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Ahead of Senate Sandy-Aid Vote, Schumer Cautiously Optimistic

Credit: Joseph Kellard
Credit: Joseph Kellard
Story by Joseph Kellard

Sen. Charles Schumer expressed cautious optimism that the Senate this week will pass a $60 billion emergency relief bill to assist families, businesses and municipalities from New Jersey to Staten Island to Montauk that are working to recover from Hurricane Sandy.

At a press conference on a Point Lookout beach Sunday afternoon, Schumer said the vote on the bill is locked for 5:30 p.m. Monday, but that five Republicans are still needed to vote in favor of the package in order for it to pass.

“We’re on the phone calling them,” Schumer said of the Republicans.

Moreover, a unanimous consent among all senators is needed to agree to bring the vote to the floor, and Sen. Mike Lee of Utah wants “to make sure that we pay for all of this with cuts in other things,” Schumer said.

The package will provide funds to homeowners to raise their homes and to small businesses to reopen their stores, as well as to municipalities, including the City of Long Beach, Nassau County and Town of Hempstead, for restoration of beaches and inlets. About $5 billion will be available in New York and New Jersey for Army Corps of Engineer projects, including dune restoration.

“It’s going to help us rebuild our whole South Shore beachfront from Staten Island to Montauk, in a way that we couldn’t before,” Schumer said of the aid package. “ … What we’re going to do is not just restore the damage that occurred from Sandy, but make it better.”

Schumer cited 22 projects that include dredging, restoring sand to beaches and providing jetties and seawalls.
About $150 million of the package would be allocated to Long Beach island, from East Rockaway Inlet to Jones Inlet, providing for projects on about seven of the nine miles of public shoreline along the barrier island. Schumer said that plans are already in place to rebuild dunes in Long Beach that were designed in years past.

“What we’re going to do, if the community wants, is build a dune,” Schumer said of plans in Long Beach.

Assemblyman Harvey Weisenberg was among the officials at Sunday’s press conference that also included Town of Hempstead Supervisor Kate Murray and Long Beach City Manager Jack Schnirman. Weisenberg said that Long Beach failed to move forward with a $98 million Army Corp of Engineer project for beach restoration in 2006 because the City Council at the time was “intimidated” by people from out of town who attended council meetings, “saying ‘we’re going to have black sand on our beach, we’re going to have riptides, people are going to drown and we don’t want to have it done.’”

But others have said that the council turned down the project in part because it failed to address shoring up the bay side of the barrier island.

Morris Kramer, an Atlantic Beach resident and self-described “independent environmentalist,” expressed skepticism that a post-Sandy beach restoration project would move forward in Long Beach.

“Unless the people in Long Beach, professionals and the business people, the residents, gather together to swamp these people, it’s not going to happen,” Kramer said of people who opposed the project in 2006.  

City Council member Len Torres, in answer to a question about the potential that the council may vote against a new beach restoration project, said: “We have a complete majority on having the work done by the Army Corps of Engineers.”

Of the other projects covered under the aid package, $750 million will be provided to rebuild the dunes and replenish the beaches from Fire Island to Montauk, and $2 million to address shoreline erosion at Asharoken, a village in the Town of Huntington.

If the Senate passes the $60 billion aid package Monday, “the money can flow within a couple of months” for many of the projects, Schumer said. He noted that while plans for dredging have already been authorized, some of these projects may be held up due to lack of equipment.  

“We will work with the community to figure out a priority, which ones should go first, which are the most important, obviously Jones and Fire Island,” Schumer said.

Earlier this month, Congress approved part of the aid package, a $50.7 billion relief bill, which passed by a vote of 241-180 — with 192 Democrats and 49 Republicans in support; 179 Republicans and one Democrat opposed. Two week prior to that vote, Congress passed a much smaller $9.7 billion package, which wrapped up a highly charged debate around the House's failure to vote on the $60.4 billion Sandy aid bill on Jan. 1.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Greg Bashaw May 21, 2013 at 09:32 pm
As for the mandate, maybe YOU should run for the Board, we need a change and thats WHY I amRead More running... Thanks for the info though!
Greg Bashaw May 21, 2013 at 09:30 pm
FYI- Rosemary Corliss, mentioned it 2times as something are are planning to loo at....at Meet theRead More Candidates Night......
Pat Boyle Egland May 20, 2013 at 04:06 pm
The NBUFSD BOE has not mentioned cutting bussing in over a year, it is not a part of the 2013-2014Read More budget. The pensions and benefits are not regulated by the BOE it is a state mandate.
Greg Bashaw May 20, 2013 at 12:50 am
Well for starters, why not give candidates 401K's and only pay a proportion of their benefits...HireRead More teachers and adm that actually live in our district...... Has anybody proposed dismantling the high school district......From the way I understand they have tried unsuccessfully to combine, well then how about saving moneu and splitting up the 3 high schools...This was we wont need 2 administrations...... I will try and I will think out of the box!
truth May 19, 2013 at 09:11 pm
You are going to do something that even Cuomo won't touch...pensions? Well, thank you forRead More recognizing the real problem that faces the taxpayers but how will you address the problem and not just promise?
Dan DeLilla May 18, 2013 at 10:40 pm
So Lu Scala never had any children so it might be safe to say you have never been to a PTA meetingRead More or a School Board meeting or a budget presentation so then you would have no idea how the money is spent good or bad. I'm sorry that your neighbors make more than you but like anything else you get what you pay for there are educational requirements for teaching and administration jobs, I'm sure you would be happy if all the school personnel could be replaced by minimum wage earners or better yet we could close all the schools after all you have been out of school for 40 years so you don't need them anymore, but thats not how it works. Why is always the uninformed that speak loudest and longest?
Lu Scala May 17, 2013 at 08:49 am
I never had any kids.. and am the last kid who went to to the Bellmore Merrick school system.....itsRead More been almost 40 years since I was a Mempham grad..and it is very disharting to hear that my many many high tax dollars..are not enought for these kids I have been sororting all these years!!! Who is getting all the money??? Its all bull.. aI live inbetween teachers.. how is it they can afford high end cars, housekeepers, landscapers, ect??????... the money is being spent in the WRONG WAYS TO THE TEACHERS, AND MOST OF ALL THE ADMISTRATION, THE SCHOOL BOARD ECT... I AM CALLING FOR A MASSIVE AUDIT AND GET0 per year.. they afe not worth any more then that.. THE MONEY BACK FROM ANYONE WHO WAS PAID MORE THEN $75,00....
patti May 16, 2013 at 08:28 pm
A bit of a surprise considering kids come home with a supply list a mile long (and average $40-$75).