Mid Hudson Times May 18 2016

TIMES MID HUDSON Vol. 28, No 20 3 MAY 18 - 24, 2016 3 ONE DOLLAR First Holy Communion Setting the pace Page 23 Page 43 SERVING NEWBURGH AND NEW WINDSOR Blaming the Guard Maloney: Air National Guard base likely source of water contaminant Trash talk at City Hall City shortens garbage abatement notice timeframe By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] Washington Lake. By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] Officials are calling on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Defense to immediately conduct an investigation into the discovery of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) in City of Newburgh water. And, Congressman Sean Patrick Maloney is pointing his finger squarely at the Stewart Air National Guard Base as the probable source of the contamination. “What is clear is that a third party has contaminated a water source for the City of Newburgh,” Maloney said Tuesday. “We need an investigation by the DOD, particularly at Stewart.” The city switched its water source from Washington Lake to Brown’s Pond when learning of elevated levels of PFOS in the water supply a few weeks ago. Levels of the chemical have since dropped to nearly zero. New York State Department of Health records show PFOS was first detected in the city water supply in 2013. It was Continued on page 4 WWW.MIDHUDSONTIMES.COM Garbage will sit around for less time in the City of Newburgh thanks to a new rule shortening the time period before the city can collect garbage posing a nuisance on private properties. “This particular legislation is amending the initial notice timeframes from 20 days to a shorter seven days,” said city Corporation Counsel Michelle Kelson. The change relates to an abatement ordinance that allows the city to take action if a determination has been made “that the property is in such disrepair that it rises to the level of a public nuisance,” Kelson explained at a meeting of the Newburgh City Council last week. The council voted unanimously to approve the resolution amending the city code to shorten the abatement notice timeframe. The change means property owners will have a week to perform the abatement after receiving a notice from the city. The vast majority of abatement notices have to do with garbage, said city Councilwoman Karen Mejia. “We’ve had several examples in the past year of debris just sitting on the sidewalks, in people’s the front lawns,” said Mejia. “That it takes 20 days for the property owner to clean it up… that’s Continued on page 2