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Monday
Aug082016

FYI - Vecchio Is Back!

FYI - Town Supervisor Patrick Vecchio was at Sunken Meadow Thursday afternoon for a Protect the L.I.Sound letter signing event. The Supervisor, along with other elected officials including Governor Andrew Cuomo, Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone,* Congressman Lee Zeldin, NYS Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan, Assemblyman Michael Fitzpatrick and Legislators Kennedy and Trotta signed a letter to President Obama and the EPA pledging to support iniatives to prevent creating an additional dumping site to be located in the eastern portion of the L.I. Sound.

Supervisor Vecchio has been recovering from a leg fracture and has been in rehab for a good part of the summer. The Supervisor told Smithtown Matters that he would be returning to the office on August 8th. 

Councilman McCarthy indicated several weeks ago that the Supervisor was like the “Energizer Bunny” talking on the phone and doing work from his room at the rehab facility. 

How did the Supervisor look? That is a question that many have asked. The answer is, the same as always. Patrick R. Vecchio is back to work. In Smithtown some things never change.

* Correction Suffolk County Executive was incorrectly identified as Lee Zeldin. 

Sunday
Aug072016

Smithtown HS Student Leighann Guardino Kicks Off Nesconset's Eagles Concert

FANTSTIC TIMES WITH THE FAST LANES

 

Leslie Kennedy with National Anthem Singer Leighann Guardino

August 2nd, 2016 – Concert goers came from all over on Tuesday night to hear the sounds of The Eagles performed by Eagles tribute band The Fast Lanes. To kick off the concert, Leighann Guardino a student in the Smithtown School District blew the audience away with her beautiful rendition of our National Anthem. As always Long Island Cares was in attendance to collect food for those in need amongst our communities. 

The Fast Lanes performed a fantastic show, with many concert goers dancing along to their favorite Eagles songs “I want to thank Leighann for donating her time to sing our National Anthem, she is very talented, and I want to thank the Nesconset Chamber of Commerce for making these shows possible, The Fast Lanes put on a great show” said Leslie Kennedy. 

Next Tuesday night, August 9th, Beginnings will be preforming their tribute to Chicago at the Nesconset Gazebo. For any questions about this concert or future concerts feel free to contact Leslie Kennedy’s office at (631) 854-3735, and don’t hesitate to reach us online at Leslie.kennedy@suffolkcountyny.gov or facebook.com/legislatorlesliekennedy.

Friday
Aug052016

Governor Cuomo Forms Bipartisan Coalition To Stop EPA From Dumping In LI Sound

by p.biancaniello

Governor Andrew Cuomo drew a line in the sand Thursday* at Sunken Meadow State Park when he put the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on notice that a proposal to create an additional sludge dumping area in the eastern section of the LI Sound was unacceptable.

In April of this year the EPA proposed “to designate a dredged material disposal site to serve the eastern Long Island Sound region. The Eastern Long Island Sound Disposal Site (ELDS) would be located offshore from New London, Connecticut, and would be available for the disposal of dredged material from harbors and navigation channels in eastern Long Island Sound in the states of Connecticut and New York.” EPA website

The Governor didn’t go it alone Tuesday. Lending support to his position and going on record by signing a letter to President Obama and the EPA was an array of elected officials from all branches of government who are united in their opposition to dumping in the sound. 

“This letter provides notice that, on behalf of the people of the State of New York, and with the full support of more than twenty-five Federal, State, and local elected officials signing onto this letter, I intend to initiate legal action against United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) challenging any final rule designating permanent disposal sites in eastern Long Island Sound, and the State will additionally seek to enjoin any further dumping in eastern Long Island Sound that may be permitted pursuant to the final rule.” (click here to read the entire letter)

Governor Cuomo offered a no-nonsense message, “This is what has to be protected, cleaned-up and passed-on. We are spending billions and billions of dollars to clean-up… Getting chemicals out of drinking water and pollutants out of coastal waters. The Sound is cleaner than it was but not where it needs to be. We still have dangerous algae blooms fish kills due to lack of oxygen. It is absurd, spending so much time and money cleaning up the water while another branch of government is literally adding pollutants.” 

Michel Kaufman, Commissioner with the SC Planning Commission, has had experience with dredging having participated in planning the dredging of Stony Brook Harbor. “We know what to do with dredge spoil and we don’t do it the way the EPA is doing it, we do it better. We replenished not dump. The Sound is a giant resource, you don’t want to pollute your resources.”

Without a script in front of them, every person in attendance committed themselves to fighting the EPA proposal. Environmentalist and former NYS candidate, Adrienne Esposito has a long history in fighting for the environment. In Smithtown she was instrumental in pushing the town to collect hazardous houseold products, she is adamently opposed to an additional dumping site in the sound saying, “We need to protect this resource that is both economically important for Long Island and important for the recreational opportunities - fishing, boating and swimming. Dumping dredge spoils and polluting the water is not the answer.”

Michael Fitzpatrick, Assembly 8th district, “We are here today to sign a letter to President Obama and his administration to ask them to reconsider their options for dumping dredge spoils in the LI Sound. Currently they have two locations where they currently dump and they are contemplating a 3rd. The LI sound estuary made great strides becoming much cleaner we want to keep it that way. We want to see further improvement because it is a very valuable economic engine for us as well as a place of enjoyment for people on both sides of the sound. There are alternatives for dumping we need to follow through with that.  We are asking politely, but strongly that President  Obama say no to the Army Corp of Engineers (ACE) and to pursue alternatives. A decade ago ACE was supposed to find alternative uses and they dropped the ball, this will set us back at least a decade.”

Both County Executive Steve Bellone and NYS Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan spoke about the importance of protecting the LI Sound for both economic and recreational purposes.   Town Supervisor Patrick R. Vecchio, Congressman Lee Zeldin, Assemblyman Michael Fitzpatrick, Legislators Leslie Kennedy and Rob Trotta all supported the Governors message and signed the letter.

Governor Cuomo and all of the electeds present yesterday sent a strong message that they are unified and willing to take action to prevent additional dumping and polluting of the LI Sound.  

* correction of date - Thursday, August 4, 2016

Thursday
Aug042016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Hand-Wrestling With God Is A No Win Strategy

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Up on Cape Cod (not far from Smithtown as the sea bird flies) they’re talking about retreat—or, a better word, relocation or adaptation to a rising sea. But for Suffolk County, the federal government in the form of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is poised to spend more than $1 billion in taxpayer dollars to take on the mighty Atlantic Ocean.

As a former Suffolk County executive, John V. N. Klein of Smithtown, put it years ago as he opposed the placement of rock jetties (called groins) along the Westhampton oceanfront, we would be “hand-wrestling with God.”  (Mr. Klein was Smithtown Town supervisor, too, and  also represented Smithtown on the Suffolk County Legislature of which he was the first presiding officer when the panel was formed in 1970. He’s now in retirement in Virginia.)

These days—with global warming or climate change causing a rise in sea level which scientists say will increase even with the most effective reduction of greenhouse gas emissions—this hand-wrestling is even more futile.

“We’re retreating,” George E. Price, Jr., superintendent of the Cape Cod National Seashore, was quoted as saying in a The New York Times article last month. The story told of how the situation on Cape Cod “raises a practical dilemma in a setting meant to be a place to escape: how to react to rising seas and eroding coastlines as climate change looms for coastal communities across the nation.”

“In many parts of the country,” it said, “like New York, New Jersey and New Orleans, property-damaging storms, tidal surges and floods have been met with the urge to shore up and rebuild.” But “Mr. Price and many who use the beach here do not want to fight coastal change, they simply want to adapt to it.” 

The article also quoted Michael B. Gerrard, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, saying that this stance “reflects a sound planning approach that is regrettably uncommon so far…As sea-level rise advances,” retreat or adaptation is “going to become increasingly important in large parts of the country.”

Photo - US Army Corps of EngineersBut in Suffolk, the Army Corps of Engineers—a combination of military officers trained to fight and engineers believing in what they see as engineering “solutions”—is getting ready to do battle with the ocean. Being readied for implementation is a version of a plan I wrote about when I came in as a journalist in Suffolk in 1962. Authorized by Congress in 1960, it called for dumping mammoth amounts of sand and constructing up to 50 rock jetties or groins on 83 miles of Suffolk oceanfront from Fire Island Inlet to Montauk Point. 

Back then, New York State public works czar Robert Moses also pushed to add to this a  a four-lane highway the length of Fire Island. The highway, he said, would “anchor” the beach. The Moses road was stopped, a Fire Island National Seashore was created, and the Army Corps scheme was never fulfilled.

This was before the science of coastal geology took full form, before there was a clear understanding of coastal dynamics, before the landmark work of Dr. Orrin Pilkey, Jr., author of many books including “The Beaches Are Moving.” Roads or groins do not “anchor” a beach. And sand dumped on beaches washes away in storms. Beaches are moving.

The Army Corps plan—with an estimated cost originally in the low tens of millions and $53.5 million by 1973—went through, in the face of strong criticism, an extended “reformulation.”  Still, it got nowhere. Then Superstorm Sandy struck in 2012 and some politicians and the Army Corps—with its budget hinged on how much work it’s involved in—suddenly brought back the scheme and pushed for prompt action on it.

There’s some acceptance of coastal realities in the draft of the “reformulation.”  Some relocation or adaptation is recommended. But to a large extent the Army Corps new plan is a repackaging of the old one—with its price tag more than 25 times its original cost. It could also trigger additional large amounts of tax money going for oceanfront work on Long Island.  Senator Charles Schumer has declared that “the same kind of comprehensive protection…being put in place in Suffolk County must be put in place for Nassau County.”

Dr. Robert Young, a protégé of Dr. Pilkey’s—together they wrote “The Rising Sea” published in 2011—said in a presentation on the East End in 2013 sponsored by Concerned Citizens of Quogue that the “first choice” in dealing with a rising sea is “relocate and develop incentives for doing so.” He commented, “I don’t say ‘retreat’ anymore.” That’s because Americans don’t like the sound of that word, he explained. “No, we say relocate.”

Dr. Young, a geologist like Dr. Pilkey, added that it needs to be realized that “coastal erosion does not destroy beaches.” Beaches remain although they get reshaped by nature. The issue, he said, is construction on the coast—and when beach houses and other buildings are threatened, as they are by rising sea level, relocation is key. Dr. Young is the director of the Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines at Western Carolina University in North Carolina, founded by Dr. Pilkey.  

Synonymously, the word adaptation is also being widely used—from the State of California with its “Climate Adaptation Strategy” to Australia and its “National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy.” 

Relocation/adaptation—a much, much better strategy than “hand-wrestling with God” on the coast.

Fire Island to Montauk Point Reformulation Study - US Army Corps of …

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Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books.

Thursday
Aug042016

Boy Scout Troop 301 White Water Rafting And More!

“Boy Scout Troop 301 had a busy and fun summer! On Memorial Day weekend, scouts and families traveled to the Poconos to do some exciting white water rafting. In June, the Troop celebrated it’s 50th Anniversary with a picnic at Hoyt Farm bringing together current scouts with 301 alumni going back to the 1960’s.

In July, Troop 301 Scouts attended two separate summer camps for fun and skills training. Our younger scouts attended Baiting Hollow Scout Camp on the east end where they practiced wall climbing and enjoyed nightly camp fires. Older scouts attended Hawk Mountain Scout Camp in Pennsylvania to learn leadership skills while hiking, swimming and canoeing.
Troop 301 meets every Thursday evening during the school year at St. James Lutheran Church starting in September. Please feel free to come down and visit or learn more about out Troop 301 on our Facebook site, www.facebook.com/t301.org/ . We welcome all interested in Scouting!”