Riverkeeper
Motto | NY's clean water advocate |
---|---|
Formation | 1966 (Hudson River Fishermen’s Association) |
Headquarters | Ossining, New York |
Hudson Riverkeeper | Paul Gallay |
Website | riverkeeper.org |
Riverkeeper is non-profit environmental organization dedicated to the protection of the Hudson River and its tributaries, as well as the watersheds that provide New York City with its drinking water. It started out as the Hudson River Fisherman's Association (HRFA) in 1966, a citizen-led environmental enforcement organization founded by a group of recreational and commercial fisherman. In 1983, HRFA hired John Cronin, the first full-time Hudson Riverkeeper, to patrol the river, protect it from polluters, and enforce environmental laws.[1] In 1986, the group officially changed its name to Riverkeeper, making it the first "keeper" group to be founded. Their movement motivated the formation of "keeper" groups across the world, protecting rivers, bays, lakes, and coastal waterways. In 1999, the Waterkeeper Alliance, was created as an umbrella organization to unite and support "keeper" organizations. Today, there are over 300 "keepers" around the globe.
Riverkeeper's mission is "to protect the environmental, recreational and commercial integrity of the Hudson River and its tributaries, and safeguard the drinking water of nine million New York City and Hudson Valley residents".[2] It uses litigation, science, patrolling, citizen engagement, and legislation to accomplish its goals. Currently Paul Gallay serves as the Riverkeeper and president of the organization.[3]
Preface
The Hudson Valley has long been considered the birthplace of the modern American environmental movement. In the 1960s a small group of scientists, fishermen and concerned citizens led by Robert H. Boyle, author of The Hudson River, A Natural and Unnatural History and a senior writer[4] at Sports Illustrated, were determined to reverse the decline of the then-polluted Hudson River by confronting the polluters through advocacy and citizen law enforcement.
Riverkeeper grew out of "a blue-collar coalition of commercial and recreational fishermen" who organized to reclaim the Hudson River from polluters.[5] While Riverkeeper aids national and international networks guard local waterways, their grassroots actions are unique. Where many local efforts use protests and high-risk defiance of authority, Riverkeeper seeks citizen empowerment in environmental law. After filing claims with government agencies such as the Army Corps of Engineers, this mobilized body politic saw how business interests clouded government actions.[5] They believe ordinary people should be able to defend public resources from abuse and it was by such actions to protect communal watershed quality that legal standing was given to United States' citizens in environmental disputes.[6]
Origins
Scenic Hudson
Prior to Riverkeeper's predecessor organization, the Hudson River Fishermen's Association (HRFA), a few activists strove to mobilize the Hudson Valley politic. Of note was Robert H. Boyle, a fisherman and a sportswriter for Sports Illustrated.[7] Boyle moved to the area in the 1960s and, upon fishing the Hudson and its tributaries, grew fond of the region. He became familiar with residents that he found knew most about the river, the fishermen. Soon after, he began to research the river and published articles rebuking wild land conservation as ignorant of community environmental issues.[7]
Boyle's support was crucial to the litigation between local environmentalists, organized under the Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference (Scenic Hudson), and Consolidated Edison (Con Ed), New York's chief electric utility in the case Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference v. Federal Power Commission. The case involved Con Ed's proposal to build a hydropower facility on Storm King Mountain in the Hudson Highlands.[8] Scenic Hudson, joined by the Nature Conservancy, filed a complaint against the plant, but the Federal Power Commission (FPC) approved it, ignoring likely ecological harm. Boyle studied this case and found that a New York Fish and Game Journal article identified this part of the Hudson as a key spawning ground for striped bass. He informed Scenic Hudson of this result.[9] The FPC rejected this data due to testimony of a former New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) biologist.
Boyle met with the article's authors and found not only was this biologist aware of the study, he hired them to perform it.[10] Boyle then tried to link other activities to striped bass populations, mainly Con Ed's Indian Point nuclear power plant. Local fishermen long asserted that thousands of fish were killed by the plant's intake pipes and Dominick Pirone of the Long Island League of Salt Water Sportsmen alleged he was shown photos of a dead fish pile twelve feet high.[11] Boyle later found that DEC gathered this proof and hid it, claiming the plant killed no fish. Infuriated, he tried to tie fish kills to the future Storm King plant. With testimony from a fisheries biologist of the United States Marine Gamefish Laboratory, Boyle undermined the DEC's faulty data, proving the site as critical bass spawning habitat.[12]
In spite of this victory, local citizens continued to battle the FPC. Yet by 1965, due in part to Boyle's articles relating the case to local fishery impacts and by unearthing the fish kill photos the DEC had stifled, the Hudson Valley politic was aroused. Scenic Hudson also began receiving donations from thousands of people from forty-eight states.[6]
Storm King Doctrine
In December 1965, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed FPC's dismissal of the petitions against the plant, "holding that injury to aesthetic or recreational values was sufficient to provide an aggrieved party with constitutional "standing"".[13] This result, known as the Storm King Doctrine, was the first time environmentalists were given standing to object to scenic or recreational injury without showing tangible economic harm.[14] Though this fight lasted for fifteen more years, community concerns for environmental quality now held weight in future litigation. Thus, despite Con Ed and FPC efforts to evade additional hearings and their later release of faulty impact assessments, a new group, the HRFA, swayed the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) to consider fish kills in relicensing Con Ed's current plant at Indian Point.[15] The HRFA, founded by Boyle, united recreational and commercial fishermen who valued the Hudson River as public property and saw its safety as linked to the protection of democratic ideals. They cared for the valley because the river supported their livelihoods and offered them a sense of place. It was "our Monte Carlo, our Riviera" as one fisherman stated.[16]
The inclusion of fish kills at Indian Point caused the Second Circuit Court of Appeals to order the FPC to revive the fish mortality issue at Storm King. With the environmentalists' new constitutional standing, Con Ed envisioned costly litigation ahead. In 1980, Con Ed sought a settlement accord, resulting in the Hudson River Peace Treaty. This agreement cancelled the hydropower plant, mandated the land become a park and forced Con Ed to donate $12 million to endow a Hudson River Foundation to study the river. Con Ed was spared costs of constructing infrastructure at Indian Point to solve the fish intake problem, but had to research alternative solutions to reduce fish kills.[17] The Storm King Doctrine set precedents for environmental law including citizens' claims to bring an environmental dispute before a court. This right was included in the National Environmental Policy Act and expanded citizen participation in the environmental movement.[18]
Citizen environmental enforcement
While empowerment swept across the region, forgotten legislation was about to reshape citizen efforts by placing them on the offensive. The Refuse Act of 1899 set up fines from $500 to $2,500 for pollutant discharges to the navigable waters of the United States.[19] Moreover, half the fine was afforded to whoever aided in alerting the public of the violation and allowed citizens to enforce its provisions if government failed to do so.[19] This Act caused a surge in public interest over water pollution in the early 1970s, stirring many citizens to enforce civil (and potentially criminal) violations of a federal statute, and placing pressure on the national government to create effective water protection policy.[20]
The HRFA was one of the first groups to rediscover this Act and successfully apply it. Once Boyle familiarized himself with the Refuse Act, he noted its value to the community at once. When the HRFA held their first public meeting, drawing a standing-room only gathering of Hudson Valley masons, commercial fishermen, carpenters and other local laborers at an American Legion Hall, Boyle found an audience to hear his new tactics for citizen empowerment.[21] Of note was the presence of Congressman Richard Ottinger, who was so moved by the turnout of working-class environmentalists who sought redress for the social and environmental inequities in their towns that he cancelled his agenda to discuss these problems.[22] Ottinger was key to the political support structure of HRFA's initial growth. He and others at this meeting heard from fishermen plagued by buyer disdain for Hudson River fish, as well as local factory and construction workers who reported personal observations of pollutant discharges by their employers.[23]
Their first target was Penn Central Railroad, which for years released petroleum products into the Croton River, a tributary of the Hudson.[23] HRFA notified the Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Attorney by written letters and phone calls to enforce the Refuse Act, but were ignored. In 1968, HRFA and Congressman Ottinger sued Penn Central, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Secretary of the Army.[23] This caught the U.S. Attorney's interest, causing them to join the suit against Penn Central. The railroad lost the suit and provided the first bounty afforded to a private organization from a polluter since the Act's enactment. HRFA, now emboldened, distributed thousands of copies of the Refuse Act on "Bag a Polluter" postcards for citizens to fill in polluters' names and to send back to the HRFA. This effectively found many violators liable for their actions.[24]
The HRFA was growing and many members now spread its message to communities and public officials. Richie Garrett, HRFA's president, was a local grave-digger from Ossining, NY who had grown up along the Croton River, fishing and living by means of this waterbody. By his involvement in the HRFA, he grew as an activist by writing letters and presenting slide shows of fish kills and pollution at venues from garden club meetings to Knights of Columbus halls.[24] He became so well known that he testified in front of the U.S. House of Representative's Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation over Governor Rockefeller's idea for a Hudson River expressway, describing his efforts not as radical, but as American in disposition.[24] Garrett urged his audiences to forgo trying to resolve all the issues facing Earth, but to find a part of the world meaningful to them, and protect it. He found such an advocate in Fred Danback in one of HRFA's largest cases yet.[25]
Danback worked as a janitor for Anaconda Wire and Cable Company at Hastings-on-Hudson, NY. On his first day of employment, he discovered that the company released oils and solvents through floor drains that led directly into the river.[25] Danback had grown up along the waterfront and had often heard complaints that Hudson shad tasted of oil. He now had proof of such pollution. After an unresponsive complaint to Anaconda, he contacted the United States Coast Guard to intervene. Yet, one afternoon he found company representatives dining with Coast Guard officials; appearing quite amicable. It was then Danback knew he could not rely on government and had to find other ways to address the issue.[26] In 1969, Danback quit Anaconda and joined the HRFA. He brought evidence and analysis before the U.S. Attorney's office and badgered the agency until 1971, when they charged Anaconda with one hundred counts of violating the Refuse Act.[27]
Growth of the organization
These victories raised citizen empowerment and provided new funding to expand HRFA influence along the Hudson. Robert Boyle had called for a "Riverkeeper" in a book, arguing for someone "on the river the length of the year, nailing polluters on the spot...giving a sense of time, place and purpose to people who live in or visit the valley".[28] Thus, he was inspired in meeting John Cronin, an area local who had worked aboard the Clearwater, a replica of the Hudson River sloop that fostered education and the restoration of the Hudson.[29] Cronin worked in the Clearwater Pipewatch project, inspecting companies for Clean Water Act (CWA) violations. His first assignment entailed an adhesive tape manufacturing company. As a result, the company was convicted of twelve violations of the 1972 CWA.[30] Initially uninspired by citizen participation in environmental fields, Cronin was transformed by this outcome. "I wasn't a scientist. I wasn't a lawyer. As just an average, everyday citizen, I was able to get a polluter charged".[30] After his legal forays, Cronin became a lobbyist at the Center for the Hudson River Valley and then worked as a political aide; educating himself on government structure. Still, he did not forget the Hudson and after a couple years returned to the river to become a commercial fisherman.[31] Cronin boated much of the Hudson and fostered an admiration for the river from his experiences with local fishermen. After facing multiple struggles as a fisherman, he found love in the river's beauty and bounty, but also hardship in its daily trials. His passion developed beyond simple environmentalism to encompass a deeper respect for a mutual coexistence between himself and the river.[32]
Boyle found his Riverkeeper in John Cronin and Cronin found his calling in this new organization. Only after Cronin's first acts as Riverkeeper did it grow in popularity. Upon taking on his role as Riverkeeper in 1983, Cronin was tipped off by a state trooper that oil tankers were rinsing contents into the Hudson. He quickly engaged the issue and often anchored near the advised area to listen to the captains' discussions over the radio at night.[30] When he learned ships were flushing out jet fuel residue and filling up with river water to take to an Exxon refinery, Cronin started collecting water samples. Over two years, he recorded one hundred seventy-seven Exxon tankers discharge into the river and take up clean water.[30] Cronin's proof was so thorough that Exxon settled, paying $1.5 million to New York State for a private river management fund and $500,000 to HRFA; half of which went to Riverkeeper and the other half towards environmental projects on the Hudson.[30][33] This case afforded Riverkeeper local and national regard. In 1986, HRFA joined Riverkeeper as one group to protect the river, to retract it from corporate abuse and to return it to public use.[34] Cronin saw Riverkeeper's new mission as not just to hunt polluters, but to prove itself to the community and empower those who felt the social disruption of the ecological misuse of the Hudson.[35]
In essence, Riverkeeper is an environmental "neighborhood watch" group maintained by concerned citizens.[36] Its constituents are not public officials and are not swayed by politics, but include members who defend the public use and restrict the private alienation of the river's benefits.[37] Thus, Riverkeeper has engaged environmental justice issues, such as community park access. For example, around 1990, the City of New York Parks Commissioner restricted greenspace access by banning bus and subway transit, frequented modes of transport for African Americans, from reaching certain parks.[38] Riverkeeper sued Westchester County and forced it to reopen six county parks that were closed to meet the budget, but due to their proximity to a railway, were mainly used by minority communities. The County had not closed any golf courses used by affluent residents, even though they were greater strains on County funds than parks that offered some minorities their only access to the river.[38] This was not the only occasion where land use policies threatened the health of the Hudson River watershed as a public resource. In 1990, a team of Riverkeeper attorneys took on developers and lackluster enforcement agencies to protect the reservoirs and streams that constitute the water supply for nine million New York City and Westchester County residents.[39] Riverkeeper also united with a chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoples (NAACP), in Ossining. During the 1960s, this oldest stable African American residential community in the Hudson Valley was rezoned industrial and has suffered social decline ever since. In 1991, Riverkeeper and the Ossining NAACP effectively sued the Ossining Planning Board to repeal an expansion of a construction debris processing plant that would have worsened diesel fumes and house vibrations at adjacent households.[40]
The Riverkeeper movement has redefined grassroots forces by democratizing resources for communities and has afforded a constant medium of participation for neighborhoods whose episodic battles can exhaust their passion. Local waterways are protected by citizen-led efforts to confront pollution in the courts, the media, and the political system with the aid of a network of local knowledge to prevent the failure of democratic processes by politically endowed industries.[41] This movement restored communal ownership and control to the lives of its participants, many of which were transformed by efforts to embrace democratic rights to clean water and the redress of regulatory failures. Diana Leicht, a quiet mother from Newburgh, N.Y. turned irate when her municipal water supply became so polluted that it sickened her child.[42] She contacted Riverkeeper, which informed her of her legal rights to clean water. They discovered her timidity had grown from a desire to be a good citizen and not for fear of conflict. With the aid of Riverkeeper, she organized sixty mothers to learn their rights under legislation such as the CWA and the Safe Drinking Water Act.[42] They gained media interest, contacted state agencies directly and at hearings, sued the town of Newburgh, won their claims and forced the payment of damages. By empowering citizens to embrace their democratic rights, Riverkeeper helped stir the passion of two hundred residents to confront the town board at a local meeting resulting in the board's public statement to become more alert to local needs.[42]
Importance
The American environmental movement spans several centuries and has been affected by past beliefs and modern ideologies.[43][44] While first focused on wild lands outside of civilization, this movement now includes urban centers, production activities, and human health.[45] Still, further cooperation is needed to unite mainstream and community-based concerns. Mainstream groups have been critiqued as elitist and overly Caucasian, and tend to focus on the current system of governance instead of alternative means to embrace issues of race, gender, class and social health.[46] These organizations have become fixated on policy-making processes, forcing them to allow concessions on issues vital to alternative groups to create a cordial dialogue with industry and government.[47]
Grassroots activism has begun to fill the void left by the institutionalization of the environmental movement. These groups foster mediums for environmental change, rely on voluntary action and stress citizen empowerment as well as pollution prevention instead of only technical controls.[48] Their origins are distinct from mainstream groups and often appear to be descendent from earlier urban and industrial movements linked to the mobilization of concerned citizens, the growth of networks and a meaningful sense of place.[48]
The public trust doctrine separates private ownership from resources held in common by the public. This legal right, recognized in New York's Constitution, holds that the people own the Hudson River and all citizens have a right to its use, but none can abuse this privilege to degrade its use by others.[49] This democratic value was offset during the Industrial Revolution when courts and legislatures overlooked the public trust and gave more power to industry.[50] A similar erosion of another common law, nuisance law, occurred in the same era. Nuisance law bars private land uses that injure the community or disrupt the rights of others to enjoy their property.[50] In response, millions of Americans demanded greater protection for environmental and community health. As such, these rights were rewritten with greater emphasis in our federal statutory system. They declare no one has the right to pollute public resources and everyone has the right to a clean environment. Only by democratic representation has industry been given permits to pollute so long as the activity benefits society and causes no harm. This created the field of risk assessment and questions what society risks in allocating our common rights to industry.[51]
The origins and propagation of the Riverkeeper movement involve citizen ownership and empowerment. Democracies can be assessed by how fairly they distribute natural wealth and whether the bodies politic have equal access to it.[52] When government fails to secure these goals, our legal structure offers ways to reassert our claims as citizens. Right-to-know laws such as the Freedom of Information Act afford citizens the power to demand knowledge of government and corporate activity in their communities. If these acts violate environmental laws, they can prosecute polluters in the place of the U.S. Attorney General under citizen-suit provisions that are part of every major federal environmental statute. These laws give the public democratic rights to regain ownership over their neighborhoods.[52]
Riverkeeper's success stirred other citizens to defend their own waterways. Such groups work across the nation and emulate Riverkeeper's tactics of empowerment by the enforcement of democratic rights and ecological quality.[53] Riverkeeper was joined by Pace University Law School in its struggles, providing it and the Hudson Valley legal resources to combat corporate power. Many law schools have forged similar alliances; becoming arsenals for citizen enforcement suits for Keeper organizations. This has educated communities, giving them a means to exercise their rights, and has taught new generations of law students the value of community-based activism in environmental law.[54] Not long after these new groups began to take shape, Riverkeeper was offered funding to become a national organization with local chapters around the nation. Riverkeeper declined the offer since it believed in grassroots action as a means to empower the disenfranchised from the bottom-up, instead of by national forces.[54] In 1992, the current set of Keeper programs created the National Alliance of River, Sound and Baykeepers, led by Riverkeeper. This organization became "a national community of Keepers" where members network, share resources, and license new groups as accredited Keeper programs.[54]
Controversy over hiring of convicted egg smuggler
In 2000, eight of the 22 members of Riverkeeper's board, including Cronin, resigned after Kennedy insisted on rehiring William Wegner, a scientist whom the organization's then-president, Boyle, had fired as soon as he had learned Wegner had been hired six months earlier. In 1995, Wegner had been convicted of smuggling rare bird eggs from Australia and had also pled guilty to tax evasion. Boyle and the board members who resigned believed it was not right for an environmental organization to hire someone convicted of environmental crimes, especially since those opposing certain aspects of Riverkeeper's work, such as New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, would not hesitate to publicize that fact to gain a publicity advantage. Treasurer John Fry, who also resigned, felt it would hurt the organization's fundraising. Boyle was also further displeased that Kennedy had made an employment decision, since that was solely his responsibility within the organization.[55]
Kennedy, who had hired Wegner to work for him personally after Boyle had fired him, said Wegner had done "terrific work" for Riverkeeper and no one, even those who had resigned over the hiring, disputed that. "We all make mistakes in our lives," he told The New York Times. "Where would any of us be if we didn't get a second chance?"[55] As of 2017 Wegner remains employed by Riverkeeper.[56]
Recent activities and cases
Today, these organizations have built a global network, the Waterkeeper Alliance, and include more than one hundred eighty Keepers, modeled after and supported by Riverkeeper.[57] Despite the national and global transformation of the Keeper movement, Riverkeeper's mission remains local. Their efforts still focus on reducing fish kills and water pollution, maintaining the quality of New York City's drinking water, and increasing public access and appreciation for the Hudson River.[57] At any given time, Riverkeeper is involved in many actions to protect the integrity of the river, its tributaries, the Croton watershed, or other waters that affect New York City’s water supply. These actions take the form of litigation; investigations; environmental review of development projects; citizen empowerment projects; regulatory review and comment; and local, state, and federal policy issues.[58]
Riverkeeper maintains a 36-foot (11-m) wooden patrol and research vessel, the R. Ian Fletcher, operated by Boat Captain, John Lipscomb. Riverkeeper’s full-time presence on the river enables it to respond to and investigate new reports of illegal discharges, facilitate scientific research on the Hudson, and provide access to the river to its members, public officials, students and the media.[59]
Keeper programs not only defend natural lands for their own sake, but preserve the quality of these environments for the cultural and social enrichment of those that call these locales home, and importantly, for those who will do so in the future.[60] Riverkeeper reveals the value of not only engaging in environmental conflicts over broad national or international issues, but also in those occurring in our own backyards. By reasserting public ownership of common resources and that any harm incurred to them is an act of thievery against every community member; Riverkeeper protects Hudson Valley communities, its environment and the democratic rights of its citizens.[61] Through outreach as well as active citizen enforcement of legal standards, Riverkeeper has empowered individuals to oppose corporate control. These citizens have retaken control of their lives by reestablishing the core principles of democratic environmental governance in their communities.[62]
Restores Access to Hudson River at Poughkeepsie Dock
In September 2012, Riverkeeper and the City of Poughkeepsie settled a 15-month-old lawsuit to restore public access to the Hudson River. Represented by the Pace Environmental Litigation Clinic, Riverkeeper, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies and legendary local fisherman John Mylod, challenged the city after it licensed its public dock at Waryas Park for the near-exclusive use by a commercial tour boat operator. By requiring the city to extend its public dock, the settlement will allow for both the public and the tour boat to access the Hudson River.
D.C. circuit court throws out NRC rule on nuclear waste storage
In a landmark ruling decided on June 11, 2012, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in Washington threw out the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s (NRC) “Waste Confidence Decision,” an agency rule that allowed the NRC to relicense aging nuclear reactors without having to address the risks of storing highly radioactive spent fuel onsite until a permanent disposal solution is developed.
This rule has previously prevented Riverkeeper from raising safety or environmental concerns about spent fuel storage at Indian Point in the relicensing proceeding, despite the fact that the packed spent fuel pools are prone to leaking radioactive water into the Hudson River, and present a major safety risk to the twenty million people living within fifty miles of Indian Point. Riverkeeper was a co-petitioner in the case, along with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League (BREDL).
Water Quality report leading to Sewage Right to Know legislation
In August 2011, Riverkeeper published a landmark report titled “How Is the Water?” revealing serious ongoing threats to water quality in the Hudson and its tributaries and followed it with a campaign to invest in infrastructure and pass a statewide spill/contamination notification law. In less than a year’s time, a Sewage Right to Know law passed New York state legislature on June 21, 2012.
Synapse Energy Report provides blueprint for life without Indian Point
In October 2011, Riverkeeper and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) commissioned an authoritative study by Synapse Energy Consultants showing that a wide range of safer, cleaner energy options is available to replace the Indian Point Energy Center if the nuclear plant is not relicensed in 2015. In early 2012, two key New York State Assembly committees came to the conclusion that it was imperative to replace Indian Point, and in April of the same year, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced a bold plan for energy innovation and a $1 billion investment in these initiatives, which align with findings from the Synapse Report.
DEP and DEC agreement to reduce sewage pollution
A landmark agreement announced in March 2012 between New York City and the state will lead to $2.4 billion in investments to reduce sewage pollution in the Hudson River, Newtown Creek, Gowanus Canal and other waterways. The agreement reflects years of Riverkeeper advocacy, in partnership with the SWIM Coalition, to advance green infrastructure, preserve citizen rights to clean water law enforcement, and take significant strides toward achieving Clean Water Act goals of making even our urban waterways safe for swimming and fishing.
GE agrees to finish historic PCB clean-up of the Hudson
Riverkeeper and its allies fought for the removal of PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) from the Hudson River, deposited by General Electric's Fort Edward and Hudson Falls plants, over the course of more than 30 years. On May 15, 2009, the initial cleanup of the river began. Phase 1 of the two-phased plan to dredge the contaminated sediments concluded in October 2009, and then GE became critical of aspects of the project and pursuant to the 2006 settlement agreement between EPA and GE. GE retained the option to refuse to perform Phase 2, which included most of the sediment removal. On December 17, 2010, EPA issued a revised plan for Phase 2 cleanup, after months of negotiation and analysis. On December 23, 2011, GE agreed to EPA’s terms and that it would move forward to prepare for Phase 2 dredging in the spring of 2012. Riverkeeper and partner organizations continue to closely monitor the clean-up.
Consolidated Iron & Metal Superfund remediation
For years, Riverkeeper has pressured the Environmental Protection Agency to clean up the remnants of a scrap metal processor on the Newburgh waterfront that had become a toxic playground for neighborhood kids. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. began the campaign in 1984 and it was championed by Riverkeeper watchdog Susan Cleaver. The Superfund cleanup of the Consolidated Iron & Metal site was completed in 2011.
DEC denial of Indian Point water quality certification
On April 3, 2010, Riverkeeper succeeded in convincing the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) to deny a critical water quality certification for failure to prevent fish kills, damaging the Indian Point nuclear power plant’s prospects for relicensing. Entergy Corporation (owner of Indian Point) filed a request for an adjudicatory hearing to review the legal and factual basis of DEC’s decision and as of October 2011, Riverkeeper has been in state hearings, arguing that radioactive leaks and the slaughter of a billion fish and other aquatic life annually put Indian Point out of compliance with the water quality permit it needs to continue operating.
Newtown Creek & Gowanus Canal Superfund designation
After major advocacy campaigns by Riverkeeper and Brooklyn groups, the Gowanus Canal and Newtown Creek were listed by the EPA as “national priority” superfund sites in March and September 2010, respectively, guaranteeing long-overdue cleanups in each location. Riverkeeper is a founder of the Newtown Creek Alliance and a key member of the Gowanus Canal Community Advisory Group (CAG) and the CAG Water Quality and Technical Committees. Working with the community, Riverkeeper has called on the EPA to select a final remedy that targets not just the sediment in the Gowanus Canal, but commits to stopping toxic pollution from CSOs, leaching of pollution from contaminated sites, and restoring shoreline habitat.
ExxonMobil Settlement
On November 10, 2010, Riverkeeper joined with New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo to announce a settlement against ExxonMobil holding the company responsible for cleaning up between 17 million and 30 million gallons of oil that were spilled and leaked from its refinery and storage facilities into the soil and groundwater in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, over the last century. Under the agreement, Greenpoint residents are the beneficiaries of a $19.5 million environmental benefit plan, the largest in NY history.
Settlement with EPA on cooling water intake regulations
Riverkeeper fought for decades in efforts to enforce Section 316(b) of the Clean Water Act, which requires the use of the best technology available to stop industrial plants like Indian Point from killing fish in cooling water intakes. On November 22, 2010, the federal government settled Riverkeeper vs. EPA, and committed to new regulations to prevent up to a trillion fish kills each year at 500 power plants and industrial facilities nationwide. Since proposing a weak rule in April 2011, the EPA has been collecting more data and recently delayed finalizing the standards for cooling water intake structures until June 27, 2013.
Moratorium on Hydrofracking / New York moratorium on gas drilling
Over the summer and fall of 2010, the actions of Riverkeeper, partner organizations, and advocates were instrumental in the New York State Senate and Assembly passing a bill that made placed a moratorium on fracking until May 15, 2011. This made New York the first state to impose a formal moratorium on any use of high volume hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," prohibiting it from proceeding in the state unless demonstrated to be safe. And in December 2010, Governor David Paterson issued an Executive Order calling for a temporary timeout on permitting the use of horizontal wells for fracking for natural gas through July 1, 2011.
Belleayre Mountain settlement
Riverkeeper and partner groups won a long-running campaign in December 2011, when New York purchased 1,200-acres of forest in New York City’s Watershed on Belleayre Mountain. The purchase was a key element in a non-binding Agreement in Principle reached between the state, the City of New York, several environmental groups and Crossroads Ventures LLC in September 2007, and will preserve a vast swath of land that naturally filters the water supply for 9 million New York City and Hudson Valley residents.
New York City commits $2.1 billion to repair leaks in the Delaware Aqueduct
Since 2001, Riverkeeper has been the primary watchdog over the leaks in the Delaware Aqueduct, which supplies more than half of New York City’s daily drinking water. After years of prodding by Riverkeeper, in November 2010, the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) announced its plans to divert water from the leaking aqueduct. Under the plan, DEP will break ground on the bypass tunnel in 2013, and complete the connection to the Delaware Aqueduct in 2019. The leaking portion of the aqueduct would then be sealed and its use discontinued. Riverkeeper continues to monitor and report on this issue and work with residents in affected communities to ensure their voices are heard and until the consequences they are suffering are made right.
See also
References
Notes
- ↑ "About Us". Waterkeeper. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
- ↑ "Our Methods". Riverkeeper. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
- ↑ "About Us| Our Team". Riverkeeper. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
- ↑ "Books of The Times". The New York Times. July 7, 1983. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- 1 2 Kennedy Jr., Robert; Alex Matthiessen. "History of the Waterkeeper Alliance". Waterkeeper Alliance. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- 1 2 Cronin and Kennedy, p.33.
- 1 2 Cronin and Kennedy, p.24.
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.27
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.29
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.29-30
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.30
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.30-31
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.32-33
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.33, 37
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.34-35
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.39-40
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.36-37
- ↑ "The Scenic Hudson Decision". Marist Environmental History Project. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- 1 2 Yeager, Peter (1993). The Limits of Law: the Public Regulation of Private Pollution. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. p. 120.
- ↑ Yeager, Peter (1993). The Limits of Law: the Public Regulation of Private Pollution. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. pp. 120–121.
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.42-43
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.43
- 1 2 3 Cronin and Kennedy, p.44
- 1 2 3 Cronin and Kennedy, p.45
- 1 2 Cronin and Kennedy, p.46
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.46-47
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.47
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.69
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.54
- 1 2 3 4 5 Reed, Susan. "Polluters, Beware! Riverkeeper John Cronin Patrols the Hudson and Pursues Those Who Foul Its Waters". People.com. Retrieved 16 Oct 2011.
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.63-64
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.66
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.76
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.48-49, 76
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.77
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.135
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.135-136
- 1 2 Cronin and Kennedy, p.165
- ↑ "Hudson riverkeeper hunts polluters". Daily News. July 1, 1990.
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.165-166
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.169-170
- 1 2 3 Cronin and Kennedy, p.173
- ↑ Nash, Roderick (2001). Wilderness and the American Mind. New Haven: Yale UP. p. 24.
- ↑ Gottlieb, pp.20-24
- ↑ Gottlieb, pp.35-36
- ↑ Gottlieb, p.269
- ↑ Gottlieb, pp.182-183
- 1 2 Gottlieb, p.227
- ↑ Kennedy, p.306
- 1 2 Kennedy, p.307
- ↑ Kennedy, pp.307-308
- 1 2 Kennedy, p.309
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, pp.131-132
- 1 2 3 Cronin and Kennedy, p.132
- 1 2 Worth, Robert (June 22, 2000). "Eight at Riverkeeper Resign Over Kennedy's Hiring of a Rare-Egg Smuggler". The New York Times. Retrieved July 12, 2017.
- ↑ "William Wegner". Riverkeeper. 2009–2017. Retrieved July 12, 2017.
- 1 2 Riverkeeper. "Our Allies | Riverkeeper". Riverkeeper. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
- ↑ Riverkeeper. "Campaigns & Cases| Safeguard Drinking Water: NYC Watershed". Riverkeeper. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
- ↑ Riverkeeper. "About Us| Our Methods: Patrol Boat". Riverkeeper. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.275
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.277
- ↑ Cronin and Kennedy, p.264
Bibliography
- Cronin, John Jr., and Robert F. Kennedy. (1999). The Riverkeepers: Two Activists Fight to Reclaim Our Environment as a Basic Human Right. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-84625-5
- Gottlieb, Robert. (2005). Forcing the Spring: the Transformation of the American Environmental Movement. Washington D.C.: Island Press.
- Kennedy, Robert F. Jr. (2000). "Risk, Democracy, and the Environment". In Gail Charnley, John D. Graham, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., and Jason Shogren, "1998 Annual Meeting Plenary Session: Assessing and Managing Risks in a Democratic Society," Risk Analysis 20(3):301-316.
External links
- Riverkeeper website
- Waterkeeper Alliance website
- A River Keeper’s View of Climate Change
- Beacon Institute for Rivers and Estuaries