
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
16, No.15 |
July
17 - 30, 2003 |



Pataki Has 'til Tuesday to Decide on Plant
By JORDAN MOSS
Governor George Pataki must decide by midnight on July 22 whether or not to sign
legislation that would pave the way for New York City to build a $1.5 billion filtration
plant at Mosholu Golf Course in Van Cortlandt Park.
The legislation passed the Senate and narrowly passed the Assembly in the final moments
of the legislative session in mid-June.
In news reports, Pataki expressed some reservations about the project's impact on the
community. And there have been rumors that Pataki would like a say in divvying up $243
million in funding for Bronx parks that was promised by the city to the borough's
Assembly delegation. (His office did not return a call seeking comment.)
But park and community advocates are livid about the legislature passing the bill, which
does not include the $243 million figure, or any real explanation of what the project will
look like when it's done.
"The legislation says there is an MOU [memorandum of understanding] to be negotiated
between the city, [Assembly] Speaker [Sheldon] Silver, [Senate Majority Leader] Joe
Bruno, and [Council Speaker] Gifford Miller about the amount of money and the
projects," said Elizabeth Cooke, president of the Friends of Van Cortlandt Park
(FVCP). "The only legal documentation we have is the legislation and it doesn't back up any of
these promises."
Members of FVCP and other park and community groups were scheduled to meet with a
Pataki staffer on Wednesday in Albany. And FVCP is devising a legal strategy to fight
the project should Pataki sign the legislation into law. Opponents of the plant believe the
city has not subjected its plan to the proper land use reviews. FVCP and a group of
Norwood residents successfully sued the city two and a half years ago the first time the
city tried to build in the park. The state's Court of Appeals ruled that the city could not go
forward without the approval of the state legislature. The golf course site was believed to
be dead because the Assembly usually defers to the member whose district the project is
in, which in this case is Jeff Dinowitz, an ardent opponent of the city's plans. But with
the city sweetening the deal with parks money, every Democratic Assembly member in
the borough went against Dinowitz.
Charles Sturcken, a spokesman for the city's Department of Environ-mental Protection,
said he could not yet comment on the threatened legal action.
"I can't speculate on any litigation," Sturcken said. "They [the FVCP] had said that [they
were going to sue] publicly and we'll have to meet the challenge of that based on the suit
they file."
If Pataki does not act by Tuesday, the bill automatically becomes law.
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