Citing “Lifetime Perfect” Environmental Scorecard, NY League of Conservation Voters Endorses Assemblyman Otis
(PHOTO: A socially distanced press conference just does not pack the same visual punch. Yes, that is a tape measure on the ground.)
At a “socially distant” press conference on the Rye Playland boardwalk Wednesday afternoon, State Assemblyman Steve Otis picked-up an endorsement from the New York League of Conservation Voters.
Julie Tighe, President of the NYLCV, appeared with Otis and said in part “Assemblyman Steve Otis is committed to protecting our environment and public health. Not only does he have a lifetime perfect score of 100% on our State Environmental Scorecard, he also helped create the Water Infrastructure Improvement Act to make sure that localities have the funding they need to provide access to safe and clean water to New Yorkers every day.”
Otis is facing the chair of the Rye City Democratic Committee Meg Cameron in the June 23rd Democratic primary race.
By the way, everyone is eligible to receive an absentee ballot.
The full news release from the campaign follows:
“New York League of Conservation Voters Endorses Assemblyman Steve Otis
NYLCV President Julie Tighe Joins Otis at a Socially Distant Press Event at Rye Playland Boardwalk
Rye, N.Y. — Julie Tighe, President of the New York League of Conservation Voters joined Assemblyman Steve Otis (D–WFP–IND – Rye) at Rye Playland’s Boardwalk to announce the League’s endorsement of Assemblyman Otis in his re-election effort. The event was scheduled as a “Socially Distant Press Conference” in recognition of the need for everyone to practice safe distancing during the current Covid-19 health crisis.
Julie Tighe said, “Assemblyman Steve Otis is committed to protecting our environment and public health. Not only does he have a lifetime perfect score of 100% on our State Environmental Scorecard, he also helped create the Water Infrastructure Improvement Act to make sure that localities have the funding they need to provide access to safe and clean water to New Yorkers every day. Clean water is one of NYLCV’s top priorities and that’s why we are proud to stand with Assemblyman Otis in his reelection. We urge voters in Assembly District 91 to cast their ballot for him on Election Day.”
Assemblyman Otis, in accepting the League’s endorsement noted his long partnership with the group, “I have worked with the NYLCV for decades. They are a key part of the coalition of groups that advocate on environmental issues in New York State and a key player in the success we have had in leadership on important issues across the country. I really appreciate the League’s support and Julie Tighe joining us in Westchester today.”
Assemblyman Otis brings a long history of environmental leadership in Westchester and New York State. His most notable recent success centers on the passage New York’s clean water grant program, the Water Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2015. Started as a plan to award $200 million over three years, the WIIA program has grown dramatically and is the largest part of Governor Cuomo’s $5 billion comprehensive clean water program announced in 2017 and 2019. WIIA is administered by the NYS Environmental Facilities Corporation in coordination with the Department of Environmental Conservation and Department of Health.
In the first five years of the WIIA program, almost $1.2 billion in state grants have been awarded statewide to local governments to help pay for almost 700 needed clean water infrastructure projects. The grants have saved local governments over $2.5 billion in reduced property taxes and created 67,000 new jobs. Westchester projects have been awarded $45.5 in grants including every Westchester coastal community on Long Island Sound.
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Environmental Bio:
Assemblyman Steve Otis has played a leadership role on environmental issues for decades through a variety of positions going back to the 1980’s.
The Assemblyman helped create the Water Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2015, New York’s primary clean water infrastructure grant program. WIIA has grown from a plan to spend $200 million over three years, when it was enacted in 2015, to $416 million in grants awarded by the state in 2019, eclipsing the $300 million NYS Environmental Protection Fund appropriation for the first time. The WIIA program is the largest portion of Governor Cuomo’s 2017 and 2019 $5 billion comprehensive array of clean water programs. Since 2015 WIIA grants have totaled almost $1.2 billion in direct assistance to local governments. With the strong support of the Governor, the Legislature and a coalition of environmental, local government, labor and construction industry groups, the growth in the program has been steady: 2015-$75 million, 2016-$175m, 2017-$255m, 2018-$270m and 2019-$416m. It is especially significant that this environmental spending occurs outside of and in addition to EPF funding.
Assemblyman Otis is involved in a wide variety of environmental and conservation issues in the Assembly. He serves on the Assembly Environmental Conservation Committee, Assembly Climate Change Work Group, as well as the committee with jurisdiction over state parks. He also has served as Chair of the Legislative Commission on Solid Waste Management. The Assemblyman is a member of the Assembly Committee on Corporations, Commissions and Authorities, which works on legislation relating to the PSC, MTA and other transportation authorities.
Awards:
• 2016 Audubon New York’s William Hoyt Environmental Excellence Award.
• 2018 Nelson A. Rockefeller Award from the New York Water Environment Association.
As Mayor of the City of Rye (1998-2009) Otis implemented numerous environmental projects and initiatives, including four open space acquisitions, wetland protection, park improvements and other policies that enhance the environment.
As Counsel and Chief of Staff to State Senator Suzi Oppenheimer for over twenty-five years, he worked on numerous statewide and local environmental issues.
Assemblyman Otis is a past Chair of the City of Rye Conservation Commission and has been a member of the Board of Directors of the NYS Association of Conservation Commissions for over twenty-five years. Other past environmental panels and activities include: Westchester County Flood Action Task Force, Vice Chair of the Long Island Sound Watershed Intermunicipal Council, Vice Chair of the Westchester County Environmental Management Council, and Co-Chair of the City of Rye’s Project Impact FEMA program. He has also served on the Stewardship Committee of AudubonNY. Otis helped write the City of Rye’s local wetlands law and wireless equipment siting law. He began his local service on the City of Rye’s Recycling Committee and the Rye Conservation Committee in the late 1980’s.”
Hidden Health Dangers Flourish on New York’s Floating Outhouse
October 22, 2017 – National
When most think of the Long Island Sound, they picture a paradisal cut-out of communities between the eastern shores of Bronx County, New York City, and southern Westchester County. But in one of America’s wealthiest small cities, hidden health dangers breed and flourish in man-made rainwater basins and un-permitted sewage pits.
Hen Island is located less than 500 feet off the shores of Rye and serves as the not-so isolated location of summer, primitive-living cottages. Residents do not rely on modern plumbing, instead collecting and storing untreated rainwater for domestic use. Human waste for years has been dumped in sewage pits, which are located only feet away from the shoreline of the pristine Long Island Sound.
In Milton Harbor, the island is just off the mouths of Mamaroneck and Rye harbors. It is owned and operated by Kuder Island Colony Inc., but regulated by the City of Rye and Westchester County. The 34 primitive cottages on the island have enjoyed exemption from federal, state and local sanitation regulations requiring residents to use potable municipal water sources–which consequently, are already available to the island–or approved water wells.
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In 2008, the county removed lead investigator Ron Gatto without explanation and replaced him with Lenny Meyerson, who claimed to have inspected the island at the time and found no violations.
Worth noting, Mr. Gatto’s initial inspection found systems were installed with PVC pipe, a clear indication that the “grandfathered” explanation doesn’t hold water. While the original patent dates back to 1913, PVC/CPVC plastic piping for municipal plumbing wasn’t introduced until the 1970s, roughly two decades after the systems were allegedly installed at Hen Island.
The city council has repeatedly heard testimony from residents and experts, including Dr. Carolyn Lederman-Barotz, a physician and surgeon specializing in pediatric ophthalmology. She pled with the city council to “recognize the threat to the health and safety to the children of Rye caused by the mosquito infestation we have on Hen Island.”
More Here –
https://www.peoplespunditdaily.com/news/us/2017/10/22/new-yorks-floating-outhouse/
One of the lessons we have learned during this pandemic:
“who you elect to public office can sometimes mean the difference between life and death.”
Steve Otis has failed us for years!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VT2FHXxz8xg
On Memorial Day 2020 let us not forget WWII veteran Robert W. Schubert and the way he was acutely mistreated in the last years of his life by two successive Rye City administrations. Steve Otis was the primary problem! Remember this video on election day!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViGEEwU2fb8&fbclid=IwAR0a2NfZ7Qf-l8W-m2QHpqtXerhTvUPxyvNWI0H5rNd1FevwGUhhou6Ycqw