Mid Hudson Times Apr. 12 2017

T IMES NATIONAL NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION FIRST-PLACE AWARD FOR GENERAL EXCELLENCE, 2016 MID HUDSON Vol. 29, No 15 3 APRIL 12 - 18, 2017 3 ONE DOLLAR The End Display of power Page 14 Page 44 SERVING NEWBURGH AND NEW WINDSOR Wetlands protection Town approves purchase near Chadwick Lake S pecial R eport : N ewburgh ’ s T ainted W ater Not just a simple blood test By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] T The Newburgh Town Council has approved the purchase of a 30-acre property and wetlands north of Chadwick Lake. By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] The Newburgh Town Council has approved the purchase of a 30-acre property and wetlands north of Chadwick Lake. The property purchase is part of an ongoing effort to protect the lake, which serves as a chief source of drinking water for the Town of Newburgh. “We need to protect the watershed wherever we can,” said Councilwoman Betty Greene at Town Hall on Monday night. Located near the Town of Newburgh- Plattekill border, the undeveloped parcel contains New York State-designated wetlands that feed into the Quassaick Creek, a Chadwick Lake tributary. “It’s mostly wetlands,” said town attorney Mark Taylor. “Orange County acquired the parcel through tax foreclosure and has offered it to the town for a price of $15,000.” Development potential of the property is limited, Taylor said. “From the town’s perspective, ownership is the best means of protecting the waters flowing into the reservoir,” he said. The wetlands have been identified as a “high-priority watershed protection area,” said town Engineer James Osborne. The town has purchased several lakeside properties in an effort to preserve the lake’s water quality in recent years. Chadwick Lake is expected Continued on page 4 WWW.MIDHUDSONTIMES.COM he room was white and sterile. A sign reading “PFOS supplies” was posted to a The City of large, standing cabinet. A nurse Newburgh is slowly recovering from PFOS arrived with contamination of its a needle and drinking-water supply syringe, which she placed a label at Washington Lake. Manufactured in the on for storage. U.S. until 2000, the Soon, the syringe was filled chemical was used in Scotchgard products with the bubbly and non-stick cookware. red stuff, ready It was also a key to be shipped off to the Wadsworth ingredient in fire foam used at Stewart Air Center National Guard Base, Laboratory in where the chemical Albany. seeped into water The blood and soil. Pooling in a sample was taken as part of a stormwater retention pond near the air base, second round of blood tests offered the chemical flowed downhill to pollute the through the city’s drinking water. New York State In this series, the Department of Health to test for Mid Hudson Times investigates the water PFOS related to City of Newburgh crisis, the ongoing cleanup and the source drinking water. of the pollution at “This is not a Stewart Air National Continued on Guard Base. page 2