subscribe to current local breaking news   The Suffolk Times
Search Current Week
Serving Long Island's North Fork since 1857
For SUBSCRIBERS:
  Top Stories  
  Business
  Police Reports
  Sports
  Education
  Editorials
  Columns
  Letters to the Editor
  Community News
  Calendar  
  Real Estate
  Health
  Food & Wine
  Back Issues
  Digital Edition

FREE CONTENT:
  Obituaries
  Slide Shows
  Movie Listings
  Community Links
  Classifieds
  Legal Notices  
  Public Meetings  
  Service Directory
  Antiques & Such
  Local Businesses

FORUMS:
  Community
   Bulletin Board

  All Boards

  Send Letter to Editor
  Submit Obituary
  Email us
  Subscribe Now
  News Tips
  Site Help

times/review online

  Contact/About

  Staff Roster

  Rates/Circulation


  The News-Review

  Shelter Island
  Reporter

  The North Shore Sun

  The Wine Press

Updated: 2/11/2010 - 4:18 AM



Greenport marks start of sewer upgrade
The project that almost wasn't takes off thanks to grants
  1 comments below

RANDEE DADDONA PHOTO
Greenport Mayor David Nyce (center) presents Rep. Tim Bishop with a golden plunger to thank him for helping secure federal stimulus funds for the village's waste water treatment plant upgrade. State DEC regional director Peter Scully (left) represented Gov. David Paterson during Tuesday morning's project launch ceremony.
It was a ceremonial exchange of golden plungers, not a ground breaking, that marked Tuesday morning's official launch of a more than $9 million upgrade to Greenport's waste water treatment plant.

A faint odor hung in the air at the site off Moore's Lane as a small crowd of officials and village workers huddled in the cold to mark the beginning of project. Construction began as soon as the ceremony was over. It is expected to take about a year.

Mayor David Nyce hailed the launch, which was more than three years in the planning, as "a really, really big day for the village." He presented golden plungers adorned with miniature Greenport flags to Rep. Timothy Bishop (D-Southampton) and Deidrea Miller of the Environmental Facilities Corporation.

It was $4.3 million in EFC grant money under President Obama's stimulus plan that gave the project the boost it needed to become a reality.

For three years, Mr. Nyce lobbied Mr. Bishop to try to secure money for the Greenport project "and he came through," the mayor said.

The plant was built with federal Works Progress Administration money during the Depression in 1935 and now a new supply of federal stimulus money is allowing for its rehabilitation, Mr. Bishop said.

'That was the right thing to do then and this is the right thing to do now.' Rep. Tim Bishop
"That was the right thing to do then and this is the right thing to do now," the congressman said. "I'm delighted that I could be a small part of it."

Besides the stimulus money, the village is applying for a $1.1 million Clean Water, Clean Air grant from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation; $400,000 in grant money from the Long Island Sound Restoration Program; $400,000 in a state community development grant; and $200,000 from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA). Remaining costs are expected to be met by qualifying -- as a green energy project -- for interest-free loans, most all of which are expected to be forgiven, Mr. Nyce said.

In a written statement issued after the event, NYSERDA president and CEO Francis Murray said the upgrade would save the village $110,000 annually in energy costs.

"This is our identity," the mayor said about the village sewer and electric utilities. "It's incumbent on us to maintain this. This is our future."

The village is also undertaking repairs to its electric system.

The treatment plant almost got stopped by a dispute with the DEC, Mr. Nyce said. He was referring to DEC requirements that Greenport reduce nitrogen levels by 2014 to federal standards keyed to a Long Island Sound pollution study. But no technology exists to meet those standards and Mr. Nyce and former trustee David Corwin stood firm, finally getting an agreement in April 2009 that the village could move forward without additional upgrades.

The mayor paid tribute to Mr. Corwin for his role in exploring the possibility of grant money from the EFC.

Peter Scully of the DEC, who delivered the good news about the nitrogen levels to Mr. Nyce last year, was on hand Tuesday morning, representing Gov. David Paterson. While the DEC sometimes has an adversarial relationship with municipalities because of its regulatory role, he said, the Greenport project demonstrates that the agency can work effectively with them.

jlane@timesreview.com

Notice about comments:
The Suffolk Times is pleased to offer readers the ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. The Suffolk Times does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not The Suffolk Times. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Service and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.




Add your comments below:










captcha c208b0a4f6f747a88334a69a5404594b





1 comments found

Sludge Composting : 2/5/2010
In a written statement issued after the event, NYSERDA president and CEO Francis Murray said the upgrade would save the village $110,000 annually in energy costs."
It should have also been mentioned the village lost close to $900,000 for a dewatering operation, in what would have been free funding and will incur an additional $100,000 in transportation cost per year, because one trustee was too closed minded to look past his own personal misconceptions and instead serve the entire village like he was elected to do.





Most Popular


Voice your opinion

Start a discussion, join a discussion or make a comment.

Click "Community Bulletin Board" link on the left or "Discuss this story" link at the top of every story to get started.






summer wine press 2007

© Times-Review Newspapers
Terms of Service - Privacy Policy