
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
20, No.
7 |
April 5 -
18, 2007 |



Residents Press City
On Reservoir Promises
By KATHRYN MOLINARO
More than 30 people gathered in the rain two weeks ago to tell
the Parks Department and the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
how they think $4.5 million the city has set aside for Jerome Park Reservoir
can best be used.
The money, originally allocated for a path of some kind around the
reservoir, is part of the parcel of $200 million in park projects that Bronx
politicians received in return for supporting the construction of the
filtration plant in Van Cortlandt Park.
The debate over whether the city would build the recreational path along the
water’s edge or outside the security fence has gone on for years, but
Richard Friedman, DEP special counsel, did his best to put an end to the
argument.
“If you’re only at this scoping meeting to say you want the track inside the
fence, then we can end this right now,” Friedman said.
But some of the reservoir’s neighbors aren’t giving up on the recreational
path they have planned and designed since 1994. Still, Anne Marie Garti,
president of the Jerome Park Conservancy, knows she will have to be patient.
“Don’t focus so much on the running track until it can go where it belongs,”
Garti said after the meeting on March 23. “The path is going to go inside
the fence, it’s just a matter of when.”
Discussion shifted to ways the $4.5 million could make the area outside of
the 8-foot security fence more park-like without the addition of a
recreational path. A new path would not circle the entire reservoir fence
because of the Lehman College parking lot on Goulden Avenue and because the
already existing sidewalk along Reservoir Avenue leaves no room between the
street, the historic pin oaks and the fence to create another path.
Many people at the meeting wanted flowers and other decorative landscaping,
new lighting, more benches and someone to maintain the new additions.
The meeting also doubled as a grievance session. Neighbors took turns
complaining of the DEP’s neglect of the land around the reservoir.
Complaints included snow-covered sidewalks during the winter, graffiti on
the low stone wall along Reservoir and Sedgwick avenues, and trash,
including a pig’s head in a bag a few weeks ago.
“Nobody is taking care of things,” Karen Argenti, a longtime reservoir
advocate, said.
Margaret Groarke (disclosure: Groarke is married to Norwood News editor
Jordan Moss) compared the maintenance of Fort Independence Park, which is
cared for by the Parks Department, with the upkeep of the land in the DEP’s
jurisdiction.
“You want to plan something that’s sustainable,” Groarke said. “The DEP is
not in the business of maintaining parkland.”
When Groarke and others suggested the Parks Department acquire the reservoir
land at least for cleaning responsibilities, Hector Aponte, the Parks
Department’s Bronx commissioner, laughed and said that would require more
funding for his agency.
Residents are particularly exasperated with the DEP’s failure to make good
on its promise to demolish a filtration demonstration plant in order to
build an urban ecology lab at the reservoir, a project championed by the
Conservancy.
According to an April 29, 2004 article in The Riverdale Press, the DEP
commissioner at the time, Christopher Ward, said the demonstration plant,
built more than 20 years ago, would be demolished within 12 to 18 months to
make room for an urban ecology lab, a project championed by the Jerome Park
Conservancy.
Almost 36 months later, the demonstration plant still stands, and plans for
the ecology lab have reached a standstill. Friedman told the group at the
scoping meeting that the DEP would begin demolition on the demonstration
water treatment plant on Goulden Avenue this summer, completing the task in
the first half of 2008.
A 1997 New York Times article said the Parks Department and the DEP expected
to finish planning the ecology lab, which would be used by area schools, in
the next month.
In May 2000, the Norwood News reported that the Jerome Park Conservancy’s
plans for the ecology lab were approved and the lab would be completed in
the spring of 2001.
A 2004 Riverdale Press article reported that Ward “promised” an urban
ecology lab would be built on the site of the demonstration plant.
Resident Leonard Stoller isn’t expecting swift action from the DEP.
“They’ve made a lot of promises,” Stoller said. “I don’t trust them.”
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