Do
you want to drink Hudson River water?
George Potanovic
Jr.
United Water New York's proposal to
build a reverse osmosis desalinization and filtration plant to
supply Rockland County with drinking water from the Hudson River
leaves many with a bad taste in their mouths and concerns about the
quality of our drinking water, how the plant will affect the
ecosystem of the river, the increased development it will bring on
land - and at what cost?
On Monday, the Haverstraw Town
Board will consider United Water's request to build a "pilot"
testing building, the first stage for construction for a Hudson
River Desalination-Filtration Plant. Haverstraw is anxious to push
the plan ahead. However, we need to open our eyes and fully
understand the impact of the United Water proposal.
Several serious environmental and
economic concerns remain unanswered, including:
- Does drinking Hudson River water
pose risks to human health?
Can United Water remove all legacy
pollutants from Hudson River water, including strontium 90, cesium,
tritium and radioactive nuclides that leak from Indian Point, PCBs,
and more? While we have been warned for years that it is unhealthy
to eat many of the fish in the Hudson River, suddenly, United Water
wants to assure us that drinking the filtered water from the Hudson
River will be safe. How do we know this is true? What additional
negative impacts will water intake and discharge have on fish life
in our Hudson River?
- Should we pay significant rate
increases, tied to skyrocketing energy prices?
Desalination is extremely energy
intensive and comes with a high price tag for operational costs.
United Water has been vague about the exact increase, which could be
200-300 percent, and significantly higher water rates in Rockland
will be forever pegged to rapidly rising energy costs. While
everyone tries to reduce their carbon footprint of energy use,
United Water's plan will increase greenhouse gas emissions with
increased energy use and expense for an expanded water resource that
Rockland may not need.
- Will "unlimited" water lead to
"unlimited" new development at ratepayer expense?
An overexpanded water resource
feeds United Water's plan to provide much greater capacity for
building in Rockland with taxpayers subsidizing more over
development throughout Rockland. United Water's plan will become a
financial burden with taxpayers assuming costs to expand our local
roads, drainage infrastructure, sewerage capacity, municipal
services and schools.
- Should Rockland residents pay
higher rates and hidden costs as water is shipped to New Jersey?
Is the timing of the recent $1.8
million bond for the Joint Regional Sewer System in Haverstraw
merely a coincidence? Are improvements to waste capacity and
treatment part of a bigger plan to clean expected toxic waste
residues for river water filtration and in anticipation of new
population growth? If so, this could constitute illegal segmentation
of the State Environmental Quality Review Act review. United Water
expects Rockland residents to drink Hudson River water and pay
higher rates for desalination-filtration, while our water is being
shipped to Bergen County.
- Why has United Water abandoned
Ambrey Pond Reservoir in Stony Point?
Ambrey Pond Reservoir, on the books
since the 1980s, would be both a welcomed tax ratable in Stony Point
and a much cleaner, less expensive and more sustainable water source
alternative for the needs of Rockland when we consider the
tremendous operating costs for a desalination-filtration plant that
will forever be driven by energy costs.
- Aren't limits to growth and water
conservation the real alternatives needed?
Rockland needs regional water
planning with sensible limits to growth, permitting growth only to
the limit of our resources, along with policies that require water
conservation.
Twenty years ago, people would have
laughed if we told them that little bottles of water would be
selling for $1.50 and gasoline for $5 per gallon. Drinking water is
a vital resource that is in critical supply as it's being privatized
around the world by international corporate "cartels" like Suez,
United Water's parent company. United Water has hired a public
relations firm to spin a story in the local press that makes its
plan appear as the best and only alternative. However, we need to
take a harder look and answer the critical question of whether it
makes sense for Rockland County residents, before it is allowed to
proceed.
The Rockland Coalition for
Sustainable Water has formed to include the Rockland County
Conservation Association, Rockland Sierra Club, Nanuet Civic
Association, Spring Valley Concerned Citizens Coalition, Preserve
Ramapo, Ramapo River Committee, Ramapo River Watershed
Intermunicipal Council, Stony Point Action Committee for the
Environment and more.
We urge you to attend Monday's
public hearing and make your voices heard.
The writer is president of the
Stony Point Action Committee for the Environment, SPACE.
|