Honorable Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor of New York State
The Capitol
Albany, NY 12224
Dear Governor Cuomo:
We, the undersigned, write to request that you take urgent action to eliminate water quality impairments which have caused cyanobacteria Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) in Skaneateles Lake, Owasco Lake, Cayuga Lake, Seneca Lake, Hemlock Lake, Canadice Lake and dozens of other New York waterbodies.
See: Photos of Harmful Algal Blooms on Owasco and Cayuga Lake 2017
See: Map of Reported Harmful Algal Blooms in New York State 2017
This unprecedented public health threat warrants your utmost attention because cyanobacteria HABs have released neurotoxins into waterbodies which supply drinking water to more than 300,000 residents of Skaneateles, Auburn, Syracuse, Rochester, Ithaca and many other communities.
New York's Long-Standing Failure to Adopt Comprehensive Clean Up Programs for Impaired Waters Listed in the National 303(d) Registry
Your administration's long-standing failure to clean up impaired waters imperils critical water supply sources, regional economic hubs, irreplaceable natural resources and local property values. We respectfully request that your administration resolve this problem as a top priority without further delay.
New York has a total of 219 waterbodies included in the National 303(d) Registry of Impaired Waters which require comprehensive Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) clean up programs. More than half of those waters are impaired by excessive phosphorus and nitrogen which can cause cyanobacteria HABs.
The pace of your administration's clean up efforts is woefully inadequate. More than half of the 219 impaired waters were listed prior to 2004 and still do not have TMDLs. No TMDLs have been adopted for 14 impaired waters listed in 1998. Only 15 impaired waters are scheduled for TMDL clean ups through 2022. New York has no plans to adopt TMDLs for more than 200 impaired waters.
See: New York State 2016 Section 303(d) List of Impaired Waters Requiring a TMDL/Other Strategy
Given New York's extensive cyanobacteria HAB problems, we request that you drastically accelerate the clean up of National 303(d) Registry nutrient impairments which threaten drinking water sources, including six reservoirs.
We request that your administration adopt a TMDL within two years for each waterbody in the 303(d) Registry which experienced a cyanobacteria HAB which threatened drinking water. A TMDL should be adopted within five years for each new impaired waterbody added to the National 303(d) Registry.
The Cautionary Tale of Cayuga Lake
Cayuga Lake exemplifies the perils of your administration's water pollution clean up delays. The southern lake was included in the National 303(d) Registry in 2002 when a TMDL was required as a "high priority" to address "phosphorus and silt/sediment" impairments. To this day, no TMDL has ever been proposed to clean up the lake's massive algal blooms and aquatic weed infestations.
In August 2017, a cyanobacteria HAB prohibited public bathing at Taughannock State Park and threatened drinking water for thousands of residents. Until then, Cayuga Lake had never experienced a major cyanobacteria HAB.
New York State exacerbated Cayuga Lake's pollution problems by improperly granting a 1998 permit which allowed Cornell's Lake Source Cooling facility to discharge phosphorus into the area of the lake with the worst water quality impairments. The Clean Water Act specifically prohibits issuing a discharge permit for any project that through its construction or operation will cause or contribute to water quality violations.
In 1999, the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed a landmark clean up plan to safeguard Cayuga Lake from Lake Source Cooling's phosphorus discharges after concerns gained national attention in The New York Times, but New York and Cornell opposed EPA's plan and it was never adopted.
See: Aid to Environment, Or Threat to Lake?; Cornell Pursues Pumping Plan, But Critics Fear Fouled Water
According to Cornell's own 2008 Before-After-Control-Impact Study, chlorophyll α, a measure of biological activity, increased by nearly 50% after Lake Source Cooling began operation. As a result, algae and weed growth greatly increased.
Another Cornell study documented in 2016 that Lake Source Cooling contributes about five percent of all the phosphorus discharged onto the shallow "shelf" in Southern Cayuga Lake where water quality exceeds state standards.
After 19 years of polluting Cayuga Lake, the Lake Source Cooling discharge must be moved "off the shelf" so that phosphorus can be returned to the lake's depths without causing HABs. This is precisely what EPA proposed in 1999.
Conclusion
New York is facing a cyanobacteria HAB drinking water threat of huge proportions. Skaneateles and Auburn, NY have both come within less than one tenth of a part per billion of not being able to fulfill EPA's 10-day health advisory that limits cyanobacteria microcystins in drinking water to 0.3 micrograms/liter for children under six years of age. Another potent neurotoxin called homo-anatoxin was just identified in Owasco Lake.
In order to eliminate all future HAB cyanobacteria hazards, we respectfully request that you implement our proposed plan of action without delay. We also ask that you adopt Maximum Contaminant Levels for cyanobacteria toxins in drinking water and upgrade treatment plants to remove these contaminants in order to safeguard public health.
We trust that you will find it self-explanatory, but please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions or suggestions.
Very best regards,
Theresa Mirando
826 Maple Ave.
Elmira, NY |
N Mistry
Ithaca, NY |
Frank Zgola
1140 Ellis Hollow Rd
Ithaca, NY |
Denise Dewandel
Honeoye lake
6001 canadice hill road
Springwater , New York |
Donna Stiner
Honeoye Valley Association
33 Ranch Road
Honeoye, NY |
Karen Smith
Ms.
3995 County Road 2
Burdett, NY |
Paul Rubin
Hydrogeologist
414 E. Kerley Corners Rd.
Tivoli, NY |
david hirsch
327 tupper rd
spencer, ny |
Susan Harris
124 High Street
Hastings On Hudson, NY |
Kristina Fedorov
6920 State Hwy.7
Maryland, NY |
Melissa Kolberg
8083 Falls Rd
Trumansburg, NY |
Wendy Jones
435 N. Aurora St.
Ithaca, NY |
Dana Bialecki
2290 CrittendenRd
Alden, New York |
Elaine Bialecki
5251 William Street
Lancaster , New York |
Lindsey Bialecki
7004 Sherwood Lane
Almond, NY |
Elizabeth Jones
28 Eckerson Ave.
Akron, NY |
julie Swift
County Road 36
Honeoye, New York |
Daniel Hoffman
415 Elm Street
Ithaca, NY |
Pat Dolson
422 Taylor Place
Ithaca, NY |
Lucinda Ramberg
1010 E. State St.
Ithaca, NY |
Jeffrey Ellis
1952 Danby Rd
Ithaca, NY |
River Hathaway
Po Box 101
Ithaca, NY |
Charlotte Griggs
180 Walding Lane
W. Danby, NY |
Lindsey Fariss |
Grace Palazzolo
109 Williams St
Groton, NY |
Eric Larson
Reverend
GreenStar
415 Elm Street
Ithaca, NY |
Joe Damiano
3341 Kruns Corners Rd
Ithaca, NY |
Arthur Fry
8 White Hawk Lane
Ithaca, New York |
Miriam Epstein
107 S Plain St
Ithaca, NY |
emme edmunds
118 east york st
ithaca, NY |
Peggy Haine
5785 Rumsey Road
Trumansburg, NY, 14886 |
Anthony Del Plato
Water Commissioner
Village of Interlaken Trustee
3509 West Ave
Interlaken, NY |
judith barker
309 washington street
ithaca, NY |
Robert Jacobson
na
342 Dean St.
Brooklyn, New York |
FRANCIS LALUNA
4217 Oakhurst Circle East
Sarasota, FL |
Kara Emmons
30 East Mayer Drive
Suffern, New York |
Kirk Emmons
5 Sydney Hill Road
Saratoga Sprgs, New York |
Robert Aceto
336 Forest Home Drive
Ithaca, NY |
Judith Johnson
po box 624
croton on hudson, NY |
Gerrit Crouse
38 4th Avenue
Nyack, NY |
joe cummins
po box 825
ithaca, NY |
E. Richard Stanley
Professor
Albert Einstein College of Medicine |
Bruce Dunn
188 bell hill rd
morris, NY |
Nathan Richardson
COO
Rep Studio
519 Willow Ave
Ithaca, NY |
Joyce Leslie
105 Maplewood Rd
Ithaca, NY |
Anne ProudFire
658 Seward St.
Rochester, NY |
Katherine Hawkins
PO Box 201
Summit, New York |
Claudia Carr-Levy
Putnam Valley Land Trust
478 West Broadway, 2S
New York, NY |
Teresa Michel
1849 Honoco Rd., PO Box 225
Aurora, NY 13026 |
Tracy Perkins
83 Seawatch Trail
Webster, NY |