« Bush Housing policies for poor assailed |
Main
| Alabama: New Bill Requires Industry to gauge pollution in minority areas »
Sunday
Mar202005
Sunday, March 20, 2005 at 12:47PM
A state environmental law passed in
2003 to help clean up polluted industrial sites known as brownfields
sets aside $15 million a year for the most heavily contaminated
neighborhoods in New York State. But not one dollar has yet been spent,
because Gov. George E. Pataki and the leaders of the State Legislature
have failed to sign a memorandum of understanding outlining how the
money should be divided up. The last two state budgets have included
$15 million each year for programs in these neighborhoods, and the
governor's new budget proposal calls for another $15 million. But
Republicans in the Senate took steps this week to eliminate the latest
appropriation until the $30 million backlog is spent. Because of the
impasse, residents of the polluted neighborhoods that applied for
grants say they have not be able to advance their plans to clean up old
junkyards, gas stations and other sites that are not polluted enough to
be put on the Superfund list of the worst toxic sites but cannot be
built on unless they are decontaminated. "The state gives the
impression that it supports community-based efforts to clean up these
areas, but it is undermining us by not making money available on time,"
said Elizabeth C. Yeampierre, executive director of the United Puerto
Rican Organization of Sunset Park, which is awaiting an $80,000
planning grant for brownfield sites on the Brooklyn waterfront near
Sunset Park and in surrounding areas. [more]