New York City has proposed a plan to respond to sewage pollution in the Newtown Creek, and an upcoming public meeting is the public’s best chance to ask tough questions about it.
This plan will govern pollution levels from combined sewage overflows – the discharge of raw sewage during rain storms – for the next 20 years. The upcoming Superfund cleanup ordered by the Environmental Protection Agency promises a future free of toxic pollution, and residents have the right to expect a Newtown Creek that is eventually sewage-free too.
Riverkeeper is reviewing the city’s plan, which the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation must approve, and has serious concerns, including:
This is your creek! Come to this meeting and let city officials know that North Brooklyn and Queens residents want and deserve a Newtown Creek that’s clean enough for the tugboats and the kayaks both. Tell New York City that maintaining the sewage-soaked status quo won’t do!
DEC Public Meeting on NYC’s Proposed Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) Waterbody/Watershed Facility Plan (WWFP) for Newtown Creek
When: Wednesday, Feb. 22, at 6:30 p.m.
Where: Newtown Creek Visitor Center, 329 Greenpoint Avenue, 2nd Floor, Greenpoint, Brooklyn NY, 11222. (Enter at the intersection of Greenpoint Avenue and Humboldt Street.)