While the rest of us wait for the next drop of precipitation that
will eventually build into the latest flood for our neighborhoods, our
Town Board keeps busy by focusing on everything except properly running our
Town. They certainly are ignoring real storm and disaster preparation. Countless people throughout the Town
have complained to Mr Feiner and his Town Board, to our County
Legislators, State leaders and the media about the need for flood mitigation. All of them have ignored these
appeals for preparation to help the ever-increasing list of neighborhoods now flooding.
First,
Mr Feiner seems to only be interested in flooding if there is a press conference or
press release that can get his name in the media, or, if there is a
flood and he can be interviewed with the destroyed beachfront property behind
him, saying how terrible this is and he will contact every other elected
leader to do something. He won’t actually do anything himself except
stave off those nagging residents with copies of emails sent to others. Politics: why fix it when we can talk about it?
Second, in a meeting
held with several Greenburgh Civic Associations, county Legislator
Alfreda Williams stated the County’s Flood Mitigation Committee (we’re sure there’s
a more formal name) hasn’t met for almost a year. So while the weather has been conducive to cleaning out the rivers, removing debris, and helping improve the flow of water, nothing has been done. Several residents at
that meeting gave numerous ideas to improve the status quo to help
mitigate some of the future flooding. In fact, our own Victor
Carosi, Greenburgh’s Commissioner of Public Works, is a co-chair of the
committee. And, even after he has seen the devastation caused by the
flooding, he and others remain impassively disconnected to residents’ plight.
Third, some say it’s the homeowners problem
that they bought a home in a flood zone. While this may be true to a miniscule degree for a very few of these homes and businesses, there are many areas that now flood that never
flooded before or when residents purchased their homes years ago. In fact, in
canvassing different neighborhood residents and discussing water
issues with them, most said its only in the last 15 years that they had
experienced some water in their basements, crawlspaces or businesses.
The common thread has been while nothing has changed to expedite the
flow of the two rivers that parallel both sides of the Town, Mr Feiner’s non-stop
over-development in our Town has all of these new projects emptying
their storm and other drainage into either the Saw Mill River or the
Bronx River. With nothing being done to accommodate the runoff water that would have been absorbed into the ground, the surrounding low-lying areas flood. Many are anxious to see what happens to the 9A corridor after the
new construction in Eastview is completed.
A study
published in Nature Climate Change warned that the annual costs from
flooding in the world’s largest coastal cities could grow from about $6
billion to $1 trillion by 2050. Granted, 2050 may be some time away,
but its that kind of thinking and lack of planning that has currently landed us in
this morass of finger-pointing and lack of action. Sure, many
politicians will say this is going to cost money and take a lot of time.
They've been saying that about the 9A corridor for the last 50 years - maybe longer. The current National Flood Insurance Program is $24 billion in debt!
This deficit will not be washed away (pun intended) without reform of
the system. It’s also a bonafide indicator that increased investment in
mitigation efforts prior to an event is imperative before we are hit with the costs of
the next disaster which promise to be overwhelming.
True story: One
neighborhood is a “A” rated flood zone (worst) neighborhood. A young couple with
a young child from the Bronx purchased their first home here. They
never knew that Mr Feiner held a press conference in their driveway after Hurricane Irene.
They didn’t know he promised the couple living there to have FEMA
purchase their home from them so they could leave. They didn’t know Mr
Feiner was lying when he told them that. The young couple’s sale went
through without much fanfare - although for them it was a pretty
exhilarating moment. At the closing, however, they learned that the bank holding the mortgage requires them to have flood insurance. The
sellers might have neglected to mention that. Regardless, while their
checkbook was out, they wrote a $2,000 check to the bank for flood
insurance. Closings are like that. Bring your checkbook, be prepared to
empty it on fees and payments that would shame an IRS agent.
The
Federal Emergency Management Association (FEMA) underwrites the
National Flood Insurance Program. Yes, the Federal government. As
mentioned earlier, they are $24 billion in debt. These are the same
people who run Social Security, who don’t have enough money to pay
retirees; the Veterans Administration, who can’t take care of our
heroes; the Post Office, who has its own $8 billion deficit; Medicare
and Medicaid, which both do everything not to pay benefits and are rife
with corruption; Education, which many believe amounts to indoctrination – or just
day care, and many more but you get the point.
Back to FEMA. They charge homeowners thousands to pay back hundreds
when you place a claim. By the way, there’s a mandatory $5,000 deductible.
Government at its best?
We just had elections. Mr
Feiner wasn’t running. It doesn't matter - he’ll get re-elected next
year. Job performance in Greenburgh doesn’t matter. What does matter is
we keep the same people in office so we can get more proclamations,
plaques with our names on them and “atta boys” from Mr Feiner and his
ilk. Ms Williams is content to coast along for her base salary of $49,
200 and various stipends. And what of Mr Abinanti, handily re-elected as our “environmentally concerned” NYS
Assemblyman? He remains AWOL during all of this. Why tackle something he’s impotent to fix? In fact, he used to live in Greenburgh until Mr Feiner started
making too many bad decisions and moved to a safer area to distance
himself from real issues. We keep electing the same people who do nothing but pander to us.
The young couple who only last year
bought their new dream home? Here it is a year later and they
now know who Senator Chuck Schumer is. He co-sponsored a bill that
increased the cost of flood insurance. You see, after having to pay out
claims for Hurricane/Tropical Storms Irene and Sandy, the program went broke. Naturally, the politicians did
what they do best: they raised taxes, in the form of flood insurance premiums, but only to the people who get
flooded. So they hammer the people suffering the most, again.
And what of our new homeowners formerly of the Bronx and now
living in the A-rated flood prone Greenburgh? Their flood insurance went up a
whopping $20,000! The Town needs to address the flooding
issue they created with over-development, poor planning and developer
carte blanche. It may be part of the solution to cause the Federal government to readjust the flood maps and reduce the young couple’s flood premiums. Although it’s not likely because we continue to fail ourselves by electing the same people over and over again and they always seek the latest tragedy for publicity. This guarantees them that publicity. This has to change. Only then might we get A Better Greenburgh.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Inaction and Incompetence Guarantees More Damage
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