Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Coastal Erosion

As sea level rises, coastal erosion is a major problem on the East End. 


Water front property owners have been battling with town trustees over their attempt to protect their property by building bulkheads or other hardened structures.

The structures usually result in significant loss of sand in front of the structure and also down stream along the shoreline, exposing neighborsbeachfront and public beaches to severe erosion as well. 

The authority of the trustees  based on a colonial era English law   has been challenged in the courts after disputes with homeowners.

In May 2012, a state judge ruled that the Southampton Town Trustees do not have the authority to regulate homeowners placement of structures on or under the ocean beach to protect their homes in the event of severe erosion during major storms, at least within village boundaries.


And  a group of homeowners along Southampton towns oceanfront in Water Mill, Bridgehampton and Sagaponack, combined to fund a multi-million dollar beach replenishment project in 2013 after severe loss of beach sand washed out dunesand threatened homes.



Marine biologist Douglas Hardy has been studying the devastating effects of hardened structures on Southold towns coast line on the north fork of Long Island  effects like severe erosion and reduced coastal resilience in the era of climate change. 

Hardy wrote a paper The Starvation of Southold Beaches  for the Conservation Advisory Council to The Southold Town Trustees.  

Hardy identifies the problem and considers the legal aspects of fixing it as property owners battle with local government.  He notes in the paper that as sea level rises and storms become more extreme, storm surges will overwhelm and undermine hardened structures  and those structures will also magnify storm surge damage to adjacent beaches. He proposes ways to encourage homeowners to plan for sea level rise in a way that better protects coastal resilience.

The paper was submitted in January at a town board meeting, but was not enthusiastically received, according to EastEndBeacon.com, a news blog.



Sustainable East End's Francesca Rheannon talked with Doug Hardy last week. 

Coastal Erosion

As sea level rises, coastal erosion is a major problem on the East End. 


Water front property owners have been battling with town trustees over their attempt to protect their property by building bulkheads or other hardened structures.

The structures usually result in significant loss of sand in front of the structure and also down stream along the shoreline, exposing neighborsbeachfront and public beaches to severe erosion as well. 

The authority of the trustees  based on a colonial era English law   has been challenged in the courts after disputes with homeowners.

In May 2012, a state judge ruled that the Southampton Town Trustees do not have the authority to regulate homeowners placement of structures on or under the ocean beach to protect their homes in the event of severe erosion during major storms, at least within village boundaries.


And  a group of homeowners along Southampton towns oceanfront in Water Mill, Bridgehampton and Sagaponack, combined to fund a multi-million dollar beach replenishment project in 2013 after severe loss of beach sand washed out dunesand threatened homes.



Marine biologist Douglas Hardy has been studying the devastating effects of hardened structures on Southold towns coast line on the north fork of Long Island  effects like severe erosion and reduced coastal resilience in the era of climate change. 

Hardy wrote a paper The Starvation of Southold Beaches  for the Conservation Advisory Council to The Southold Town Trustees.  

Hardy identifies the problem and considers the legal aspects of fixing it as property owners battle with local government.  He notes in the paper that as sea level rises and storms become more extreme, storm surges will overwhelm and undermine hardened structures  and those structures will also magnify storm surge damage to adjacent beaches. He proposes ways to encourage homeowners to plan for sea level rise in a way that better protects coastal resilience.

The paper was submitted in January at a town board meeting, but was not enthusiastically received, according to EastEndBeacon.com, a news blog.



Sustainable East End's Francesca Rheannon talked with Doug Hardy last week. 

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Tip Brolin - Citizens Climate Lobby


As the UN Climate Conference winds down in Paris, advocates for cutting the use of fossil fuels world-wide are still looking for action from the earth’s major polluters.

Climate scientists say we are already experiencing climate change — more extreme weather, longer droughts, worse flooding, warmer average ocean and surface temperatures.  

With this comes disappearing glaciers, melting ice caps, expanding deserts, rising sea levels, ocean acidification, and the mass extinction of animal species. 

Scientists warn us, we need to bring CO2 levels in our atmosphere back down to 350 parts per million. We are currently at 400 — and rising by 2-3 parts per million annually. It makes an insulating blanket on our atmosphere that forces the climate to warm. And because oceans absorb a large amount of this CO2, they are becoming more acidic. That threatens seafood stocks and, indeed, a collapse of marine ecosystems.

Will the world’s leaders get serious in time to avert climate catastrophe? Climate scientist James Hansen told Amy Goodman of Democracy Now last week that “as long as fuels are dirt cheap, people will keep burning them.” 

The Citizens Climate Lobby is a nation-wide organization that has a plan they say will fix the problem and they have proposed legislation to address it.

Tony Ernst spoke with power generation engineer Tip Brolin, a local member of Citizens Climate Lobby and the Southampton Town Sustainability Committee at his home in Water Mill last month. 

Brolin, trained at Tufts University and George Washington University.

As a Navy officer and later as a civilian he worked in Washington DC on nuclear propulsion with Admiral Hyman Rickover. 

Brolin worked in industry designing both coal and nuclear power generation systems and he helped manage the Department of Energy’s nuclear power and nuclear fusion programs. 

Tip Brolin - Citizens Climate Lobby


As the UN Climate Conference winds down in Paris, advocates for cutting the use of fossil fuels world-wide are still looking for action from the earth’s major polluters.

Climate scientists say we are already experiencing climate change — more extreme weather, longer droughts, worse flooding, warmer average ocean and surface temperatures.  

With this comes disappearing glaciers, melting ice caps, expanding deserts, rising sea levels, ocean acidification, and the mass extinction of animal species. 

Scientists warn us, we need to bring CO2 levels in our atmosphere back down to 350 parts per million. We are currently at 400 — and rising by 2-3 parts per million annually. It makes an insulating blanket on our atmosphere that forces the climate to warm. And because oceans absorb a large amount of this CO2, they are becoming more acidic. That threatens seafood stocks and, indeed, a collapse of marine ecosystems.

Will the world’s leaders get serious in time to avert climate catastrophe? Climate scientist James Hansen told Amy Goodman of Democracy Now last week that “as long as fuels are dirt cheap, people will keep burning them.” 

The Citizens Climate Lobby is a nation-wide organization that has a plan they say will fix the problem and they have proposed legislation to address it.

Tony Ernst spoke with power generation engineer Tip Brolin, a local member of Citizens Climate Lobby and the Southampton Town Sustainability Committee at his home in Water Mill last month. 

Brolin, trained at Tufts University and George Washington University.

As a Navy officer and later as a civilian he worked in Washington DC on nuclear propulsion with Admiral Hyman Rickover. 

Brolin worked in industry designing both coal and nuclear power generation systems and he helped manage the Department of Energy’s nuclear power and nuclear fusion programs. 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

East End Resilience Network


Francesca Rheannon reports:

With its miles of low-lying coast land and population pressures, the East End of Long Island is vulnerable to disaster. It could come suddenly in the form of a storm like Hurricane Sandy. Or creep inexorably toward us on the encroaching tide of sea level rise or the degradation of our land and water resources. Or from some other completely unexpected direction, like a pandemic.

Yet we are also a community rich in people committed to the health and well-being of the region. We also have fisheries and farmland to sustain us.

Bringing our resources to bear on building community resilience is the goal of the East End Resilience Network. 


We talk today with the organizer of that network, Michael McDonald. As Coordinator of the Global Health Response and Resilience Alliance and Chairman of Global Resilience Systems, Inc., McDonald has been involved in building resilience networks all over the world. 

He worked with the de Blasio administration to set up a resilience network in New York City and, as a part-time resident of East Hampton, thought our region could use one, too. 


Listen here:

https://eastendreport.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/sustainable-east-end-10-21-15.mp3

East End Resilience Network


Francesca Rheannon reports:

With its miles of low-lying coast land and population pressures, the East End of Long Island is vulnerable to disaster. It could come suddenly in the form of a storm like Hurricane Sandy. Or creep inexorably toward us on the encroaching tide of sea level rise or the degradation of our land and water resources. Or from some other completely unexpected direction, like a pandemic.

Yet we are also a community rich in people committed to the health and well-being of the region. We also have fisheries and farmland to sustain us.

Bringing our resources to bear on building community resilience is the goal of the East End Resilience Network. 


We talk today with the organizer of that network, Michael McDonald. As Coordinator of the Global Health Response and Resilience Alliance and Chairman of Global Resilience Systems, Inc., McDonald has been involved in building resilience networks all over the world. 

He worked with the de Blasio administration to set up a resilience network in New York City and, as a part-time resident of East Hampton, thought our region could use one, too. 


Listen here:

https://eastendreport.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/sustainable-east-end-10-21-15.mp3

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Amagansett Food Institute and Finnwheel Farm


Francesca Rheannon speaks with Kathleen Masters and John De Cuevas of the Amagansett Food Institute, an organization that supports and promotes farmers, vintners, fishermen and other food producers on the East End.
They operate the Amagansett Farmers Market and South Fork Kitchens, a business incubator for food entrepreneurs.

Also Francesca speaks with Corinne Herndon, owner of Finnwheel Farm -- a new organic farm in the hamlet of Springs in East Hampton.   
listen here


More Information about the Amagansett Food Institute is available at amagansettfoodinstitute.org
Information about Finnwheel Farm and other business members of the Amagansett Food Institute can also be found at that site.

Amagansett Food Institute and Finnwheel Farm


Francesca Rheannon speaks with Kathleen Masters and John De Cuevas of the Amagansett Food Institute, an organization that supports and promotes farmers, vintners, fishermen and other food producers on the East End.
They operate the Amagansett Farmers Market and South Fork Kitchens, a business incubator for food entrepreneurs.

Also Francesca speaks with Corinne Herndon, owner of Finnwheel Farm -- a new organic farm in the hamlet of Springs in East Hampton.   
listen here


More Information about the Amagansett Food Institute is available at amagansettfoodinstitute.org
Information about Finnwheel Farm and other business members of the Amagansett Food Institute can also be found at that site.

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Dr. Steven Cohen: issues in human and environmental sustainability

Dr. Steven Cohen, Executive Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University speaks about current issues in human and environmental sustainability, in a talk given last month at The Ross School in East Hampton, NY


Listen here



More information about the Earth Institute is available at:

Dr. Steven Cohen: issues in human and environmental sustainability

Dr. Steven Cohen, Executive Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University speaks about current issues in human and environmental sustainability, in a talk given last month at The Ross School in East Hampton, NY


Listen here



More information about the Earth Institute is available at:

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Kevin McAllister - nitrogen pollution - a plague to our waters


Last month researchers at Stony Brook University found “an intense and damaging brown tide” across much of Great South Bay and other bays on the south shore of eastern Long Island.
Brown tide is dangerous to shellfish and in recent years almost destroyed the scallop population, an important economic asset on the east end.  
Also, two recent fish kills in the Peconic Estuary brought further attention to the sorry  state of our waterways.
To help us understand why this is occurring and what can be done to fix it, I spoke last month to Kevin McAllister, president of the Sag Harbor-based environmental advocacy group Defend H2O.
 Listen here

Here are some links to more information about the the pollution of Long Island's waterways:

Brown-Tide-On-The-Rise-In-Moriches-Shinnecock-Bays

Experts-Suspect-Diamondback-Terrapin-Die-Off-Is-Caused-By-A-Marine-Biotoxin

Dog-Dies-After-Ingesting-Georgica-Pond-Water

more coming 

Kevin McAllister - nitrogen pollution - a plague to our waters


Last month researchers at Stony Brook University found “an intense and damaging brown tide” across much of Great South Bay and other bays on the south shore of eastern Long Island.
Brown tide is dangerous to shellfish and in recent years almost destroyed the scallop population, an important economic asset on the east end.  
Also, two recent fish kills in the Peconic Estuary brought further attention to the sorry  state of our waterways.
To help us understand why this is occurring and what can be done to fix it, I spoke last month to Kevin McAllister, president of the Sag Harbor-based environmental advocacy group Defend H2O.
 Listen here

Here are some links to more information about the the pollution of Long Island's waterways:

Brown-Tide-On-The-Rise-In-Moriches-Shinnecock-Bays

Experts-Suspect-Diamondback-Terrapin-Die-Off-Is-Caused-By-A-Marine-Biotoxin

Dog-Dies-After-Ingesting-Georgica-Pond-Water

more coming