applicable regulations. N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(a); N.J.A.C. 5:97-8.1, -8.3. However, because COAH had not approved Monroe’s affordable housing or spending plans, the Township was statutorily prohibited from spending or committing to spend the funds collected. N.J.S.A 52:27D-329.2(a) (“A municipality may not spend or commit to spend any affordable housing fees, including Statewide non-residential fees collected and deposited into the municipal affordable housing trust fund, without first obtaining the council’s approval of the expenditure”) (emphasis added). COAH never approved Monroe’s affordable housing or spending plans, rendering Monroe, under the statute, unauthorized to spend or commit the funds in its affordable housing trust.
In May 2012, apparently in response to the inclusion of municipal affordable housing trust fund monies in the State’s 2013 fiscal budget, Monroe passed an ordinance authorizing the Township Council to create an irrevocable affordable housing trust, whereby all collected fees would be held by the Township Council for the [571]*571sole purpose of developing affordable housing in accordance with the Township’s spending plan. Concurrently, the Township adopted an amendment to its Third Round Housing Element and Fair Share Plan to include a municipality-sponsored project and two new overlay zones and also adopted an amendment to its Affordable Housing Trust Fund Spending Plan. On May 31, 2012, an affordable housing irrevocable trust was executed on behalf of Monroe, and on June 29, 2012, the Township’s Council, as trustee, opened two bank accounts at TD Bank and deposited the funds therein.5
Notwithstanding COAH’s failure to approve the spending plans submitted by Monroe in 2008 (as supplemented in 2012), COAH requested, on July 24, 2012, a “certification” as to the status of Monroe’s municipal fund and demanded a turnover thereof. The Township responded by letter dated August 9, 2012, certifying that the funds had been “deposited” in an “irrevocable” trust.
On August 10, 2012, the Supreme Court granted FSHC’s application for emergent relief and entered an order restraining COAH from “demanding or receiving affordable housing trust funds,” because these requests were being made unilaterally by COAH’S Executive Director without any approval by the COAH board.6
On May 1, 2013, COAH determined that the Township had failed to timely commit or expend $10,732,103.58, and demanded the forfeiture and transfer of all unspent affordable housing trust funds that had been collected between July 18, 2008, and March 31, 2009. The Township rejected this demand.
[572]*572On June 7, 2013, an “Interim Supplemental Order” was entered by the Appellate Division in the Trust Fund Litigation. That order vacated the May 1, 2013, letters sent by COAH, and afforded ail affected municipalities 30 days to respond to COAH’s contention that the funds were subject to forfeiture, and at the same time, directed COAH to provide a written explanation for rejecting (or accepting) any municipality’s position as to forfeiture of its funds. Instead, in a letter dated June 25, 2013, COAH simply reiterated its prior conclusory allegation that Monroe had “failed to commit” the expenditure of the $10,732,103.58. Two days later, the Township responded by forwarding to COAH supplemental documentation to further buttress its position that the funds had in fact been “committed.” Despite the Appellate Division’s mandatory directive, COAH, remarkably, refused to respond and never explained why the creation and deposit of funds into an irrevocable trust, did, or did not qualify as a “commitment” of its funds.7
III. Standard of Review
The DCA bases its motion for intervention upon both the Declaratory Judgment Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:16-56, and Rules 4:33-1 and -2. Under the Declaratory Judgment Act, “all persons having or claiming any interest which would be affected by the [573]*573declaration shall be made parties to the [declaratory] proceeding.” N.J.S.A. 2A:16-56.8
Under Rule 4:33-1, “Intervention as of Right,” a party is entitled to intervene as of right if the applicant:
(1) claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the litigation;
(2) demonstrates that it is so situated that the disposition of the litigation may impair or impede its ability to protect that interest;
(3) demonstrates that its interest is not adequately represented by existing parties; and
(4) makes a timely application to intervene.
[Id] 9
Under Rule 4:33-2, “Permissive Intervention,” a party may be permitted to intervene in an action
if the claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common. When a party to an action relies for ground of claim or defense upon any statute or executive order administered by a state or federal governmental agency or officer, or upon any regulation, order, requirement or agreement issued or made pursuant to the statute or executive order, the agency or officer upon timely application may be permitted to intervene in the action. In exercising its discretion the court shall consider whether the intervention will unduly delay or prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties.
Ud.)
IV. The DCA Does Not Satisfy the Criteria for Intervention in this Action
a. The DCA Has No Legitimate Interest in the Crux of this Declaratory Action: Monroe’s Constitutional Compliance
Unquestionably, the DCA has no interest in the constitutional compliance proceedings authorized by the Supreme Court [574]*574Mt. Laurel TV. Indeed, the DCA concedes as much. Instead, the DCA seeks to intervene in this action “to ensure that the statutory provisions of N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2 and -329.3 are enforced ... [because] [t]he Legislature intended to prevent stockpiling of affordable housing trust fund monies by requiring certain actions within four years of collection of funds ... [and] no other party to this litigation is representing this interest^]”
While the DCA is the agency responsible for the State Fund, the Supreme Court’s decision in Mt. Laurel TV — empowering specified trial judges to adjudicate municipal compliance with the constitutional mandate to provide affordable housing — demonstrates, unmistakably, its intent to streamline resolution of this narrowly defined issue. In this regard, I see no legitimate basis to permit the DCA to intervene in such an action, especially where it has acknowledged having no interest in the limited issues I have been tasked with adjudicating.
The DCA argues that despite its disinterest in Monroe’s constitutional compliance, it should be permitted to intervene in this action because the Township’s intention to use the trust fund monies in its affordable housing trust fund through this court’s approval of its spending plan “threatens” its ability to litigate the merits of its proposed counterclaim — i.e., its right to seize the funds. While it is true that if this court ultimately approves a spending plan resulting in the actual expenditure of the trust fund monies, the DCA would be prevented from pursuing the transfer of those specifically targeted accounts, it is of no irreparable consequence, since money is fungible and the Township understands and has acknowledged that a later ruling in DCA’s favor on this issue would require the Township either to amend its plan to exclude and forfeit any unspent funds, or pay back any monies actually expended, but ultimately determined to belong to the State.
Accordingly, I am satisfied that the DCA cannot satisfy the criteria for intervention, based upon its inability to demonstrate an interest in the subject of this constitutional compliance action, and [575]*575its inability to demonstrate that the disposition of this litigation will irreparably impede or impair its rights. Furthermore, the unique posture of this action, as mandated by the Supreme Court in Mount Laurel IV, requires that I limit the scope of this declaratory action to its intended purpose: determining whether the Township of Monroe has fulfilled its obligation to provide affordable housing. For these reasons, I am satisfied that the DCA’s intervention in this declaratory action is improper.
V. Even if the DCA was Permitted to Intervene in this Action, its Counterclaim Seeking a Transfer of Municipal Trust Fund Monies Would Be Futile
Assuming, arguendo, that the DCA was otherwise entitled to intervene and to file a counterclaim seeking the forfeiture of Monroe’s trust funds, its request to intervene for such a purpose would be rejected on grounds that it would be futile, as a matter of law on at least, two separate grounds.10 First, the four-year period, within which Monroe was, by statute, required to obtain COAH’s approval, before “spending” or “committing to spend” the funds, cannot reasonably be interpreted to have been “triggered,” in light of COAH’s utter failure to carry out its regulatory responsibilities. Second, even if I were to determine that Monroe should have “committed” the funds (despite the unequivocal statutory prohibition against doing so prior to obtain[576]*576ing COAH’s approval), COAH’s failure to define “commitment,” and COAH’s inexplicable failure to review, reject or approve, Monroe’s submissions, preclude and estop the DCA, both legally and equitably, from now claiming a forfeiture of those funds.
a. COAH’s Failure to Function Results in a Tolling of the Four-Year Period Within Which Monroe was Required to Commit its Affordable Housing Trust Funds
In analyzing the statutory provision at issue, N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329, I am guided by well-established principles of statutory construction. The most important factor in construing a statute “is generally considered to be the intent of the Legislature, if it can be discerned.”11 The words of a statute must be given their common-sense meaning in the context of the entire statute, which should be afforded a “harmonizing construction and read so as to give effect to all of its provisions and to the legislative will.”12 Statutes must, if reasonably possible, be accorded a construction that is sensible and consonant with reason and good discretion, rather than one that leads to absurd consequences. Schierstead v. Brigantine, 29 N.J. 220, 230, 148 A.2d 591 (1959); see also Manchester Twp. Bd. of Educ. v. Raubinger, 78 N.J.Super. 90, 187 [577]*577A.2d 614 (App.Div.1963) (statutes should not be interpreted so as to produce an absurd or anomalous result).
N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(a) unambiguously provides that “a municipality may not spend or commit to spend any affordable housing development fees ... without first obtaining [COAH’s] approval of the expenditure.” Id. (emphasis added). Not only did COAH fail to define what municipal actions would suffice as a “commitment” of funds,13 but it never even responded to municipalities that had submitted spending plans for approval, such as Monroe, leaving them wholly immobilized with respect to the use of their affordable housing funds.14 To suggest that a municipality, such as Monroe Township — that was lawfully barred from spending or committing its fund monies unless and until COAH approved the specific request to spend or commit — should now be required to forfeit over $10 million because of that entity’s inaction, is a “Catch 22” of the most rudimentary sort.15
In providing that “all fees shall be committed for expenditure within four years from the date of collection,” the Legislature’s clear intent was to preclude municipalities from accumulating funds indefinitely, never using them toward the construction of affordable housing.16 However, its overarching concern, that uncommitted funds would escheat to the State, could not reasonably [578]*578have been intended to punish municipalities that sought, in good faith, to utilize those trust funds for their intended purposes — ■ advancing affordable housing — but were stymied either by COAH’s impotence or its unwillingness to act. Indeed, whether calculated or not, the resultant dismantling of COAH and its ultimate collapse could not reasonably have been foreseen by the Legislature and was, for all intents and purposes, without precedent in the annals of New Jersey administrative law. Had the contrary been so, the Legislature would certainly (and easily could) have included some alternative process or means, such as resort to the courts, through which a municipality could seek to use its affordable housing funds and implement its housing element and fair share plan.
The statutory mandate that a municipality obtain COAH’s “approval” before being allowed in the first instance, either to spend or to “commit” to spend certain funds, quite obviously rests upon the rather unremarkable assumption that COAH would continue to be a normally functioning State Administrative Agency, and that its review and approval (or rejection) of matters within its jurisdiction, would be mundane and routine. Given the apparent fallacy of this assumption, it would be jarringly anomalous (not only with regard to general rules of statutory construction, but also in light of common sense) to penalize a municipality because it could not obtain approval from an agency that either purposely refused, or was simply unwilling or unable, to carry out its statutory duties and obligations. If municipalities are to be limited to a specific time period within which they must commit to spend certain monies, they must, of necessity, also be given a reasonable and practical avenue by which to do so.17
[579]*579Consequently, I must strive to reconcile these seemingly incompatible and contradictory statutory provisions so as to give effect to the Legislature’s dual overarching goals: (1) to prevent the stockpiling of affordable housing trust funds on the one hand; and (2) to insist upon some review and oversight of the spending plans on the other, so as to ensure that the collected funds are in fact, utilized for their intended purposes of creating and providing affordable housing opportunities.
In this regard, it is helpful to examine the manner in which the Supreme Court interpreted various provisions of the Fair Housing Act in the context of municipal requests to “transfer” their pending Mount Laurel lawsuits from the courts to the newly created Council on Affordable Housing. See Hills Dev. Co. v. Bernards, 103 N.J. 1, 510 A.2d 621 (1986). There, despite the absence of any statutory provision compelling18 municipalities to seek substantive certification following a “successful transfer,” the Court recognized that if such “transferred” municipalities could indefinitely delay petitioning COAH for substantive certification or worse, could withdraw from the process after having participated at length, the legislative intent of encouraging agency review and approval instead of continued judicial oversight would be severely undermined. Id. at 33, 510 A.2d 621. To reconcile the apparent omission, and to avoid the mischief that could easily result from such conduct, the court “deemed” the municipal motions to transfer to be tantamount to a voluntary petition for substantive certification. Id. at 57, n. 19, 510 A.2d 621.
So too, here, Monroe Township’s affirmative step in filing a declaratory judgment action to obtain judicial approval of its [580]*580housing element and fair share plan (which depends at least in part, on approval of its proposed trust fund expenditures), shall, likewise, be “deemed” the legal and equitable equivalent19 to having requested COAH’s approval of its spending plan, thereby satisfying, in my view, its statutory obligation in this regard.
Accordingly, the filing of the declaratory judgment action will “trigger” the start of the four-year clock contemplated by N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.2(d). However, for those towns proceeding in good faith toward achieving constitutional compliance, the time period within which to “spend or commit to spend” the trust funds, will be “tolled” until such time as the court has either: (1) granted a judgment of compliance; or (2) adjudicated a municipality’s fair share plan to be deficient; and has, in addition, concluded (3) that the municipality is “determined to be non-compliant” by failing to amend or correct its plan’s deficiencies.
Where a judgment of compliance is ultimately awarded to a municipality whose fair share compliance package included an approved trust fund spending plan, that judgment shall be sufficient to satisfy the prerequisites of N.J.S.A 52:27D-329.2(a), that no affordable housing trust fund monies be spent without prior review and approval. In such a case, the time period within which to “spend or commit to spend” will begin to run from the filing date of the judgment of compliance. In the latter case, where a municipality is determined to be non-compliant, the tolling will cease simultaneously with the entry of that judgment, and the four-year period will relate back to, and be calculated from the filing date of the original declaratory judgment action, although any future forfeiture proceedings must be brought in a separate, independent action, consistent with the Appellate Division’s deci[581]*581sion in The Trust Fund Decision, and in accordance with all applicable statutory provisions and protocols.20
VI. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, I am satisfied that the DCA is proeedurally, legally, and equitably precluded from intervening in this action, not only because of the Supreme Court’s clear directive that declaratory judgment actions such as that filed by Monroe Township sub judiee, are limited to the issue of constitutional compliance, but also because intervention by DCA to pursue its proposed counterclaim would be futile, and would, as a matter of law, be dismissed. As a result of COAH’s abject failure to function and the consequent inability of any municipality to obtain COAH approval of its spending plan, those equitable and legal principles demand that the statutory four-year time period (during which collected trust funds were required to be spent or “committed”) be tolled, and the running of the period within which to commit said funds, not be triggered until a municipality’s housing element and fair share plan is either adjudicated to be constitutionally compliant, or its plan is judicially rejected and the court concludes that the municipality is determined to be non-eompliant.
This conclusion fairly reconciles and harmonizes the applicable statutory language so as to avoid an absurd or anomalous result, and properly affords deferential respect to the Legislature’s primary intent and dual purposes of: (1) discouraging the stockpiling of affordable housing funds; and (2) insuring that there be independent oversight of municipal efforts to utilize those collected trust funds. In so doing, the trust funds of participating municipalities that achieve constitutional compliance, are preserved, [582]*582while recalcitrant and non-compliant municipalities will be left vulnerable to separate, subsequent challenges by the DCA in any future pursuits to seize unspent affordable housing funds.
An appropriate form of order, incorporating this opinion by reference, has been entered simultaneously herewith. No costs.