Creation of More Apartments in 3 locations, Proposed at Common Council Special Meeting

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. From a CitizeNetReporter Correspondent. February 2, 2017 UPDATED FEBRUARY 3 2:30 PM:

Three new proposals for residential apartments were presented to the Common Council during a Special Meeting Tuesday.

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The Broadstone complex (439 rental apartments, pricepoints undetermined) was proposed for the block between East Post Road and Mitchell Place overlooking Mamaroneck Avenue (see diagram below) that would be comprised of 3 buildings, 16,15 and 6 stories respectively with pocket greenspace parks in the center of the development. The base of the apartment complex fronting Mamaroneck Avenue would be a mix of retail and restaurants. The complex if approved would add to the White Plains Pavilion rebuild of apartments,cinema and retail/restaurants at the end of East Post Road

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PROPOSED LOCATION OF BROADSTONE DEVELOPMENT–THE BLOCK FROM EAST POST ROAD TO MITCHELL PLACE ON MAMARONECK AVENUE

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440 Hamilton Avenue the former AT & T complex (overlooking North Broadway is proposed to be converted into 245 rental apartments WITH A COMPLETELY REDESIGNED LOOK. (SEE RENDERING BELOW)

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Mount Hope A.M.E.Zion Church on Lake Street, asked for a zoning ordinance to convert a portion of their property into an 24-APARTMENT SENIOR living facility.

 

 

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203 MAMARONECK AVENUE BLAZE –CONTROLLED BY WP FIRE DEPARTMENT. 12 APARTMENTS UNINHABITABLE

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203 Mamaroneck Avenue (on left). Fire Headquarters is second building from right.

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203 Mamaroneck Avenue.

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Yellow Notice banning persons from 203 Mamaroneck unless authorized.

WPCNR FIRE NEWS. From the White Plains Professional Firefighters. February 1, 2017:

Earlier today, White Plains firefighters responded to a working fire in an apartment on the 4th floor of a mixed occupancy dwelling (203 Mamaroneck Avenue).

Following an aggressive interior attack as well as dangerous conditions while ventilating a pitched terracotta-tiled roof in the snow, they were able to gain control and extinguish the flames just as they began to spread to the common attic and cockloft. One firefighter was injured and transported to the hospital as a result of the hazardous roof operations.

With Ladder 34 out of service, we relied on mutual aid from neighboring departments in order to provide relief for our men and the use of their ladder truck, a job which would’ve been undertaken by L-34 were it in service.

While we appreciate the help from our neighbors, a quick response from Ladder 34 may have provided faster relief for our other ladder crews operating and perhaps prevented our brother from being injured.

Luckily for everyone involved, the close proximity of the building to fire headquarters made for a response time of less than 2 minutes, and allowed our men to get on top of the fire before it had a chance to spread further.

This goes to show that a lightning fast response and adequate manpower are necessary to operate safely and efficiently at a fire scene, something that the taxpayers of this city deserve.

 

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WHITE PLAINS ACT ASSERTION “FASNY PARCEL A” HAS NEVER BEEN ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE SAID TO BE FALSE BASED ON FASNY’S OWN DEIS STATEMENT

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. January 31, 2017:

Dear Mayor Roach and Members of the White Plains Common Council,
I attach here FASNY’s DEIS page with an 1899 map clearly showing the natural streams which were later buried when the Ridgeway Country Club golf course was built atop them.  Note FASNY’s own notation, “STREAM ON PARCEL A.”
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 You can very clearly see that FASNY’s correctly-identified “STREAM ON PARCEL D” (lower center of picture–in red outline) joins together with the stream that arises on Parcel A (in red outline, slightly to left of  “Stream on Parcel D).
It then continues to flow south as one of the many streams on the FASNY property that together form the East Branch of the Mamaroneck River.  Nowhere is there any reference to a “sewer ditch.”
I also attach a screenshot of FASNY’s description of this as a STREAM on p. 21 of FASNY’s DEIS.
FASNYDEISstreamdescripscreenshot
ACT’s claim that “everyone agrees” these are “sewer ditches” is ludicrous.  Does ACT really believe that Westchester Country Club, across the street from the current FASNY property, would allow an open sewer to flow across their property?  It’s laughable.
Over the course of the 20th century, it was very common for human development to intentionally bury water courses of all kinds, erroneously believing that once buried, they could be forgotten.  But as neighbors of the FASNY property know, there is regular flooding of all these buried streams after heavy rains, spring thaws, and so on.  If ACT wants to be taken seriously, they should read FASNY’s own map and documentation of the property.
Sincerely,
Anne Bobroff-Hajal

 

 

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Service Employees International Union Expresses Alarm Over Gorsuch Nomination to Supreme Court

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From SEIU 32BJ, Trumbull Connecticut. January 31, 2017:

The following statement is from Héctor Figueroa President of 32BJ SEIU, one of the largest unions representing immigrant workers in the country:

“The discriminatory and xenophobic actions on refugees and immigrants imposed by President Trump make clear that the next justice to the Supreme Court must be willing to serve as a check on extremist and unconstitutional policies that undermine our system of self-governance and our justice system. We need a careful, thorough and independent review to ensure the American public understands the background and views of the nominee.

Together we will stand up against the nomination of any extremist, speak out for our vision for a just society, and rise up to win back an America where every family and community can feel protected by the law.”

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ACT-FASNY DEVELOPMENT SUPPORTERS…SAY DRAINAGE DITCH IS NOT ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE.

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From White Plains Neighbors Act. January 31, 2017:

Dear Mayor Roach and Members of the Common Council,
As members of White Plains Neighbors ACT, many of us living in or around the failed Ridgeway Golf Course, we feel compelled to respond to the continued negative campaign and outright lies against the School and Park, as evidenced by the recent letters to the Council by the Gedney Association and their followers.
Their latest ridiculous claim is that an open sewer ditch on the other side of Ridgeway – not even on FASNY property – would make FASNY’s reduced alternative plan a designated environmentally sensitive site, thus requiring a supermajority vote. This is truly a desperate, “last-ditch” effort to stop the creation of the School and Park.
If sewer ditches indicated environmentally sensitive sites, the entire City would be declared an environmentally sensitive site.  This makes no sense.
It is important to note that the Gedney Association speaks for a limited number of the thousands of White Plains residents who live in this area. The majority of our community, and the City at large, strongly believe that the Common Council, as they did in supporting the Settlement Stipulation for a reduced School, should put this matter to rest, and approve the current plan to build the School.
The reduced plan will only build on 29 acres of the former 130 acre former Ridgeway Site, as well as include a 51 acre publicly accessible nature park at no cost to the City. We think this would be an incredible asset for our City – as do our thousand plus supporters.
The White Plains Planning Board, Design Review Board, and Transportation Commission all reviewed the revised, reduced scale project and all three agencies unanimously recommend approval by the Common Council.
If the Gedney Association’s ridiculous ditch argument were entertained, it would return this matter to the Courts and destroy the settlement agreement and recommence the expensive litigation.
The City already voted 6-1 in its prior SEQRA Findings, and other public documents produced during the prior SEQRA review, that there were “no sensitive environmental features or their established buffer areas” on Parcel A of the FASNY site.
Nothing has changed on or off the FASNY site, except that their project is smaller with lessened impacts. If the City backtracks now on its prior determination, it would open the City and its taxpayers to enormous legal liabilities and damage claims.
More importantly, the City’s own records label this feature, again not even on FASNY’s property, as an open drainage “ditch.” A copy of the City’s own map is attached. Manual pdf This ditch runs under the Ridgeway Golf Course in City storm sewer pipes, crosses under Ridgeway, opens for 60 feet or so on the Westchester Hills Golf property, and discharges back into underground storm sewer pipes on Westchester Hills.
Everyone agrees that it carries mostly storm-water from the City streets. It is not a “river, stream or brook” or other similar “flowing water course,” which were meant to be protected in the City’s environmental statutes.  This whole topic is ridiculous and is another example of the Gedney Association’s “war of attrition” against this School.
Finally, we are aware that the City regularly does not apply these provisions where roadways separate the various parcels such as Ridgeway in this case.
This latest claim by the Gedney Association is not about protecting the environment. This is about the battle by a few to kill the School and Park, keep WPHS foot traffic out of their neighborhood, and continue this losing litigation, which has already cost the City’s taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars. The Gedney Association’s lawsuits and motions continue to strike out – they are 0 for 3 in the Courts.  When will the insanity stop?
We also want to note that Neighbors ACT supporters include a significant number of us in the Gedney area who do not agree with the intransigent nature of the Gedney Association leadership.  These ACT Gedney residents favor the FASNY project and feel that the Gedney Association does not represent us or our views.
We trust that the Common Council will see through this absurd “last ditch” effort by the Gedney Association – as the rest of your taxpayers do – and vote to end this unfortunate stain on the City’s reputation and Budget. To backtrack on your own Environmental Findings and convert this property to an Environmentally Sensitive Site, when lawyers in ACT tell us at best that it is probably a question of ambiguous statutory language, is to invite continued and more intense litigation at taxpayer expense as we enter the upcoming election cycle.
Respectfully,
The White Plains Neighbors ACT Communications Team
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Next Executive Order?: Remove The Statue of Liberty from New York Harbor. America is Closed. Move On.

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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. January 28, 2017:

The issue of Executive Orders by President Trump Friday leads to an all too sad conclusion:

America is no longer the “go to” place for dreamers, people in trouble, children, oppressed  men, women and their children, and God knows the misery individuals face around the world as a result of pandering to Americans’ fear of the different..

That America just disappeared yesterday with a pen stroke.

The Statue of Liberty has been the personality of America since France gave it to this nation in the 19th century.

The erstwhile “Lady of Liberty”  is a relic of a time when America stood for something. At the base of the statue there is this poem:

New Colossus

By Emma Lazurus

statue of liberty poem

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Well that legendary message is obsolete now.

As I read it over just as I posted it. I really read it. It brought tears to my eyes.

That America is over. My America is gone. In a few strokes of a pen a very mean person shattered America’s reputation, its pride, its courage, its mission to the world.

It is not coming back ever the way it was. Maybe long after I am dead it will.

President Trump put out restrictions on immigration.

Immigration was always restrictive to a degree: persons coming to Ellis Island at the time of the great migration, were not admitted if sick; if they had no place to stay or family, if they could not support themselves.

And, of course the predominantly “blue blood” USA State Department in the 1930s and 1940s refused to accept Jews into the country for most of World War II,(an absolute prejudiced and genocidal policy).  The U.S. government was reluctant even to accept one ship of them until Reporter Ruth Gruber’s photographs of a jam-packed ship full of Jews that every port in the Mediteranean Sea turned away, shamed the United States into doing so (despite evidence of the holocaust).

By the way Holocaust Remembrance Day was recognized Friday.

What callous timing by the new President.

It is ironic and poignantly melancholy that President Trump signed these orders to hold back the tide of  refugees when the holocaust was remembered, (as follows according to The Huffington Post):

  • Suspend all refugee admissions for 120 days while the administration determines which countries pose the least risk.
  • Temporarily suspending visa issuances to people in countries where the administration considers security screening inadequate ― meaning people from those countries couldn’t enter the U.S. at all.
  • Capping total refugee admissions for fiscal year 2017 at 50,000 ― less than half of the 110,000 proposed by the Obama administration.

He is proposing to build a wall between Mexico and the United States.

When immigrants arrived here 100 years ago they faced the same prejudices from the “Americans” who were here—the descendants of the religious founders from England who left that land because of repression — who survived mainly because Native Americans helped them.

Those that came in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries faced resentment by those property owners who had already made their mark. The new immigrants were called harsh, humiliating names (you know what those names were) and they settled in neighborhoods of their own kind. The East Side of Manhattan, the West Side, Mulberry Street. Chinatown.

New York also accepted Negros from the South. It was a tumultuous time. The immigrants were disliked because they were different,  did not  speak English, had different customs, whatever.

Somehow we always dislike the “different,” make fun of them. Does it make us feel good to do that? What is there about that feeling? Or worse.

But, now America is afraid of refugees. Afraid of helping starving children without a home. Since when?

Now the intent of these restrictions above that Mr Trump has put out executive orders on or will, is to protect us.

Run background checks. And, in the process just arbitrarily shutting America’s door on all from “risky nations” pending Trump Administration analysis of which nations pose the greatest risk. Suspending immigration entirely for nations with inadequate security procedures? Well he issued a list yesterday: 7 Middle Eastern Nations.

Trump inherits a government that can’t secure its own secret information. Hopefully, Rudolph Giuliani will change all that.

(See Eric  Snowden “Take Out”, Hillary Clinton hacked emails, and that 39 page “From Russia With Love” dossier, is it real or is it not? And we don’t know? Where is James Bond when you need him? They’ll never investigate that dossier.)

To do all this that the Trump Administration proposes, as well as the deportation initiative,  I think that is going to be very hard to do and set up structures and organizations to do that.

But, more to the point: this is not the America I once knew.

It breaks my heart we did not accept more “boat people” when we were turning them away. It breaks my heart.

The heartbreak, the deaths, the despair the refugees sitting on our borders are now going through is worse. The future of those on route are now faced with, I cannot imagine.

Well, I hope everybody feels good and more protected, this morning. I hope you do.

Someday you will need help and there will be nobody there. You will know what it means to find no compassion.

Now the refugees of the world have nobody either thanks to the Trump  Executive Orders.

I hope Mr. Trump is acting out of prudence, not politics, acting out of concern, not prejudice. Sadly, I don’t think so.

Perhaps this new administration should build a monument to what it stands for– a statue of Donald Trump to replace the Statue of Liberty.

In 7 Days as President he has shattered the image of America across the world. He has shut “The Golden Door,” ignoring the truth that immigrants built this nation, the railroads, the bridges, the factories, the farms. We can only hope that his assembled team of “The New Robber Barons,” who in the last 17 years have created financial misery while enhancing their own wealth, and now have shown their true nature.

As a woman told me yesterday in a conversation about a news event, in a totally spontaneous statement:

“I want my America back.”

I could not have said it better.

And, until it means something again,  send the Statue of Liberty back to France. It no longer means anything, replace it with a statue of Donald Trump.

It could be a statue like the statue of  Ozymandias, “The King of Kings.”

“Ozymandias” is a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley:

 I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed;
And on the pedestal these words appear:
“My name is Donald Trump, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!”
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

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Now on the internet: WHITE PLAINS WEEK AT www.whiteplainsweek.com

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PETER KATZ   JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE

ON

THE COUNTY CENTER GUN SHOW

COUNCILWOMAN LECOUNA RUNNING FOR MAYOR

THE CSEA NEW CONTRACT

THE SCHOOL DISTRICT KICKOFF BUDGET FORUM

THE AUSTIN MURDER

EXCLUSIVE VIDEO OF WHITES CITIZENS JOINING THE WOMEN’S MARCH

JIM BENEROFE REPORTS ON HIS OBSERVATIONS OF THE WOMEN’S MARCH

AND A SPECIAL NEW PETER KATZ REPORT

TRUMP THE PRESIDENT

THE FIRST 6 DAYS

SEE IT NOW ON YOUTUBE  WORLDWIDE

RKOTower

AT NEW LINK TO YOUTUBE AS OF 11:30 PM SATURDAY

(If you could not get the YOUTUBE INTERNET CAST OF WHITE PLAINS WEEK
TRY THIS NEW LINK ABOVE

or

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Vermont Police Issue Photo of Suspect Sought in Markus Austin Murder Believed to be in NY area

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JAVEON CABALLERO
SUSPECT IN MARKUS AUSTIN MURDER Contact Vermont State Police, 229-9191 or Montpelier Police, 802-223-3445

 

WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From news reports and The Rutland Herald. January 27, 2017:

Wednesday, Vermont State Police arrested as an accessory after the fact related to the Sunday killing of former White Plains resident, Markus Austin. Police said investigation determined  Reginald Jones, 36,  drove Javeon Caballero, (pictured above, photo, Vermont State Police) to a bus station in White River Junction the morning of the shooting and then bought Caballero a bus ticket.

Police said Caballero shot Austin after the two had been involved in an altercation in Barre, Vermont, where both men, Austin and Caballero, lived that took place earlier Sunday morning.

Police believe Caballero has “fled the state,” presumably for New York City area.If you have seen this man, contact the Vermont State Place , 229-9191 or the Montpelier Police 802-223-3445.

Police added that Caballero had a felony conviction for aggravated assault in 2010, which would make it illegal for him to have a gun.

Caballero also has three misdemeanor simple assaults charges, two in 2010, and one in 2008.

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Service Employees International Union Issues Statement on Executive Deportation Orders

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 HARTFORD, Conn. — The following statement may be attributed to Hector Figueroa, President of 32BJ SEIU, Hartford, Connecticut. January 25, 2017:

“President Trump’s counterproductive actions on immigration will have tragic implications for hundreds of thousands of hard-working, tax-paying immigrant and American citizens alike. His actions today do nothing more than stir panic and fear in the hearts of millions while encouraging a Wild West vigilante culture among those looking to scapegoat innocent Americans.

Punishing some of the most dynamic and welcoming cities in our country by blocking federal funding is a mean-spirited move that will surely inflict pain on our communities but won’t undermine our resolve to continue fighting for commonsense immigration reform.

Banning immigrants from Muslim-majority countries, blocking entry of asylum-seekers and building a wall with our closest neighbor and trading partner are horrendous ideas that run counter to our identity as a nation and our core values as Americans. State and local law enforcement resources must not be misspent on federal immigration enforcement activities that target working people and undermine community relations.

As a union 163,000 strong – including tens of thousands of immigrant members from countries all over the world – we will use our collective power in the days and months ahead to fight for a better future for our families, prevent deportations, and protect immigrants, Muslims and refugees.

Now, more than ever, we must unite across racial, economic and other lines to fight back against hatred, racism and bigotry.

Trump’s approach to dealing with our country’s immigration challenges is based on the ugly notion that America should expel 11 million hard-working undocumented immigrants, most of whom have worked and lived in America for more than a decade and contribute to our local economies and communities. This is both impractical and un-American. State and local law enforcement resources must not be misspent on federal immigration enforcement activities that target working people and undermine community relations.

Immigrant workers and their families are an indispensable part of our communities and economy, and a workable solution must include a path to legalization for hard-working, tax-paying immigrants. Federal Immigration reform is the only solution to this tragic and divisive scenario and the path forward is to make our voices heard everywhere.

We urge all Americans to stand up and join us in our call for the dignity, safety, and protection of our communities.”

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With 155,000 members in eleven states and Washington, D.C  — including 4,000 in the Hudson Valley —32BJ SEIU is the largest property service workers union in the country.

 

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Windmill power farm approved for location 30 Miles Southeast of Montauk Point Fifteen Wind Terminals Planned

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Wind Turbine operating 5 miles off Block Island, One of 5 in operation off the Island in the Atlantic Ocean, in operation since October of 2016. Aerial Photograph by WPCNR

WPCNR THE POWER NEWS. From the Governor’s Press Office. January 25, 2017:

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the Board of Trustees of the Long Island Power Authority voted to approve the nation’s largest offshore wind farm, and the first offshore wind farm in New York.

The approval of the South Fork Wind Farm, a 90 megawatt development 30 miles southeast of Montauk, is the first step toward developing an area that can host up to 1,000 megawatts of offshore wind power.  The wind farm, which is out of sight from Long Island’s beaches, will provide enough electricity to power 50,000 Long Island homes with clean, renewable energy, and will help meet increasing electricity demand on the South Fork of Long Island.
 
The vote comes two weeks after Governor Cuomo called on LIPA to approve the wind farm project and announced an unprecedented commitment to develop up to 2.4 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030 in his regional State of the State address on Long Island.

The 2.4 gigawatt target, which is enough power generation for 1.25 million homes, is the largest commitment to offshore wind energy in U.S. history, helping to bring this valuable resource to New Yorkers at a scale unmatched in the United States.
 
“New York leads the nation in pioneering clean energy innovation, and this bold action marks the next step in our unprecedented commitment to offshore wind, as well as our ambitious long term energy goal of supplying half of all electricity from renewable sources by 2030,” Governor Cuomo said. “This project will not only provide a new, reliable source of clean energy, but will also create high-paying jobs, continue our efforts to combat climate change and help preserve our environment for current and future generations of New Yorkers.”

The LIPA Board approved a contract submitted by Deepwater Wind for the South Fork Wind Farm after a year-long process engaging the private sector for the best available clean energy generation ideas and detailed cost modeling.  Other elements of LIPA’s South Fork energy portfolio include transmission enhancements and additional clean energy solutions such as battery storage and consumer electricity demand reduction.

The LIPA Board approved a 20-year pay-for-performance Power Purchase Agreement, allowing the utility to only pay for delivered energy without taking construction or operating risk.  Advancing technology and innovation reduced the projects all-in wind energy price to be competitive with other renewable energy sources.

In addition to today’s approval for the South Fork Wind Farm, the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority is continuing to develop an Offshore Wind Master Plan outlining the State’s commitment to developing cost-effective offshore wind resources in federal waters off the coast of New York.

 The Master Plan, to be released in late 2017, will show how additional New York coastal sites may be developed responsibly and will set capacity targets and commercial operation dates for each site. The state will continue to work closely with coastal community members, the fishing and maritime industries, environmental advocates and other stakeholders to identify additional offshore wind energy sites to be included in New York’s Offshore Wind Master Plan.

Tom Falcone, LIPA’s Chief Executive Officer, said, “We are confident this is the first step to developing the tremendous potential of off-shore wind off Long Island’s coast and meeting Governor Cuomo’s Clean Energy Standard. This project is the right size, at the right location and demonstrates how smart energy decisions can reduce cost while providing renewable energy and clean air for all of Long Island.”
 
John Rhodes, President and CEO of NYSERDA said: “New York is leading the nation in developing offshore wind to provide clean, renewable energy and I applaud LIPA’s approval of the South Fork Wind Farm. Offshore wind has great potential to help us achieve our ambitious clean energy goals under the Clean Energy Standard and Reforming the Energy Vision as well as the Governor’s 2.4 gigawatt goal, and this project will reduce our carbon footprint and protect the environment for generations to come.”

New York State Senator Kenneth LaValle said, “Wind and other alternative energy sources are critically important components in our overall energy strategy.  This project will greatly bolster the East End’s energy reliability in an environmentally compatible manner, help stabilize rates, and create much needed construction jobs in the region.”

New York State Senator Phil Boyle said, “I applaud the Long Island Power Authority’s consideration of the proposed 90-megawatt, 15-turbine wind farm east of Montauk and encourage the Board of Directors to approve the Deepwater Wind proposal. With major changes in NY’s energy markets in recent years, including retirements of coal and nuclear generation and an increasing reliance on natural gas, it is more essential than ever to increase local renewable energy sources on a large scale. The proposal by Deepwater Wind will create jobs, and will ensure the protection of NY’s coastline, the tourism industry, and the quality of life for all here on Long Island.”
 
New York State Senator Todd Kaminsky said, “A comprehensive offshore wind program is vital to growing a clean-energy economy and combating climate change. With this offshore wind farm, New York will take its rightful place as the national leader in advancing renewable energy. I will continue to advocate for investments in renewable energy that lower carbon emissions and grow our clean-energy economy.”
 
New York State Assemblyman Steve Englebright said, “By making the commitment to move forward with this offshore wind project, LIPA will not only help New York further its state-wide carbon reduction and renewable energy goals but will also help to establish the infrastructure and quality labor force necessary to give Long Island and New York State the long-term competitive edge in an emerging offshore wind industry.”
 
New York State Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele, Jr. said, “Long Island, and particularly the East End, faces unique energy and economic challenges.  As one of the few parts of Long Island in which energy demands continue to grow, we face a steadily increasing need for new sources of power.  Our existing electricity grid is operating at its limits and, given our population density and our commitment to conservation, building any new energy infrastructure here is difficult. I am pleased that with today’s announcement LIPA broadens their commitment to maintaining a renewable energy portfolio. Not only will this help the South Fork meet its increasing energy demand, but will do so in an environmentally responsible manner, creating jobs for our State.”
 
Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone said, “By locating the offshore wind farm 30 miles offshore, it will be over the horizon and will not impact views from our beaches.  By installing energy storage facilities in Montauk and Wainscott, it will deliver reliable power without the noise and emissions that accompany conventional power plants.  And, by providing enough clean energy for 50,000 Long Island homes, it will help to mitigate climate change and establish New York State as a leader in clean energy.”

Kit Kennedy from NRDC said, “This is what our clean energy future looks like. Greenlighting the nation’s largest – and New York’s first – offshore wind farm would be a giant step forward in finally unleashing the largely untapped potential of this plentiful source of clean energy. Approving this project is critical to putting Governor Cuomo’s bold climate goals for the state into action.”

Lisa Dix New York Senior Representative for the Sierra Club said, “We applaud the Long Island Power Authority and Governor Cuomo for their visionary leadership today. Building New York’s first, and nation’s largest, offshore wind project is an historic first step – by providing cost-effective, reliable and pollution free electricity for Long Islanders, creating jobs and new economic development opportunities for New Yorkers, and positioning the Empire State as a national climate and clean energy leader.”
 
Anne Reynolds, Executive Director of ACE NY said, “It is exciting to see LIPA’s leadership on investing in offshore wind, which is key to achieving the Governor’s vision of fifty percent renewable energy. LIPA recognizes that offshore wind can help affordably meet Long Island’s electricity needs with clean and homegrown power.”
 
Adrienne Esposito, Executive Director, Citizens Campaign for the Environment said, “Our transition from fossil fuels to renewables has just taken a giant leap forward with this historic decision. This is game changer, a legacy that all New Yorkers will be proud of. By tackling climate change head on New York is proving to be a global leader.”
 
Gordian Raacke, Executive Director of Renewable Energy Long Island said, “This is a big step for LIPA, a bold step for renewable energy on Long Island, and the beginning of an offshore wind industry in the State of New York and the country. “We commend Governor Cuomo and LIPA for showing visionary leadership in the transition to renewable energy and thank all who have advocated for offshore wind energy over the last couple of decades.”
 
Elizabeth Gordon, Director of the New York Offshore Wind Alliance said, “LIPA’s 90 MW South Fork project moves New York to the forefront of offshore wind development in America. “Major progress on what will be the nation’s largest offshore wind project, combined with Governor Cuomo’s 2,400 MW commitment, makes it clear that New York is entering a new energy era – one where offshore wind power is poised to play a key role in meeting down state’s electricity needs.”

Karl R. Rábago, Pace Energy and Climate Center said, “It is gratifying to see years of advocacy for clean energy development bearing fruit in such a spectacular fashion. And it is inspiring to have the leadership in New York that made it happen.”
 
Heather Leibowitz, Director, Environment New York said, “Offshore wind needs to be a significant part of the energy mix. It is key to putting the Empire State on a path toward an economy powered entirely by renewable energy. The 90-megawatts of energy produced off east Montauk will get us one step closer to this goal.”
 
Kevin Law, President and CEO of the Long Island Association said, “The offshore wind farm proposed by Deepwater Wind is an important step forward in building Long Island’s clean energy economy, creating new jobs in this industry and diversifying our fuel sources which is why the LIA has supported this project.”
 
John R. Durso, President, Long Island Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO said, “LIPA’s decision to enter into an agreement with Deepwater Wind is good news for the Long Island labor movement.  It is a first step in realizing the potential for a new American industry with Long Island at the epicenter.  We thank New York State for their commitment to our energy future, an opportunity which includes union jobs. We are excited to put our skilled workforce on the job.”
 
About Reforming the Energy Vision
Reforming the Energy Vision is Governor Andrew M. Cuomo’s strategy to lead on climate change and grow New York’s economy. REV is building a cleaner, more resilient and affordable energy system for all New Yorkers by stimulating investment in clean technologies like solar, wind, and energy efficiency and generating 50 percent of the state’s electricity needs from renewable energy by 2030. Already, REV has driven 730 percent growth in the statewide solar market, enabled over 105,000 low-income households to permanently cut their energy bills with energy efficiency, and created thousands of jobs in manufacturing, engineering, and other clean tech sectors. REV is ensuring New York State reduces statewide greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent by 2030 and achieves the internationally-recognized target of reducing emissions 80 percent by 2050. To learn more about REV, including the Governor’s $5 billion investment in clean energy technology and innovation, please visit
www.ny.gov/REV4NY and follow us at @Rev4NY.
 
 

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