Archive for April 8th, 2008

Why Amherst Is Losing More And More Respect Every Day

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

The $800,000 dollars which was lying around in an obscure Town account since1995, should all go to our school systems to pay bills.  This is what usually has happened when money like this was found.  But lo and behold, this money has caused the need for an investigation as to whom should receive this money.  What did you expect with Satish Mohan as our Supervisor? 

When you have a man such as Supervisor Satish Mohan in charge the truth about the money, and where it came from, is as mysterious as the Bermuda Triangle.  Mohan is a man who will put undue pressure on select employees to do as he wants, or out the door they go. He is not to be trusted with any monies or any other deals which our town is involved in. 

Mohan works behind the scenes, then he either informs the Town Board what is to be done or tells them simply what he wants them to hear.  He has lied to the public about which union contracts were signed, how much various project were costing us, how the assessment plan got so messed up, and many other things.  Our town is now being sued by more vendors and individuals than ever before in the history of Amherst. 

All this from the muddling mind of Satish Mohan.

Krueger Moves To Ban Styrofoam Products

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

KRUEGER MOVES TO BRING BILL BANNING STYROFOAM PRODUCTS TO FLOOR FOR VOTE OF FULL SENATE

SENATOR CITES NEED TO DECREASE USE OF PETROLEUM-BASED PRODUCTS IN ORDER TO CLEAN UP NY WASTE STREAM 

AlbanyState Senator Liz Krueger (D-Manhattan) offered a motion to petition today to bring a bill, the Food Service Waste Reduction Act (S6402), to the floor for a vote of the full Senate. The bill is designed to lead to a statewide phase-out of all polystyrene (Styrofoam) products used in the food service industry.  Senator Krueger’s motion was defeated along party lines with Republican unanimously opposing it.  

Assembly Member Brian Kavanagh carries the “same-as” in that chamber. 

“Picture styrofoam, and you picture a product produced from petroleum that takes up to 500 years to fully disintegrate,” Krueger said. “The purpose of this bill is to help New York clean up our waste stream and become a more environmentally sustainable state. We have a real problem with needlessly creating too much waste. We have the ability and the produce to create biodegradable and affordable alternatives, so we should make that leap.” 

The bill would allow the food service industry one year to find environmentally-friendly alternatives to the styrofoam products currently in use. It applies to restaurants, as well as food-service providers and vendors, such as supermarkets. 

Today’s effort to bring the bill out of a committee for a full floor debate and vote in the Senate is the latest in a continuing effort by the Senate Democrats. Last fall the Senate Democrats wrote to nearly 200 college and university presidents, as well as all county executives and supervisors, and the mayors of cities and large towns across the state, asking them to support this legislation and move on their own to ban Styrofoam and support New York-made bioplastic alternatives from locally grown products like potatoes. The response has been overwhelmingly positive, with counties like Westchester recently moving forward on their own, and colleges like SUNY Morrisville proposing to develop bioplastic alternatives. 

Each year Americans throw away 25 billion styrofoam cups, or 1,369 tons of styrofoam products every day. The NYC school system alone throws away 150 million styrofoam meal trays annually.  

Styrofoam is a notorious pollutant that is very difficult to recycle due to its light weight and low scrap value. It is generally not accepted in curbside programs, is seldom able to be reused, takes up a considerable amount of space in landfills, and takes a very long time to fully decompose. Due to the physical properties of polystyrene, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) states that “such materials can have serious impacts on human health, wildlife, and the aquatic environment” because the product breaks down and can clog waterways or be mistaken for food by wildlife. 

Polystyrene is a liquid hydrocarbon that is commercially manufactured from petroleum. One of styrofoam’s components, styrene, is a known hazardous substance suspected to be a carcinogen and neurotoxin. Many people do not realize that when they re-heat food in a styrofoam product, toxins are released into their food.Krueger’s act includes an “affordability” clause, which recognizes that not every styrofoam product currently has an environmentally-friendly alternative, and even in some cases where there is such an alternative, the much higher cost would place undue economic hardship on various businesses. Under her bill, the State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) will annually adopt a list of suitable, affordable alternative products that are compostable or recyclable; these alternatives must be within 15% of the cost of non-compostable or non-recyclable products currently in use.  

Similar bills have already been enacted in the cities of Oakland, Berkeley, Portland, and about 100 other municipalities across the country. San Francisco, which passed similar legislation in 2006, supplies their entire public school cafeteria system with bioplastic products. The Hawaii State Senate is currently considering legislation modeled after Senator Krueger’s, and legislators from Georgia have also contacted her about introducing a similar bill in that state. 

New York has the chance to be the first state to enact this legislation. 

“Many municipalities have enacted various versions of this law and some of the nation’s largest food-service providers have already moved in this direction as well, based not on new laws, but their own free will and conscience,” Krueger explained. “Every year millions of tons of styrofoam are released into the environment. No one is saying we have the perfect answer right now. What we are saying is that we have to make the wisest choice with what we have, and phasing out the use and negative lasting-effects of styrofoam on our environment is a logical step.”  

During the debate Senator Krueger pointed out that due to New York’s agricultural industry, produce for bioplastic alternatives is plentiful, jobs would be created through the manufacturing of those alternatives, and our landfills and environment would be cleaner and safer. 

“This legislation is smart, thoughtful and responsible—best of all it is a win-win for everyone involved. Unfortunately, not a single one of the Senate Republicans was willing to support this motion. I will continue pushing for passage of this and other measures that will help clean up New York State’s waste stream,” said Senator Krueger.

Olympic Torch Goes Out, Briefly, in Paris

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

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The City of Light caused the Olympic torch to be extinguished several times causing the light to go dark.  Human rights groups used the torch run to assail China’s record on rights and make the Olympic Games an increasingly delicate political challenge for the governing Communist Party.

“China has spent eight years and tens of billions of dollars preparing to host the Summer Games, which Beijing has envisioned as a kind of coming-of-age party to showcase its rapid growth. But the outbreak of violent unrest in Tibet and a continuing crackdown there by Chinese security forces has emboldened China’s critics, a diverse coalition of rights groups whose demands are often ignored in China and played down by Western leaders eager to promote Chinese trade and investment.”
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Bush Says Economy Is Poised to Rebound

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

President Bush says the economy is poised to rebound.  While the Democrats are looking for another economic stimulus package, the President says we have to wait and let this first effort ”kick in.”

“But in the wake of a bleak report on Friday that showed 80,000 jobs were lost in March, Democrats say there is no time to waste. The House speaker, Nancy Pelosi of California, has called on Mr. Bush to work with Congress in passing a new stimulus bill and has said she will raise the issue with Mr. Bush directly at a meeting scheduled for Wednesday at the White House.”
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Growing Pains for a Deep-Sea Home Built of Subway Cars

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008


When a New York city subway car is too old and worn out to continue to be of service, where does it go to die?  For the last several years they have been taken out off the coast of Delaware and are dumped into the waters of the Indian River Inlet.  More than 600 have been sent down so far.  They have become luxury condominiums for fish.  The barren stretch of ocean floor has been transformed into a bountiful oasis, carpeted in sea grasses, walled thick with blue mussels and sponges, and teeming with black sea bass and tautog.

“But now, Delaware is struggling with the misfortune of its own success.
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There’s Gas in Those Hills

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

Not quite two centuries ago the cry was, “There’s gold in them th’r hills!”  Today it’s been tweeked just a bit and we can say, “There’s gas in them th’r hills!”  The funny thing is, it could be on land some of you may own.  An area encompasing a huge chunk of the East, stretching from upstate New York to eastern Ohio and as far south as West Virginia contains a layer of rock called the Marcellus Shale.  Some companies are risking big money on a bet that this area could produce billions of dollars worth of natural gas.

“Marcellus Shale has been known for more than a century to contain gas, but it was generally not seen as economical to extract. Now, improved recovery technology, sharply higher natural gas prices and strong drilling results in a similar shale formation in north Texas are changing the calculus. A result is that a part of the country where energy supplies were long thought to be largely tapped out is suddenly ripe for gas prospecting.”
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Congressman Higgins Joins House in Commitment to Care for Wounded Soldiers

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

WASHINGTON, DCToday the House of Representatives approved H. Res. 1020, a resolution recognizing the tremendous service members of the Armed Forces have given to this nation, including the supreme sacrifices made by our wounded warriors.  Congressman Brian Higgins, one of four original co-sponsors of the legislation and a member of the House Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs, recognized the men and women wounded in combat on the House floor today. 

“Every day our military men and women risk their own personal safety as they defend our Nation’s safety and our citizens’ freedoms,” said Congressman Higgins.  “Many return from duty forever physically or mentally changed as a result of their selfless service.  This Nation owes our veterans the same commitment and dedication when they return that they so valiantly delivered while serving abroad.” 

An estimated three-quarter of a million troops have been discharged since the war in Iraq began – many of whom with compromised mental and physical health. Approximately 260,000 have been treated at veterans’ health facilities, almost 100,000 have been diagnosed as having mental health conditions, and more than 200,000 have received some level of care from walk-in facilities. 

Congressmen Peter Welch, Timothy Walberg, Todd Tiahrt were the others joining Congressman Higgins as original co-sponsors of H. Res. 1020. 

Congressman Higgins noted that while the war is costing Americans an astonishing $338 million each and every day, the human cost to American military families is much greater.    

In the House of Representative Chambers today, Congressman Higgins delivered the following speech in support of H. Res. 1020: 

“I am proud to be an original cosponsor of House Resolution 1020.  Thanks to advances in modern technology, many American soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan have lived through events that would have previously cost them their lives.  Of the 1.6 million service members that have been deployed in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom since September 2001, more than thirty thousand have been wounded in battle.   

The numbers are staggering, but we are here today to acknowledge that these Wounded Warriors are not just statistics; they are men and women from across the country who have faced unique situations and struggles, and they have individual stories to tell.  Last summer I had the honor to meet a young man from my district who was injured in a roadside bomb explosion in Iraq that killed three other soldiers riding in the same Humvee.  He suffered extensive injuries, including a broken back and elbow, and underwent two surgeries at a hospital in Germany before being transferred to Walter Reed Army Medical Center.  Quick reactions by a medic meant that instead of being paralyzed he can now walk again, but only after extensive surgeries and painful rehabilitation.  This young man is actually a lucky one, he was able to recover with the help of a caring family and a supportive wife.  There are many others that are not as fortunate, and it is our responsibility to provide them with the best physical care and emotional support possible. 

Over the last year, Congress has taken many steps to enhance the quality of care our veterans receive, including passing the largest increase in veterans’ health funding in history, but there is still more to be done.  With this legislation we do a simple but necessary thing: we take a moment to thank the men and women of the Armed Services who have been wounded in the line of duty for their service and their sacrifice.  I urge my colleagues to support the passage of H. Res. 1020.”