OPINION
This matter comes before the court on a motion by plaintiffs ACLU and Deborah Jacoby (“ACLU”) for a preliminary injunction to prevent any further steps toward the creation of an eruv within the City of Long Branch and on a motion to dismiss by defendant-intervenors Congregation Brothers of Israel (“Congregation”). Inasmuch *1294 as this court heard testimony on this matter on August 6, 1987 and affidavits and depositions have been submitted to the court, we will treat the motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment, F.R. C.P. Rule 12(b). On May 8, 1987 this court denied the ACLU’s motion for a temporary restraining order. This lawsuit was originally filed by the ACLU solely against the City of Long Branch. On August 6, 1987 at oral argument the court granted the request of the Congregation Brothers of Israel to intervene as a defendant in this action.
Plaintiff ACLU alleges that the creation of an eruv with its boundary markers on public property violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, HI 3 and 4 of the New Jersey Constitution. An eruv, under Jewish law, is an unbroken delineation of an areа. The demarcation of the eruv boundary is primarily created using existing telephone poles and fences with wires connecting them and with small half-rounds attached to the sides of the poles. The designation of an eruv allows observant Jews to carry or push objects from place to place within the area during the Sabbath. Within the eruv observant Jews may push baby carriages from their homes to the synagogue or to other homes, carry books to the synagogue, and carry food to one another’s homes. Pushing and carrying are not permitted in the public domain on the Sabbath; however, the creation of an eruv district permits such actions by creating the legal fiction of a “private domain.”
In order to delineate the eruv in Long Branch the Congregation is using existing utility poles, telephone poles and fences connected by wires. The Congregation has also been authorized by the city, at the Congregation’s expense, to erect two additional рoles, extend a fence, and raise the pole at the end of a fence. The city's resolution establishing the eruv and authorizing the Congregation to erect the poles and fence extension on public property is the focus of plaintiffs’ challenge in this case.
On June 15, 1985 the Council of the City of Long Branch adoрted a resolution authorizing the creation of an eruv within Long Branch. On July 11, 1985 the Board of Chosen Freeholders of Monmouth County adopted an identical resolution. After a number of revisions the final plan for the eruv calls for the use of existing telephone poles and for the installation of two additional poles, a fence extension and one fence pole at the Congregation’s expense. The ACLU and Ms. Jacoby allege that the demarcation of the eruv using poles and fences erected on public property violates the “constitutional proscription against governmental action respecting an establishment of religion.” (Complaint, ¶! 31). Plaintiffs maintain that the creation of an eruv constitutes the placement of “permanent symbols” of the Jewish religion on public property. (Complaint ¶ 43).
The defendants allege that plaintiffs do not have standing to raise these claims. The defendants argue that the plaintiffs ACLU and Ms. Jacoby cannоt bring this lawsuit because they have not shown a particular injury that has been inflicted on them by the creation of the eruv. The court finds that Ms. Jacoby and the ACLU, on behalf of its members who reside in Long Branch, do allege personal injuries suffered as a consequence of the alleged constitutional violation sufficient to cоnfer standing on them. Their allegations that their access to the park and/or to particular parts of the park has been impeded as well as their aesthetic objections to the poles and the fence are palpable injuries different from “the psychological consequence presumably рroduced by observation of conduct with which one disagrees.”
Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Inc.,
*1295
Plaintiff ACLU argues that the authorization for the eruv and the erection of the poles and fence on public property violate the establishment clause of the First Amendment as applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment. As set forth in
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
In order to determine whether there is a secular purpose for actions taken by the City of Long Branch we must examine whаt the city did and what the effect of the actions has been. The city’s actions appear to be limited to granting the Congregation the right to erect two additional utility poles, extend a fence and lengthen a fence pole in order to create an eruv in which observant Jews may engage in secular activitiеs on the Sabbath, such as carrying a book or pushing a baby carriage to the park. As the City of Long Branch notes in its brief, the secular purpose of this resolution is that it allows a large group of citizens access to public properties. Within the eruv district they may go to the park, push a baby carriage on public streеts, and visit friends. The eruv which the city has allowed the Congregation to create is not a religious symbol. Neither the boundary markers of the eruv nor the eruv itself have any religious significance. They are not objects of worship nor do they play any theological role in the observance of the Sabbath. Under Jewish law the eruv dоes not alter the religious observance of the Sabbath, it merely allows observant Jews to engage in secular activities on the Sabbath. The court finds that the City of Long Branch has established a secular purpose for its authorization permitting the delineation of an eruv in Long Branch.
By permitting the synagogue to use its own funds to create an almost invisible boundary in which its members may engage in secular activities on the Sabbath, the City of Long Branch is not putting its imprimatur on any public manifestation of religion, such as moments of prayer in public schools or the posting of the ten commandments on classroom walls.
Wallace v. Jafree,
The city allowed the eruv to be created to enable observant Jews to engage in secular activities on the Sabbath. This action does not impose any religion on the other residents of Long Branch. Residents are not confronted with any visible religious symbolism in their community, in fact the only visible alterations are two additional utility poles, an additional piece of fence, and some half-rounds on the sides of existing polеs. None-of these objects have any religious significance. Residents are not subjected to religious words coming from those employed by the government, such as teachers in public schools, nor has any religious group been given any authority to mandate behavior in the community. The eruv does not alter the observance of the Sabbath by observant Jews, these congre *1296 gants will continue to observe the Sabbath as they have all their lives and as they would without an eruv. The eruv merely permits them to participate in such secular activities as pushing a stroller or carrying a book while observing the Sabbath.
Under the
Lemon
test the defendants must also show that the сity’s resolution does not advance any particular religion. As noted above the existence of the eruv does not impose the Jewish religion on other residents of Long Branch, it merely accommodates the religious practices of those residents who are observant Jews. Since it is permissible to construct hоuses of worship on public land at an airport to enable travelers and airport employees to practice their religions, it is certainly permissible to unobstrusively demarcate an area as an eruv to permit observant Jews to engage in secular activities while they practice their religion.
See Brashich v. Port Authority of New York and New Jersey,
In the case now before this court no religious symbol has been erected. As Rabbi Roth, of the Congregation Brothers of Israel, testified before this court the eruv itself has no religious significance or symbolism and is not part of any religious ritual. The eruv is basically invisible to Long Branch residents as it utilizes existing poles and wires with the addition of wooden half-rounds attached to the sides of the poles. The two additional poles and the fence extension will not significantly alter the existing environment. Having examined pictures of the eruv boundaries, the court finds that the boundaries are invisible in that they look just as they looked prior to being designated as the eruv’s boundaries. The eruv sends no religious message to the rest of the community. Its existence could not be discerned by anyone who has not been shown the boundaries. An eruv does not in any way force other residents to confront daily images and symbols of another religion. As the court noted in
Smith v. Community Board No. 14,
Finally, the court must ask whether the actions by the City of Long Branch permitting the demarcation of the eruv constitute an excessive entanglemеnt with religion. In order to make this determination we must review “the character and purpose of the institutions that are benefited, the nature of the aid that the state provides, and the resulting relationship between the government and the religious authority.”
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
Furthermore, the Congregation is responsible for maintaining and insuring the objects it erects. The fact that the city may find it necessary to ascertain that the items are being maintained correctly does not constitute improper aid or entanglement, rather it is similar to the state’s burden of ascertaining whether tax-exempt property is being used for religious purposes.
Lemon,
at 614,
Although the synagogue’s initial proposal which involved erecting some fifty or sixty additional poles engendered some disрutes within the community, the court sees no indication that the existence of the eruv under the current plan will cause the kind of continuing political divisiveness within the community anticipated by the Supreme Court in
Lemon.
Plaintiffs also argue thаt the actions of the City of Long Branch are in violation of Article 1, 11113 and 4 of the New Jersey Constitution. Both of these provisions prohibit the establishment of religion and protect the individual’s right to freedom of religion. In cases concerning whether a governmental action violates the state constitution’s prohibition on the establishment of religion, the New Jersey Supreme Court has held that it will apply the federal standard as enunciated by the United States Supreme Court.
Right to Choose v. Byrne,
As no violation of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution has been stated and no violation of Article 1, ¶¶ 3 and 4 of the New Jersey Constitution has been shown, the court will grant the de *1298 fendants’ motion for summary judgment. The court will deny plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. The court will enter its own order.
