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Low Tide 1:19amHigh Tide 6:59amLow Tide 1:20pmHigh Tide 7:31pm*
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For a map of vessels navigating the NY/NJ waterways at this moment, check marinetraffic.com.

Tide times above are for the waters off Tarrytown on June 14, 2012. For your waterfront's daily tides,
go to saltwatertides.com.

For information about environmental conditions (currents, water temperature, salinity, wave height, etc.) of the New York Harbor area, check the Urban Ocean Observatory at Stevens Institute's Center for Maritime Systems

TAKE ACTION
Is there a plan in public review
that you should know about?
An important meeting you might want to attend? A waterfront project needing your help?
TAKE ACTION HERE! 


VOLUNTEER
* Teach people about safe kayaking at the Hoboken Cove Boathouse
* Paint, clean, sand; be a deckhand or a docent at the Tug Pegasus Preservation Project. Email  info@tugpegasus.org 
 
* Survey the shoreline in the Keyport, NJ area; collect data for important work by Baykeeper and Rutgers University. Email meredith@nynjbaykeeper.org
* Help ensure safety in swimming competitions with NYC Swim
* Volunteer at City of Water Day, a guaranteed blast. Go to www.cityofwaterday.org/volunteer
* List your volunteer opportunity here in the next edition of WaterWire. Email asimko@waterfrontalliance.org

ATTEND the DEP's Open House 
on developing Long Term Control Plans for local water bodies.   
 

 

SUPPORT the Harbor Act
Sign a petition that urges Congressional representatives to support the New York-New Jersey Harbor Restoration and Reinvestment Act.

URGE your State Senator
to pass the Sewage Pollution Right-to-
Know Act before New York's legislative session ends. Read more here.

JOIN the South Street Seaport Museum
The reenergized museum needs the support of everyone in the maritime community. Click
here and look for the membership box on the left. 
learnget to the water!
Make this the summer you learn to
row, paddle, sail or swim. If we missed your organization in these listings, contact asimko@waterfrontalliance.org and we'll publish an addendum.
 
LEARN TO SWIM
NYC Dept. of Parks & Recreation
- Free classes at various city pools for toddlers (1˝-5), children (6-17), and adults (18+).

LEARN TO KAYAK 
National Parks of New York Harbor
- Kayak skills workshop in Jamaica Bay, Fridays, June 29-August 31; Mondays through Sept. 3

LEARN TO ROW 
Harlem River Community Rowing
(Roberto Clemente State Park, Bronx)
- Adult Learn to Row, $200
(also Master rowing)
New York Rowing
(Overpeck Lake, NJ)
- Juniors and adults learn to row, every weekend in June and July. Call 212-277-8018 for prices.
Row New York
(Sharp Boathouse, Harlem River and Meadow Lake in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens)
- Adult Learn to Row: intensive weekend $100, three weeks $320
- Youth Summer Camp, two weeks $350
(also, Masters Rowing and Collegiate Rowing) 
 
LEARN TO SAIL
Atlantic Yachting
- Youth sailing camp, ages 9-15, at 79th Street Boat Basin. One week: $990.
- Adult learn-to-sail: two-day course: $375. Other options available.
Hudson River Community Sailing
- For 6th-11th graders, at Pier 66 Maritime. One week: $475.
Manhattan Sailing Club
- Learn-to-sail sailing for adults at North Cove (Battery Park City), Shipyard Marina (Hoboken) or Liberty Harbor (Jersey City). 2 consecutive days or 5 weekly evenings: $390.
- Junior sailing camp: one week: $690.
- Teen sailing camp: one week: $390.
National Parks of New York Harbor
- 3 sessions for $50, Jamaica Bay. For reservations, all 718-338-3799.
Offshore Sailing School
- Learn-to-sail for adults at Chelsea Piers, Pier 25 and Liberty Landing, NJ. 3-day or 5-day options. Call 888-454-7015 for prices.
Sail NY
- Learn-to-sail for adults at Weehawken, NJ. $475 
Events
Events on the Waterfront

Click on the links for more
information about these events.
A detailed calendar of events
may be found at www.waterfrontalliance.org/calendar

June 16
Aquathlon and Swim
8am, start at Randall's Island
Go Fish
Catch-and-release fishing, art projects, music. Free. 10am-2pm, Wagner Park, Battery Park City
Fish Parade and Summer Festival
Prizes for floats and costumes. Boat rides, music, carnival. 9am. Barretto Park, Bronx
 Hidden Harbor Walking Tour
1pm, meet at Wagner Park (Battery Park City)
Clearwater Festival
Annual festival of music, crafts, working riverfront and environmental education. Also June 19. Croton-on-Hudson

June 17
Seining
11am, Pelham Bay Park, Orchard Beach, Bronx
Clean and Green
11am. Clean and plant along the Gowanus Canal. Also July 28, August 19
Seaweeds, Seashells and More
Hike the seashore and look for marine life. 9am-11am. Fort Tilden
Lighthouse Guided Boat Tour
10am-1pm, leave from The Battery, Slip 6. Also Aug. 5

June 19
Featuring the Kill Van Kull, Bayonne Bridge and container ports of Newark Bay. Also July 24 & August 21. 6:15pm

June 20
Be a citizen scientist; contribute to a national database. Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge. 9:30am-11am
Meet at Guardian Park for a stroll along Sandy Hook. 7pm

June 23
28.5-mile swim around Manhattan. Start and finish at South Cove, Battery Park City. 10:20am start
Guided hike. Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge. 11am-2pm
Annual extravaganza. 2pm, Coney Island Beach & Boardwalk
Hundreds of international paddlers gather for this annual outrigger competition
Jeff Newell's New-Trad Quartet performs at the Waterfront Museum aboard the Lehigh Valley Barge No.79. Red Hook, Brooklyn. 2pm
From Perth Amboy to Wards Point and Arthur Kill. 10am

June 26
Workshop: Impacts of Extreme Climate Events on Urban Coasts
Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken
 DEP Open House on Long Term Control Plans for Improving Water Quality
3pm-8pm, Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant Visitor Center, 329 Greenpoint Avenue, Brooklyn
classified advertising
Have a boat to sell?
A maritime job opening to post? Place your free water-related classified ad in WaterWire. Contact
asimko@waterfrontalliance.org


Blue Classroom is a 24' launch built in 1989 by Peterson Shipbuilders in Wisconsin. She most recently served as a police boat for the US Navy. The boat is owned by MWA Co-Founders Paul Balser and Carter Craft, and her homeport is the Shipyard Marina in Hoboken. She is ideally suited for small scale tours, photo/video photography shoots, and as an event safety and support boat. Over the winter she was re-powered at Tottenville Marina and has been recently tuned up at Liberty Landing Marina in Jersey City. All good causes and reasonable requests will be considered! Visit our fledgling blog at http://blueclassroom.wordpress.com/ or email theblueclassroom@gmail.com for more information.
ahoyAHOY!
WaterWire Q&A with
Captain Patrick Harris

69th Street Transfer Bridge Capt. Pat Harris, owner of Atlantic Sail and Charter and the North Cove-based charter sailboat Ventura, has been working New York Harbor for 26 years. Normally a casual, windswept type, he meets me at Ventura in full epaulet-and-gold-braid regalia, having just conducted a wedding aboard the boat. He is also carrying volumes 13 through 16 of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey/Maturin nautical adventure novels.  

 

Personal history in 100 words or less?

I went to sea immediately after college. I wanted to sail around the world. I worked on various boats as long as they were going west. The circumnavigation took two and a half years. I came back, got married and got a "real" job - and that was the end of the marriage. When I saw Ventura in 1987, I was working as a writer at Citibank. I quit my job and bought the boat the next day.  

 

Observations on the last quarter century of history at the NY/NJ waterfront?

When I was starting my sailing business, garbage barges would pass by, outbound, for dumping. You could calculate by the time it took for medical waste to wash up on the beach that they hadn't gone out as far as they were supposed to. The harbor is cleaner now but it's lost a lot of its character. I miss the fun. The closest thing we have to that is Pier 66.

 

Pivotal event?  

9/11. It changed the atmosphere on the water. It changed the Coast Guard's mission - and from my perspective, not for the better. Today, because of profusion of applications for captain's licenses, this process is outsourced to for-profit sea schools instead of being handled by the Coast Guard. The decline in professional courtesy, conduct on water, language on the radio and competency of seamanship have all been compromised. The other big change since 9/11 is the Coast Guard's emphasis on security as opposed to rescue.  

 

What's the most important water-related issue we in the metro region need to address?
Ship-to-ship communications to deal with wakes and vessels in close quarters. The proliferation of vessels having critical meeting places - for example, charter boats in front of the Statue of Liberty, and ferry routes around the Battery - means those areas need policing. Ferries don't slow down any more. They're on a schedule. You call them on the radio and they often ignore you. Instead I'll hear the phrase "sailboat sandwich" - when two ferries deliberately catch sailboats between them just to make them rock. They're guilty of any number of violations. They need to slow down and build that into their schedules.

TOCCONTENTS: June 15, 2012
Maximizing Maritime Potential at Gowanus Bay
Vane Bros. grabs last available berth at a once moribund working waterfront

Deal with EPA will have far-reaching effects

Get Those Kids On the Water!
MWA's free Splash guide gives you all the information you need

June 26: put it on  your calendar

City of Water Day is Part of the River to River Festival
Month-long celebration of culture downtown

Make This the Summer You Learn How to Row, Sail or Swim

 AHOY!
Introducing a regular Q&A column

Meet Some MWA Partners

 Newslinks
gowanusMAXIMIZING MARITIME POTENTIAL AT GOWANUS BAY
Last Available Berth at Terminal Snapped Up by Vane Bros.
John Quadrozzi, president of GBX-Gowanus Bay Terminal, stands on the highest platform of his magnificent old bulk carrier, the MV Loujaine, reconfigured as a floating cement silo docked in Gowanus Bay. Vessels dock alongside the Loujaine and unload cement or flyash into the hold. A massive conveying system (photo below) transfers the material to waiting trucks.
69th Street Transfer Bridge
Mr. Quadrozzi points out the neighboring shoreline businesses. There's Hornbeck Offshore Services, which delivers fuel to ships in the harbor, and LaFarge Cement, which receives cement by barge at the 25th Street Pier. There's New York Sand and Stone, which processes dredged material from the Amboy Channel for beneficial reuse.

There are the city generators powered by fuel delivered by barge, and there's Hess Oil, which operates a fuel depot near the mouth of the Gowanus Canal, piping fuel from vessels into storage tanks. Docked next to the Loujaine are vessels owned by Vane Brothers, an East Coast tug and barge company that just signed a six-year lease on the terminal's last unoccupied berth. Among other jobs, Vane moves petroleum received via water by Hess back out to bunker ships at anchor in New York Harbor.
69th Street Transfer Bridge
This photo was taken from the deck of the bulk carrier MV Loujaine. Beyond the Vane Bros. barges is the mouth of Gowanus Bay and New York Harbor. Below, aboard the MV Loujaine.

69th Street Transfer Bridge"Moving cargo to and from Brooklyn via water -- this is commerce that never touches our roadways!
" says Mr. Quadrozzi, whose goal is to create an environmentally friendly industrial ecosystem on Gowanus Bay.
"This is the first time in decades that Gowanus Bay is completely utilized," he notes.

What a turn-around for the bay. An empty silo (below) is the only evidence of what was once a busy hub of grain deliveries, part of New York's Erie Canal barge system in the early 20th century, before the waters of Gowanus grew stagnant. Mr. Quadrozzi owns the silo, along with 33 acres of underwater property and 13 acres of upland property. He hopes to move the  cement delivery operation of the Loujaine into the 70,000-ton capacity silo and create more space for vessels loading and unloading material by moving docks out to deeper water. He dreams of a network of industries on the bay that fuel each other -- reuse of building materials, a waste-to-energy facility, a supplier of bio-diesel, and more. "The shoreline industries of Gowanus Bay are alive and well -- and proactive," he says.
69th Street Transfer Bridge
His colleagues have expansion plans, too. "We expect to complete some improvements to the pier that will allow additional barge docking and make this facility a long term part of our New York operations," says Mike Barr, a Vane Bros. executive.

For years Mr. Quadrozzi has utilized New York City's maritime infrastructure in his other business, Quadrozzi Concrete. The ability to barge in high-quality cement from Greece or Mexico helped Quadrozzi Concrete win bids to build major skyscrapers, including 7 World Trade Center and the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle.

In 1997, he established the Gowanus Bay Terminal. Back then, "the Bay was like a stew," he says, and feral dogs roamed the shoreline. "Today you can actually see fish -- but it's still very polluted."

It's also teeming with industrial maritime activity. Back up on the Loujaine platform, Mr. Quadrozzi points out more auspicious signs that Brooklyn's working waterfront is gaining momentum. To the south is the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, where the NYC Economic Development Corporation is close to reactivating maritime services that specialize in recycling and automobile deliveries. To the north is Erie Basin, crowded with tugs and barges belonging to Reinauer and Hughes Marine and visited many times every day by the IKEA water taxi. 

Mr. Quadrozzi knows the importance of telling the story of the working waterfront to the public. "We'll be adding a waterfront awareness component to Gowanus Bay Terminal," he promises. "We'll have an educational tour bus where folks can learn about the industrial waterfront and how it plays an important role for our environment, sustainability and quality of life."
amboyPERTH AMBOY STRIKES WATER QUALITY DEAL WITH EPA
Will Upgrade Sewer System
The city of Perth Amboy, NJ, whose motto is "The City By the Bay," allows an estimated 370 million gallons of sewage to flow annually into the Raritan River and the Arthur Kill.

Under a June 6 agreement with the Environmental Protection Agency, Perth Amboy agreed to reduce the sewage that flows out of 16 combined sewer outfall pipes by repairing, upgrading and expanding the sewer system. In addition, city officials will conduct annual inspections of all its sewage treatment facilities and will develop and implement a combined sewer overflow pollution prevention plan.

This agreement, subject to a 30-day public comment period, may be viewed here.
splashGET YOUR 2012 SPLASH! GUIDE
And Get Those Kids
Out On the Water! 
Arranging boat trips or fishing expeditions for New York children is perhaps easier -- and less expensive -- than many people imagine.

For some, the only hurdle might simply be getting information about all the organizations in the metropolitan area offering low- or no-cost water-based field trips or educational programs.

SPLASH! to the rescue. SPLASH! is a waterfront education guide published by the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance for free distribution to camp leaders, schoolteachers, and other adults.

The 2012 SPLASH! is now available, filled with details about organizations from Alley Pond Environmental Center in Queens to Weekawken Rowing. No experience listed in this guide costs more than $10, and many are absolutely free.
DEPLEARN ABOUT WATER QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PLANS
Give Input at DEP Open House Launching Planning Process 

The NYC Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is launching its program to develop Long Term Control Plans (LTCPs) for NYC water bodies impacted by combined sewer overflows (CSOs) with an Open House on Tuesday, June 26, 3pm to 8pm, at the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant Visitor Center, 329 Greenpoint Avenue in Brooklyn. DEP representatives will give a brief presentation on the LTCP process at 4pm and again at 6:30pm. Poster displays will be open to the public between 3pm and 8pm.   

 

WHAT IS A LONG TERM CONTROL PLAN?
On March 8, 2012, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and DEP signed a groundbreaking agreement to reduce CSOs using a hybrid green and gray infrastructure approach. As part of this agreement, DEP will develop LTCPs, or comprehensive evaluations of long term solutions, to reduce CSOs and improve water quality in NYC's water bodies and waterways. The goal of each LTCP is to identify appropriate CSO controls necessary to achieve water quality standards consistent with the Federal CSO policy and the water quality goals of the Clean Water Act (CWA).

To RSVP, please email Shane Ojar or call DEP's Community Partnerships Office at 718-595-3496.  

R2RCITY OF WATER DAY PART OF RIVER TO RIVER FESTIVAL
A Month of Free Fun! 
The River To RiverŽ Festival is back this year from June 17 through July 15 with a densely-packed month of events spanning music, dance, film, theater, visual art, and experiences, as well as family programs. And this year, City of Water Day is part of the fun!

Enjoy performances as varied as Bang on a Can, Philip Glass Ensemble, and Latin jazz legend Eddie Palmieri. Participate in Improv Everywhere. Catch Monday Movie Nights on the Elevated Acre in association with Tribeca Film. See behind the scenes at Trisha Brown Dance Company and take part in Le Grand Continental™, a contemporary line dance choreographed performed by more than 200 New Yorkers. Go on free boat tours around the Harbor on City of Water Day! Check out RiverToRiverNYC.com for the full line-up.
partnersMWA PARTNER SPOTLIGHT
Expanding every week, the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance is more than a coalition; it's a force. We are ferry captains, shipping executives, park directors, scientists, sailors, paddlers, swimmers, teachers, urban planners, architects and more. Together, we advocate for the best possible waterfront in the best possible city, a waterfront that is clean and accessible to all, with a robust maritime workforce and efficient, affordable waterborne transportation. Join us! Contact Louis Kleinman at lkleinman@waterfrontalliance.org.

Meet some Partners of the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance:
  • K-Sea Transportation    http://www.k-sea.com/

    K-Sea Transportation Partners LLC, headquartered in East Brunswick, New Jersey, is a leading provider of marine transportation, distribution and logistics services in the US.

  • Kayak and Canoe Club of NY     http://www.kccny.com/

    KCCNY is one of the largest whitewater clubs in the East, serving New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Connecticut as well as New York, where it was formed in 1959.  

  • Kayak East         http://www.kayakeast.com/  
    Kayak instruction held at Assunpink Lake, Lake Hopatcong, Green Turtle Pond and the Delaware River.  
  • KaYak Staten Island  http://www.kayakstatenisland.org/
    All-volunteer organization providing free kayaking for the public at the shoreline on South Beach in Staten Island.
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NLWATERFRONT NEWSLINKS
 
 Exploring the Harlem River's Little-Known Swindler Cove Park
"Swindler Cove Park is one of Manhattan's least known yet most beautiful parks. Opened in 2003, the park occupies a five acre patch of land along the Harlem River that was once used as a communal dumping ground..."
Curbed, June 14, 2012

Rename Jamaica Bay? Greens say no
"An effort to rename the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge for a retired U.S. Court of Appeals judge and former U.S. senator from New York is causing consternation among area environmentalists and a new front in the political battle between Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and one of her potential challengers, Rep. Bob Turner (R-Queens, Brooklyn)..."
Queens Chronicle, June 14, 2012

NJ, feds to share cost of $2.4M Passaic River Basin flooding study
"The state and federal government will share the cost of a $2.4 million preliminary study to analyze various projects to reduce flooding in communities throughout the Passaic River Basin, officials announced Thursday..."
Associated Press, June 14, 2012 

DOH releases Newtown Creek health warnings
"Newtown Creek residents should avoid swimming in and eating fish from the contaminated waterway, according to a study recently released by state health agencies, but community members are calling on the government to do more research into the potential impacts of the waterway's cleanup..."
Greenpoint Star, May 30, 2012

The Politics of Poop: Feds Battle the City Over Gowanus Cleanup
"Looking out into the heavy rain on Monday morning, City Councilman Brad Lander was thinking about the Gowanus Canal. "Luckily I hadn't eaten breakfast yet," he said..."
New York Magazine, May 21, 2012       

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