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May 9, 2006
The Honorable Denise Sheehan
Commissioner of Environmental Conservation
New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
625 Broadway
Albany, New York 12233
The Honorable Elliot Spitzer
New York Attorney General
The Capitol
Albany, NY 12224-0341
The Honorable David Soares
Albany County District Attorney
County Courthouse
Room 218
Albany, NY 12207
The Honorable Gerald D. Jennings
Albany City Hall
Eagle Street
Albany, New York 12207
Dear Commissioner Sheehan, Attorney General
Spitzer, District Attorney Soares and Mayor Jennings:
Save the Pine Bush asks that you stop the City
of Albany from any further destruction of the Pine Bush by
bulldozing or drilling test wells in land dedicated to the
Pine Bush Preserve.
In addition, we are writing to you to ask that
you investigate violations of the law on the part of the City
of Albany. On or about April 24 and 25, the City of Albany
bulldozed land that had been dedicated as forever wild in the
Pine Bush Preserve.
Save the Pine Bush volunteers have observed
first hand the destruction of the bulldozing of the fire breaks
and walking paths that was done by the City of Albany in the
Albany Pine Bush Preserve.
This land is still land dedicated to be forever
wild in the Albany Pine Bush Preserve. Bulldozing the land
is unacceptable.
Save the Pine Bush agrees with the information
in the attached Nature Conservancy letter, and asks that an
investigation be opened to address the questions raised by
TNC.
In addition, Save the Pine Bush asks that this
illegal bulldozing be investigated under Part 648, Public Use
of the Albany Pine Bush Preserve, which states:
“648.4 Natural Resource Management.
“(a) It is unlawful for any person to:
‘(1) knowingly introduce, collect, deface, remove, destroy
or otherwise injure in any manner whatsoever any plant, animal
or other living or non-living feature except as otherwise herein
authorized by the Commission or Department;”
Part 648
applies to the City of Albany. The only exception are outlined
in Part 648
“(b) Prohibitions contained in this Part do not apply to
Albany Pine Bush Preserve Commission or New York State Department
of Environmental Conservation employees and their designees
who are engaged in administrative activities that are consistent
with the goals and objectives of the Albany Pine Bush Preserve
Management Plan (see Section 648.10).”
The City of Albany is not the “Albany Pine Bush Preserve
Commission or the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation employee engaged in activities consistent with
the goals and objectives of the Albany Pine Bush Preserve Management
Plan.” The City violated the law.
In a letter dated May 5, 2006, Ruth E. Leistensnider,
attorney for the City of Albany, asserts on page 3 that “the work
took place along existing roads”. Save the Pine Bush
volunteers were at this location several times in the past
three months, and can attest to the fact that prior to the
bulldozing, these areas were fire breaks and foot paths,
not existing roads.
Ms. Leistensnider states that letters were sent
to DEC regarding the planned bulldozing, but received no response
from the department. Who was this letter sent to? Did that
person receive the letter? When proposing to bulldoze land
dedicated to the Preserve, the City should be required
to follow the SEQRA law, prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement, hold public hearings and accept public comment.
Sending one letter prior to bulldozing land that is in
the Preserve in no way meets the requirements of the law.
Also in the letter of May 5, 2006, Ms. Leistensnider
completely leaves out the fact that the City abandoned its
plans to build on the Fox Run Mobile Home Park primarily because
of a Save the Pine Bush lawsuit. Expanding the landfill onto
Fox Run would have violated the City’s current landfill
permit to do so. Save the Pine Bush sued the City of Albany
in a hybrid lawsuit on January 18, 2006 over this very issue.
On January 19, 2006, Mayor Gerald Jennings announced
at his state of the City address that he would withdraw the
City’s
application to put a landfill on this Fox Run that the City
was required to dedicate to the Preserve. Save the Pine Bush
would like to point out that the City is still in violation
of its P-4 landfill expansion permit because it still has not
dedicated the Fox Run Mobile Home Park to the Preserve. Save
the Pine Bush’s lawsuit over this issue is still pending
in State Supreme Court.
Do you intend to uphold the laws that protect
the Pine Bush Preserve from destruction? The State of New York,
City of Albany, and Towns of Colonie and Guilderland have
spent millions of tax-payer dollars to acquire land for
the Pine Bush Preserve as forever wild. The government
holds the public trust. Allowing the City of Albany to
bulldoze Pine Bush Preserve lands without following proper
legal procedure destroys that public trust. What good is
having a Preserve if it can be bulldozed at will by the
government? What good are any laws that protect Preserve
land if they can be violated by our very own government?
In the court case Save the Pine Bush v. Town
of Guilderland (August, 1998), the defendants were compelled
to move water lines which had been illegally placed inside
the Pine Bush Preserve boundary. The developers had to move
the water lines from one side of the road to the other so as
not to encroach upon the Preserve. This case had immediate
impact and demonstrates the importance the courts places on
the integrity of the Pine Bush Preserve.
The City is planning to drill test wells in
the area where it bulldozed. Test wells will undoubtedly damage
the Pine Bush Preserve further. We ask that you prohibit
the City from further destruction of the Pine Bush Preserve
and forbid the drilling of test wells.
For the future of all preserve lands in New
York State, the integrity of the Pine Bush Preserve must be
protected. We strongly believe that this action by the City
of Albany sets a dangerous precedent for all dedicated parkland
in the State. What does it say to the citizens of the State
that the government will prosecute people who mountain bike
on fire breaks in the Pine Bush (two men were prosecuted for
this recently in Albany City Court), but the City can bulldoze
the ecosystem with no consequences?
Lastly, Save the Pine Bush asks that the City
of Albany completely withdraw its proposal to take land from
the Preserve to construct a landfill expansion. Landfills do
not belong in sensitive ecosystems. The Common Council
dedicated this beautiful, delicate land as forever wild — and it should stay that
way.
Sincerely,
Lynne Jackson
Volunteer, Save the Pine Bush
cc: Albany Pine Bush Preserve Commission
The Nature Conservancy
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