Sunday, June 30, 2013

Forum For You


Woodbury fights K.J. pipeline

Multiple suits brought to halt construction

By Joshua Rosenau

Published Jun 30, 2013
Photo News
HIGHLAND MILLS – It was a packed house on Thursday, when Supervisor John Burke and Orange County Legislator Roxanne Donnery joined attorney David Gordon to discuss the pipeline currently under construction for the Village of Kiryas Joel and their efforts to stop it.

Conflict between the government of Woodbury and its residents and the actions of Kiryas Joel and its leaders deepened as construction crews this spring began burying sections of pipeline for a project that has yet to gain full approval from the state.

If built, the pipeline would convey water from the New York City viaduct to the Kiryas Joel. The pipeline is expected to expand water use in the village from 1.6 million gallons per day to 2.5 million gallons per day, with a maximum capacity of 6 million gallons per day.

Thursday evening, Burke called the K.J. project a direct threat to the future of Woodbury.

“This really is a gut-check meeting,” he said. “Every town, village, city would like to control its own destiny. That’s not a bad way to live: controlling our own destiny. However, there are many outside forces that are sticking their ideas, their thoughts and their desires into our destiny. It’s very upsetting. It’s constant.”

As opponents of the pipeline, Woodbury, Burke and Donnery are currently parties in multiple law suits, which were explained by Gordon, the man hired to mount their defense.

The central lawsuit is Woodbury’s case against Kiryas Joel for understating the environmental impact of the pipeline to the state Department of Conservation. Among other impacts, Gordon said that the increased water from the pipeline would result millions of gallons of added wastewater from Kiryas Joel that the county’s sewer facility at Harriman cannot thoroughly treat.

The suit also argues that a back-up well Kiryas Joel needs in order to connect with the New York City viaduct would harm the aquifer feeding a well already approved to supply 500,000 gallons per day to Woodbury.

Why the pipeline continues

Efforts to pause the pipeline have themselves been stalled in court.

Supreme Court Judge Francis A Nicolai denied a preliminary injunction that Gordon requested at his first court appearance for Woodbury, Gordon said.

Gordon has since made a formal injunction filing, but Nicolai’s deliberations have gone beyond the 20-day deadline. The judge is still undecided, Gordon said.

Though Woodbury and the adjacent town of Cornwall have joined together to oppose the project, the municipalities have no control over the work because it has be routed across county and state roads, Burke said.

Donnery said that County Executive Ed Diana agreed to give Kiryas Joel the permits it needed to begin building.

“Guess what? There isn’t a darn thing the town can do," Donnery said. "There’s nothing anyone can do about it because the permitting that was given was from our Orange County DPW.”

Burke said that county and state leaders responsible for approving the plans only came to Woodbury after the deal was done.

“It was a conscious decision. It was a strategic decision,” he said.

An attempt to slow the project through public protests by Burke and Donnery prompted attorneys for Kiryas Joel to file suit against them.
In response to that case, the judge has been asked to approve ground rules for public protests.

Both the case against Burke and Donnery and the rules for protests remain unannounced, Gordon said.

Next steps

Comments from the Department of Environmental Conservation have resulted in the state agreeing to a public hearing on the pipeline matter.

Once the date for the hearing is set, Gordon urged embers of the public with an interest in the project to go and make their grievances known.

“For the DEC, the squeaky wheel gets the oil,” he said.

Burke urged residents whose property may be affected by construction to photograph areas before and after to document any impacts.

With elections nearing, several in the audience implored audiences to call on their legislators and local representatives to take a stand on the issue.
As for exactly where Kiryas Joel will bury more pipe in the ground, Burke said that K.J.’s leaders are the only ones who know.

“We’ve been calling them every day and asking them,” he said. “So far, it’s worked.”
The pipeline project has yet to receive a permit from the state Department of Transportation to extend all the way up Route 32 to its final destination, Gordon said.

“That’s because they haven’t applied,” he said.

- See more at: http://thephoto-news.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20130630/NEWS01/130639999/Woodbury-fights-KJ-pipeline#sthash.hKnJNXdc.dpuf

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Laying Pipe

Pipeline Forum

Times Herald Record
06/23/13

The Town of Woodbury has scheduled an information session on Thursday to discuss neighboring Kiryas Joel's water-pipeline construction and a dormant well the village hopes to connect to the pipe when work reaches the Mountainville section of Cornwall.
The forum will be at 7:30 p.m. at the Woodbury Senior Center at 16 County Route 105 in Highland Mills.
County Legislator Roxanne Donnery, Woodbury Supervisor John Burke and New Paltz attorney David Gordon are set to speak. Gordon represents the Town of Woodbury and the villages of Woodbury and Harriman in litigation over the well and pipeline.
Earlier this year, Kiryas Joel began installing a 24-inch-wide pipe along the side of Orange County Route 44 in Woodbury for the first of what it says will be two phases of construction of a 13.5-mile pipeline to the Catskill Aqueduct in New Windsor.
The current litigation seeks to stop the work until the village has gotten all permits for the project.


Chris McKenna

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Electile Dysfunction


The Village Elections are this Tuesday, June 18th.

So what, you might say, the current board members are running unopposed.

The "so what" is that elected officials need to know you're out there, paying attention.  And even if you're not, you can at least fake it by voting!

The polls are on the upper floor of the Highland Mills Fire House.  Voting is from 6 AM 'til 9 PM.

Fake it like you mean it.

Go and vote!

Tuesday, June 04, 2013