Petition updateStop the MegaMall -- Sign the New Petition that goes to the Huntington Town BoardFYI: Two news articles related to Villadom mall
Laura DiGrandeDix Hills, NY, United States
Aug 1, 2016
Hi neighbors,
I hope you are enjoying summer! According to the Planning Department, the Planning Board is targeting either its August 17 or August 31 meetings to render a decision on the amendment to Comprehensive Plan that would allow rezoning of the Mediavilla Property for the Villadom Mall, but it may take longer.
In the meantime, I share with you two recent articles:
1. The Long Islander published a brief article on the project’s environmental impacts: http://www.longislandernews.com/the-long-islander-archives/environmental-impacts-of-planned-shopping-center-questioned. (I’ll post the text in its entirety at the end of this message). The content of the article not only confirms the fears of residents living near the site who receive their water from the southern pumps of the Greenlawn Water District, but it indicates that the groundwater impact is much broader due to the site’s high elevation of the location above the part of the aquifer that most Suffolk Co wells get their water from. The quote from the developer show he is hedging. His own DEIS report acknowledges adverse environmental impacts on groundwater, though the report is insufficient in its scope.
2. The Long Island Press published a policy piece that covers several facets of Long Island development: https://www.longislandpress.com/2016/08/01/pushy-developers-irrational-communities-and-hypocritical-local-officials-put-long-islands-future-at-risk/. Of the Villadom project, Richard Murdocco writes: “Sometimes, however, developers can be far from rational in their requests for zoning leniency. A quick, but significant example of this disconnect between a developer’s expectation and reality can be found near the Elwood/Dix Hills border in Suffolk County. There, Great Neck-based developer Villadom is trying to convince local policymakers to amend the Town of Huntington’s comprehensive plan so it can build yet another giant shopping center along the Jericho Turnpike corridor. In short, a private entity (the developer) wants the Town (and the public) to change its pre-existing zoning, which was created with resident and professional input in a comprehensive manner. Why? For Villadom’s own gain.”
While we wait for the Planning Department’s decision, there are a few things that you can do to help keep our momentum going. If anyone of voting age in your household has not signed the petition, please ask him/her to do so. Post our link on Facebook or email our link and ask friends/family to join us too. We are 2,800+ strong and it’d be fantastic to have 3,000 residents sign/comment before the Planning Board decision. If the articles above have sparked some additional passion in you, send another communication to the Planning and Town Boards to let them know that this proposal is just bad news all around.
We will continue our commitment to protect our roads, local businesses, health/safety, environment, zoning laws, and of course, our Town’s comprehensive plan, which is explicitly designed to guide our officials in responsible development. So please stay tuned for more and get ready to galvanize in the coming months. Once the Planning Board makes its decision, we are on to the Town Board hearing, and we must make our message heard loud and clear: STOP THE VILLADOM!
Thank you,
Laura D.
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Environmental Impacts Of Planned Shopping Center Questioned
July 28, 2016
By Jano Tantongco
jtantongco@longislandergroup.com
Opponents of the proposed 486,000-square-foot Elwood Orchard shopping mall have taken aim at the environmental aspects of the Jericho Turnpike project, highlighting potential impacts for groundwater contamination.
Professional civil engineer Paul Besmertnik, of Melville, explained that the project planned to be built on a high-elevation site, on the northeast corner of Jericho and Manor Road. Besmertnik said the location is especially sensitive to contamination, due to maximum elevations, which, according project documents, range 284 feet-296 feet above mean sea level.
“When you build a shopping center… where do you think all the water goes to?” Besmertnik said in an interview Monday. “It goes into the groundwater, and it flows gently down towards the south.”
He argued that the pollutants dripping out of cars would also contribute to the “effect on the water quality in our three great water districts,” which are Dix Hills, Greenlawn and South Huntington.
In regards to potential stormwater runoff, estimated concentrations of inorganic chemicals “do not have the potential to adversely affect groundwater quality,” according to the draft environmental impact statement that was done for the project and filed with the Town of Huntington.
Kouros Torkan, principal of project developer Syndicated Ventures, said he did not feel qualified to speak on the environmental aspects of the program, but believed there was no adverse impact.
“We voluntarily did the DEIS to specifically review the environmental impact,” he said. “There is no negative environmental impact on the groundwater to the best of my understanding.”
But Besmertnik claimed “you don’t have to have a PhD to figure this out.”
“Just like when you pollute with one smokestack, it doesn’t lead… to greenhouse gasses, it’s all a cumulative effect,” Besmertnik said.
Another one of the defining characteristics of the site project is its sand mounds. At the June 22 Huntington Planning Board meeting, Besmertnik asserted that the dunes act as a filter for water that ends up going into Long Island’s water table.
Long Island gets its water from underground. There are three primary aquifers that provide drinkable water, one of which, the Magothy aquifer, is primarily used in the area of the planned project. The Magothy aquifer, which sits on top of the Lloyd aquifer, is used by many wells throughout Suffolk
The project sits just south of the water table’s groundwater divide. Long Island’s groundwater flows north and south of this divide.
“The major zone of recharge, especially to the Magothy and Lloyd aquifers, is along the center of the island where the water table is highest,” according to a groundwater report from Stony Brook University’s Earth Science Educational Resource Center.
The center of the water table, the report further elaborates, is in fact the groundwater divide. Since water flows north and south from this point, any water that falls on the divide tends to go vertically into the ground. When this occurs, it replenishes the deep aquifers in a process called “recharge.”
According to a report from the Citizens Campaign for the Environment, “Unfortunately, this means that contaminants on the land within the deep-flow recharge area can also infiltrate the Magothy and Lloyd easily.”
Further explaining the characteristics of groundwater, Henry Bokuniewicz, director of the Groundwater Institute at Stony Brook, explained that “the aquifer is not like a swimming pool.”
“If you pour ink in one part of the pool, it just spreads all over the place,” he said.
He elaborated and said that, if contaminants have a short pathway to the water table, they can then easily spread in slow-moving contaminant plumes.
In the project’s DEIS, it’s explained that water will be consumed by retail, restaurant, office and other uses. The report states that the Suffolk County Sanitary Code allows up to 600 gallons per day, per acre for sanitary flow without sewage treatment. The total maximum sanitary flow for this project is calculated at 33,606 gallons per day.
That same figure is what is estimated to flow out of the site. But, in a letter to engineering firm Nelson, Pope & Voorhis in 2013, Robert Santoriello, superintendent of the Greenlawn Water District believes this to be a “significantly underestimated” figure.
“We are concerned that the proposed 17,700-square-foot restaurant and the 90,000-square-foot fitness center will, by themselves, use at least more than the estimated water quantity,” he wrote.
This figure is also what was used to calculate to potential nitrate impacts of the project.
According to the SONIR groundwater model produced by Nelson, Pope & Voorhis, the current estimated nitrogen concentration is 3.13 milligrams per liter. The EPA limit for nitrogen is 10 mg/l. According to the DEIS, the nitrogen concentration in recharge would be increased to 5.43 mg/l.
Though the code allows untreated water, the DEIS states that “the proposed action will utilize on-site septic systems to treat and recharge all wastewater generated.”
Besmertnik believes that the impact would still negatively impact the drinking water in the long run.
“We don’t just do things here because of what’s going to be good for the next year,” he said. “When you talk about water quality, you got to be thinking about 50 to 100 years into the future.”
A.J. Carter, spokesman for the Town of Huntington, said on Monday the Huntington Planning Board has not yet made a decision on whether or not to recommend a required change to the town’s comprehensive plan, necessary for the project to move forward, to the town board. Carter said a decision is expected to come down next month. Once that happens, the town board will take a look at the project.
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