A New Front in the Fight Against the East 91st Street Marine Transfer Station

I am proud to announce that I am the lead plaintiff with Councilmember Jessica Lappin and Asphalt Green on a new federal lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the City to stop the construction of Mayor Bloomberg’s ill-conceived East 91st Street Marine Transfer Station.

When Superstorm Sandy hit on October 29th, the area around the East 91st Street Marine Transfer Station flooded, damaging Asphalt Green’s facilities – with waters reaching as far as First Avenue.  This new reality of frequent extreme weather should be a wake up call for the Bloomberg administration and the City Council – that building a Marine Transfer Station in Flood Zone “A” is a disaster in the making.

Our new lawsuit exposes the fact that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers violated the requirements of the Federal Clean Water Act along with its own guidelines in granting the final permit necessary to begin construction on the East 91st Street Marine Transfer Station.  The Army Corps of Engineers cut corners in issuing its permit in July. They failed to thoroughly evaluate all possible alternative sites, the true long term environmental impact on this densely populated residential neighborhood and whether constructing a Marine Transfer Station at East 91st Street is truly in the public interest.  That puts our community, and the tens-of-thousands of people who use Asphalt Green each year, at risk.

In June, I sued Mayor Bloomberg and the City Council in State Supreme Court to stop the East 91st Street Marine Transfer Station.  While that lawsuit is ongoing, this new lawsuit will give us yet another avenue to finally stop the construction of the East 91stStreet Marine Transfer Station.

Below you may find my press release announcing the lawsuit and a copy of the lawsuit itself.

 

Post to Twitter

One thought on “A New Front in the Fight Against the East 91st Street Marine Transfer Station

  1. I commend your stamina and support your standards. I am a lung cancer survivor, and will be forced to move away from the hazardous air and toxic risks if this transfer station is built as I live at 1755 York Avenue, and face the front of York Ave and 91st Street as well. The billions of dollars needed to build this transfer station and keep it running is better served by helping the victims of Hurricane Sandy. I think all of New York City would be appalled if everyone knew Bloomberg’s priorities. Has this been addressed in the New York Time, the Post, etc?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>