Mid Hudson Times Aug. 24 2016

TIMES MID DEC to lower water levels at Washington Lake By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] Contractors for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation have begun work to lower water levels at Washington Lake. Water levels have swelled since perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) was found in and around the lake, which was the city’s primary source of drinking water until May. Contractors began preliminary work on Monday. “Our plan is to lower and maintain the water level through a direct discharge of Lake Washington water to Silver Stream, after first treating the water with portable, granular-activated carbon treatment units,” DEC Deputy Commissioner of Remediation and Materials Management Martin Brand wrote in a letter to Newburgh City Manager Michael Ciaravino last week. Brand said the discharge will lead to a portion of Silver Stream, downstream of diversion gates that were closed to cut off the flow of water from Silver Stream, which also flows through the recentlydesignated Superfund site at the Stewart Air National Guard Base. Continued on page 4 HUDSON Vol. 28, No 34 3 AUGUST 24 - 30, 2016 3 ONE DOLLAR Guide to the celebration SERVING NEWBURGH AND NEW WINDSOR Harzardous to our health? Gillibrand calls for blood tests in wake of PFOS By SHANTAL RILEY [email protected] U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is calling on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to offer blood testing for perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) to City of Newburgh residents. “Residents of Newburgh should be able to drink their water without having to worry about whether it is going to harm them, and they have a right to know the extent of how this water crisis has already affected them,” said Gillibrand in a statement last week. She urged the CDC to work with the New York State Department of Health to offer blood tests in order to get “clarity about the extent” of the PFOS contamination. “We need to use every tool and resource the government has, from testing to funding to scientific expertise, to fully investigate the sources of this contamination and prevent it from happening again,” Gillibrand said. The senator joins a chorus of officials to demand federal action following the discovery of PFOS in the city’s drinking water supply in May. Samples showed extremely high levels of PFOS at an outfall pipe located at Continued on page 2 Blue & Gold Workers paint the word “Newburgh” in the end zone of Academy Field recently, as part of the replacement of the turn on the Newburgh Free Academy Field. Story, additional photos on page 40. WWW.MIDHUDSONTIMES.COM