BSDU

The harbor is cleaner than it has been in 150 years, yet not exactly ‘clean.’

The de Blasio administration last month asked state regulators for a second extension on a plan to control the release of untreated sewage into the waters that connect the five boroughs. And the advocates that often prod the city’s Department of Environmental Protection to act faster to address pollution support the move—so long as it produces a plan worth waiting for.

Most of New York City is served by sewer pipes where rainwater from street drains and wastewater from toilets, tubs and sinks mix together and head to treatment plants. When it rains heavily, those plants can get overwhelmed and release untreated water into rivers, creeks and bays. Those so-called “combined sewer overflows” total billions of gallons a year. While the city has spent billions cleaning up its waterways, making them healthier than they have been in modern times, New York still falls short of the federal Clean Water Act’s goal of fishable and swimmable water.

After years of pressure from regulators and advocates to address the problem comprehensively, the city began in 2012 to produce long-term control plans, or LTCPs, committing to specific policies to improve quality in affecting water bodies. So far, it has generated 11 plans for places like the Bronx River, the Gowanus Canal and Flushing Creek. Ten have been approved by the state; the one for Jamaica Bay remains under review in Albany.

The plans propose different combinations of “green infrastructure” (basically, using vegetation to soak up the rain and delay it entering the sewage system) and “grey infrastructure” that includes stuff like building holding tanks and installing chlorination systems to kill the germs that lurk in what is known on the street as “poop.” There’s been a fair amount of tension between the city and some water-quality advocates over whether the plans are ambitious enough.

The final plan the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) must create is the citywide plan, which basically covers all the water that connects the individual waterways it has already addressed. According to the advocates at the S.W.I.M. Coalition, this final plan will cover “every borough in New York City and encompasses the Hudson River, East River, Lower and Upper New York Bay, Harlem River, Arthur Kill and Kill Van Kull off of Staten Island, and the western portion of Long Island Sound.”

The plan was due in December 2017, but the city got a one-year extension from the start Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). Last month, the DEP asked DEC for another 15 months citing the complexity of the plan, the need to coordinate with New Jersey on issue affecting the shared harbor, the desire to have a more robust public outreach effort and the need to craft a new contract for the outside consultants that assist the city with these plans.

DEP says it has invested $4.2 billion for completed and ongoing projects to further improve water quality and “testing confirms that NY Harbor is cleaner today than it has been since the Civil War.” The new projects in the 10 completed long-term plans will mean another $5 billion in work.

“As early as January of 2017 DEP began raising the issue of additional time needed to complete a citywide plan due to the complexity of the analysis of multiple waterbodies and nine separate wastewater treatment plant drainage areas, coordination with New Jersey DEP (and their own Long Term Control Plan), the evaluation of early-tipping regulators, and an enhanced public participation process, amongst other issues,” DEP spokesman Ted Timbers told City Limits. “DEP is proposing to submit a citywide/open waters Long Term Control Plan by March 31, 2020. This additional time would allow for a thorough review and additional public comment.”

The S.W.I.M. Coalition said in a note to members this week it supported the extension, with caveats. “Despite the urgency to clean up the city’s waters, we recognize that submission of a flawed LTCP in December 2018, without opportunity for public input, would not advance our shared goals of solving the city’s extreme and long-standing sewage pollution problems,” it read. The coalition wants specific, enforceable deadlines for water testing, contracting, laying out alternatives and producing a draft plan.

A key facet of the discussion is around the public engagement process. The city released broad outlines of earlier LTCPs for public comment and then submitted their much larger final proposals to DEC without the public having a chance to weigh in on what was done about their critiques and suggestions. DEC offered no avenue for public comment. This irked advocates.

Now DEP is proposing two comment periods: one on the list of possible policies, and one on the list of policies DEP intends to adopt.

But S.W.I.M. still feels the city “has not committed to a meaningful public participation plan worthy of delaying the implementation of the Citywide LTCP,” according to its letter to the state, because the full plan still won’t be seen by the public until it is submitted to the state.

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