March 22, 2010
Welcome to Environmental Advocates
of New York’s online newsletter from the State Capital, your source
for environmental news. We update you every other week with insider
news and observations carefully gleaned from the halls of the
Capitol.
NY'S ENVIRONMENTAL AGENCY
FORCED TO CUT OVERSIGHT OF OIL & CHEMICAL SPILLS
Environmental Advocates of New York has done a
little research and we uncovered that based on the Governor’s
proposed budget cuts the Department of Environmental Conservation
(DEC) will soon be forced to cut responses to oil spills by more
than half and inspections of petroleum and chemical storage
facilities by 25 percent. And this is despite the fact that half of
the agency’s inspections last year turned up violations.
According to the DEC’s website, drinking water
supplies in hundreds of cities and towns across the state have been
rendered useless because of unchecked spills and chemical
contamination. Click
here to download our report.
Unless state lawmakers restore the DEC’s budget, the agency will
have less than half the funds on hand for inspection site visits and
equipment to support oversight than in 2007-2008, down to $63
million from $127 million.
The DEC keeps New
Yorkers safe from oil and chemical spills by ensuring accidental
spills and leaks don’t happen in the first place. These accidents
are most often the result of poor maintenance, overfilled tanks,
mistakes and lack of inspection. And that’s exactly what will result
from fewer DEC staff and resources.
New York’s leaders need to get their priorities in order and
keep—not cut—critical DEC staff and resources.
And that’s not
all. If the Governor’s cuts aren’t restored during budget
negotiations, the DEC will be forced to rely increasingly on
polluters to self-report the release of toxic substances. In the
past, this has led to biased samples and incomplete reports.
Pesticide sample inspections will be impacted by the Governor’s
budget proposal, as well. Cuts to laboratory supplies will mean
fewer samples will be processed and there will be weaker enforcement
of state laws regarding pesticides. Earlier this year, DEC
inspections revealed that a landowner in Allegany County had killed
two bald eagles with illegal pesticides.
In a series of
reports on the state of the DEC, Agency in Crisis,
Environmental Advocates uncovered steep declines in resources
dedicated to environmental programs. When accounting for inflation,
operating funds for the DEC have declined 11 percent since
2005-2006. The agency, which has lost more than 400 staff over the
last three years, will lose another 83 staff due to attrition and
the Governor’s hiring freeze this year alone, leaving it
hard-pressed to protect public health and safety with 700 fewer
staff than it had 20 years ago.
The question is:
will the State Legislature do anything about it?
Click
here to tell your representatives in Albany to restore critical
funding to the DEC.
EPA TO START STUDY ON NATURAL GAS
DRILLING
Late last week,
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced it will take a
closer look at the environmental and health impacts of natural gas
drilling by means of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking.”
The oil and gas
industry is eager to start exploration in New York State’s Marcellus
and Utica shale formations. But we’re not interested in giving
anybody the green light until the State puts strong safeguards in
place to protect New York’s resources. Because each time a new well
is drilled, or fracked, two to eight million gallons of water laced
with toxic chemicals are required. With thousands of wells proposed,
that means billions of gallons of water will be used every year!
Withdrawing this volume of water from local waterways and aquifers
could devastate sensitive habitats and drinking water.
Recent events in Pennsylvania show how dangerous fracking can be
when it’s not properly regulated.
Although the EPA’s study could take months to complete, it shines
a bright light on the potential dangers of fracking, especially with
regard to water quality.
New York’s Department of Environmental Conservation is currently
reviewing the more than 13,000 public comments the agency received
on a draft drilling guide to oversee the practice. And several state
legislators have introduced bills that would regulate such drilling.
Click
here to read more.
SHOW SOME LOVE

Earlier this month, Environmental Advocates,
working with dozens of other organizations, launched the statewide
“We Love New York” campaign. We Love New York calls on state leaders
to show their love for the Empire State by restoring the
Environmental Protection Fund to $222 million during budget
negotiations.
Click here to learn
more about the campaign.
The Governor cut the Fund by $69 million, or a third, in his
budget proposal, jeopardizing or shutting down hundreds of projects
across the state. The Fund helps ensure the health and safety of New
York’s air and water, updates sewage treatment facilities, keeps
working farms operating, preserves historic heritage and open space,
maintains zoos and parks, revitalizes waterfronts, monitors
pesticide use, and much more.
Here are two easy ways that you can show your “love,” too:
Join us in Albany this Wednesday, March 24th to
tell state lawmakers face-to-face that New York’s environment
matters to you. Contact Alison Jenkins at
ajenkins@eany.org for more information.
Call State Senate Leader John Sampson and Assembly Speaker
Shelly Silver on Thursday, March 25th, and tell them
to restore our Environmental Protection Fund. Click here for details
and tips on what you should say.
To learn more about the We Love New York
campaign and what you can do to help, visit
www.KeepProtectingNY.org.
GET RECOGNIZED
Apply by May 21, 2010, to get some recognition for your efforts
to make New York State more sustainable. The application brochure
for the 7th annual Environmental Excellence Awards is
available now, just visit
http://www.dec.ny.gov/public/945.html. For a hard copy, contact
the Department of Environmental Conservation’s (DEC) Pollution
Prevention Unit at (518) 402-9469 or email
eeawards@gw.dec.state.ny.us.
The awards are
sponsored by the DEC.
FORMER STAFFER NOW GOV'S DEPUTY SECRETARY FOR
ENVIRONMENT
Former staff member at Environmental Advocates of New York,
Pete Iwanowicz, has been
tapped as Governor Paterson’s new Deputy Secretary
for the Environment. As such, he’ll be responsible for representing
the Governor on a range of environmental policy matters, including
climate change, natural resource protection, and clean air and
water.
Prior to his current position, Pete was the first Director of the
New York State Office of Climate Change. Before joining state
government, Pete served as Vice President for the American Lung
Association of New York State. He has also worked for the San
Francisco-based Resource Renewal Institute promoting sustainability
policies in New York State. And at Environmental Advocates, Pete led
our clean air and clean energy policy work.
Pete replaces Judith Enck as Deputy Secretary. Judith is one of
Environmental Advocates’ past executive directors. Judith is now the
Region 2 Director for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
BILLS ON THE
MOVE
It’s that time
again! Every week during the Legislative Session, Environmental
Advocates of New York looks at the measures that will impact the
environment for good or ill. Here are this week's Bills on the Move:
SUPER BILL! Three trees for the Global Warming
Pollution Control Act. This bill would reduce
climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions from all sources by 80
percent by the year 2050.
SUPER BILL! Three trees for Electronic Waste
Recycling. This bill would require manufacturers of toxic
“e-waste” to collect and recycle a portion of their products.
SUPER BILL! Three trees
for Environmental Access to Justice. This bill would
allow groups or individuals to challenge State Environmental Quality
Review Act decisions if they can demonstrate that they will suffer
injury from a proposed projects’ environmental impact, without
having to show that the harm they will suffer is different than that
suffered by the public at large.
And one not-so-good bill on the move:
Three smokestacks for a new Dirty Coal
Plant for New York State. This bill would fast track a
not-so “clean coal” plant in Jamestown, NY. Almost all of the
project’s original backers, including the power industry and the
federal government, have backed away from this dirty, expensive and
unnecessary piece of political pork. Why people continue to pursue
this is a mystery to us.
Click here to learn more about these
measures and what each will do to help or hurt New York’s natural
resources.
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCATES OF NEW YORK IS A MEMBER OF EARTH SHARE OF NEW YORK
Environmental Advocates is a member of
EarthShare, a federation of the nation’s most respected
environmental charities. To find out more about how and your
workplace can support Environmental Advocates through an EarthShare
campaign, please call us at 518.462.5526, or visit
www.earthshare.org. To donate through EarthShare, designate your
donation to Environmental Advocates of New York, CFC #97425.

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