Section of East River Park reopens after being lifted to fight floods


A brand new park with pretty green grass.

By Liam Quigley, Gothamist

One of the largest projects designed to protect Manhattan from a catastrophic flood has reached a new milestone with the opening of revamped parkland along the East River on the Lower East Side.

An overhauled section of East River Park that had been closed for nearly four years as part of a $1.5 billion flood protection project reopened this week. The refurbished sections are south of the Williamsburg Bridge, and feature new barbeque areas, basketball courts and green spaces. Contractors also planted about 600 new trees in the area.

Parts of the Lower East Side inland from the park were inundated by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, with floodwaters creeping almost to nearby Tompkins Square Park. The Department of Design and Construction project faced significant pushback from some neighborhood residents, who protested the destruction of hundreds of trees to rebuild the park.

“This milestone marks another important step forward in the East Side Coastal Resiliency project,” Parks Commissioner Sue Donoghue said in a statement.

A freshly renovated lawn.
The park features a fresh new lawn. Department of Design and Construction

The new park has been lifted 8 to 10 feet higher, concealing a floodwall through its center. Once complete, the flood barrier will stretch for 2.4 miles from Montgomery Street to East 25th Street.

Key pedestrian bridges to the park have also been replaced as part of the project, including one at Delancey Street under the Williamsburg Bridge.

New basketball courts.
New basketball courts below the Williamsburg Bridge. Department of Design and Construction

Read the full story here


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DOGE Cuts Target Elephant-Sized Jersey Shore Attraction

The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) rescinded $500K in renovation funds for this beloved attraction.

By Veronica Flesher, Patch Staff

MARGATE CITY, NJ — Interior renovations at what was recently named America’s favorite roadside attraction by USA Today are being threatened by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

Back in April, the Elon Musk-headed agency announced that among their cuts was $500,000 in discretionary funds from Sen. Cory Booker intended for renovating Lucy the Elephant, an icon of the Jersey Shore.

“All of us at Lucy — as well as Senator Booker — are stunned by the sudden breach of contract, which would have funded most of the cost of our long-planned and much-needed interior restoration, including the installation of a new state-of-the-art fire suppression system inside Lucy,” Lucy’s Executive Director Richard Helfant said in a statement when the news was first announced.

Since then, a grassroots effort to raise the lost money has generated $8,000 in donations, according to Action News.

The impact of the loss hasn’t been felt yet, so Lucy has time to recoup the half-million dollars, according to Philly Voice. Helfant will seek another grant through the New Jersey Economic Development Authority and plan a series of fundraisers, the outlet reported.

Read the full story here


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NJ municipalities: Get free help from Rutgers with your MS 4 permits



Rutgers Water Resources Program Offers Free Municipal Stormwater Technical Assistance!

The Rutgers Cooperative Extension (RCE) Water Resources Program has funding from NJDEP to help towns address their municipal separate storm sewer (MS4) permit requirements. 

I strongly encourage you to reach out to Chris Obropta and the RCE Water Resources Program while they still have the capacity to help your town with your MS4 permit. It’s free!

Sincerely,
Jennifer M. Coffey, ANJEC

See attached flier for information and contact details for your region.

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With Clean Energy Stalled, Can New Jersey Bet on Nuclear and Win?

The state recently took the first step to potentially becoming a leader in next-generation nuclear energy.

An aerial view of the Salem and Hope Creek Generating Stations situated on the Delaware River in Salem County, N.J. Credit: Stan Honda/AFP via Getty Images
An aerial view of the Salem and Hope Creek Generating Stations situated on the Delaware River in Salem County, N.J. Credit: Stan Honda/AFP via Getty Images

By Rambo Talabong, Inside Climate News

With growing energy demand and delays in renewable energy rollout, New Jersey is doubling down on nuclear—its largest source of in-state electricity—and is now looking at positioning itself as a national leader in developing next-generation reactors.

In March, the state’s Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) issued a request for information, a document signaling the state’s interest in exploring nuclear energy, asking for input from experts and New Jersey residents.

“To ensure resource adequacy can be met in the region without unreasonable impacts on ratepayers, new sources of electricity generation must come online to grow the supply of resources into the electricity grid,” the request reads.

At the same time, its energy master plan is undergoing an update, from declaring that it would only sustain its current nuclear fleet to recognizing in its latest draft summary that “there will be a role for emerging clean firm technologies such as new nuclear, long duration storage and decarbonized fuels.”

It adds: “New Jersey has the opportunity to emerge as a leader in this space.”

Read the full story here


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NJ Bill to Spur Transmission-Scale Energy Storage Advances

From the NJ Senate Democrats

The NJ Senate Environment and Energy Committee has advanced legislation from its Chair, Senator Bob Smith, and Senator John Burzichelli to require the Board of Public Utilities (BPU) to establish a program to procure and incentivize the development of transmission-scale energy storage systems with a reasonable likelihood of successful and timely completion.

In essence, energy storage systems are a technology that stores generated energy for use at a later time. For example, solar panels and wind turbines produce energy when the sun is out or when there is sufficient wind. Absent the correct conditions, they do not produce the amount of energy that may be needed to satisfy the demand for electricity at a given time. Energy storage systems allow surplus energy to be captured and stored for later use, such as when demand is particularly high or when other conditions, like lack of sun, reduce the amount of energy that can be generated. In doing so, they can reduce energy costs, improve grid resilience, and make a variety of different energy types more reliable. 

“The benefits of energy storage systems are hard to understate. They enable wider application of clean, renewable energy and they can more broadly reduce energy costs by charging during low-demand, low-cost hours and discharging when demand on the wider electrical grid is higher,” said Senator Smith (D-Middlesex/Somerset). “As projected energy demand rises and electricity costs are scheduled to rise, it is especially important now to invest in these systems and enable the cost savings that they can create.” 

“Energy storage is one of the more effective ways to make the grid more resilient to fluctuations in demand and to reinforce the supply of energy – which will help lower costs,” said Senator Burzichelli (D-Cumberland/Gloucester/Salem). “We have to do what we can to protect consumers from being hit by rising electric bills, and investing in transmission-scale energy storage is an important part of that effort.”

The bill, S-4289, would define “transmission-scale energy storage systems” to mean an energy storage system capable of at least five MW of storage that is interconnected to the PJM Transmission Network and situated inside a Transmission Zone in New Jersey or is otherwise located within the state and qualified to provide services in the wholesale markets established by PJM. The legislation would authorize the BPU to develop a program to provide a long-term, stable financial incentive to large transmission-scale energy storage projects, with eligibility criteria targeting projects that are further along in the development process and show the most promise for successful deployment. 


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 Residents in this PA town push back on $53 million sewage plan

By Stephana Ocneanu, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Tucked away into the rolling farmland of Butler County is the Connoquenessing Township Municipal Building, where dozens of residents turned out for the May supervisors’ meeting.

In a small room with no air conditioning, neighbors were pressed against one another, shoulder-to-shoulder, many waiting for an opportunity to speak out against a sewage plan that would cost them $252 a month plus thousands to tap into a public system.

“I pray Jesus takes the wheel because this train is going off the tracks,” lifelong resident Jim Marburger, 63, said during the meeting. “You’re letting these outside people come in here and change our beautiful community into something that it’s not. If they want this, let them go back to the damn city.”

As a result of a consent order from the state Department of Environmental Protection, the township has until June 21 to submit a sewage plan. Local officials must decide by then whether to move forward with a $53 million plan that many say would be devastating to residents.

Township supervisors said they’re waiting on approval for a 60-day extension from the DEP, which would allow them to draft up more affordable options from the local Pennsylvania American Water Co.

Until then, the current plan being considered was prepared by the Cranberry engineering firm Herbert, Rowland & Grubic, or HRG. It would include four phases of construction of a system that would send wastewater to the Saxonburg Area Authority for treatment.

By 2033, all customers would be required to tap into the system — costing them thousands of dollars to do so, unless the township received help through grants or loans that could be passed along to residents.

If approved, the HRG plan could also leave Connoquenessing residents paying a $252 monthly sewage fee, which is up to five times more than what people pay in nearby areas. For example, in the Butler area, where PAW has taken over, customers pay $45.50 a month. In Saxonburg the rate is $79 a month, and in Pittsburgh it’s $100. 

“It makes no sense,” said resident Dianna Edwards. “You would never put your own personal family in that kind of financial strain. You would never put your own business in that kind of personal strain. Why in the world would you do it to everybody else?”

Mr. Marburger owns more than nine acres of land in Renfrew. His mother, Bonnie, 81, lives nearby on land that was passed down by her father. Like many older residents of the township, she lives on a fixed income.

“She gets $900 a month. How is she going to afford a $300 sewage bill?” Mr. Marburger said. “This would take everything from her and then some.”

Read the full story here


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