CCE in the News

Legislator Lafazan, Citizens Campaign for the Environment: Help fight climate change by making Nassau County carbon neutral by 2035

Legislator Lafazan, Citizens Campaign for the Environment: Help fight climate change by making Nassau County carbon neutral by 2035

Nassau County Legislator Joshua A. Lafazan (D – Woodbury) joined with members of the Legislature’s Minority Caucus and advocates from the Citizens Campaign for the Environment to unveil legislation that would require Nassau County to become carbon neutrality in its municipal operations by Jan. 1, 2035.

Suffolk sewer upgrade plan includes tax hike

Suffolk sewer upgrade plan includes tax hike

A bipartisan coalition of state lawmakers, environmentalists, construction groups and labor union representatives is pushing in the final days of New York State budget negotiations for a plan to fund a dramatic expansion of sewers and high-tech septic systems in Suffolk County.

Suffolk County Executive Bellone and Brookhaven Town Supervisor Romaine Announce Local Benefits Agreements to Advance Sunrise Wind Project

Suffolk County Executive Bellone and Brookhaven Town Supervisor Romaine Announce Local Benefits Agreements to Advance Sunrise Wind Project

Shirley, NY—Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone and Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine today announced a giant step forward to cement Suffolk County as a national leader of the growing offshore wind industry. 

Long Island experts' report calls for better use of recycled water to save aquifer, reduce pollution

Long Island experts' report calls for better use of recycled water to save aquifer, reduce pollution

A plan to reuse treated wastewater to irrigate golf courses, sod farms and nurseries has the potential for "revolutionizing" water conservation on Long Island by reducing pumping from the region's sole source aquifer while avoiding the discharge of nitrogen into coastal waters, a team of environmental experts said Wednesday.

Sunrise Wind Project takes another step toward becoming a reality

Sunrise Wind Project takes another step toward becoming a reality

The offshore wind project, which will be developed 30 miles east of Montauk, marks the second such effort to use renewable energy as a power source. South Fork Wind is currently under construction and will provide energy by the end of the year.

Op-Ed: Water Reuse Increasingly Important

SOURCE:

https://huntingtonnow.com/op-ed-water-reuse-increasingly-important/

By Karl Grossman - March 19, 2023

“Water reuse has been increasingly recognized as an essential component in effective
water resource management plans,” says the “Long Island Water Reuse Road Map & Action
Plan” unveiled last week. “The United Nations formally acknowledged the importance of water
reuse in 2017,” it adds.

“The benefits of water reuse have long been recognized and embraced in other parts of
the world,” it continues. And now in the United States, “approximately 2.6 billion gallons of
water is reused daily.”

But in New York State, “large-scale water reuse projects have been limited. There are a
few projects in upstate New York and one on Long Island,” the “Riverhead reuse project” which
started in 2016 “to redirect highly treated wastewater, as much as 260,000 gallons per day” from
the Riverhead Sewage Treatment Plant to “irrigate the nearby Indian Island County Golf Course”
instead of, as had been the practice, dumping it into Flanders Bay.

“Reusing water, for some other valuable purpose, provides numerous benefits,” the
“Long Island Water Reuse Road Map & Action Plan” goes on. “These include protecting public
wells and water supplies from salt water intrusion.” It calls for highly treated wastewater to be
used for a variety of purposes here with additional irrigation of golf courses but also of sod farms
and greenhouses, lawns and fields at educational and commercial sites and—highly
important—to deal with “over-pumping.”

Indeed, a lesson for all of Long Island is how Brooklyn—on Long Island’s western
end—lost its potable water supply more than a century ago: by over-pumping and consequent saltwater intrusion, along with pollution, notes John Turner, senior conservation policy advocate at the Seatuck Environmental Association.

So, Brooklyn began getting its water from reservoirs built upstate. There has been talk in
recent years of Nassau County buying water from those New York City-owned reservoirs. But
they are near capacity, says Turner, so the city “has not been welcoming Nassau County with open arms.”

For Nassau and Suffolk Counties water reuse is critical.

The “Long Island Water Reuse Road Map & Action Plan” was presented this week at an
event at the treatment facility of the Great Neck Water Pollution Control District in Nassau
County. Nassau is a case study of how the Brooklyn lesson has not been learned. In Nassau,
which is 85% sewered, its sewage treatment plants dump wastewater through outfall pipes into
nearby waterways and the Atlantic Ocean and Long Island Sound—and as a result Nassau’s
water table is dropping.

An announcement for the event said that it “serves as a kick-off for a new way of
thinking that could revolutionize the way in which our community protects its most precious
natural resource.”

The “Long Island Water Reuse Road Map & Action Plan” charting a course for Long
Island to reuse water from its underground water supply, its “sole source” of potable water, was
created by Islip-based Seatuck working with the Greentree Foundation and Cameron
Engineering & Associates, and a Water Reuse Technical Working Group of 28 members.
Suffolk County is about 25% sewered. Some water treatment plants in Suffolk recharge
treated wastewater into the ground but plants also do what Nassau has been doing, sending
wastewater out to adjacent waters or the ocean or Long Island Sound through outfall pipes.

There has been action through the years on pollutants in the water supply, on quality of
drinking water, in Nassau and Suffolk. There must be a parallel emphasis on quantity.
“Major Action Plan Recommendations” in the new plan, include: “Develop Water Reuse
Regulations/Guidelines…Convene a Long Island Water Reuse Workgroup to develop and
implement strategies…Conduct engineering studies on the most feasible projects…Engage Long
Island Golf Course Association in plan development…”

The “Water Reuse Technical Working Group” for the plan included: Anthony Caniano,
hydrologist at the Suffolk County Department of Health Services; Dr. Christopher Gobler of the
Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences; Bill Zalakar, president of
the Long Island Farm Bureau; Chris Class, marine scientist at The Nature Conservancy; Joseph
Gardner, president of the Long Island Golf Course Superintendent’s Association; Christopher
Schubert, program development specialist at the New York Water Science Center; Adrienne
Esposito, executive director of Citizens Campaign for the Environment; Suffolk County Public
Works Supervisor Madhav Sathe and Deputy Suffolk County Executive Peter Scully.

Projects for water reuse considered in the Town of Huntington in the plan include at: Kurt
Weiss Greenhouses in Melville; White Post Farms in Melville; Deckers and Van Cott Nurseries
in Greenlawn; Northport High School and Harborfields High School in Greenlawn; Holmes
Farms in Huntington; and Del Vino Vineyard in Northport.

For more information on the plan visit https://seatuck.org/water-reuse/

NAACP again intervenes to protest Yaphank waste transfer facility

NAACP again intervenes to protest Yaphank waste transfer facility

A truck transports waste.

A bill that would allow the Town of Brookhaven to eliminate a zoning requirement that protects open space to allow for a rail spur extension faces pushback from the New York NAACP and local chapters.

Eliminating a conservation easement would allow a proposed waste transfer station in Yaphank to connect to the freight system on the Long Island Rail Road. State NAACP officials warn that hauling away “thousands of tons of trash” by rail would disproportionately harm nearby communities of color.

EPA data shows 2021 had fewer toxic chemical releases in Connecticut

EPA data shows 2021 had fewer toxic chemical releases in Connecticut

Eva Stebel, water researcher, pours a water sample into a smaller glass container for experimentation as part of drinking water and PFAS research at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Center For Environmental Solutions and Emergency Response.

EPA Proposes New Drinking Water Standards Against 'Forever Chemicals'

EPA Proposes New Drinking Water Standards Against 'Forever Chemicals'

The proposed regulations focus on "forever chemicals" - chemicals that do not break down - found in drinking water.

FARMINGDALE, NY — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Tuesday proposed new enforceable drinking water standards, known as maximum contaminant levels, for two chemicals, PFOA and PFOS, found in drinking water, the agency announced.

Community offshore wind invests in youth STEM education

Community offshore wind invests in youth STEM education

One month after submitting a proposal to the state government for clean energy investment, Community Offshore Wind is already starting to invest.

The joint venture between RWE Renewables and National Grid has put over $100,000 into youth STEM education programs for the future workforce, collaborating with multiple community partners in downstate New York to provide access to museums, outdoor spaces, and environmental and marine education for hands-on learning experiences.

Commentary: Corporations, not communities, should be responsible for recycling packaging waste

Commentary: Corporations, not communities, should be responsible for recycling packaging waste

The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act will reduce waste and ease the burden on municipalities.

New York state generates more than 17 million tons of municipal solid waste each year, with a lackluster recycling rate below 20 percent. Instead of being recycled, much of our waste is going to landfills, being burned in incinerators, or ending up as plastic pollution in our communities and waterways. Each year companies ship billions of products, exacerbating the paper and plastic waste crisis, yet they bear no responsibility for managing the packaging waste they create.

A real bus stop

A real bus stop

The general aggravation of bad weather became very specific for 30 Long Islanders gathered Tuesday morning at the Melville park ‘n’ ride on the Long Island Expressway. It was 6 a.m., and members of the Long Island Lobby Coalition were waiting in the cold and slush for the bus that would take them to Albany for their annual Long Island Lobbying Day — a bus that never came.

Long Island fourth nationally in potential risks due to climate change, Moody's report says

Long Island fourth nationally in potential risks due to climate change, Moody's report says

Long Island ranks fourth among major American population centers for exposure to the physical and economic risks of climate change, behind only San Francisco, Cape Coral, Florida and New York City, according to a report released last week by Moody’s Analytics.

Local officials adamant public drinking water near MacArthur Airport is safe, but some homeowners with private wells are concerned

Local officials adamant public drinking water near MacArthur Airport is safe, but some homeowners with private wells are concerned

RONKONKOMA, N.Y. -- There are concerns about the public drinking water in and around Long Island's MacArthur Airport.

Authorities say it's safe, but people with private wells tell CBS2's Jennifer McLogan they're worried.

At environmental forum, officials discuss host of issues including waste management, housing needs

At environmental forum, officials discuss host of issues including waste management, housing needs

A who’s who of leading environmental advocates joined elected officials in Riverhead last week to discuss and Long Island-wide conservation initiatives.