City Council members and activists, including AAEA-NY, believe the mayor's plan to delay funding for four sanitation facilities will unfairly burden low-income and minority communities.
In 2006, following intense negotiations, the council and the mayor's administration agreed on a comprehensive "Solid Waste Management Plan" that sought to distribute equitably the siting of undesirable sanitation facilities in the five boroughs. But the mayor's current budget blueprint upends that objective by delaying funding for all of the proposed solid-waste marine-transfer stations in upscale Manhattan—and one in Brooklyn—for five to eight years, well past the end of Mr. Bloomberg's tenure at City Hall. An aide to the mayor said the proposed delay was necessary because of the economy.
The delayed facilities are:
East 91st Street marine transfer station along the East River in Manhattan (FY11 to FY16)
West 59th Street marine transfer station at Pier 99 on the Hudson River in Manhattan (FY 14 to FY 19)
Gansevoort marine transfer station at Pier 52 along the Hudson River in Manhattan (FY13 to FY18)
Southwest Brooklyn marine transfer station along Gravesend Bay (FY 11 to FY 16)
Source: City Hall; New York City Environmental Justice Alliance
The city already has long-term rail contracts in place and two marine transfer stations, along with a new recycling facility, are currently under construction. The delay in funding means the South Bronx, Sunset Park and East Williamsburg in Brooklyn will continue to shoulder the burden of handling the entire city's waste stream. (WSJ, 4/13/2011)
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