Long Island Sound at risk

Whether we’re fishing off Montauk or swimming at Rye Beach, Long Island Sound is a huge part of what we love about New York.  Yet the Sound’s waters face serious pollution — from sewage overflows, development, unrestricted pollution and more. Environment New York is working to rein in the pollution, and restore Long Island Sound to health.

Billions of gallons of sewage pollute the Sound

Billions of gallons of untreated sewage flow into Long Island Sound each year. The consequences are clear.

High pollution levels have led to hundreds of beach closings or warnings in New York each year. Dead zones spread across the Sound each summer, growing up to seven times the size of Manhattan.

Clean Water Act loopholes leave half of our streams unprotected

Over the past decade, polluters and irresponsible developers have used the courts to strip Clean Water Act protections from small streams and wetlands.

More than half of New York’s streams and hundreds of acres of wetlands are vulnerable to pollution and development as a result. Polluters can dump garbage into streams, developers can pave over wetlands to build strip malls, and the cops on the environmental beat can’t do a thing about it. And it’s not just small streams and wetlands that will suffer — these waterways are the same ones that feed the Sound and help to keep it clean.

The EPA can protect the Sound — but Congress threatens to stand in the way

The Environmental Protection Agency is moving to update clean water standards to reduce pollution in Long Island Sound, but polluters and their allies in Congress are trying to block them. We need to show overwhelming public support for tough clean water standards to protect the Sound and all of our waterways.

This spring, we and our allies across the country submitted more than 170,000 petitions to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, urging her to restore protections to all of our waters and cut sewage pollution. In April, she announced a plan to do just that.

But polluters’ allies in Congress won’t give up — and now they’re threatening to stop the EPA from doing its job. At the same time, powerful corporate interests are preparing for battle: ExxonMobil threatened “legal warfare” if the EPA moves forward with its plan to restore Clean Water Act protections.

Our plan to defend Long Island Sound

We refuse to let polluters and their allies in Congress open our precious waterways to more dumping and development. We’re bringing together New Yorkers from all walks of life to protect the Sound. From anglers to sailing enthusiasts, clergy to scientists, local officials to ordinary families, we all have a stake in keeping our water clean.

But if we’re going to push past ExxonMobil and other powerful polluters, we’re going to need everyone who cares about the Sound to get involved. Join our campaign by sending the EPA a message today.


Clean Water Updates

News Release | Environment New York

Groups Representing Millions of Americans Say No to Fracking

Amid reports that a decision on fracking in New York is imminent, national environmental organizations – collectively representing millions of members across the country – sent a letter to Governor Cuomo today urging him to heed concerns raised by scores of local and statewide groups over dirty drilling. Those state groups in June called Governor Cuomo’s plan to allow fracking in five upstate counties inconsistent with his pledge to protect public health and the environment.

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Coalition Pushes Cuomo, Others, on Greenhouse-Gas Cap

A coalition of environmentalists, renewable energy advocates, elected officials and national groups released a letter today that was delivered to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, calling on him to back changes to a regional cap-and-trade program for greenhouse-gas emissions.

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Calls to Strengthen Regional Emissions Coalition

More than 50 New York organizations and individuals delivered a letter to Governor Cuomo this week calling on him to strengthen the multi-state coalition that reduces greenhouse gas emissions.

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News Release | Environment New York

Businesses, Consumer, Energy & Environment Groups, & Elected Officials Call on Gov Cuomo to Build on Regional Climate Effort’s Success

Fifty-seven New York-based groups and elected officials yesterday delivered a letter to Governor Andrew Cuomo calling on him to strengthen the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (nicknamed “RGGI”), the precedent-setting multi-state effort to reduce climate pollution from power plants. The signatories, which represent the business, consumer, energy, environment and health communities, were joined by more than 250 regional, national and other state groups in the RGGI region signaling their support for the nation’s first enforceable effort to cut the pollution that is changing our climate. With record high temperatures and droughts plaguing much of the nation, the impacts of climate change are becoming more prevalent. It is clear that we have no time to waste; we must strengthen RGGI now.

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Extreme weather linked to climate change

Environment New York's Eric Whalen joins the Richard French Live Show to talk about the link between recent extreme weather events and global warming.

Watch the interview here.

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