TCE levels in dump did not go down much after barrel removal in 98-99: DEC

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WPCNR City Confidential. By John F. Bailey. © 2006, The CitizeNetReporter. All rights reserved. June 21, 2006: Wendy Rosenbach, spokesperson for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation told WPCNR today that the reason the DEC is asking the city for a testing plan to determine the present state of TCE contamination in the ground water emanating from the city dump is, “the TCE levels didn’t go down that much” after 26 barrels containing “traces” of the contaminent, TriChloroEthylene, a degreaser and cleaning solvent were removed from the dump in 1998-99.



 


Rosenbach said the DEC’s made its decision calling for a new testing plan based on the results of the city ground well monitoring. She said the DEC will be reviewing the testing plan to be submitted by Department of Public Works Commissioner Joseph Nicoletti, and held out the possibility of doing “split-tests” with the city to confirm the city findings.


 


She said today there is no date set for a meeting with the city on the compost operation that Nicoletti presented solutions for May 31.


 


Rosenbach said there was no TCE threat to the city drinking water, but that TCE was in the ground water running off from the site of the compost and city landfill.  She did not have the levels of TCE available.


 


DEC did not require remediation in mid-80s.


 


WPCNR learned from Michael Graessle, Executive Officer of the Del Vecchio Administration, who recalled that the chemical was identified as “carbon tetrachloride” and was discovered in the dump. Graessle said that the DEC said the city did not have to remove that chemical at the time. He recalls:


 


“The best of my recollection the city had been notified by the DEC that there was a contamination of the water flowing down from the West branch of the Mamaroneck River that flows down to Long Island Sound. They discovered the material was a cleaning fluid, my recollection was it was carbon tetrachloride, and it was emanating from their belief at the city’s landfill. Expoloration was done and indeed it was found through some testing to be some 50 gallon drums that had apparently been buried many years earlier. They had rusted through and the content was now leaking out and contaminating the water.


 


There appeared to be some stone underneath that was bowled in shape, so the carbon tet would leak into that and gather there and in rainstorms, it was then flushing up and over the edge of the rock,  then traveling into the water stream and reaching down into the West Branch of the Mamaroneck River. The state then asked that the city not excavate, but rather to test it and monitor the well water. I was a little surprised because I thought it would be more appropriate to dig it up and then relocate the soil and treat it as contaminated soil and remove anymore remaining liquids.  The city had agreed to a 5 year monitoring period and testing wells to go on as long as needed.


 


 


Graessle said he did not recall the removal of the drums reported by Rosenbach to WPCNR.


 


Graessle also recalled as Commissioner of Planning during the Delfino Administration a gas station on Gedney Way experienced a problem with their fuel tanks, also requiring city monitoring. That leakage, he said went into the landfill area. “The state DEC did require the city do to reclamation there. Many people will recall they had a pile of dirt excavated out sitting on the land for more than a year. The city had test wells put on the landfill to test for that.”


 


 

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Realm Gains Access for its giant Senior Facility off Saxon Woods RD

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WPCNR SOUTHEND TIMES. By John F. Bailey. June 21, 2006: Elizabeth Marin, Planning Commissioner for Scarsdale confirmed to WPNCR yesterday that Realm LLC has reached an agreement with the Ethical Culture Society of Westchester on Saxon Woods Road to use the Ethical Culture entrance to gain access to the wooded site Realm plans to develop into a 131 unit Assisted Living facility for seniors. The President of the Ethical Culture Society speaking to WPCNR would not confirm the arrangement at this time and would not say what the conditions of the agreement were, whether the Ethical Culture Society had sold the driveway right of way or was just granting use of it, or the terms.


 



Proposed Entrance for Realm 131-Unit Senior Assisted Living Facility. The proposal is up on the Scarsdale Planning Board agenda next week. White Plains officials have not stated a position or whether they have jurisdiction over the use of the Ethical Culture Society drive by Realm to access their site located to the rear of the Ethical building in Scarsdale. Photo, WPCNR News.



 


According to Marin, “They have applied for an amendment to their site plan approval which provides for elimination of the driveway originally proposed where the original bridge is currently on the site. Instead, they would provide access to the site across the Ethical Culture Society bridge along their driveway and then an additional portion of the (Ethical Culture) driveway would cross over into the site.”


 


WPCNR asked if Realm still required water and electric and services from White Plains – the roadblock thrown up in March of 2001 when Realm first received approval from the facility in Scarsdale. “The electric is by Con Ed. There is a water connection provided. There would be no need for an additional curb cut permit because they will be using the existing driveway.”


 


Asked if Realm needed anything else from White Plains or White Plains approval, Marin said she did not believe so.


 


Calls to the White Plains Planning Department by WPCNR were referred to the Mayor’s office and the city legal department which have not contacted WPCNR with the city position on the Realm agreement with the Ethical Culture Society.


 


Realm proposed a 131-unit senior assisted living facility for a wild wooded area behind the Ethical Culture building located in Scarsdale back in 2001, and was vehemently fought by the city because Realm wanted to build an access road over a bridge that was in White Plains, crossing the Mamaroneck River where it runs along Saxon Woods Road.


 


The matter comes up on the Scarsdale Planning Board agenda one week from tonight.


 


Marin said the Scarsdale Planning Board approved the project back in 2001. Marin said she did not know if White Plains had jurisdiction to stop the use of the Ethical Bridge. Marin said she did not think so.


 


The Realm assisted living project would be in competition with the Sunrise assisted living facility planned for Maple Avenue in White Plains, and the North Street Community project planned for the former St. Agnes Property in White Plains.

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Work Session Wed. Juggles Hot Potatos Prior to Comp Plan Review Airout

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. June 21, 2006: The Common Council and Mayor Joseph Delfino have scheduled a work session Wednesday at 6 PM in the Mayor’s cozy little comference room to discuss Developer Martin Ginsburg’s request for 5 more stories on his Pinnacle at 240 Main Street; talk over the Performing Arts Center Budget and agreement with the city; chat about the Louis Cappelli request for 408 feet and “mechanical camouflage,”  plus review the beginnings of the Lexington Avenue “Renaissance”. Following the Work Session the Common Council will hold a hearing to have the Comprehensive Plan Review session presented to the Council. Rumors that no public comment will be allowed have been received at this listening post. The Work Session agenda:



1.                  Amended site plan submitted on behalf of Pinnacle-Westchester LLC, to construct 171 unit, 27 story 280 foot residential condominium apartment building, including 293 off street parking spaces in a structured parking garage, and an adjacent 260 Main Street building containing 50 affordable residential rental units.


 


 


2.                  A proposed amendment to Sections 4.4.15 and 4.4.22 of the Zoning Ordinance of the City of White Plains submitted by LC Main LLC, with respect to exceptions to building height limitations and the screening of mechanical equipment, and informal site plan application.


 


 


3.                  Capital Projects in relation to Miscellaneous Storm Drain Rehabilitation, and Rolling Stock Acquisition.


 


 


4.                  East Post Road Phase II Urban Renewal Plan.


 


 


5.                  Operating Agreement between the City and the Performing Arts Center.


 


 


6.                  Proposed legislation in relation to the possession and use of air pistols.


 


 


7.                  White Plains Cable Franchise Agreement and Budget Transfer.

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The Mayors’ Man: Mayor Joe Elected NYCOM Leader

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WPCNR THE DAILY MAYOR. From New York Conference of Mayors. June 20, 2006: At its Annual Meeting, the New York State Conference of Mayors (NYCOM) elected Joseph Delfino, Mayor of the City of White Plains, as President.



Mayor Joseph Delfino Being Sworn in for Term Number Three, January 2006.


Photo, WPCNR News Archive.




According to Peter Baynes, Executive Director of NYCOM, “These are challenging times for local officials as they are faced with limited resources, and ever increasing responsibilities. Mayor Delfino will be instrumental in NYCOM’s efforts to achieve local tax relief, and I look forward to working with him to strengthen the partnership between the State of New York and its local governments.”

Founded in 1910, NYCOM represents 575 cities and villages in New York State ranging from the smallest village to the City of New York.

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Pro Fastpitch is Back. Conn. Brakettes Debut, Split with the Champs

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WPCNR PRESS BOX, By Fastpitch Johnny. June 19, 2006: The slugging Akron Racers, the National Pro Fastpitch Champions spent a weekend in Bridgeport, Connecticut and escaped their first trip to the East Coast with a split of the four game series with the Connecticut Brakettes. For Manager John Stratton’s Brakettes it showed America’s legendary amateur team the last 59 years was on a par with the professional champions and was ready for Jennie Finch and the Chicago Bandits coming into town this week. 


 


 



 


 


On the dusty Frank DeLuca Hall of Fame diamond, the greatest players of the fastpitch game cavorted, dove, rallied, battled and blasted homers to the far reaches of the Little Ball Park on Long Island Sound for four straight days. Here Radara McHugh of the Racers prepares to throw the first pitch to Olympic Champion, Brakettes centerfielder,  Kelly Kretschman. That’s the Big Cat, the Olympic champion, Crystl Bustos creeping in at third for the Akron Racers. Bustos threw out Kelly on a slick backhand stop.  Photo, WPCNR Sports.





Two hundred fans saw Akron come back for an 11-10 win yesterday afternoon in a 2 hour and 45 minute slugfest. Whoever said fastpitch had no offense? Not when you have the Brakettes Kelly Kretschman, Jessica Merchant, Kellie Wilkerson and Germaine Fairchild battling the Racers’ Crystl Bustos, Oli Keohohou, Brandi McArthur, Iyhia McMichael, and  Jen Topping. .



Fastpitch Sunset on Saturday night. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


The homestand for the Brakettes finally got the league underway this weekend after a week of rain in the Midwest and Northeast. The Brakettes lost their first homestand to rain, but with serious promoting, webcast radio play-by-play, billboards, and radio spots the Brakettes should generate more fan interest. The Bridgeport media are covering them, and that is a real coup, considering how the New York Juggernaut were shut out cold from all coverage by all New York media their first two years in the league. And, gee, if I had a partner like major league baseball, I wouldn’t have a partner!


 


Split with the Best.


 


Right now, the Brakettes have to be happy about their weekend split with the Racers. They won the first game of the 4-game series last Thursday evening, 3-2 behind Nikki Myers, the punktough-pony tailed sparkplug of a pitcher, who gained her third victory of the season. Denise Denis homered off Brandi McArthur for the winning margin after the Brakettes Stephanie Hill (of LSU) had singled home 2 runs in the third and Myers made the runs stand up, fanning the Racers’ Amber Hall on a change to end the game with 2 Racers on.


 


 


Friday evening, K.C. Clark started for the Brakettes and fell victim to the one bad inning syndrome.  The Racers jumped Clark for 7 runs in the second inning, sending 11 girls to the plate, but the inning may have turned on a critical 3-2 pitch when after a single, hitsbatsperson and a single loaded the bases for Akron.  K.C. fanned Emily Price with the sacks full of Racers, but was squeezed twice on 2-2 an two very close pitches on the corner resulting in a bases-loaded walk to Tracy McCoy forcing in the first run to make it 1-0. Designated Player Brandi McArthur was up next and K.C. made a 4-run mistake. McArthur hit her first pitch high, far and deep into the Brakette bullpen for a grand-slammer to make it 5-0. Three more singles and a ground out made it 7-0 and the Racers Amy Kuyler, the former Sacremento Sunbird and New England Riptide hurler set down the Brakettes the rest of the way for a 7-1 win. Not that the Brakettes did not have their chances, leaving 3 runners on in the third and 2 in the 4th and 2 in the 5th.


 


Saturday evening it was the Brakettes turn to longball with Sarah Pauly, the long tall right hander in the circle. The Racers broke on top 2-0 in the second inning on a walk to Jen Topping and a double by  Karen Benyi. With two out Amber Hall cracked a double on the first pitch to the rightcenterfield fence to score the two Racers ahead of her but Kellie Wilkerson in right gunned down Hall trying to stretch the single into a double.


 


Saturday Night Blasting.


 


The Brakettes came right back in the last of the second, when Racers’ Radara McHugh gave up a single to secondbaser Stephanie Hill, hit Germaine Fairchild with a very close pitch that Racer Manager Judy Martino questioned. Aimee Minor singled to center to load the bases after taking a very close pitch for ball 3 on a 2-2 pitch. The Racers Martino questioned that call too and the plate umpire walked over and told off the Racers coach, saying “They’ll be no discussion of balls and strikes.” When Martino questioned “Why?” with a shrug of her shoulders, the umpire said “Because I have a chip on my shoulder, that’s why.”


 


On the next sequence featuring a close 0-2 pitch,  Brakette catcher Callie Piper singled to right on a 1-2 pitch to make it 2-1. Emily Sobel grounded into a force at the plate and Kelly Kretschman in the leadoff spot lofted a shallow fly halfway down the rightfield line. McHugh was almost out of the jam. Manager John Stratton elected not to send Minor in from third for the tie and there were 2 out.


 



There She Goes! Stephanie Best, ponytail flying, bottom of picture watches her Grand Slam Homer in the second inning Saturday night that was the big blow in the Brakettes 9-3 win. Radara McHugh in the circle watches the majestic shot. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


Stephanie Best, Brakette second baser came to the plate. McHugh threw a first pitch “strike” in Stephanie’s wheelhouse and with a crack of metal on cowhide that sounded like an ax hitting a tree, Best sent it with great majesty to deep left field. A towering drive. No doubt about it. Best circled the bases with a grand slam to make it 5-2 Brakettes.


 



Jessica Merchant Caps the 7-Run Rally with a long one over the centerfield fence. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


After Kellie Wilkerson walked,  Jessica Merchant All American from the University of Michigan added another 2-run shot over the centerfield fence to make it 7-2. Has the NPF juiced the “softball” or what?  Merchant hit a second two-run dinger in the 5th to make it 9-2. Crystl Bustos hit a solo shot off Sarah Pauly to make the final score 9-3.


 



The Blaster: Crystl Bustos, the USA Softball Olympic Champion rounding third after her roundtripper Saturday night. Crystl’s blast carried to the scoreboard in deepest right center and sounded like a crack a thunder. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


Donnybrook on a Sunday.


 


Sunday afternoon in 90 degree heat and humidity, a remarkable fastpitch game was played. Nikki Myers returned to the circle but the Racers loaded the bases and Oli Keohohou blasted a grand slam homer to put the Racers on top 5-0. The Brakettes came back on a 5 run fourth inning to take the lead 10-8. Amy Kyler winner of Friday’s game came in for Brandi McArthur and held the Brakettes off, then held on to win the game as Akron rallied for three runs off Sarah Pauly  to win a split, 11-10.  Kyler fanned Emily Sobel on a called third strike with two on in the last of the sixth to preserve the lead, and in the bottom of the seventh, after Kretschman singled, she fanned Stephanie Best and Kellie Wilkerson on called thirds to send the Akrons back to Ohio with a split.


 


The Brakettes and the Racers each have good pitching but not that overpowering stopper like Amanda Scott or the elite Finch. The Brakettes may get that overpowererette this nd if Cat Osterman, the University of Texas graduate decides to join the team. Manager John Stratton says Osterman is sorting out a number of possibilities, and as of now has not made up her mind.


 


Seven Best Teams in America


 


The Brakettes and the Racers are formidable hard-hitting clubs. The Brakettes are strong up the middle with Stephanie Best at second and Jessica Merchant at short with Stephanie Hill alternating with Kellie Wilkerson at first. The elegant competitor Germaine Fairchild, returned from the Juggernauts (after their move to Allentown), holds down the catcher spot. The outfield features  Aimee Minor in left, Kretschman the Olympic Champion in center and Wilkerson in right. Manager Stratton can call on Denise Denis and Julie Brooks  and Jen Owens to alternate as the NPF schedule goes on.


 


After a week of play, the Brakettes have the best record in the NPF at 7-2, a half-game ahead of the Chicago Bandits who come on in for a big four game series this weekend starting Thursday evening at Frank DeLuca Hall of Fame Field…an easy shot out I-95 to Exit 30, Lordship Boulevard. Allow time for the Friday night traffic though.


 


Baird and Stratton: Architects of Excellence.


 


We asked Brakette General Manager Bob Baird how the transition into the new league is going, and how the Brakettes are drawing: “Disappointing in the beginning of the year when we lost those three games at home (to rain) and three in Philadelphia, we’ll end up playing them all sooner or later. They will be made up. We’ve sold over 230 season tickets. We’re happy with what it is. Ask me that next week when Chicago’s here and you can’t get a seat.”


 



Bob Baird. General Manager, Connecticut Brakettes.


Photo Capture from Brakettes Website.


 


Asked how Manager Stratton and he put the team together Baird said, “John does most of the personnel things. We talk a lot about who we want to pick and everything. We work together on the draft. It wasn’t too hard this year because we had a lot of former Brakettes came back to us. And we took nine from last year’s team. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist.”


 


We asked if America’s favorite “Cat” (Osterman) would be in a Brakette jersey soon, and found out the Brakettes will be strengthened with two new stars from the college ranks.


“We hope so. That would be nice wouldn’t it. We’ll find out this week. We’re getting Andrea Duran from UCLA, and Adrienne Alo from Oregon State. They’re coming in Tuesday morning. They’re still in school. They’re in a trimester system on the West Coast.”


 


We asked how the Bandit series shapes up. “The presale for the Bandits has been unbelievable.”


 


Casey Stengel of Softball


 


WPCNR caught up with Manager John Stratton, the “Casey Stengel” of softball, who manages games with aplomb and never seems to get rattled, who not only looks like Stengel, but talks like him too, and is such an ambassador for the game. I asked him how the competition has gone so far:


 



John Stratton, Manager. Connecticut Brakettes.


 Photo Capture from Brakettes website.


 


“Well the competition is super. We had three Olympians on that field tonight against us and three on our own team. The big guns on our team came out tonight and hit some good shots. The competition is fierce. The competition is very good. Every team is very good. This team (the Racers) won it last year with the players they had here today. And they beat us last night 7-1. Our pitcher had one bad inning, and after that she shut them down. You get good pitching, decent pitching and score a few runs and you’re o.k. So you have to have a combination of both. All the teams do.”


 


I asked him about his new players:


 


“We’re getting two, unless Cat Osterman comes in. Maybe Saturday’s game she’ll pitch against Chicago. They’re trying to arrange a Finch-Cat game. It’s a little trouble getting her in because she just got out of school. She just got out of trials for the Olympic team. Right now her menu is pretty full, endorsements, everybody’s jumping on her back they want her to come in and endorse their product. Right now she’s kind of tired. She told me that, she’d love to come in and play, but she’s awfully tired. All my pitchers will be ready to go Thursday night.”


 


I asked about the rest of the league:


 


 “Texas is a good team. We split with them last year. Chicago knocked us off  four last year but every game was good. We never played Arizona, so we don’t know anything about them. It doesn’t make any difference they’ve taken the best players in the country and put them on 7 different teams. It makes it (the NPF) interesting and it makes it good. You hit a ground ball somebody’s going to catch it. These guys will make errors but most of the time they catch it You practice more. The amateur teams you play on the weekend, you wouldn’t practice during the week. These guys have to practice a couple of times a week then they play their games. The competition is super.”


 


 


 


Young players learn by watching


 


The Brakettes Manager was disappointed about one thing:


 


“the only thing that bothers me is young girls, young people in this game do not support the game. This place should have been filled with young softball players. How do they expect to learn if they don’t come out and watch the best play. I don’t understand why they don’t come for $5. I spent my life going to ball games. That’s how I learned to play. I went to Yankee Stadium. When I started softball I went to every softball game. I’ll stop in the middle of the road we’ll be on the way home from Florida, and I’ll see a softball game and I’ll go over and watch it if it’s a good game. It’s fun to watch it. I don’t understand why these young girls don’t get out and do it. So any league team can come in here free. It’s clean, no smoking, no beer. It’s clean and nice. It’s costing people a lot of money to do this and they have to get something back once in awhile  otherwise it dies. We can’t let that happen.”


 


The first pitch


 


We talked first pitch hitting: Stephanie Best hit a grand slam on the first pitch Saturday night,  instead of looking. We asked the softball master his philosophy on swinging on the first pitch:


 


“My philosophy is simple. If you go for the first pitch, never be late. In other words, when you go for it, you better go for it with everything you got and you get it out front. Don’t go for it behind. Don’t be late. If you decide you want to go on that first pitch, you give it everything you got. Don’t hold anything back (in your swing). You got two more comin’ to ya.”


 


But, if you’re late on it and you pop it up that’s bad. You don’t want to do it.Even if it’s a bad pitch. Yogi Berra for years lived on bad pitches as a baseball player because he went after them with everything he had. As far as the first pitch, go for it. Don’t be late.”


 


Brakette Breaks: The Brakettes announced their softball clinics for up and coming younger players beginning this week June 22 at Frank DeLuca Hall of Fame Field in Stratford and Short Beach Recreation Complex on Long Island Sound…


 


 June 22-23  and June 26-27 will be for Beginning Pitchers.  June 29-30, for Advanced Pitchers. July 1 the Brakettes will hold a catching clinic taught by the incomparable Germaine Fairchild, Brakettes catcher. On July 10-11, the Clinics will be for Offense/Hitting and July 13/14 Defense/Fielding.  Clinics are held in the mornings from 9:30 A.M. to 12 Noon.  My daughter, Juliana Bailey learned to pitch with the Brakettes clinics, and honed her defensive skills in these clinics, and was thrilled to be taught by the Brakettes players and I recommend the clinics for all young players who want to improve their game.  For information on the clinics, costing approximately $70 each (and a bargain!)  contact (203) 378-7262.


 


 


For information on the Chicago Bandits series beginning Thursday night, go to the Brakettes website at www.ctbrakettes.com 


 



Why They Play: Members of the Easthaven Little League All-Stars watch the Brakettes warming up in the pregames up-close and personal. Photo, WPCNR Sports

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Anonymous Angel Saves The Hayes-2 Years to Turn Has-Been to Star.Show Goes On!

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. By John F. Bailey. June 19, 2006: The Friends of the Nyacks community group announced today they have signed a 15 year lease with Milbrook Acquisitions of Great Neck, NY to operate the defunct Helen Hayes Theatre—with an option to buy. They have two years of rent guaranteed to them by a mystery donor to turn the operation around.


 



The Helen Hayes Footlights Will Shine Again, thanks to a Mystery Donor who has guaranteed approximately $500,000-plus in rent and equipment leasing to the new lessor, Friends of the Nyacks. Photo, WPCNR ArtsCam.


 


The community “save” is made possible by an anonymous resident of Nyack stepping forward and guaranteeing two years of rent & taxes to the landlord, Milbrook Acquisitions, giving The Friends time to get the theatre producing, and breaking even. The theatre was sold to Milbrook in December to eliminate $2.7 Million of debt, accumulated in the last five years.


 


 


 


 




Deborah Darbonne announced the agreement in which The Friends of the Nyacks will run the theatre, paying Milbrook $18,000 a month rent for the space. She said the theatre  will be run by a community board that will be announcing a staff for the theatre in the next two months. She announced the theatre is looking for a new Artistic Director. Photo, WPCNR ArtsCam


 


Darbonne said the theatre operating budget was estimated in the past to be $300,000 a year, and that the new community board was looking to trim that. She also said she would be applying to the Rockland County government for funding.


 


Programming would include productions of local film and theatre groups, she said, and the Friends would be seeking individual concerts, corporate meetings, and be offering rentals of the theatre’s facilities at reduced rates.  Organizations interested should contact The Friends of the Nyacks, www.friendsofthenyacks.org.


 



 


 


John Shields, Mayor of Nyack said he saw the community coming together to save the theatre as a new direction for Nyack, visualizing the Helen Hayes Performing Arts Center as Ms. Darbonne said it would be known , as the corner stone to make Nyack a center of performing arts in the region. With Mayor Chields is Nyack resident, Grey Johnson of WGBO Jazz Radio. Harriet Cornell, Chair of the Rockland County Board of Legislators congratulated Ms. Darbonne on her achievement on negotiating the lease.  Photo, WPCNR ArtsCam.


 



 


Tom Kleiner, Rockland County Executive also lent his presence to the affair congratulating Ms. Darbonne for taking the inititative to save the theatre, saying there was nothing the county could have done, and “we cannot thank you enough.” Photo, WPCNR ArtsCam


 


Introduced as guiding advisors of the theatre in its new incarnation who will be working with Ms. Darbonne and the Friends of the Nyacks in managing the theatre, were A & E Television Network’s Elliot Forster, host of Breakfast With the Arts;  Grey Johnson of Nyack, Marketing and Membership Manager for WBGO jazz radio. Also introduced as participants in guiding the future of the theatre were  Darrel Larson, the WFUV host of Whole Wide World Friday evenings on WFU, William Erwin, the noted producer, and Neil Berg, the composer.


 


Darbonne said there will be a cleanup night for the community to help get the theatre into shape on July 15. She also said an extensive fundraising effort would be created shortly. No date was given for a first performance.


 


No members of the former Helen Hayes Theatre Company Board of Directors, (who secretly sold the in the face of community protest), were present at the news conference, though that Board did send a congratulatory note to Ms. Darbonne. No representative from Milbrook Acquisitions was asked to speak, but Gary Kahn of Milbrook was thanked for his negotiating the contract. Former Artistic Director of the Helen Hayes Theatre Company, Tony Stimac was not in attendance.  


 

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Sales Tax May Just Make $41.9 M. Mortgage Tax #s UP 870Gs and Rising.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE. June 19, 2006: The City Commissioner of Finance, Gina Cuneo-Harwood, reported to WPCNR last week that sales tax receipts for April and May, set the city up to make its “revised” sales tax projection of $41.9 Million when business ends for the fiscal year June 30. The city had originally projected $42.5 Million in sales taxes for the year last fall. Whatever softness in the sales tax revenues will be offset by an $869,598 windfall in mortgage taxes from sales of condominiums and homes in “The Renaissance City,” through the first three quarters, and that should go up in Quarter Four.


 


Cuneo-Harward said she was confident that the month of June would find sales tax receipts meeting projections. In July, Wal-Mart will begin injecting its retail magic in the White Plains marketplace, setting up a possible surge in sales tax revenues of $800,000 a year, according to city hall financial prognosticators.


 


For the record, through three quarters of fiscal year 2005-2006, the city received  $32,511,570 in sales tax. In April, the city collected $3,123,461 and in May, $3,019,564. In order to meet the $41.9 “revised” sales tax projection, the city need only collect $3,245,405 in June.


 


To hit the optimistic $42.5 Million predicted last fall, the city will need $3,845,405. The only times of the year White Plains has ever “done” over $4 Million in sales tax receipts in a month were December,03-04; December 04-05, and December of 05-06,  and once in January, and the January achievement came in this fiscal year with $4,214,709 turned over.

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Westchester Coyotes Tracked in Greenburgh. Catch and Release Program To Start

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WPCNR  THE FEINER REPORT. By Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner. June 18, 2006: In recent years more people have expressed concern after seeing coyotes around the town. A few months ago a coyote was even seen at the Greenburgh Town Hall parking lot! Some residents have expressed concern about their personal safety and the safety of their pets and property.

 


Wanted: Westchester E. Coyote. Suspect is nocturnal, stealthy, often mistaken for a fox, since the coyote is redish brown in coat, distinguished from the fox by his skinny tale, not bushy like a fox, dragged low to the ground, and sharp snarly snout. Preys on cats, small dogs, rodents, has no natural enemies in this area. The CitizeNetReporter has seen coyotes in the Havilands Manor area. Others have spotted coyotes in the Saxon Woods neighborhood of White Plains. Photo, public domain.



Cornell University’s Department of Natural Resources has contracted with the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation to conduct a study in response to the increasing interactions between people and coyotes within many urban and suburban areas across NY. This study is designed to document the ecology of suburb dwelling coyotes to better understand the behaviors that lead to nuisance interactions with people and to identify a means to prevent heightened interactions between coyotes and suburban residents.


The Greenburgh Town Board has been asked to participate in the study which will involve the live capture and release of radio collared coyotes on town owned property; the radio tracking of collared coyotes during daytime and night time periods, diet surveys to document important food sources of coyotes and genetic analysis to estimate coyote demographic information.


The police department reviewed the request and determined that the capture of these animals would be done humanely. The methods employed in this study follow the protocols recommended by the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and had been scrutinized by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee comprised of members from the Cornell Research Staff, independent veterinarians in order to provide an unbiased assessment of research ethics. Cornell has demonstrated to the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee that all capture and handling techniques are the most humane methods for studying wild coyotes.


The Greenburgh Town Board voted unanimously to participate in the study. 


The Greenburgh web site: www.greenburghny.com (police dept) has information about coyotes that may be of interest to residents.


PAUL FEINER


Greenburgh Town Supervisor

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UHL’s Danbury Trashers and Adirondack Frostbite Suspend Operations.

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. From United Hockey League Offices. June 15, 2006: In the wake of the indictment of their owner on racketeering charges last week, and revelations the team allegedly violated the United Hockey League salary cap, according to the Associated Press, the Danbury Trashers United Hockey League franchise has suspended operations for the 2006-2007 season. The Adirondack Frostbite playing out of Glens Falls have also suspended operations according to the United Hockey League Media Relations office. The Trashers were highly successful in Danbury, averaging 2,000 fans per game the last two seasons. Brian Werger, spokesperson for the league wrote WPCNR, “There really is not any further information or comment at this point. We do not know if there are any future plans with Danbury at this point.”
The league issued this official statement:


 


 The United Hockey League (UHL) announced Monday that the Adirondack Frostbite and Danbury Trashers have suspended operations. The teams will not compete during the 2006-07 season.

“Both organizations made a business decision to not participate in the league for the upcoming season,” stated Richard Brosal, UHL President/CEO. “The Frostbite were not able to secure a lease with the Glens Falls Civic Center. Without their closest geographical rival in the league, the Trashers made a financial decision to suspend their operations.”

A draft will be conducted later this week to disperse the players from the 2005-06 final rosters of both clubs.

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WPCNR CONFIRMS CHEMICAL CONTAMINATION AT CITY DUMP. INVESTIGATION ON.

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WPCNR CITY CONFIDENTIAL. By John F. Bailey. June 15, 2006.  © 2006, The White Plains CitizeNetReporter, All Rights Reserved. UPDATED 6:52 P.M. E.D.T. At least a portion of the White Plains City Dump site between Gedney Way and Ridgeway Avenue is contaminated with TCE (trichloroethylene), a cleaning solvent used in dry cleaning operations and machinery maintenance as a degreaser, according to documents obtained by WPCNR.  The contamination has been known to both the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and the City of White Plains for some time, although the extent remains to be determined. WPCNR has been informed by the Commissioner of Public Works that a testing procedure has been submitted to the DEC to determine the extent of the contamination.



The contamination has been known to the city for twenty years, according to official city and DEC documents, though never divulged publicly before this week. When questioned Wednesday by WPCNR, both Wendy Rosenbach, a spokesperson for the Department of Environmental Conservation and Commissioner of Public Works for the City of White Plains, Joseph Nicoletti, confirmed that the contamination exists.



The City Dump Is Contaminated with TCE. Carl Albanese, a White Plains video journalist, first raised this possibility at the June 5 Common Council Meeting, in his call for environmental standards to be part of the Comprehensive Plan Review. This is a view of the dump, looking North towards Gedney Way, photographed April 15, 2006. Photo, Courtesy Carl Albanese.



 




Both Rosenbach and Nicoletti said the extent of the contamination is not known at this time and the present condition of the contamination of ground water and soil awaits analysis to be conducted by the City with DEC oversight under a Nicoletti-designed test procedure expected to be completed within the next six months.


 


Composting Ongoing.


Alternatives to be Discussed.

Rosenbach said the City composting operation at the Gedney dump is authorized to continue “for now,” but the City has to close the dump and alternatives are now being considered.



South End of the 25 foot high Compost Pile, looking East.  Photographed in March. The Railside Avenue properties and Ridgeway Avenue are to the right. Contaminated soil lies 15 feet under the base of the compost pile. Photo Courtesy, Carl Albanese.




Commissioner Nicoletti told The CitizeNetReporter in an interview authorized by the Mayor’s Office that the city sent a massive set of data to the DEC May 31, applying for a renewal of the city composting permit, and outlining a series of corrective measures the Commissioner hoped would make continuation of the composting operation acceptable to the DEC.

Those measures include: purchasing a machine at a cost of a few hundred thousand dollars to sift and till the compost pile; installing a filtering pad beneath the compost ;and, the sinking of plastic pipes to the bottom of the compost pile equipped with charcoal filters to control escaping gases.


 


 DEC Blows Whistle.

Rosenbach acknowledged that the DEC has received the City’s request for renewal of its permit to conduct composting yard operations at the Gedney site.  The permit expired at the end of February and the DEC had previously told the City that it had no intention of issuing a renewal.


In a letter dated May 4, 2006, the DEC told the City that it has detected groundwater contamination at the facility site that the DEC attributes to the “former” landfill operation at the composting yard and demanded the composting yard be closed. Rosenbach said the DEC has not changed its mind, the City still has to close the yard, and the remediation issue is in play at this time.



Stream coming from under the Compost Pile at the South End of the Dump. Photo made in March 2006. Photo, Courtesy Carl Albanese. 


A Clarification.


The revelations by Rosenbach and Nicoletti shed a different light on what WPCNR was told last week.


 


WPCNR had talked with Paul Wood, the Executive Officer for Mayor Delfino said last week. At that time, Wood said the only issue with the Gedney dumpsite had to do with an oversight on the City’s part – that it was simply a matter of the City neglecting to renew the permit for the composting operation.

Nicoletti said he currently is dealing with, “The issue of renewing our composting permit and what they (the DEC) would like to see us do with the solvent issue — what was discovered about 20 years ago, and there are I don’t know how many boxes of test data that go back to that point with them (the DEC). They want to see us do something with it. I don’t know (at this time) what the solution would be.”


A Contamination There for 35 Years.



Nicoletti told WPCNR the contamination is “like a cleaning fluid – the chlorine family something you use in dry cleaning.”


 


WPCNR asked if it was pervasive. Nicoletti said, “It’s down pretty far in the soil, 15 feet beneath the compost pile.  It was discovered by us some years back, in 1986, and they (the DEC) are fully aware of it. We’re just waiting to see what they would want us to do (about it). It was put there some 15 years before that (1971).”

Trichloreoethylene is described by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry of Atlanta as having been found in 852 of the 1,430 National Priorities List clean-up sites (as of 2003) identified by the Environmental Protection Agency.


26 Barrels with TCE Traces


Removed in 1999.



WPCNR asked if the City of White Plains would have to remove the entire compost pile and Nicoletti said the DEC has not asked the City to do that in 20 years. However, the DEC’s Rosenbach said, based on a report by Malcolm Pirnie (a consultant) in 1995, White Plains was instructed by the Department of Environmental Protection to remove 26 metal storage barrels that Rosenbach said were in a deteriorated condition,  from the dump in 1999. Rosenbach said the barrels were found to have “traces of TCE.”


 



Storage Barrel in stream leading from Compost Pile. Photographed March, 2006. Photo, Courtesy Carl Albanese


 



 


Standing Water at foot of compost pile adjacent the Railside Avenue Properties, recently sold by the city. Photo, Courtesy, Carl Albanese.

In the 1950s, Dugan’s Bakery had a garage on the site where they repaired delivery trucks and executed extensive truck maintenance. Community activist Jack Harrington remembers that cleaning establishments delivered their cleaning fluid waste to the dump in the past. Harrington also recalls that gas stations were located on Gedney Way and on Ridgeway Avenue, the cross streets bordering the approximate 55-acre City Dump to the North and the South respectively. Harrington said he never knew about the removal of the storage barrels in 1999.



WPCNR asked Nicoletti if the DEC was dragging its feet on the issue of TCEs. Nicoletti said, “I don’t know if it’s dragging their feet, or it’s not important or that critical.”


Composting Proposals



On the issue of the composting, WPCNR asked if the City had to reconstitute the compost with a new composting procedure. Nicoletti  replied, “No, we’re looking at new equipment to turn the leaves more efficiently. There are things we’re interested in pursuing. It’s a more high tech way of composting.”

Nicoletti said the photo shown at a Common Council meeting by resident Carl Albanese did not depict methane gas rising from the dump. The Albanese photo also was published by WPCNR.  


 


“The photo is not methane gas there. That’s not what you see above ground. We have a plan for that, or at least a concept. It’s relatively straightforward: plastic pipes with activated carbon or charcoal filter to collect the gases. This is not a very productive methane gas-producing site because most of the cell material was ash – which is relatively inert material. (The ash) is left over from our incinerator left over after garbage was incinerated,” said Nicoletti.

Commissioner Nicoletti said it was “a misunderstanding” when WPCNR was told by Executive Officer Paul Wood last week that failing to renew the permit was an oversight. “We asked back in November for an extension of time because they (the DEC) had a lot of new information they requested since the last time (renewed, 1996), so we said we needed an extension to get all the things they were looking for.”


TCE the only problem.



Nicoletti said there was no other  contamination issue other than the TCE. “The composting issue is above ground, and that’s pretty straightforward. I’m not going to figure out what they’re going to say (about remediation). We’ve had the site monitored. We put 9 monitoring wells in and we’ve been regularly testing those and sending those reports to the DEC. We’ve had a regular inspection. They come in unannounced, they come in every month. We’ve never had any issue with any of the operation (composting). It’s been going on for years,” said Nicoletti.


The Smell



WPCNR asked about the ripe smells from the dump long complained about for decades by residents in the
Railside Avenue and homes between Ridgeway Avenue and Gedney Way.
Nicoletti said that was “organic,” noting “It’s sort of an organic thing. We continue to put more and more trees in the city and the volume of leaves has gone up over the years. It just makes it a little more difficult to toss. (The smell) depends on the weather, temperature, humidity, amount of rainfall. A lot of moving parts. Sometimes it’s nonexistent, other times you have that compost smell. We urge people to do either home composting or use mulching mowers where you just cut the grass and the mower chops up the grass so fine there’s no need to rake and get of clippings.”

May 31 Letter Sets the City Plan

In a letter to Alexander F. Ciesluk, Jr. Deputy Regional Permit Administrator for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Region 3, Niccoletti outlined how the City is proceeding to deal with the DEC request to close the dump and detailed how they propose to fix the composting operation to make it acceptable. Those enhancements include a pad to be placed under the compost.

Nicoletti writes: “the design and linear testing requirements of the compost pad in Area B, the method of leachate (drainoff from the compost) management …will be submitted in approximately four weeks. The design of the compost pad cannot be completed until a determination is made regarding the appropriate permeability. The proper permeability of this pad cannot be determined until the present condition of the solvent-contaminated soil beneath Area B is evaluated, and the former landfill site cap issues are resolved with the Division of Solid Waste.”

City Tests for TCE Levels, Methane
in soil, gases and water. Complete in 6 Months.


The Commisioner’s letter says that it will submit “an investigation work plan by the end of June, which will include collecting and analyzing samples of subsurface soil, soil vapor and groundwater. The soil vapor sampling effort collect samples within the landfill and around the perimeter in appropriate locations and analyze the samples for volatile organic compounds and methane.”

The Commissioner’s plan includes testing for volatile organic compounds and parameters (of the dump) within 50 feet of the top of the slope, which by WPCNR reckoning does not extend to the properties recently sold for $2.9 Million on Railside Avenue.

Nicoletti estimates the program of testing will be completed in six months.

Ms. Rosenbach, the DEC spokesperson, told WPCNR that
White Plains would have to pay for any clean-up of the site.

Expensive Clean-up in Queens

The Queens newspaper Times Ledger reports in an article by Howard Koplowitz that 4,000 pounds of TCE is being removed currently from a site in Jamica Queens at 107-110 180th street, which was left at the former West Side Corporation site.


 


The TCE being removed is percholoroethylene, a member of the TCE family of solvents. The Department of Environmental Conservation is cleansing contaminated soil and groundwater at the cost of $4-million, in a process expected to last 20 years. The Buffalo firm, URS Corporation, is conducting the clean-up which consists of heating the soil to a boiling point (known as electrical resistance heating), changing the “perc” from liquid to a vapor form. The steam is then collected into a treatment system where the perc is destroyed.


 


TCE: What it is.



TCE is heavier than water according to Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and is used as a solvent for cleaning metal parts. It sinks to the bottom of streams it enters, forming a silt. It has a sweet odor and is also used in adhesives, paint removers typewriter correction fluids and spot removers. It has been found, according to the ATSDR in underground water sources and many surface waters as a result of the manufacture use and disposal of the chemical.

TCE is described by the ATSDR as remaining in ground water a long time. The
Jamaica deposits of TCE are reported left from 25 years ago. It is said to stick to particles and remain for a long time. Breathing small amounts of TCE may cause headaches, lung irritation, dizziness, poor coordination and difficulty concentrating. TCE has been designated by the National Toxicology Program as “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen, and the International Agency for Research on Cancer has reported that trichloroethylene is “probably carcinogenic to humans.”

The Environmental Protection Agency, according the ATSDR, has set a maximum contaminant level for trichloroethylene in drinking water at 0.005 milligrams per liter or 5 parts of TCE per billion parts water.

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