Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper’s Water Wins in 2022

Like all things Buffalo, 2022 saw a resurgence for water wins in WNY! Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper wrote and submitted 53 grants in 2022, and to date has secured a whopping $8,428,747 in funding with an additional $16,837,096 pending to protect and restore the waterways and surrounding ecosystems in our region.  Here are some of the Waterkeeper projects that provided us with water wins in 2022:

Outreach

Waterkeeper participated in or led over 184 outreach events and engaged over 7,114 people in direct conversations about our mission. We also overhauled our website to make it more user-friendly! Check it out at www.bnwaterkeeper.org.

Clean Ups By The Numbers

· Spring Sweep – 1482 volunteers, 19,665 lbs trash

· Great Lakes Cleanup – 4962 volunteers, 74152 lbs trash

· Scajaquada Sweep – 86 volunteers, 625 lbs trash

· Solo Sweeps – 82 Solo Sweeps, 1568 lbs trash

RestoreCorps

· We mobilized nearly 200 volunteers to help perform adaptive landscape management tasks at our existing restoration sites.

· We planted over 2,308 herbaceous plugs in establishing meadow and wetland areas.

· We planted approximately 514 trees/shrubs in riparian areas at Hyde Park and Ellicott Creek Park.

Waterkeeper has been working with our design team to develop a living shoreline design to address the severe erosion and bank failure occurring at the southern tip of Ellicott Island Bark Park.  Our target of starting construction will be autumn, 2023.

Waterkeeper continues to work with our partners to accomplish adaptive landscape management & public access improvements throughout three habitat restoration areas within Forest Lawn Cemetery. The activities completed in 2022 included:

·  invasive species management of approximately 3-acres of floodplain and upland meadow areas

· upland & wetland plant installation of approximately 2,441 plants

· meadow seeding & establishment of approximately 53,670sf of native meadow habitat

· the creation 350lf of trails

· the creation/installation of educational signage throughout the project areas

Kayak Classroom

· Waterkeeper purchased 10 new kayaks to update our fleet.

Policy & Advocacy

• Waterkeeper advocated for strong drinking water protections to the NYSDOH.

• Waterkeeper collected surface water samples at 14 sites in our watershed to be analyzed for toxic PFAS chemicals, participating in a larger Waterkeeper Alliance Surface Water Study, the first of its kind. (https://bnwaterkeeper.org/pfas-pfoa-pfos/).

• We celebrated the first year of the Polystyrene Ban in New York State.

• We passed the Environmental Bond Act!

 

Education

• Waterkeeper provided hands on educational experiences at Explore & More Children’s Museum.

• We implemented our Buffalo Young Environmental Leaders Program (YELP) after a 2-year hiatus.

• Waterkeeper continued our Young Environmental Leaders Program (YELP) in partnership with Niagara Falls HS and Niagara Wheatfield HS reaching 34 students

• We engaged 10 teachers in a Niagara River/Lake Erie Watershed focused Teacher Academy in partnership with Reinstein Woods.

Citizen Science

• Waterkeeper collected over 3,200 plastic nurdles from waterway shorelines, submitting this data to the large Nurdle Patrol Citizen Science project.

• We collected bacteria data at 15 sites in the Niagara River Watershed. We reported E. coli exceedances out to the public using social media and uploaded data to our interactive water quality map – https://bnwaterkeeper.org/our-impact/water-quality/

• Waterkeeper responded to community reports of potential Harmful Algal Blooms and identified type of algae to determine level of risk and need for community safety information.

• We trained 30 volunteers to use high tech water quality probes to collect baseline water quality data on a monthly basis to help us to track waterway trends.

Forest Lawn on Scajaquada Creek

Waterkeeper continues to work with our partners to accomplish adaptive landscape management and public access improvements throughout three habitat restoration areas within Forest Lawn Cemetery. The activities completed in 2022 included: 

· Invasive species management of approximately 3-acres of floodplain and upland meadow areas

· Upland and wetland plant installation of approximately 2,441 plants 

· Meadow seeding and establishment of approximately 53,670sf of native meadow habitat

· The creation 350lf of trails 

· The creation/installation of educational signage throughout the project areas 

Ellicott Island Bark Park / Tonawanda Creek 

Waterkeeper continues to work with our design team to develop a living shoreline design to address the severe erosion and bank failure occurring at the southern tip of Ellicott Island Bark Park.  Designs have passed the 60% phase and we anticipate starting construction in Fall 2023. 

Cayuga Creek

Waterkeeper completed the Cayuga Creek Stream & Floodplain Restoration Project, which was over 10 years in the making. This project mitigates flooding for community members downstream of the project area, improves the health of Cayuga Creek, and restores critical fish and wildlife habitat. Project accomplishments included: creating 1,750 linear feet of new stream channel to reconnect the creek to its historic floodplain and improve flood storage; restored over 11 acres of forested wetland habitat; planted over 8,600 trees, shrubs, wetland plugs, and live stakes. Combined, the improvements are projected to capture over 2.5 million gallons of runoff each year. 

In partnership with the Buffalo Niagara River Land Trust, a conservation easement was applied across 25 acres of land where the Cayuga Creek Stream & Floodplain Restoration took place and acquired an additional 11 acres of significant forested wetland habitat, achieving permanent protection of 36 acres of important natural land along the Cayuga Creek corridor. 

North Tonawanda Botanical Gardens

Waterkeeper worked with the North Tonawanda Botanical Garden Organization to grow over 500 native plants. Students from the North Tonawanda Middle School worked to install these plants in the North Tonawanda Botanical Garden Living Shoreline site to enhance plant establishment.

Gill Creek

We secured two grants to complete planning and implementation of improvements along the Gill Creek corridor to develop a strategy for restoration and make meaningful progress towards addressing stormwater inputs in an area where Harmful Algae Blooms have been found since 2017.

West Seneca Flood Reduction Project

Waterkeeper worked with Ramboll Engineering to determine the feasibility of reconnecting a floodplain in the Town of West Seneca to alleviate flooding in the adjacent Lexington Green neighborhood.  Results from the data analysis and modeling show that installation of a floodplain bench would provide significant relief from flooding during ice jam events. Waterkeeper is working closely with the Town of West Seneca and community members to develop preliminary design plans which will lead to construction in 2024.

Ralph Wilson Park

Waterkeeper wrote four grants on behalf of the project team to fund shoreline restoration, public waterway access, and upland native tree plantings as components of the improvements that will take place at the Ralph C. Wilson Jr. Centennial Park.  Our efforts have secured an additional $6.75 million dollars with another $10 million pending to ensure coastal resiliency, public access, and habitat creation are a main focus of this park rehabilitation project. 

Buffalo Blueway

As part of Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper’s Buffalo Blueway, the Red Jacket Park grand re-opening was held in June 2022 and marks the completion of the fifth Buffalo Blueway site. The project added an enhanced paddle sport launch, benches, ADA accessible walkways, a redesigned overlook with sweeping views of the Buffalo River, and an upgraded parking lot.

Also through the Buffalo Blueway, three additional sites are in the design and implementation phase: Higgins Park, which will receive improved shoreline habitat and a graded ingress along the shoreline; at both South Buffalo Charter School and NYS DEC Harlem Road Boat Launch invasive species management work continues with anticipated final design and construction in 2023.

Buffalo River Remedial Action Plan 

· Management Action’s for the Buffalo River have been completed .

· Restrictions on Dredging BUI were removed in late September 2022.

· Buffalo River Team was invited to speak at the International Great Lakes Forum to discuss our successes of the restoration and public outreach thus far.

Headwaters

During 2022, Waterkeeper made significant progress in securing two headwaters’ parcels for permanent protection through the NYS DEC Water Quality Improvement Program. Both parcels contain tributaries of Eighteenmile Creek, a priority source water protection watershed. It is anticipated that both parcels will be formally acquired in 2023.

We continued to build out the Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper Source Water Protection Program through partnership building, seeking funding for future program support, and the advancement of an ecosystems benefit analysis as a resource for natural resource protection in the headwaters of the Niagara River watershed.

Crow Creek

This Waterkeeper project removed a culvert that blocked upstream movement for native brook trout, preventing them from accessing important spawning habitat in the headwaters of the Tonawanda Creek watershed. Through this project, 3.7 miles of stream were re-opened to native brook trout through the installation of a new, larger culvert, and habitat improvements were completed along 1.5 miles of stream.

The post Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper’s Water Wins in 2022 appeared first on Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper.

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Mamdani promises housing ‘transformation’

Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced his housing plan blueprint for New York City in Brooklyn on Tuesday.

DAYS THE BUDGET IS LATE: 56

GETTING TO 200K: Mayor Zohran Mamdani released a wide-ranging housing plan today that he said will usher in the “largest municipal housing transformation this country has ever seen.”

The blueprint lays out how Mamdani plans to address the single biggest driver of the city’s affordability crisis, the central focus of the mayoral campaign that propelled him into City Hall.

While the plan lays out ambitious targets that would surpass past mayors if achieved — including the planned creation and preservation of a combined 400,000 affordable homes over a decade — it also illustrates how Mamdani is not reinventing the wheel on many housing issues, but rather leaning into or expanding policies pursued by his predecessors.

The plan seeks to tackle a range of coinciding crises: the severe shortage of available housing; a public housing system that’s crumbling and facing massive capital needs; and a rental housing stock that is experiencing growing distress as operating costs skyrocket.

“If the absence of good government created the conditions we now face, the presence of good government can build the solutions we now need,” Mamdani said in a speech announcing the plan in Brooklyn’s Gowanus section, where a city-led rezoning enacted nearly five years ago has spurred a residential building boom.

Mamdani is already encountering the limits of some of his campaign promises and moderating costly plans as his administration grapples with a strained municipal budget. On the campaign trail, the mayor said he would create 200,000 publicly-subsidized homes over a decade, tripling current rates of production. He is standing by that goal, while also pledging to preserve another 200,000 affordable homes.

“Scaling to these levels of affordable housing production will not be easy and cannot be done overnight,” the blueprint states. The administration is aiming to create some 14,000 affordable homes in fiscal year 2027, which starts July 1, while ramping up to 21,000 units per year by fiscal year 2031.

Under the blueprint released Tuesday, Mamdani’s housing department plans to finance 8,000 new affordable homes in fiscal years 2027 and 2028 — which would grow subsidized housing by more than 35 percent from the prior two years. But the plan does not spell out specifically how the administration will produce roughly 12,000 remaining units annually to get to Mamdani’s 200,000-unit goal.

Much of that additional affordable housing will rely on zoning, tax and other financing tools rather than direct city subsidies. And it would require the private sector to embrace those tools. — Janaki Chadha

From the Capitol

New York State Assemblymember Jeff Dinowitz said he voted in favor of the state budget bills due to favored changes for Tier VI.

‘BIG UGLY’ VOTE: The Legislature spent the better part of today plowing through votes on the budget’s “big ugly” bill, which contains most of the hot-button issues in this year’s spending plan.

“This bill has some really good stuff in it and some really bad stuff,” said Assemblymember Jeff Dinowitz, who cited Tier VI pension plan changes when speaking about his “yes” vote. “I look forward to seeing the positive impact it’s going to have on many, many state workers.”

That was the common theme that emerged among Democratic during today’s debate — they hate the rollbacks to the climate law, but they’re also supportive of the inclusion of what Republican Assemblymember Michael Fitzpatrick dubbed “the mother of all pension sweeteners” that they reluctantly voted yes. That line of reasoning appeared especially common from members who, like Dinowitz, have Democratic primaries in four weeks and stand to face attacks for being weak on the environment.

“This is not an easy vote for me,” said Assemblymember Grace Lee, who’s running for an open Senate seat and wound up backing the bill because of Tier VI.

“I am voting yes because I refuse to deny hardworking union members and retirees the retirement security they have worked years to achieve,” Assemblymember Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas said.

Gonzalez-Rojas also took time to slam the climate law changes.

“Communities like Jackson Heights, Corona, East Elmhurst, Elmhurst, LeFrak City have already experienced the consequences of environmental injustice,” she said. “Climate change is not theoretical for our communities. It is personal.”

That might be another indication of just how much budget season has blended into primary season. Not all of those neighborhoods fall within Gonzalez-Rojas’ district — but they’re a perfect description of the Senate district where she’s challenging fellow Democrat Jessica Ramos next month. — Bill Mahoney

FROM CITY HALL

Fans often gather around Madison Square Garden for watch parties during and after Knicks games.

MEANWHILE, IN KNICKS WORLD: Mamdani appeared to indicate today that watch parties will be back outside Madison Square Garden during next month’s NBA finals.

“They will be there,” Mamdani said with a laugh when asked at an unrelated press conference if the partying will resume outside the iconic arena next month when the Knicks play their first NBA finals in nearly three decades.

But a Mamdani spokesperson told Playbook that the mayor wasn’t referring to official watch parties. Rather, the spokesperson said he was talking about how Knicks fans inevitably gather outside the Garden during and after games to celebrate or mourn — oftentimes in rather raucous fashion.

Whether official watch parties — replete with massive screens showing the games — will be back outside the Garden during the finals, the Mamdani spokesperson wouldn’t say, adding that plans are still being finalized.

“It’s not a question of if there will be watch parties but where,” spokesperson Dora Pekec said.

The issue could become a bone of contention for Knicks fans.

Last week, the city pulled MSG’s permit to hold its usual large-scale parties outside the arena during Knicks games due to concerns from the NYPD about public drinking and other debauchery. During one of the Knicks’ Eastern Conference Finals games against the Cleveland Cavaliers last week, six people were arrested in connection with the outdoor watch party.

The NYPD’s decision to put the kibosh on the parties may infuriate Knicks fans who are ecstatic about their team making it to the NBA finals for the first time since 1999. Mamdani, an avid Knicks fan, is already facing tension with NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch over how to police this summer’s World Cup, as previously reported by POLITICO, and an MSG dispute could drive a further wedge.

With the outdoor party permit scrapped, MSG hosted a watch party at Radio City Music Hall for the Knicks’ clincher against the Cavs last night.

No matter what, Mamdani said at today’s press conference that Knicks fans will be able to cheer on their team at a variety of watch parties across the city during next month’s finals.

“We’re looking forward to making sure that it is a time for New Yorkers to celebrate, it’s a time that they’re also safe,” he said. “We’re going to have a number of different kinds of watch parties, and we’ll get back to you as we keep going through those plans.”

The Knicks will face either the San Antonio Spurs or Oklahoma City Thunder in the finals next month. The first game in the series is set for June 3. Chris Sommerfeldt

FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL

Congressional primary debates will begin to take place in June, including the crowded NY-12 race for retiring Rep. Jerry Nadler.

DEBATE-A-PALOOZA: Got plans in June? How about a congressional primary debate — or six?

After forums galore across the city’s competitive primaries, a slew of televised debates are on the books ahead of the June 23 election: two each for the races to replace retiring Reps. Nydia Velázquez and Jerry Nadler, and another two for Rep. Dan Goldman’s primary challenge from former City Comptroller Brad Lander.

All debates will be live at 7 p.m., with the exception of the first NY-07 debate on June 3, which will be prerecorded earlier that day and air at 7 p.m. Here’s when to block off your schedule:

— June 1: Goldman and Lander will be facing off for their first televised debate, hosted by Spectrum News NY1. NY1’s Errol Louis and Courtney Gross will moderate the program.

Goldman’s campaign has frequently criticized Lander for not agreeing to partake in seven debates.

— June 3: State Assemblymember Claire Valdez, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and City Council member Julie Won will take the stage as they vie for Velázquez’s seat. The debate will be hosted by NY1 and moderated by Louis and Gross. Public defender Vichal Kumar is also on the ballot, though he did not qualify for the debate.

— June 4: The four leading candidates looking to succeed Nadler will meet in a PIX11 debate: state Assemblymembers Micah Lasher and Alex Bores, Kennedy scion Jack Schlossberg and anti-Trump commentator George Conway. It will be moderated by Dan Mannarino.

— June 9: Another NY-12 debate will be hosted by NY1 and WNYC. Louis and WNYC’s Brian Lehrer and Brigid Bergin will moderate. This debate is set to feature Bores, Conway, Lasher, Schlossberg and public health practitioner Nina Schwalbe.

Schwalbe, a progressive candidate who has struggled to break through in the crowded field, has frequently criticized media coverage and events for not including her. A handful of other lesser-known candidates are also on the ballot next month.

— June 10: Valdez, Reynoso and Won will partake in a PIX11 debate, with Mannarino moderating.

— June 15: PIX11 will host Goldman and Lander for another showdown, moderated by Mannarino.

Early voting starts June 13. Madison Fernandez


MUM-DANI: Mamdani is noncommittal about getting involved in the competitive race in what is now his home district.

When asked by PIX11’s Henry Rosoff who he’s voting for in the Democratic primary to succeed Nadler, Gracie Mansion’s newest resident laughed and said he hadn’t made a decision but is “following the race as a keen constituent.”

“At this time, I would say that I’ve focused on the two decisions I’ve made thus far,” Mamdani continued, referring to his endorsements for Lander and Valdez.

Bores recently said he would “love” to have Mamdani’s backing. Lasher, meanwhile, is getting campaign help from political strategist Morris Katz, an architect of Mamdani’s win last year. A recent Emerson College/PIX11 poll found that Mamdani has a strong approval rating, at 66 percent, among Democratic primary voters in the district. But a Mamdani endorsement could also turn off some Jewish voters — a prominent constituency in the district — who are not fans of the mayor.

“It was a pleasure to serve with both of them in Albany,” Mamdani said of Bores and Lasher. Madison Fernandez 

ENDORSEMENT CORNER: Abundance New York rolled out its voter guide on Tuesday, highlighting candidates in competitive races who the group’s executive director Catherine Vaughan said in a statement are “willing to actually build the things New York needs.”

They include Reynoso and Lander, as well as a dual-endorsement for Bores and Lasher. (The group said that between Bores and Lasher, it “cannot recommend one over the other at this time, but we may revisit as the race continues.”)

The endorsements aren’t exactly all glowing. In the rationale for Reynoso, it states that his “record has not always supported our agenda, but we have decided to take his evolution at face value and to commit to holding him to his word.”

The blurb about Lander acknowledged that the group has “concerns about [his] record and some of his current stances,” including opposing some rezonings during his time on the Council and supporting a ban on what the group described as “investor-owned ‘build-to-rent’ housing.” The guide also states that the group is “dismayed at his demand that Brooklyn Marine Terminal development be delayed; this is a NIMBY stance that seems cynically targeted at Goldman’s leadership on the issue.” Despite that, Abundance New York pointed to Lander’s “record on housing production, transit, and the local land-use machinery in this district” and said it thinks he “would prioritize the built environment issues that we champion more strongly.”

The group is also backing Drew Warshaw — the affordable housing nonprofit executive who’s one of two primary challengers to state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli — along with a handful of candidates in the state Legislature and City Council member Carl Wilson. Madison Fernandez

IN OTHER NEWS

THINGS GO SOUTH: Mamdani-backed congressional candidate Claire Valdez, who has called to abolish ICE, is facing scrutiny over her father’s work for a firm involved in Texas border projects. (New York Post)

WHAT’S IN A NAME: Internal renderings for the Penn Station overhaul project show a presidential seal featuring Donald Trump’s name alongside a redesigned train hall. (Gothamist)

ACROSS THE AISLE: Brooklyn’s Park Slope Food Co-op is split over a looming vote to boycott Israeli products from the socially conscious grocery store. (The New York Times)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

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