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Sanitation - NY

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This working group is focused on discussions about sanitation issues.

The mission of this working group is to focus on discussions about sanitation issues.

Members

Albert Gomez Amanda Cole drvroeg Eric Wittenberg Kathy Gilbeaux mdmcdonald

Email address for group

sanitation-ny@m.resiliencesystem.org

Gov. Cuomo’s Plan To Use Clean Water Funds For Tappan Zee Bridge OK’d

Tappan Zee Bridge as seen from Chopper 880 on May 13, 2014. (Photo by Tom Kaminski, WCBS Newsradio 880)August 6, 2014 7:31 PM - cbslocal.com - CBS Radio Inc.

ALBANY, N.Y. (CBSNewYork/AP) — Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s plan to use clean water funds on the new Tappan Zee Bridge was approved Wednesday by a key state board despite objections from environmental groups that said the money should support drinking water and sewer treatment projects. 

The $256 million loan from the clean water fund would help pay for the $3.9 billion span being built north of New York City. Cuomo’s administration argues the novel use of the funds would help minimize the cost of tolls on the new bridge and pay for work associated with the construction that would protect the Hudson River Valley.

 http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2014/08/06/gov-cuomos-plan-to-use-clean-water-funds-for-tappan-zee-bridge-okd/

Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 

25 Tons of Organics Collected in First Month of NYC Pilot Organics Program

      

The pilot program gives residents another bin to put organics in.  Photo by New York City Department of Sanitation

wasterecyclingnews.com - by Jeremy Carroll - June 19, 2013

More than 25 tons of organic material has been collected in a Staten Island neighborhood in the first month of New York City's pilot curbside organics collections.

The city said 43% of the 3,000 homes in the Westerleigh neighborhood are participating in the voluntary program.

"There has been great participation in Westerleigh," said John J. Doherty, the city's sanitation commissioner, in a statement.

(READ COMPLETE ARTICLE)

Bloomberg Plan Aims to Require Food Composting

nytimes.com - June 16, 2013 - Mireya Navarro

 

 

 

 

 

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg ... is taking on a new cause: requiring New Yorkers to separate their food scraps for composting.

Dozens of smaller cities, including San Francisco and Seattle, have adopted rules that mandate recycling of food waste from homes, but sanitation officials in New York had long considered the city too dense and vertically structured for such a policy to succeed.

Recent pilot programs in the city, though, have shown an unexpectedly high level of participation, officials said. As a result, the Bloomberg administration is rolling out an ambitious plan to begin collecting food scraps across the city, according to Caswell F. Holloway IV, a deputy mayor.

The administration plans to announce shortly that it is hiring a composting plant to handle 100,000 tons of food scraps a year. That amount would represent about 10 percent of the city’s residential food waste.

Nassau: Wastewater Spills Into Channel

submitted by Doug Kuntz

newsday.com - May 10, 2013

An estimated 3 million gallons of "partially treated wastewater" from the Bay Park Sewage Treatment Plant discharged into Reynolds Channel during a brief power outage late Thursday, Nassau County reported on its website.

The spill occurred about 11 p.m. and lasted about an hour, according to a spill report posted Friday on the website.  The state Department of Environmental Conservation was informed shortly after midnight, the report said. "That's a significant spill," said Adrienne Esposito, executive director of the Citizens Campaign for the Environment, adding that the spill comes at the start of flounder season. "We heard there were boats fishing right there and they didn't know it spilled."

Nassau officials could not be reached for comment last night.

The plant on Nassau's South Shore dumped about 100 million gallons of untreated sewage into Hewlett Bay when it was knocked out of service for 44 hours during superstorm Sandy. In the 44 days it took to restore operations fully at the plant, another 2.2 billion gallons of partially treated sewage flowed through the plant.

Report Cites Large Release of Sewage From Hurricane Sandy

      

A view of Breezy Point, Queens, from November. Hurricane Sandy brought sewage-filled floodwaters to the neighborhood.  Robert Stolarik for The New York Times

nytimes.com - by Michael Schwirtz - April 30, 2013

Over 10 billion gallons of raw and partly treated sewage gushed into waterways and bubbled up onto streets and into homes as a result of Hurricane Sandy — enough to cover Central Park in a 41-foot-high pile of sludge, a nonprofit research group said in a report released on Tuesday.

The group, Climate Central, said about 94 percent of the sewage flowed into rivers, canals and bays in New York and New Jersey, the states hit hardest by the storm that came ashore six months ago. In New York City alone, 1.6 billion gallons spilled into area waterways.

(READ COMPLETE ARTICLE)

New Toilet Turns Human Waste Into Electricity and Fertilizer

June 26, 2012 — Scientists from Nanyang Technological University (NTU) have invented a new toilet system that will turn human waste into electricity and fertilisers and also reduce the amount of water needed for flushing by up to 90 per cent compared to current toilet systems in Singapore.

Dubbed the No-Mix Vacuum Toilet, it has two chambers that separate the liquid and solid wastes. Using vacuum suction technology, such as those used in aircraft lavatories, flushing liquids would now take only 0.2 litres of water while flushing solids require just one litre.

The existing conventional water closet uses about 4 to 6 litres of water per flush. If installed in a public restroom flushed 100 times a day, this next generation toilet system, will save about 160,000 litres in a year -- enough to fill a small pool 10 x 8 metres x 2m.

The NTU scientists are now looking to carry out trials by installing the toilet prototypes in two NTU restrooms. If all goes well, the world can expect to see and even sit on the new toilet in the next three years.

More remains of Sandy: Human waste continues to spill into New York Harbor more than two weeks after the storm

What a waste: More than three billion gallons of untreated or partially treated wastewater have poured into the New York Harbor since October 29

Image: What a waste: More than three billion gallons of untreated or partially treated wastewater have poured into the New York Harbor since October 29

submitted by Albert Gomez

gwob.org - November 23rd, 2012

What a mess.

Billions of gallons of human waste have poured into New York Harbor since Hurricane Sandy hit the region, NBC reports.

The waste is coming from the fifth largest sewage treatment plant in the nation, based in Newark, New Jersey.

(VIEW COMPLETE ARTICLE)

NYC revives Fresh Kills landfill for storm debris

http://stmedia.startribune.com/images/3sandy1118.jpg

http://www.startribune.com/nation/179820051.html?refer=y

NEW YORK - Amid the clanging of dump trucks, a crane with a clamshell scoop hoisted a pile of debris as big as a minivan and dropped it onto a waiting barge -- striking evidence that New York City has revived a place it just cannot seem to do without.

The Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island, where tons of debris were dumped after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, once again has been enlisted in the aftermath of a disaster, this time to serve as the staging area for the monumental cleanup job underway since superstorm Sandy hit. Again and again, that scoop plunges into a three-story hill of debris and lifts out pulverized drywall, floorboards, furniture, clothing, photo albums.

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