Showing posts with label Mayor Bloomberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mayor Bloomberg. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Best Comment Of The Day: Amazing Display Of Arrogance

Anonymous has left the following comment on the post "Mayor Bloomberg Holds Press Conference On NYC Water System Improvements Just Steps Away From A Very Foul Gowanus Canal":

"An amazing display of arrogance..How can a mayor that puts new "m[a]ndates" on its citizens for what we can eat, how much soda we can buy, where we drive, what we pay in rent, where we may smoke etc etc have the gall to complain about the federal government issuing mandates to enforce a 1972 law for the city to clean up its waters by getting the human sewage out.. just 6 more months of little general."



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Thursday, May 09, 2013

On A Day Of Massive Flooding In Gowanus, Local Politicians Ask City To Evaluate Hydrological Impact Of Large Elevated Sites Like Lightstone Group's In Flood Prone Area

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Gowanus Rain 9-23-11 B
Rendering of proposed Lightstone Group's Project on shore of Gowanus Canal
image credit: Lightstone Group



It would seem appropriate that on a day that saw heavy rains and flash flooding in the Gowanus area, our elected officials sent a letter to City Hall to ask if the "potential for adverse hydrologic impacts upon surrounding properties resulting from re-grading of large sites within flood hazards areas" has fully been investigated.

In the letter addressed to Deputy Mayors Cas Holloway and Robert Steele yesterday , Councilmember Lander, Congresswoman Velázquez and State Senator Montgomery specifically mention the 12 story, 700-unit Lightstone Group's project at 363-365 Bond Street.

Lightstone intends to re-grade their building site by raising the site of the development by two feet at First Street to address FEMA's recently released post-Sandy Advisory Base Flood Elevations and to comply with changes to the Building Code.

Since the Gowanus Canal was originally engineered to drain the upland marshland surrounding the canal in order to keep water away from residences in Carroll Gardens and Park Slope, this change in hydrology raises serious concerns about flooding and drainage in the Gowanus area. It may mean more problems for nearby residents, who deal with flooded basements on an regular basis.

Lander, Velazquez and Montgomery are asking City Planning "if re-grading could-even in a limited set of circumstances- lead to such impacts, how will such impacts be evaluated?
For example, would the Department Of Buildings confer with the Department of Environmental Protection before approving building permits for a re-graded site in a flood hazard area, such as that planned for 363-365 Bond Street?"

Further, Lander, Velazquez and Montgomery believe that " it would be better to bring all stakeholders to the table to develop a comprehensive plan for the infrastructure, flood protection, and land use regulations needed for a safe, vibrant, and sustainable Canal area. We should seize this opportunity to create an innovative model for low-lying, mixed-use waterfront areas on a warming planet."

It is encouraging that our Electeds recognize the hydrological impact to surrounding areas if developers like Lightstone's are allowed to re-grade the Gowanus area.

We need a new hydrological study before any new development moves forward.



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Thursday, March 07, 2013

Tonight, Share Your Thoughts On Priorities For Post-Sandy Rebuilding In Red Hook And Gowanus

(photo credit: Steven Miller)

This is a topic of interest to all of us in South Brooklyn.  How should we rebuild our waterfront communities after last October's Hurricane Sandy?  Tonight,  Mayor Bloomberg's Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency (SIRR) is hosting a meeting at PS 58 to get input from residents on pst-Sandy rebuilding priorities for Gowanus, Red Hook and Sunset Park. You will find all the details on the meeting below courtesy of Councilman Brad Lander's office, who will be attending tonight.

Four short months ago, Hurricane Sandy brought unprecedented destruction to New York City. The storm made our shared vulnerability all too clear, and brought home the frightening reality of climate change.

Many are still struggling to recover, contending with extensive storm damage, mold, and rats. Over 2,000 families are still displaced, living in SROs and hotels (sign on here to our petition calling on HUD to immediately issue housing vouchers to let them move into apartments).

While there is much more work to be done to help these households and communities, we must also start planning for our city’s resilience in the face of future storms. We need to make smart investments in sustainable infrastructure, learn from places like the Netherlands that have worked to adapt to the realities of sea level rise and climate change, pay attention to the inequalities the storm exposed, and build upon the remarkable volunteer relief efforts by including communities more deeply in planning.

In January, the Mayor launched the Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency (SIRR), which is working to develop recommendations for rebuilding the most impacted neighborhoods and protecting New York City from future climate risks. This Thursday, March 7 at 7:30 pm, representatives from SIRR will present their initial assessment of the Brooklyn Waterfront, followed by break-out sessions where you can give your input on priorities for rebuilding in Red Hook, Gowanus, and Sunset Park. I will be there, to listen to their presentation and hear your comments.

Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Recovery
Brooklyn Waterfront Public Workshop
Thursday March 7, 2013, at 7:30 pm
PS 58, 330 Smith Street at Carroll Street
RSVP:  to RSVPMarch7@nycsirr.org or 212-618-5745




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Tuesday, April 17, 2012

On Wednesday Eve, Come To Meeting With DEP Regarding Gowanus CSOs And Tell The Agency To Stop That S**t From Flowing Into The Canal

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Community Board 6 is holding an informational meeting with Representatives of the NYC Department of Environmental Protection on "the findings from the Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund Site investigation and Feasibility Study relating to the Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO's) at the Gowanus Canal."
Members of the community are invited.

It is important to note that New York City has been named a Potencially Responsible Party(PRP) by the EPA for its role in contributing to the toxins in the canal and for allowing CSOs to continue to discharge into the Gowanus.

However, rather than to work with the EPA to find a real solution that would address the CSOs in conjunction with the Superfund clean-up, the City has been trying to stall and kick the problem down the road. The DEP has even refuted some of EPA's finding, obviously eager to re-invent science.

As community members, we should all attend to tell the City and DEP that we want them to work with the Federal Government to give us the clean-up we all deserve.



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Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Tackling The Problem Of Combined Sewer Overflow: Why Can't New York Be More Like London?

 (photos courtesy of www.thamestunnelconsultation.co.uk)


While New York City has once again wiggled out of its obligation under law to stop combined sewer overflows (CSOs) from its sewer system to flow into surrounding waters with the blessing of the NYState Department of Environmental Conservation, London is facing its CSO problem head on.

Both Cities have aging sewer systems. Both systems discharge untreated sewage and industrial wastewater that occur when wet weather flows exceed the treatment capacity of these combined sewer systems. Both have a growing population. Yet New York is trying to push the problem further down the road and London is planning the Thames Tunnel "that will tackle the problem of overflows from the capital's Victorian servers and will protect the River Thames from increasing pollution for at least the next 100 years." Construction of the Tunnel Project is slated to begin in 2016.

In comparison, New York is implementing a Green Infrastructure Plan "which relies upon modeling to project CSO reductions based on information available to date, that would result from managing stormwater equivalent to one inch of rainfall on 10% of available impervious surfaces in the City's combined sewer areas by 2030."

Though Green Infrastructure is great, the New York City's plan is certainly a drop in the bucket and will not address the CSO problem in any meaningful way. It simply is not enough, unless the City commits to upgrading its gray infrastructure with forward thinking projects like the Thames Tunnel.

Just this Monday night, I was sitting at a Gowanus Canal Superfund Community Advisory meeting with
representatives of NYC DEP pleading for more help from the agency to reduce the CSO's in the Gowanus Canal. Yes, New York City is currently in the process of implementing upgrades to the Gowanus Canal facilities, which it claims will reduce CSO discharges by about 34% and another 10% from newly installed High-Level Storm Sewers and green infrastructure, but the community is asking for more. Much more.
It is important for the community to remember that the green infrastructure plan is at the design bid phase and it will be some time until any goals are achieved. It has also vital for Gowanus residents to remember, as it has been pointed out, that the Flushing Tunnel work does not focus on actual CSO reductions but is simply doing what is needed to keep a 101-year old system running. While the pump station and force main improvements lead to actual CSO reductions, it should be noted that this 136 million gallon annual CSO reduction into the Canal is partly offset by a 41 million gallon annual CSO increase into the Atlantic Basin, Buttermilk Channel and East River from sewage being diverted outside the Canal. (2008 Gowanus Waterbody/Watershed Facility Plan, Table 7-9.)

So what is the difference between New York and London? Why is our City so resistant to solving a real problem that poses both a human health and environmental risk? Is it just political will? Is it disregard for its citizens?
If it is a question of money, New York City should talk to London. The Thames Tunnel is "expected to directly create over 4,000 jobs at the peak of its planned seven-year construction phase, and a further 5,000 indirectly. Generating the equivalent of 19,000 employment years, this would be a major stimulus for the wider economy of communities along the tunnel’s 15-mile route and beyond."
London sees it as vital for its economy.


Mayor Bloomberg, perhaps you can give Boris Johnson a call?

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Sunday, August 28, 2011

Hey, Mayor Bloomberg! Remind Us Again Why We Should Allow New Buildings In A Flood Zone

Screen shot 2011-08-28 at 1.03.44 PM
(photo above courtesy of Hudson Companies' Inc.)
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Simp pump under the front entrance of Third and Bond
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A smaller hose coming out of the front door of the building

After Hurricane (Tropical Storm) Irene, some serious basement pumping is going on over at Third And Bond, Hudson Companies' Inc new condo building. It was built right in a flood zone, one block away from the Gowanus Canal.

One has to feel bad for those new owners. This will be an ongoing problem for them. Hudson Companies probably don't advertise that little fact in their shiny brochure.

After Irene, one can only hope that Mayor Bloomberg has a better understanding of why it's folly to build more housing in flood zones.

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Monday, October 19, 2009

What If The Gowanus Canal Were Clean: PS 58 Fourth Graders Dare To Dream















Could you imagine what the Gowanus Canal area could look like if the waters of the waterway were clean? For the 4th Graders at PS 58, this vision would include water slides, surfboards, boats and healthy fish, and on its shores, picnics, playgrounds, lots of grass and ice cream. And above it all, there would be a wide blue sky.

This does not exactly match with the plans that Mayor Bloomberg and the Toll Brothers have for the area, but the children's dream of a clean environment for the canal is shared by the entire community. I know I do.
The " Hopes And Dreams For The Gowanus Canal" exhibit was part of the Annual Gowanus Arts Show Tour this last week-end.
The art was produced by the entire 4th grade class at PS 58. I would like to thank their art teacher, Megan Kimball, for engaging the children in such a meaningful way and for allowing them a voice in such an important dialogue.
Please check out Ms. Kimball's blog here.


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Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Must Watch: "The City's Broken Promise: Superfunding the Gowanus"

GowanusWhale






Still not convinced that EPA Superfund listing is the only way that the Gowanus Canal will ever truly be cleaned? Then you have to watch this video. It was made by Peter Pierce who wanted to show " the rationale for Superfunding the Gowanus Canal as opposed to adopting Mayor Bloomberg's Alternative Superfund Approach." It is excellent.

The video was first posted by Ms. Found For Brooklyn on her blog. Her coverage of the issue is amazing. Take a look at her latest post, "The Gowanus Canal has ALWAYS been stigmatized...Superfund Gowanus!"


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Friday, June 19, 2009

A Carroll Gardener Furious At Mayor Bloomberg's Anti-Superfund Stance



BRAVO!!! Couldn't have said it better myself!


This is a comment left by Anonymous on my post "City To Host Gowanus Homeowners Meeting To Tout Al..."


STOP THE SPIN AND STOP THE STEALTH! THE CITY OF NEW YORK (MAYOR BLOOMBERG) IS GETTING CAUGHT WITH HIS PANTS DOWN ON THIS VITAL HEALTH/ENVIRONMENTAL ISSSUE. SHAME ON BLOOMIE! SCIENCE MATTERS! HUMAN HEALTH MATTERS! Why all the secret flyers and now the secret meetings? To refute the science of course! (Make the facts go away!) IS BLOOMIE trying to re-create the Middle Ages in Greater Gowanus by burning all the science books and EPA findings? Where's the "Green" mayor when you need him?


Let's watch Bloomie take a "nice" canoe trip with all the youngest members of his family REAL SOON on the Gowanus Canal! I am sure the Dredgers will help him.

Doesn't the Mayor care about the health of ALL New Yorkers not just the few wealthy white ones he seems to like to help get rich?

I am a homeowner and live two blocks from the canal and have not received any notice of this meeting nor has anyone else that I have asked. I am NOT surprised however.

Financial "guru" Bloomberg can NOT be trusted to clean this canal. For him it's all about a trade of CASH for HEALTHY residents. Simply put he does not give a crap!

All the proof I need to remain PRO SUPERFUND (which I have been since the get go) is right here in the STEALTH way the City is trying to hold secret meetings. Two weeks ago it was the mysterious stealth flyer designed to alarm people and paid for by slick developer lobbyists who are close friends with the Mayor......They featured the names of all the Local POLS and had misinformation written all over them. It looked like every POL was anti Superfund and was a blatant attempt to spin the issue.

They confused the few residents here still naive enough to trust the City.. Now we have this: stealth meetings with a few select anti-SUPERFUND people to convince WHO? that Superfund is unpopular?

Everyone I know is PRO SUPERFUND! When will these spin doctors ever stop? Something is very fishy here.
I hope Bloomie can smell it where he lives too. It stinks.


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Tuesday, June 02, 2009

What Would Happen To The Polluted Gowanus Canal In Case Of A Hurricane?




From the Office Of Emergency Management

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From City Hurricane Preparedness Web Site:
In Case Of Hurricane, Cross The Gowanus Canal To Get To Nearest Evacuation Center




Waves striking a seawall, 1938
(NWS Historic Collection)


So, yesterday was the beginning of the 2009 hurricane season. Which got me thinking... 
Hurricanes are rare in New York City, but they do occur. Over the last decade, storms have become stronger, more unpredictable and more frequent. If a Category 3 hurricane were to hit the metropolitan area, it would be a disaster. There is no way to evacuate all inhabitants. 

Scientists Cynthia Rosenzweig and Vivien Gornitz, part of a team at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and New York's Columbia University determined that "rising sea levels combined with the storm surge of a category three hurricane would leave much of a 2050s New York underwater and the city's entire metropolitan transportation system shut down.

Obviously, New York City is taking this seriously. A while back, the Office of Emergency Management sent out a brochure to every household in the city, indicating flood zones, evacuation routes and detailing steps to take in the event of a hurricane. 

Why am I bringing this up? Well, after looking at the city flood map, I am more than uneasy about what would happen to the heavily polluted Gowanus Canal in case of a hurricane. 
Because flooding, which already occurs regularly in the area, may be the least of our problems. 
You see, the toxic sludge at the bottom of the Gowanus would be churned around in the waters of the canal and would be dumped on land. Which, well, would be an incredibly dangerous situation. Even without storm, "there is a constant flux of movement between the water and the sediment" Walter Mugden of the EPA mentioned at a meeting last week. So imagine that same body of water during a category three hurricane. 
As a dear friend always says, that would be "like Love Canal and Hurricane Katrina all in one." 
Yikes! 

Though we cannot significantly reduce the dangers associated with natural disasters, we can support the EPA's listing of the Gowanus Canal as a Superfund site. As part of their clean-up, the EPA would dredge the toxic sludge from the bottom of the canal, which would control the damage which would result from a hurricane. 
That, however, is not something that Mayor Bloomberg and our own Councilmember Bill de Blasio are willing to support. No, they were fully willing to have developers build condos in a flood zone, on the banks of a poisoned body of water. 
Those against the Superfund complain that the designation could affect house prices in the area. I would venture to say that having toxic sludge on our streets and in our houses after a hurricane would make any building uninhabitable and unsalable for much longer. 

So lets hope that the 2009 hurricane season passes without unleashing a major storm over our area, because otherwise, we will all have toxic sludge in our houses. 

Oh, and just one last thing: 
Why would the hurricane evacuation route indicated by the Office of Emergency Management take someone from Carroll Gardens over the Gowanus Canal to an Evacuation Center on 4th Avenue? 
That is exactly what their web site indicated when I played around with different addresses. (I used number 357 Carroll Street as an example.
That doesn't make a whole lot of sense now does it? 

Hurricanes are a rare occurrence in New York City, so it is understandable that most New York City residents have no idea how vulnerable our coastal city is to the storm surge flooding which follows these massive storms. Here are just a few facts:

Scary New York Moments
Some of the worst hurricane-related effects in New York's history:

1821: The only hurricane in modern times known to pass directly over parts of New York City pushed the tide up 13 feet in one hour and inundated wharves, causing the East River and the Hudson River to merge across lower Manhattan as far north as Canal Street. Deaths were limited since few lived there at the time.

1893: A category 1 hurricane destroyed Hog Island, a resort island off the Rockaways in southern Queens.

1960: Hurricane Donna created an 11-foot storm tide in the New York Harbor that caused extensive pier damage. Forced 300 families to evacuate Long Island.

1999: Floyd, weakened to a tropical storm, brought sustained 60 mph winds and dumped 10-15 inches of rain on upstate New Jersey and New York State.

2004: The remains of Hurricane Frances in September flooded city subways, stranding some passengers aboard trains that had to be stopped by flooded tracks.


SOURCE: New York City Office of Emergency Management, LiveScience reporting
(from:http://www.livescience.com/environment/050601_hurricane_1938.html)


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Friday, May 29, 2009

Superfund Gowanus: Friends And Residents Of Greater Gowanus (F.R.O.G.G.) Release Video

GowanusWhale




Dear Reader, I hope you will take a few minutes to view this incredibly well done and informative video on the proposed Superfund Site designation for the Gowanus Canal.
The members of 'Friends And Residents of Greater Gowanus', or F.R.O.G.G., urge you to support the designation.

Bravo!!!
Great job, Margaret, Marlene, Lisanne, Bette and Mike. I am proud of you!



Sign The Superfund Now! petition
Here



Please also go to Found In Brooklyn for further information





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