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Release: In Wayne County, Cuomo updates $300 million for flood control on Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River. Press releases, transcript, Youtube videos.
NYSNYS News








For Immediate Release: 2/12/2020
GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO


GOVERNOR CUOMO ANNOUNCES 20 DREDGING SITES SELECTED AS PART OF STATE'S $300 MILLION EFFORT TO BUILD RESILIENCY ALONG LAKE ONTARIO AND THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER

20 Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence Harbors Selected as Dredging Sites, See The Map Here

$300 Million Appropriated To Increase The Resilience of Shoreline Communities

First Round of Dredging at Port Bay, Wayne County Now Complete

Dredging to Commence at Blind Sodus Bay, Wayne County in April 2020

First Shoreline Stabilization Project Completed at Mexico Point State Park in Oswego County


Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the completion of the first round of dredging at Port Bay, in Wayne County, the first of 20 dredging sites selected across the region to address a backlog of projects at harbor navigation channels along the southern shore of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River. The $15 million regional dredging initiative is part of the State's $300 million effort to repair and build resiliency in communities recovering from damage caused by high water levels and flooding, with the next round of dredging to commence at Blind Sodus Bay, Wayne County in April 2020.

The Governor made the announcement during a stop at Sandy Pond, where a $600,000 REDI award for the North Sandy Pond Resiliency Project will help the Town of Sandy Creek strengthen the barrier bar dividing Sandy Pond and Lake Ontario. Multiple phases of dredging will provide a substantial amount of sediment for beneficial reuse and help to maintain the balance of natural coastal processes, while protecting property and infrastructure, and ensuring reactional access to the waterfront.

"New Yorkers living and working along the shorelines of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River are still reeling from last year's record flooding that devastated their communities," Governor Cuomo said. "We are doing everything we can to help these communities build back stronger than before. We have completed the first round of 20 dredging projects, beginning with Port Bay, as part of our $300 million initiative to repair and rebuild resiliency by creating natural storm barriers along the region's waterfront, which will ensure a better and stronger future for lakeside residents."

The first REDI project completed is at Mexico Point State Park in Oswego County where record-high water levels at Lake Ontario in 2017 and again in 2019 caused devastating damage to the shoreline. In just four weeks, 435 linear feet of shoreline was stabilized with the placement of 3,200 tons of stone. The project, which was completed ahead of schedule on February 6, will preserve public access to Lake Ontario at Mexico Point Park and protect the local economy through the continued attraction of visitors.

At a Resiliency and Economic Development Initiative Conference in Albany in November 2019, the Governor introduced the $15 million Regional Dredging Project to the representatives of communities slated to receive REDI grants, letting them know that later that month field teams would be identifying areas to be dredged and developing a timeline for implementation. Underwater surveys for approximately 20 potential harbor locations were planned, and in early December the first was completed at Port Bay in Wayne County.

The funding complements Governor Cuomo's creation of REDI, which includes a multi-agency commission that has been studying ways to strengthen infrastructure along Lake Ontario's waterfront while bolstering the region's local economies. Through REDI, the State has committed up to $300 million, for 133 projects, to rebuild the shoreline, as well as improve resiliency in flood prone regions along Lake Ontario.

Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Basil Seggos said, "These 20 regional dredging projects are a critical component of Governor Cuomo's comprehensive plan to protect Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River shoreline communities from high water. The Governor's REDI experts will continue to identify strategic and nature-based flood mitigation projects and utilize state-of-the-art technology to advance projects that protect harbor navigation channels and the economic activity they support while safeguarding our environment and communities for generations to come."

Office of General Services Commissioner RoAnn Destito said, "As one of the 11 State agency commissioners sent by Governor Cuomo to work with Lake Ontario communities to identify assets at risk from flooding and projects that would mitigate those risks, I am delighted to see our efforts coming to fruition. No one has been pushing harder than the Governor has to get these REDI and dredging projects done."

State agencies, in coordination with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, secured engineering services to kick start the eight-county regional dredging project and deliver a project outline that will identify areas to be dredged and include a timeline for implementation. The New York Power Authority is part of the REDI Strike Team on dredging and is providing independent technical review for the dredging projects.

Using a remote-controlled boat equipped with a multi-beam sonar, a bathymetric survey was completed by prime contractor Ramboll Group's sub-consultant Prudent Engineering, LLP, a New York State-certified minority-owned business headquartered in East Syracuse, to give the State a picture of what the bottom of Port Bay and Blind Sodus Bay look like. The survey is helping to determine how much dredging is required to reach the desired depth for the navigation channels. This type of survey, along with knowledge of the sediment composition and a disposal location for the dredged sediment is required to implement the Regional Dredging Project at each harbor. Field teams will be conducting additional surveys at harbors throughout the region in spring 2020.

The State's initial support for the Regional Dredging Project is designed to give Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River counties the time needed to develop long-term operational, maintenance, and funding plans to maintain recreational navigation channels in the future. The harbors along the southern shore of Lake Ontario alone are estimated to generate $94 million in economic activity and support more than 1,350 local jobs.

Dredging locations include:
Oswego County: Sandy Pond Inlet, Salmon River/Port Ontario
Niagara County: Wilson, Olcott Harbor
Orleans County: Oak Orchard Harbor, Johnson Creek
Monroe County: Sandy Creek, Braddock Bay, Long Pond Outlet, Irondequoit Bay
Wayne County: Port Bay, Blind Sodus Bay, Bear Creek Harbor, Pultneyville, East Bay
Cayuga County: Little Sodus Bay
Jefferson County: Clayton French Creek Marina, Henderson "The Cut"
St. Lawrence County: Ogdensburg "City Front Channel," Morristown Navigation Channel

Each dredging project is targeted to be complete no more than four months from its start date, with dredging expected to commence in:
April 2020 at Blind Sodus Bay
September 2020 at East Bay and North Sandy Pond Inlet
October 2020 at Braddock Bay, Pultneyville and Little Sodus Bay
April 2021 at Sandy Creek
June 2021 at Olcott Harbor, Oak Orchard Harbor and Wilson
July 2021 at Irondequoit Bay, Long Pond Outlet, Bear Creek Harbor, Henderson "The Cut," Johnson Creek, Salmon River/Port Ontario, Ogdensburg "City Front" Channel, Morristown Navigation Channel and Clayton French Creek Marine.

Initial details about the Regional Dredging Project in Cayuga, Jefferson, Monroe, Niagara, Orleans, Oswego, St. Lawrence, and Wayne counties, as well as the regional benefit to all of these counties is available here.

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For Immediate Release: 2/12/2020
GOVERNOR ANDREW M. CUOMO


VIDEO, B-ROLL, AUDIO, PHOTOS & RUSH TRANSCRIPT: GOVERNOR CUOMO ANNOUNCES 20 DREDGING SITES SELECTED AS PART OF STATE'S $300 MILLION EFFORT TO BUILD RESILIENCY ALONG LAKE ONTARIO AND THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER

20 Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence Harbors Selected as Dredging Sites, See The Map Here

$300 Million Appropriated To Increase The Resilience of Shoreline Communities

First Round of Dredging at Port Bay, Wayne County Now Complete

Dredging to Commence at Blind Sodus Bay, Wayne County in April 2020

First Shoreline Stabilization Project Completed at Mexico Point State Park in Oswego County

Governor Cuomo: "But New York is not waiting. We're not going to trust the IJC. We're not going to trust the federal government. We're not going to wait for Mother Nature to change. We're taking our fate and our destiny to our own hands and we're acting. We announced an unprecedented $300 million program called REDI which is the Resiliency Economic Development Initiative and it is what the name says. Be more resilient and let's adjust our economics to this new reality."


Earlier today, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo announced the completion of the first round of dredging at Port Bay, in Wayne County, the first of 20 dredging sites selected across the region to address a backlog of projects at harbor navigation channels along the southern shore of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River. The $15 million regional dredging initiative is part of the State's $300 million effort to repair and build resiliency in communities recovering from damage caused by high water levels and flooding, with the next round of dredging to commence at Blind Sodus Bay, Wayne County in April 2020. More information is available here.

VIDEO of today's event is available on YouTube here and in TV quality (h.264, mp4) format here.

B-ROLL is available on YouTube here and in TV quality (h.264, mp4) format here.

AUDIO of today's event is available here.

PHOTOS of today's event will be available on the Governor's Flickr page.

A rush transcript of the Governor's remarks is below:

Good morning. Let me know acknowledge some of our special guests who are here today and then you'll hear from some of my colleagues. I want to thank my team - Commissioner Basil Seggos, Commissioner of DEC, and Commissioner Roann Destito, Commissioner of Office of General Services. Senator Ritchie is with us, I want to thank her very much. Assemblyman Mark Walczyk. We have Jefferson County Chair Scott Gray who's with us, Ruth Scheppard who's with us. I want to thank them very much and I want to thank Lynne Johnson who has been pioneering a regional dredging project that makes a lot of sense. We have Molly Reilly from my team who's been running this project, and Simonia Subotic and I want to thank them very much for their work.

Okay, why are we out here in February? This is a true commitment to be here because we have serious situation that has been developing for a number of years and we said we would be on top of it and we are on top of it and that's the ongoing problem of high water level on Lake Ontario. I'd like to say it's a new problem, it's not. We've lived with it for several years now. This year the lake is even higher than it was last year, which is troubling news. The IJC, which is the organization that is charged with monitoring the level of the lake and managing the level of the lake says it's not an outflow problem, it's an inflow problem. I still don't understand that. To me, inflow and outflow are directly related. And the IJC's position is well it's not that we're not letting out enough water, it's that too much water is coming in. We've had an ongoing disagreement with the IJC - if more water is coming in then I say to the IJC, "You have should have been letting out more water. If you have an inflow problem then you adjust it on the outflow."

This has been going on for several years, we're actually in court suing the IJC, which was not a step that I wanted to take, but they had refused to do anything for several years. The IJC's slim reed of hope is that the increased inflow this year is because of high level of rain and we don't have the high level of snow so there will be less of a snow melt and therefore there may not be the kind of flooding we've seen before.

But New York is not waiting. We're not going to trust the IJC. We're not going to trust the federal government. We're not going to wait for Mother Nature to change. We're taking our fate and our destiny to our own hands and we're acting. We announced an unprecedented $300 million program called REDI which is the Resiliency Economic Development Initiative and it is what the name says. Be more resilient and let's adjust our economics to this new reality. The $300 million has funded projects all along the shoreline of Lake Ontario and Cayuga and Oswego - 31 projects, total of $43 million. We just finished the Mexico Point Park stabilization so that park which is a great tourism destination will be fully operational.

And part of what we're doing is a regional dredging operation, $15 million for regional dredging, 20 locations all along the shoreline. Eight counties are on the Ontario shore. Every county has certain dredging operations. It goes from St. Lawrence to Niagara County. What the dredging does is it increases the access and capacity of creeks, inlets, etcetera, and it uses the dredging material, in this situation to increase a barrier to keep the high water from affecting the shoreline so dredging for access, creating a shoreline barrier that is higher than before that will be a buffer against the higher level of the lake. We're also funding $30 billion in business improvement and resiliency, keeping the economy running and making the economy stronger has been very important to us. This part of the state tourism is a very big economic driver. We don't want the lake flooding in any way to impact the tourism. We've actually done a good job on that. The economic numbers, the tourism numbers, were up and very strong last year. The state did additional tourism advertising. We did a lower fees for state parks, we did additional free fishing license days to increase that tourism and that worked. But we now want to help these businesses repair from any damage done and make themselves more resilient going into the future. We also have a 20 million dollar homeownership assistance program for homes that were damaged by the storm. But, the bottom line is this is what they call a new normal. It's happened for several years. We don't think it's going to stop, so let's adjust to the new reality and let's do it by taking action.

And that's exactly what we're doing. We didn't just announce another government program. It is happening, it is happening now, it's happening today right here. It will be happening in all these dredging locations. Let's make this transition to the new normal as quickly as possible. Let's get these businesses rebuilt, let's make them more resilient, let's make them stronger, let's make them more economically viable than ever before to keep that economic engine. And let's adjust to this reality. We'll stay on the IJC, we'll do everything we have to do. In the meantime, let's take action and make sure that we're ready for what Mother Nature has brought us and that it's going to work for the homeowners and the businesses along Lake Ontario.

I want to thank all my colleagues for braving the cold today.

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