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Manhattan's Backyard Wildlife Preserve
      by Nelson Harvey

Inside of the Jamaica Bay National Wildlife Refuge, a lone swan sits on the water, grooming itself. It is backed by the tall marsh grasses that characterize this swampy preserve, and behind those, I can see the Manhattan skyline.

The refuge, which encompasses 9,155 acres just east of Brooklyn and Queens, is such a haven for birds, from oystercatchers to willets and ospreys, that an estimated 20 percent of North America’s bird species visit it annually.

What makes the refuge more striking, though, is its proximity to one of the world most intensely urban areas. Less than an hour outside of Manhattan by subway, it sits just southeast of the runways at JFK, so that a visitor to the refuge hears not only a profusion of wild bird calls, but also the constant blast of man-made birds taking off nearby. When the twin towers fell in 2001, 29-year Park Service veteran Eduardo Castillo was watching from the shoreline of Jamaica Bay, just a short walk from his post at the refuge visitor’s center.

Along with such closeness to the city, however, comes exposure to a range of pollutants that threaten the health of the ecosystem. Four wastewater treatment plants discharge into the Bay, leading to elevated nitrogen levels that harm animal and plant species. Development in Brooklyn and Queens continues to reduce available habitat, and dredging and digging projects have altered water flows. The rate of salt marsh loss in the bay is estimated at 54 acres per year, and is accelerating.

The city Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has created a Watershed Protection Plan for the Bay, and the first draft of the plan  contains scores of proposals intended to improve the bay’s water quality, restore its ecology, and control upstream pollution. However, an advisory committee appointed to oversee the plan has criticized it for lacking enough quantitative goals, timelines, or cost estimates. “You can say you’re going to restore some oyster beds,” said committee co-chair Brad Sewell, an attorney for NRDC, “but are you going to restore one oyster bed, or 100 oyster beds?”

Because members of the advisory committee consider elevated nitrogen levels in the Bay from wastewater discharge to be the most urgent threat facing it, they have called for the creation of a separate, accelerated plan to address that issue.  “The DEP has been out of compliance with water quality standards for many years because of those wastewater facilities,” said Sewell. His group, the NRDC, has organized a campaign to urge the DEP to adopt a nitrogen reduction plan.

As I wandered through the Jamaica Bay Refuge on a recent visit, I came across a turtle in the middle of the path, attempting to bury itself in the sand to protect its eggs from predators. It was a basic survival mechanism, meant to diffuse a threat that the turtle has faced for eons. The external forces currently affecting Jamaica Bay are of a different sort: only humans can change them.



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Kicking Off Book Tour and Pre-Launch of Green Lighting Book for Green Guru Guides
As many of you know, I am Consulting Series Editor to McGraw-Hill on the Green Guru Guides. I have started an early launch of my book Green Lighting to kick off my book tour. Yup, seven states and a lot of sites. So my original story is on my site The Green Living Guy©. However, here is the most important point. There is a party tomorrow in NYC at the Hiro Ballroom for Green Lighting. I decided to kick off my Green Lighting and Green Guru Guides book tour at an event with Rock the Reactors on July 14th at the Hiro Ballroom in Manhattan. It symbolizes the essence of the book. If we go green with our lighting we will save energy at such a level that we would not need coal, nuclear or natural gas powerplants. Light emitting diodes (LED) like the Endura LED from Philips Lighting provide green solutions. It is so amazing to the industry that, like Mother Earth, Philips is giving us this bulb as the start of a global retrofit. For us, when photographer Courtney Dailey shot this picture with the amazing May Lindstrom whom I have known forever, it's an inspiration. Copyright 2010. Photographer, Courtney Dailey, McGraw-Hill Professional Royal Philips Electronics unveiled its 12 watt EnduraLED 60bulb a few weeks ago, the industry's first LED replacement for a 60 watt incandescent light bulb. They will be in stores in the fall. Shown for the first time here at the Lightfair International tradeshow, it marks an important breakthrough in the use of LED lighting technology in everyday applications. Consumers will now have an LED alternative to the most commonly used incandescent bulb, which will deliver up to 80% energy savings and last 25 times longer than its century-old predecessor. Recently, the state of Vermont voted not to renew Entergy's license to operate the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. On April 2nd, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation followed suit by denying Entergy a new water permit for Indian Point.

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