Residents and Riverkeeper Sue Queens Waste Facilities, Alleging Water Pollution

Adi Talwar

Jamaica Bay is a critical habitat for birds, supporting some 325 species.

Caroll Forbes has spent much of her life swimming and fishing in Jamaica Bay. Up until the pandemic, she made weekly visits to the nearby beaches she’s been familiar with since childhood. And for more than 40 years, she’s plucked flounder and fluke from the bay alongside her children and grandchildren.

But she’s yet to extend her tradition of teaching fishing to her great-grandchildren because in recent years, she’s become concerned about the level of pollutants in the waterways near her Queens home.

Her distress over the current state of the bay motivated Forbes to join a lawsuit, filed by New York Lawyers for the Public Interest and the Super Law Group on behalf of residents and the NJ/NY Baykeeper and the Riverkeeper—environmental groups focused on restoration and stewardship of waterways in the New York City area—taking aim at multiple waste-transfer facilities in Queens, alleging the companies are polluting Jamaica Bay in violation of the federal Clean Water Act.

The Baykeeper, Riverkeeper, Forbes and another Queens resident, Crystal Ervin, filed a 60-page complaint last week in the U.S. Eastern District of New York Court claiming that American Recycling, Inc. and Royal Waste Services, Inc., along with its subsidiaries, are allowing “stormwater associated with industrial activities” and polluted wastewater, including water that has come into contact with garbage—called leachate—to enter the Jamaica Bay via public storm drains. 

“Stormwater runoff is one of the most significant sources of water pollution in the nation—comparable to, if not greater than, contamination from industrial and sewage sources,” the complaint says.

Jamaica Bay is one of the Northeast’s most biodiverse regions, with more than 325 bird species, 100 fish species as well as butterflies, reptiles and small mammals, according to Brooklyn College’s Science and Resilience Institute. Its ecosystem is also in danger, due in part to pollution and the city’s sewage treatment plants, which lead to the release of nitrogen into the bay, which can be damaging to its marshlands and increase algae blooms.

The two waste transfer facilities identified in the lawsuit are located on Douglas Avenue, in a residential area of Queens, adjacent to Detective Keith L. Williams Park and just blocks away from Forbes’ and Ervin’s homes.

Douglas is an unpaved dirt road that allows for large pockets of puddles to accumulate near the sites, which process large amounts of garbage and recycling that are carried in and out of the facility by trucks. Dirt and gravel roads are a major source of pollutants, including dust and sediment, entering streams, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Dominic Susino, the chief financial officer of American Recycling, said in July that he and the neighboring company have offered to pay to pave Douglas Avenue but that the Department of Transportation does not allow private companies to pave city roads.

When asked about the status of paving the road in July, a DOT spokesperson said that the agency “is currently evaluating the roadway reconstruction needs of this area, as conditions cannot be remedied by simple resurfacing.” The spokesperson added that the Department of Environmental Protection had recently improved the infrastructure of drainage and made sanitary sewer repairs there.

The Clean Water Act stipulates that when certain types of industrial companies have stormwater runoff from their facilities, they must obtain permits from the Environmental Protection Agency showing that they are preventing it from polluting waterways.

“Rain’s going to happen, storms are going to happen and some water is going to be discharged,” said Doug McKenna, the regional chief of the EPA’s water compliance branch. The permit governs how the companies “to the best extent possible prevent stormwater from carrying pollutants from their facility to waterways in the United States,” he added.

The complaint alleges that the companies do not have such permits. The EPA did not immediately respond to questions of whether the companies have the permits named in the complaint, but McKenna confirmed that waste transfer facilities would fall under the category of a company that would require such permits. A search for the companies on the EPA’s permit search function returned no results.

Mike Dulong, an attorney with Riverkeeper, said that although he cannot comment on this specific case, for cases like these, the end goal is for the court to implore those companies to stop polluting via hefty penalties and to address past contamination, through, for instance, an environmental benefit payment toward a local group.

Susino, of American Recycling, said he cannot comment in detail on the lawsuit, but offered the following statement: “The attorneys are only beginning to look through and evaluate the case that was filed. American Recycling has always sought to maintain the highest quality environmental compliance and operational efficiency to serve the needs of Queens businesses and its residential communities.”

The owners of Regal Recycling and its subsidiaries did not respond to a request for comment.

Liz Donovan

American Recycling in Jamaica, Queens, is one of the facilities named in the lawsuit.

A spokesperson for the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation, which oversees the state’s Environmental Conservation Law, confirmed in July that both companies have valid and current permits to operate as solid waste management transfer facilities and as construction and demolition debris handling and recovery facilities. Both companies have previously been subject of enforcement actions but are currently in compliance with DEC regulations, the spokesperson said.

Earlier this summer, the companies were embroiled in a controversial legislative battle during which City Councilmember I. Daneek Miller attempted to pass a bill that critics say would effectively roll back the city’s long-fought Waste Equity Law. The law, which passed in 2018 following nearly 10 years of advocacy, reduced the capacity of waste that such companies could accept unless they agreed to export a majority of the waste by rail. The companies had a plan in place to do that, Susino said, but ran out of time to begin the several-year-long project before the law became effective.

READ MORE: NYC Council Considers Waste Transfer Bill That Would Roll Back Environmental Gains in Queens, Critics Say

Miller’s sponsored bill, Intro. 2349, would allow the two companies named in the suit, which are adjacent to a Long Island Rail Road line, to reinstate their original capacity if they agreed to make the switch to rail exporting within four years. The bill was scheduled for a committee vote in July but was abruptly canceled minutes before the meeting due to a dispute over wording, council staffers told City Limits. Miller’s office did not have an update on the status of the legislation as of last week.

Susino said in July that American Recycling is eager to make the switch to rail transport but would need to be functioning at full capacity to be able to finance the project. As it stands, the building is outdated and not fully enclosed, resulting in dust, putrid odors and noise from trucks that the plaintiffs in the complaint allege create a nuisance that interferes with their ability to use and enjoy their own property.  

“Longtime residents of the neighborhood have had to take numerous steps to try and adjust to the many impacts of the Facilities,” the complaint says. “For example, they dare not open their windows, and end up having to pay for extra air conditioners and purifiers during the summer months; they decide against taking their grandchildren to the nearby, otherwise-enjoyable park; they decide against waiting for the bus at the closer yet nausea-inducing smelly bus stop and either walk further to another transportation option, or are required to pay for cars; they no longer host events or guests in their outdoor spaces.”

Susino said in July that the company’s plans to switch to rail transport would also involve funding a full renovation of their facility, which he said would resolve the issues neighbors have complained about. The state-of-the-art building would feature rooftop solar panels, an education room to teach local children about recycling and a more aesthetically pleasing enclosed exterior that would prevent odor and dust from blanketing the neighborhood.

Without approval on restoring their capacity of the waste they can accept, the company cannot afford to do the renovation, he said previously. 

But neighbors are looking for relief in the meantime.

“The smell is very, very bad,” lawsuit plaintiff Caroll Forbes told City Limits. “It smells like spoiled food all the time or a dead person, and it’s constant. It’s like you can’t get a break. I can never open the front windows.” 

Liz Donovan is a Report for America corps member.

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¿Qué opciones hay luego de la decisión de la parlamentarian en inmigración?

Elizabeth McDonough, la parlamentarian, escribió en su fallo que este caso “supera sustancialmente el impacto presupuestario”. Entonces ¿qué opciones quedan para presionar por una reforma que abra el camino para la ciudadanía a millones de indocumentados?

Adi Talwar

El 17 de septiembre, la parlamentaria Elizabeth McDonough, encargada de determinar si la legalización de millones de inmigrantes indocumentados podía incluirse en el paquete presupuestario del Congreso, dijo que el plan no cumplía los requisitos del proceso de conciliación presupuestaria.


En este caso, tuvo que analizar y luego dictaminar sobre cuestiones de procedimiento, es decir, establecer lo que está permitido incluir en el proceso de reconciliación presupuestaria y si la propuesta tenía un efecto presupuestario. McDonough escribió en su fallo que este caso “excede sustancialmente el impacto presupuestario”.

“La cuestión que tenemos ante nosotros es si una serie de enmiendas propuestas a la Ley de Inmigración y Nacionalidad (INA) que eliminan las barreras existentes para el ajuste del estatus de residente permanente legal (LPR) para una variedad de clases existentes y recién creadas de inmigrantes y no inmigrantes, incluyendo muchos que no están legalmente presentes en los Estados Unidos, es un cambio de política que supera sustancialmente el impacto presupuestario de ese cambio”, dijo McDonough sobre su fallo.

“La propuesta actual renunciaría a las secciones pertinentes de la INA, y crearía una nueva clase de extranjeros elegibles para el ajuste de estatus, incluyendo una categoría completamente nueva de individuos llamados ‘trabajadores esenciales de infraestructura crítica’”, añadió.

Ambos partidos han aprovechado su pronunciamiento para eludir el habitual umbral de 60 votos. Los demócratas insisten en que intentarán otras propuestas, aún no anunciadas, para impulsar las políticas de inmigración.

Para conocer más detalles sobre el pronunciamiento, las marchas que generó impulsadas por grupos de defensa de inmigrantes y las opciones tras la decisión invitamos a Pablo Manríquez, corresponsal del Congreso para el medio Latino Rebels.

Escuche nuestra conversación a continuación.

Ciudad Sin Límites, el proyecto en español de City Limits, y El Diario de Nueva York se han unido para crear el podcast “El Diario Sin Límites” para hablar sobre latinos y política. Para no perderse ningún episodio de nuestro podcast “El Diario Sin Límites” síguenos en Spotify, Soundcloud, Apple Podcast y Stitcher. Todos los episodios están allí. !Suscríbete!

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Manhattan Dems Pick Cordell Cleare to Replace Brian Benjamin in Harlem Senate Race

“The Manhattan Democratic Party is proud to support the selection by the 30th Senate District Committee of Cordell Cleare as their Democratic Nominee for the New York State Senate,” the party said in a Saturday evening release.

Adi Talwar

125th Street in Harlem, at the heart of the 30th State Senate District.

On Saturday, Members of the Manhattan Democratic Party selected Cordell Cleare—who served as chief of staff to outgoing Councilmember Bill Perkins for close to two decades—as the Democratic nominee in the upcoming Nov. 2 special election to replace Brian Benjamin in the state Senate.

Senate District 30 spans Upper Manhattan neighborhoods including Harlem, East Harlem, and the Upper West Side. Benjamin was elected to the seat in a special election in 2017, serving nearly one full term before he was selected last month to be new Gov. Kathy Hochul’s second-in-command as lieutenant governor. 

The special election for the now-vacant seat, which drew interest from area electeds including Assemblymembers Inez Dickens and Al Taylor, who represent adjoining parts of the district, will coincide with New York’s November general election, where city residents will vote for their next mayor, comptroller, borough presidents and City Council members. 

Read more elections coverage here.

Although candidates can still run in the 30th Senate District race as independents, the Democratic nominee in this special election was chosen via the party’s competitive county committee process, and not a primary. Instead, hundreds of the group’s members vote for a nominee.

“The Manhattan Democratic Party is proud to support the selection by the 30th Senate District Committee of Cordell Cleare as their Democratic Nominee for the New York State Senate,” the party said in a Saturday evening release, adding that Cleare won with 57.4 of ballots after three rounds of voting against Athena Moore, who earned 42.6 percent of votes.

Both Cleare and Moore were one of more than a dozen candidates, including Perkins, to run in the June primary for City Council District 9. Cleare was eliminated in round 12 of ranked-choice voting; Moore in 13. Cleare also ran for the Council seat in 2017, later losing to Perkins.

Cleare, of Harlem, could not immediately be reached for comment. If she wins the November race—likely, given the heavy Democratic enrollment in the Senate District—she will have to run again next year to keep the seat.

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NYPD Can No Longer Access Sealed Arrest Records Without Court Order, Judge Rules

“Until today, the NYPD has been using private information from sealed arrests in over a dozen of their interconnected surveillance databases, and has trained its officers that it is okay to violate the law,” said Niji Jain, an attorney at the Bronx Defenders.

Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office

The Bronx Defenders’ yearslong class action suit against the NYPD’s use of sealed arrest records took a critical turn on Monday, when a Manhattan Supreme Court judge ruled that the police department could not instruct its personnel to use such records without a court order.

Right now, Judge Lyle E. Frank wrote in the Sept. 27 order, an estimated 800 NYPD officers have access to the more than 3.5 million records belonging to New Yorkers whose criminal charges were ultimately dismissed.

The records—which can only legally be accessed by a court order, according to a 1976 state law—are kept in at least 14 different NYPD databases, attorneys at the Bronx Defenders said. In police training materials reviewed by the legal defense group, the NYPD instructs officers to use the sealed information, the lawyers said.

As a result of the Monday decision, the NYPD will be required to inform personnel that they may not access and use sealed arrest information without a court order. It also prompts the agency to declassify and publicly release NYPD training materials on the practice that were obtained by the Bronx Defenders in discovery.

Police officials “freely admit that their prior training regarding the sealing of records was contrary to law,” Judge Frank wrote. “As the NYPD did not properly train as to the sealing statutes before, the best way to ensure this conduct is not repeated is for this Court to issue an order enjoining such future conduct.”

Put simply, “until today, the NYPD has been using private information from sealed arrests in over a dozen of their interconnected surveillance databases, and has trained its officers that it is okay to violate the law,” said Niji Jain, an attorney at the Bronx Defenders. “Now that the court has issued this sweeping ruling, officers will be cut off from that kind of access, so that the sealed information remains private as the law requires.”

A police department spokesperson, responding to questions from City Limits, said the agency is “reviewing the judge’s decision and exploring our legal options.”

In an op-ed published on Monday in the New York Daily News, Police Commissioner Dermot Shea argued that the lawsuit was a “serious setback for public safety.”

“What is taking place today is that a handful of plaintiffs want to push the courts to stretch the bounds of the original intent of the sealing laws far beyond what anyone contemplated when the law was passed in 1976,” Shea wrote, claiming that police officers would be blindfolded by the change to its current practice.

“If the city loses this lawsuit, all these sealed records could become completely invisible to police,” he added. “We wouldn’t even be able to know they exist.”

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Celebración del 45º aniversario de City Limits y su presentación del Salón de la Fama

El evento marcará el lanzamiento del Salón de la Fama de City Limits, que honrará a cuatro líderes comunitarias de Nueva York por sus contribuciones a la justicia, los medios de comunicación, la vivienda y el desarrollo económico. Podrá participar en el evento de forma presencial o virtual el próximo 18 de noviembre.

Este artículo apareció originalmente en inglés. Translated by Daniel Parra. Read the English version here

City Limits, un medio de comunicación sin ánimo de lucro dedicado al periodismo de investigación que ha informado y empoderado a los neoyorquinos durante cuatro décadas y media, invita al público a unirse a la celebración de nuestro 45º aniversario este otoño.


El evento marcará el lanzamiento del Salón de la Fama de City Limits, que honrará a cuatro líderes comunitarios de Nueva York por sus contribuciones a la justicia, los medios de comunicación, la vivienda y el desarrollo económico. Podrá participar en el evento de forma presencial o virtual el próximo 18 de noviembre.

Los galardonados son:

  • Afua Atta-Mensah, exdirectora ejecutiva de la organización Community Voices Heard (CVH)
  • Jenna Flanagan, periodista y presentadora del premiado programa de noticias MetroFocus del grupo WNET
  • Christine Quinn, presidenta y directora ejecutiva de la empresa que provee refugio familiar y vivienda de apoyo Win
  • Kathryn Wylde, presidenta y directora ejecutiva de la organización sin ánimo de lucro Partnership for New York City

Anteriormente City Limits ha galardonado a: Wayne Barrett, Preet Bharara, Adam Blumenthal, Richard Buery, Angela Fernandez, Laura Flanders, Henry Garrido, Elizabeth Cooke Levy, Gabe Pressman, Tom Robbins y Sean Straub, quienes también serán miembros del Salón de la Fama de City Limits.

“Estamos encantados de dar la bienvenida a nuestros anteriores galardonados de City Limits al Salón de la Fama de City Limits”, dijo la directora ejecutiva Marjorie W. Martay.

Las ventas de entradas, donaciones y patrocinios para la celebración del 45º aniversario de City Limits y la entrada al Salón de la Fama se destinarán directamente a apoyar el periodismo investigativo que City Limits produce cada día. 

Además este año estamos recaudando fondos para lanzar becas de $25.000 dólares cada una, nombradas en honor de dos notables colaboradores de City Limits: 

  • La beca Jarrett Murphy de información sobre el medio ambiente y la salud apoyará el trabajo de un periodista en estas dos importantes áreas temáticas, llamada así en honor al antiguo editor de City Limits, Jarrett Murphy, quien dirigió nuestra redacción durante más de una década.
  • La beca Mark Edmiston para la innovación en medios de comunicación y negocios apoyará a un líder empresarial emergente para que se centre en las iniciativas de nuevos productos de City Limits sobre el desarrollo estratégico de los negocios. Lleva el nombre del veterano de los medios de comunicación Mark Edminston, antiguo presidente de la junta directiva de City Limits.

“Durante décadas, los reporteros y editores de City Limits han tenido el privilegio de contar las historias de los neoyorquinos, examinar las políticas de nuestra ciudad y hacer que nuestros líderes locales rindan cuentas”, dijo la editora ejecutiva Jeanmarie Evelly. “Su apoyo es esencial para nuestro futuro y para garantizar que podamos seguir haciendo ese importante trabajo”.

Para obtener más información sobre la celebración del 45º aniversario de City Limits y las galardonadas de este año, comprar boletas de entradas, hacer una donación o revisar las oportunidades de patrocinio, visite citylimitsgala.org

Fundada en medio de la crisis fiscal de Nueva York en 1976, City Limits existe para informar y equipar a los ciudadanos para crear una ciudad más justa. Lo que empezó hace 45 años como un boletín para organizadores de la vivienda ha crecido hasta convertirse en una premiada redacción con una plantilla de ocho personas a tiempo completo.

Además de la cobertura en profundidad de la vivienda, las personas sin hogar, la resiliencia climática, los adultos mayores, la política gubernamental, entre otros temas, City Limits también dirige un programa de formación periodística para estudiantes de secundaria, opera el proyecto Voices of Nueva York, así como Una Ciudad Sin Límites, una iniciativa informativa en español.

Como organización sin ánimo de lucro, City Limits depende del apoyo de fundaciones, patrocinios, publicidad y donaciones. La meta que nos hemos propuesto alcanzar es sumar $300.000 dólares para poder seguir sirviendo a la ciudad de Nueva York durante los próximos 45 años y más allá.

Para más información en español sobre la celebración del aniversario, escríbele a Greis Torres en Greis@citylimits.org

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