PARCnassau

Park Advocacy & Recreation Council of Nassau. A coalition of 150 park advocacy and/or user groups with a combined membership of over 250,000 county residents.

Friday, June 27, 2014

Court stops the installation of Air Stripper in Christopher Morley Park, Roslyn


Temporary Injunction Issued to Protect Christopher Morley Forest;Judge's Order Overturns Nassau Ordinance Used to Block Rally There

On June 25, 2014. After going to Nassau Supreme Court on an emergency basis Tuesday,  plaintiffs from the Roslyn area obtained a Temporary Restraining Order to protect the 33-acre recreational forest at Christopher Morley Park  from any work to install an "air-stripper" for the Roslyn Water District.

The order to preserve the "status quo" in the forest was granted after an emergency hearing due to the imminent expiration of a Statute of Limitations on one decision the plaintiffs were challenging, from February. The emergency also dealt with the imminent destruction of dozens of trees in the forest.

The order is due to remain in effect until the next court hearing which is currently scheduled before assigned Justice James P. McCormack, next Wednesday July 2, 2014. Justice F. Dana Winslow signed the present TRO as a Special Term judge for the day.

The three agencies challenged are Nassau County, which owns and runs Christopher Morley Park, the Town of North Hempstead, and the Roslyn Water District. The Water District is a Special Improvement District of the Town, which appropriates money for its capital budget, such as the air-stripper project.

Meanwhile, a Nassau County ordinance used to prevent protests and demonstrations at County parks was overturned by a State Supreme Court judge in an order dated June 13, after a challenge by environmental activist Richard Brummel, who was initially denied a permit to protest the plans for Christopher Morley Park.

The Nassau County Legislature may act on the Roslyn Water District project at its next meeting Monday, June 30 at 1 PM. The State Legislature has approved the loss of parkland, and the law is awaiting Governor Cuomo's signature.  

Planet-In-Peril.org and two residents of Roslyn Estates who live very close to the Christopher Morley forest challenged various official actions up to June 22, 2014 as being in gross violation of numerous provisions of NY state environmental protection law.

The Park Advocacy & Recreation Council of Nassau (PARCnassau), The Sierra Club LI Group and the Green Party of Nassau County have also opposed the use of the Christopher Morley Park  for the air-stripper.

The Water District claims the facility is perfectly safe for neighbors, pointing to dozens of such facilities in residential neighborhoods across Long Island, and had planned to locate it on its own property before a chorus of opponents pushed them to try to locate it in the Park.

The air-stripper project in Roslyn would involve cutting a 320-foot road through a vibrant forest and walking trail, leading to a half-acre compound with a 30-foot tall building that would emit a constant hum, as well as putting toxic chemicals into the atmosphere 24/6. 

The proposed site of the facility is only 150 feet from a camping area used by Boy Scouts for overnight camping, and the project would involve the destruction of about 50 healthy, towering trees including Tulip-trees and Oak trees.

Despite many serious environmental impacts such as those, the project was essentially 'waved through' by local officials and not subject to any substantial, complete environmental review by any of the government agencies, in violation of the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA), the lawsuit charges.

Information and legal papers on the Christopher Morley lawsuit are posted online at Planet-in-Peril.org, under "Environmental Action Update June 24, 2014".

In an earlier action over the protest permits, environmental activists, who are also part of the second action, sued the County to hold some rallies in Christopher Morley Park to draw attention to the water project, which many park users are not aware of.

When the County denied the permits, the courts were asked to force the permits. Justice Anthony Parga refused to grant an injunction, but the County relented anyway and issued several permits.

Later after an argument outlined that the County was violating freedom of speech and freedom of assembly guarantees under the state and federal constitutions. Justice Roy S. Mahon approved the relief he sought because the order was "unopposed."

After Nassau issued permits, rallies were held at Christopher Morley Park on four days in early June, two of which featured speakers from the Sierra Club LI Group and the Green Party of Nassau County, as well as Bruce Piel from the Park and Recreation Council of Nassau (PARCNassau).

A petition with about 300 signatures of Park users opposing the project was gathered in the Park over three weekends. A petition with 150 signatures was submitted to the County Legislature before they approved the alienation Home Rule Message on June 2. The voice-vote was unanimous.



Thursday, June 12, 2014

Stop Water Stripper being built in Christopher Morely Park


Statement in Opposition to the proposal to locate a "Water Stripper" in Nassau County's Christopher Morley Park, Roslyn, NY

June 11, 2014
The Park Advocacy & Recreation Council of Nassau (PARCnassau) opposes the placement of a "water stripper" in Christopher Morley Park by the Roslyn Water District and urges the County Administration, County Legislators, County Park Officials and NYS Legislators to stop this overt theft of public parkland to address a trace contaminant found in a well outside the park

Over the last 3 county administrations, the county park system, has been decimated. by wholesale give-aways of parkland by leasing and permitting private use and occupancy for up to 20 years by various organizations looking to profit at the taxpayers' expense. Private companies do not pay real estate taxes on public lands.

The 600 acres of county parkland including 18 parks, preserves and museums have been systematically looted by the very public officials charged with the protection and preservation of these facilities.

Enough is enough!

The following county parklands have been gifted, leased and/or privatized over the past several years. It  is time to stop!

Facility                                                  Beneficiary                                            Acreage

Roosevelt Preserve                                 Coleman Camp                                      4 acres
Tanglewood Preserve                              Centre for Science & Learning                 11 acres
Hempstead Harbor Park                         Huntington Coach Co (Bus Storage         290 acres
Manhasset Valley Park                          TONH   (Inter government favor)               230 acres
Whitney Pond Park                                TONH               "                                   24 acres
Herricks Park                                        TONH              "                                                2.4 acres
Albertson Memorial Park                        TONH              "                                                2 acres
Sagamore Ballfield                                 TONH             "                                     1 acre
Roslyn Road Park                                  TONH             "                                     1 Acre
Plandome Park                                      TONH             "                                     1 acre
Cantiague Park                                      Westbury Jeep  (auto storage)                2.5 acres
Christopher Morley Park                         C. Morley Tennis LLC (privatize)              5 acres
Christopher Morely Park                         Ice Rink (Privatize)                                 1 acre
Christopher Morely Park                         Roslyn Water District                             2 acres
Eisenhower Park                                    Private Pool(Dave Ferris                          2 acres
Eisenhower Park                                    Private Tennis Facility                            6 acres
Bay Park                                               Molloy College                                       20 acres
Mitchell Field                                         Molloy College                                       10 acres
Mitchell Field                                         Pro Soccer                                            10 acres
Old Bethpage Planting Fields                  US Armor Museum                                10 acres
Sterling Woods                                      TOB      (Forest into ball fields)                15 acre
Millburn Park                                         Coral House                                          2 acres
                                                                                                                        649.9( acres

Bruce Piel
Chairman
Park Advocacy & Recreation Council of Nassau
516 783-8378