Historic high seas radio station in NJ to be demolished

The remains of shortwave radio station WOO — for decades the Atlantic coast hub of American Telephone & Telegraph’s high seas radio service — will likely disappear in the coming weeks.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with contractor Amec Foster Wheeler Environment & Infrastructure Inc., plans to remove more than 500 antennas and poles that stud 222 acres of salt marsh on New Jersey’s Barnegat Bay.
The site at Good Luck Point was the transmitter station for WOO, which from the early 1930s onward was a shore-to-ship critical link to U.S. bluewater and coastwise shipping. Right up to the dawn of cellular telephones in the late 20th century, mariners could place telephone calls by contacting the AT&T marine operator on VHF channels.
High seas and overseas radio operators at AT&T's New York City switchboard in 1943 handled calls through station WOO. AT&T photo.

High seas and overseas radio operators at AT&T’s New York City switchboard in 1943 handled calls through station WOO. AT&T photo.
Also known as the Ocean Gate site, the transmitter worked in tandem with a receiver site about 15 miles south on the marsh at Manahawkin, N.J. Both were part of AT&T’s national “long lines” system, along with stations KMI near San Francisco and WOM near Miami.
An operator at radio station KMI in California, 1966. Maritime Radio Historical Society photo.

An operator at radio station KMI in California, 1966. Maritime Radio Historical Society photo.
As technology changed and users began falling away, the stations still provided single-sideband (SSB) radiotelephone service up to February 1999 when AT&T announced it was ceasing operations. Satellite service had usurped the old manned shoreside station model, and the company was selling customers on its own Sea Call service using Inmarsat technology.
The New Jersey sites were soon abandoned, and the Good Luck Point tract was purchased in 2003 by the non-profit Trust for Public Land, to be donated to the Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge.
Among boaters passing on Barnegat Bay, the decaying antenna array is jokingly called “the telephone pole farm.” U.S. Fish and Wildlife biologists always wanted to clean up the site and restore the marsh to improve its value for wildlife, but never had the money.
That changed after Hurricane Sandy hit the region in October 2012. Parts of the 47,000-acre Forsythe refuge were inundated with wreckage from  flooded homes and marinas, and the wildlife service eventually got $15 million out of federal Sandy relief funding for the cleanup. Some $1.7 million of that will go to clearing the Good Luck Point site, which is getting priority with the limited funding.
Contractors will use airboats to work in the marsh and bring cut-up poles and steel in for disposal. Some poles will be left standing, for use as osprey nest platforms.

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Kirk Moore
Associate Editor Kirk Moore was a reporter for the Asbury Park Press for over 30 years before joining WorkBoat in 2015. He wrote several award-winning stories on marine, environmental, coastal and military issues that helped drive federal and state government policy changes. He has also been a field editor for WorkBoat’s sister publication, National Fisherman, for almost 25 years. Moore was awarded the Online News Association 2011 Knight Award for Public Service for the “Barnegat Bay Under Stress,” 2010 series that led to the New Jersey state government’s restoration plan. He lives in West Creek, N.J.

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Pa’s Potter Township Oks $6 billion ethane cracker plant

cracker_plant.jpg

Workers prepare a site in Beaver County for Shell’s multi-billion dollar ethane cracker. (Photo by Reid Frazier/The Allegheny Front).
The Associated Press report today:
Supervisors of a western Pennsylvania township have granted a conditional use permit for a $6 billion ethane cracker plant proposed by Shell Chemicals.
A 10-hour hearing last month ended without a decision because the Potter Township supervisors wanted Shell and the Clean Air Council, an environmental group that opposes the plant, to file legal arguments about the permit.
At Wednesday night’s two-hour meeting the supervisors imposed noise limits, and pledged to investigate any complaints of light pollution or traffic disruptions that could occur once construction begins in the next two years.
Shell has said the plant will create 6,000 construction jobs and 600 permanent jobs once the plant opens.
Shell still needs state environmental regulators to modify two pollution permits held by the property’s former owner, and get federal permits, before construction begins.

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Did Christie snooker us when he squashed the rail tunnel?

Pulaski Skyway

A legal settlement between the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and the federal Securities and Exchange Commission blows a hole in Gov. Chris Christie’s original version of why he canceled a long-planned commuter-rail tunnel during his first year in office.
Announced just before the governor delivered his State of the State speech, the SEC’s order makes clear that Christie administration officials were eyeing money the authority had earmarked for the commuter tunnel, hoping to use it instead to solve state transportation funding problems. Ultimately, that’s exactly what happened.

See John Reitmeyer’s full NJ Spotlight story here

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NJ Senators in active roles at Trump appointee hearings



Cory Booker made history yesterday as the first sitting senator to testify against a colleague when he spoke out against Jeff Sessions becoming the U.S. attorney general.



On the same day, Sen. Bob Menendez questioned Rex Tillerson, Donald Trump’s pick to be secretary of state, at the former Exxon/Mobil CEO’s confirmation hearing. Menendez accused Tillerson of lobbying hard against on Russia’s behalf against sanctions imposed by the U.S. 


Brenda Flanagan has the video story above for NJTV News

and the written story here.


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NJ enviro, energy bills in committee – Jan. 12, 2017

ASSEMBLY TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND UTILITIES
1/12/17 10:00 AM
Aide: (609) 847-3840
Committtee Room 9, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
A-441  Eustace, T. (D-38); Benson, D.R. (D-14);
Zwicker, A. (D-16)
Establishes solar power incentive program.
Related Bill: S-2691
     
A-2401  McKeon, J.F. (D-27); Wimberly, B.E. (D-35);
Benson (D-14)
Expands programs in BPU to include low-interest loans
and grants to municipalities for energy efficient programs and innovative
energy technologies.
     
A-2828  McKeon, J.F. (D-27); Wimberly, B.E. (D-35)
Establishes financial incentives for certain energy
providers to conduct energy audits.
     
ACR-151  Diegnan, P.J. (D-18); Eustace, T. (D-38);
Wimberly (D-35)
Urges construction of microgrids at municipal
facilities in New Jersey.  
Related Bill: SCR-108

________________________________________

     
ASSEMBLY COMMERCE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
1/12/17  1:30 PM
Aide: (609) 847-3875
Committee Room 16, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey
A-4274  Houghtaling, E. (D-11); Andrzejczak, B. (D-1)
Requires EDA, in consultation with Department of
Agriculture, to establish loan program for certain vineyard and winery capital
expenses.  
Related Bill: S-2727
     
___________________________________________
ASSEMBLY HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
1/12/17  2:00 PM
Aide: (609) 847-3875
Committee Room 9, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
A-4304  Conaway, H. (D-7); Wimberly, B.E. (D-35)
Requires compilation of, and public access to, tests of
soil lead levels.
     
A-4305  Conaway, H. (D-7); Wimberly, B.E. (D-35)
Requires soil testing to determine lead content prior
to certain home sales.
     
A-4306  Conaway, H. (D-7); Wimberly, B.E. (D-35)
Requires DEP to adopt Statewide plan to reduce lead
exposure from contaminated soils and drinking water.
     

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