Monday, December 21, 2009

December 21, 2009, AFP: Gas 'gold rush' ignites in rural New York

Gas 'gold rush' ignites in rural New York
link to complete article is here: http://www.laredosun.us/notas.asp?id=2156

Pete Diehl (L), his son Adam (R) and their dog Boney on the family dairy farm December 14, 2009 in Callicoon, New York, about 120 miles (193 Km) northwest of New York City. The Diehls have refused to sign an agreement with energy companies to allow drilling rights on their land for access to part of the largest natural gas reserve in the US. AFP PHOTO

After a lifetime struggling to make money from the land, New York farmer Bill Graby has discovered he's sitting on treasure -- possibly the biggest natural gas deposit in America.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
By: Sebastian Smith

CALLICOON, December 20, 2009 (AFP) - After a lifetime struggling to make money from the land, New York farmer Bill Graby has discovered he's sitting on treasure -- possibly the biggest natural gas deposit in America.

"It's like winning the lottery," says the 6.6-foot (two-meter) dairy farmer from the picturesque town of Callicoon in the Catskills hills.

The deposit, called the Marcellus shale, stretches all the way from New York to Tennessee, containing 168 to 500 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, according to New York State's Department of Environmental Conservation.

That dwarfs the previous big daddy, the Barnett shale in Texas, and by industry estimates could meet all US gas needs for years.

"The size is potentially tremendous for the nation as a whole," John Felmy, chief economist for the American Petroleum Institute, told a Pennsylvania College of Technology conference last month.

Environmentalists fear intense drilling could bring ecological disaster to the same pristine Catskills that also contain New York City's entire drinking water supply.

Many others, though, foresee an economic miracle that could turn an impoverished section of New York into "a Little Texas," as 56-year-old Graby puts it.

These are early days. Extraction is underway in Pennsylvania, but New York's authorities are still debating regulatory approval, with a decision expected in 2010.

Yet already energy companies are swarming across the countryside, offering to make millionaires of cash-strapped farmers like Graby in exchange for drilling rights on their land.

The economics are self-evident. There's not only gas, but a huge market nearby in New York and New Jersey, and a transport network that includes a big new pipeline opened a year ago to bring gas from Canada.

In a region blighted by bankrupt farms and a struggling tourist industry, the excitement is palpable.

"It's a once in a lifetime opportunity that can change this region," Graby said at Callicoon's old-fashioned cafe/petrol station by the snow-lined Delaware River.

Geologists long knew about the Marcellus Shale, which formed about 385 million years ago and extends more than 7,000 feet (2,133 meters) underground, mostly under New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.

But development was unprofitable until recent improvements in horizontal, rather than ordinary vertical drills, and in an extraction process called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

"Nobody cared much about shales. They were all around us, but then the price of gas rose and there were some techniques that were quite useful... that made shales much more attractive," said Gary Lash, a geosciences professor at SUNY Fredonia university and an expert on the Marcellus.

In southern New York, the result is what the state's Department of Environmental Conservation likens to a "modern-day gold rush."

Graby and former teacher Noel van Swol have formed a landowners' association to bargain collectively with the gas companies.

A couple years ago, drilling rights were being sold to fast-talking company reps, or landmen, for a pittance. Now, they trade for small fortunes: about 5,000 dollars an acre for a five-year drilling lease and a whopping 20 percent of royalties on gas extracted, van Swol said.

That means a farmer leasing 200 acres would collect a million dollars upfront -- and the same again for an extension -- plus potentially astronomical royalties.

"It's the big play. This changes lives," says van Swol, sporting a solid gold ring decorated with an American Indian chief that he says brings him gambler's luck.

"This is game changing."

-- Gas or water? --

--------------------

Natural gas is a relatively clean-burning fuel, but the extraction process needed in the Marcellus is not pretty.

Fracking involves shooting enormous quantities of water, mixed with chemicals and sand, at extreme pressure into the subterranean rock, smashing shale and forcing out gas.

The process is often likened to an earthquake.

Ramsay Adams, executive director at Catskill Mountainkeeper environmental group, says the biggest worry is what happens next, when the poisonous mix is locked underground in the same hills as New York's drinking water aquifers.

"Thirty percent of these millions of millions of gallons of water are left down there," Adams said.

"Ultimately it will migrate up and go downstream. You could find the contamination downstream. No one knows. The gas companies don't know."

The gas industry says fracking is safe because gas wells are sealed from the water table, which is closer to the Earth's surface.

"Environmental extremists have poisoned the natural gas debate by implying that drilling operators will pollute our water and air," said Brad Gill, director of the Independent Oil and Gas Association of New York.

"They have used bad science and twisted facts to oppose natural gas exploration."

New York's environmental body also says that "no known instances of groundwater contamination have occurred from previous horizontal drilling or hydraulic fracturing projects" during previous projects in the state.

But Adams and other environmentalists are lobbying for swaths of countryside to be off-limits, especially anywhere near to what Adams considers New York's true treasure -- water.

"They think they have found the Saudi Arabia of natural gas," Adams said, "but we are the Saudi Arabia of fresh water."

Many opposing the gas rush are second home owners from New York aghast at the idea of drilling rigs scarring the landscape.

Yet holdouts also include the Diehl family, which has been farming the same river valley outside Callicoon for six generations.

"It's all about the water. It's what we drink, it's what our animals drink. And once the aquifers are breached, you can't fix them," Alice Diehl, 58, said in the cozy kitchen of her hilltop house.

To compensate for a collapse in milk prices, the Diehls are working overtime on everything from making maple syrup and honey to selling Christmas trees.

They say nothing can persuade them to risk contaminating their beloved land, where Diehl ancestors lie buried among a copse of trees in a broad field.

"Money isn't everything," said Alice's husband Peter, a wiry, bearded man of 65. He looked out over the snow-covered valley. "They can pay you a lot, but if they ruin the land, you have nothing."

Alice Diehl smiled as she recalled a gas company landman coming to the house last summer and promising to make them "multi-millionaires."

"Pete just ran him off," she said.

As New York's authorities get closer to ruling, tensions are running high.

Van Swol compares environmentalists to Soviet dictators and Adams acknowledges that people like van Swol "probably see me as the devil. I'm standing between them and that money."

Peter Diehl even finds himself arguing with his own brothers, who farm other parts of the family's valley. All their signatures would be needed to deal with a gas company.

"It makes things a little tense at Christmas," as Alice Diehl said.

In the Callicoon cafe, the air was full of expectation.

"I want to see those drilling rigs coming into town!" exclaimed one local as he greeted van Swol and Graby.

"You and me both," van Swol answered.

Later, van Swol said: "When those permits get approved here, all hell's going to break loose."

sms/ao/ns

December 21, 2009, AFP: Gas 'gold rush' ignites in rural New York

Gas 'gold rush' ignites in rural New York

Pete Diehl (L), his son Adam (R) and their dog Boney on the family dairy farm December 14, 2009 in Callicoon, New York, about 120 miles (193 Km) northwest of New York City. The Diehls have refused to sign an agreement with energy companies to allow drilling rights on their land for access to part of the largest natural gas reserve in the US. AFP PHOTO
After a lifetime struggling to make money from the land, New York farmer Bill Graby has discovered he's sitting on treasure -- possibly the biggest natural gas deposit in America.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
By: Sebastian Smith
Enlarge Font
Decrease Font
CALLICOON, December 20, 2009 (AFP) - After a lifetime struggling to make money from the land, New York farmer Bill Graby has discovered he's sitting on treasure -- possibly the biggest natural gas deposit in America.

"It's like winning the lottery," says the 6.6-foot (two-meter) dairy farmer from the picturesque town of Callicoon in the Catskills hills.

The deposit, called the Marcellus shale, stretches all the way from New York to Tennessee, containing 168 to 500 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, according to New York State's Department of Environmental Conservation.

That dwarfs the previous big daddy, the Barnett shale in Texas, and by industry estimates could meet all US gas needs for years.

"The size is potentially tremendous for the nation as a whole," John Felmy, chief economist for the American Petroleum Institute, told a Pennsylvania College of Technology conference last month.

Environmentalists fear intense drilling could bring ecological disaster to the same pristine Catskills that also contain New York City's entire drinking water supply.

Many others, though, foresee an economic miracle that could turn an impoverished section of New York into "a Little Texas," as 56-year-old Graby puts it.

These are early days. Extraction is underway in Pennsylvania, but New York's authorities are still debating regulatory approval, with a decision expected in 2010.

Yet already energy companies are swarming across the countryside, offering to make millionaires of cash-strapped farmers like Graby in exchange for drilling rights on their land.

The economics are self-evident. There's not only gas, but a huge market nearby in New York and New Jersey, and a transport network that includes a big new pipeline opened a year ago to bring gas from Canada.

In a region blighted by bankrupt farms and a struggling tourist industry, the excitement is palpable.

"It's a once in a lifetime opportunity that can change this region," Graby said at Callicoon's old-fashioned cafe/petrol station by the snow-lined Delaware River.

Geologists long knew about the Marcellus Shale, which formed about 385 million years ago and extends more than 7,000 feet (2,133 meters) underground, mostly under New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.

But development was unprofitable until recent improvements in horizontal, rather than ordinary vertical drills, and in an extraction process called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

"Nobody cared much about shales. They were all around us, but then the price of gas rose and there were some techniques that were quite useful... that made shales much more attractive," said Gary Lash, a geosciences professor at SUNY Fredonia university and an expert on the Marcellus.

In southern New York, the result is what the state's Department of Environmental Conservation likens to a "modern-day gold rush."

Graby and former teacher Noel van Swol have formed a landowners' association to bargain collectively with the gas companies.

A couple years ago, drilling rights were being sold to fast-talking company reps, or landmen, for a pittance. Now, they trade for small fortunes: about 5,000 dollars an acre for a five-year drilling lease and a whopping 20 percent of royalties on gas extracted, van Swol said.

That means a farmer leasing 200 acres would collect a million dollars upfront -- and the same again for an extension -- plus potentially astronomical royalties.

"It's the big play. This changes lives," says van Swol, sporting a solid gold ring decorated with an American Indian chief that he says brings him gambler's luck.

"This is game changing."

-- Gas or water? --

--------------------

Natural gas is a relatively clean-burning fuel, but the extraction process needed in the Marcellus is not pretty.

Fracking involves shooting enormous quantities of water, mixed with chemicals and sand, at extreme pressure into the subterranean rock, smashing shale and forcing out gas.

The process is often likened to an earthquake.

Ramsay Adams, executive director at Catskill Mountainkeeper environmental group, says the biggest worry is what happens next, when the poisonous mix is locked underground in the same hills as New York's drinking water aquifers.

"Thirty percent of these millions of millions of gallons of water are left down there," Adams said.

"Ultimately it will migrate up and go downstream. You could find the contamination downstream. No one knows. The gas companies don't know."

The gas industry says fracking is safe because gas wells are sealed from the water table, which is closer to the Earth's surface.

"Environmental extremists have poisoned the natural gas debate by implying that drilling operators will pollute our water and air," said Brad Gill, director of the Independent Oil and Gas Association of New York.

"They have used bad science and twisted facts to oppose natural gas exploration."

New York's environmental body also says that "no known instances of groundwater contamination have occurred from previous horizontal drilling or hydraulic fracturing projects" during previous projects in the state.

But Adams and other environmentalists are lobbying for swaths of countryside to be off-limits, especially anywhere near to what Adams considers New York's true treasure -- water.

"They think they have found the Saudi Arabia of natural gas," Adams said, "but we are the Saudi Arabia of fresh water."

Many opposing the gas rush are second home owners from New York aghast at the idea of drilling rigs scarring the landscape.

Yet holdouts also include the Diehl family, which has been farming the same river valley outside Callicoon for six generations.

"It's all about the water. It's what we drink, it's what our animals drink. And once the aquifers are breached, you can't fix them," Alice Diehl, 58, said in the cozy kitchen of her hilltop house.

To compensate for a collapse in milk prices, the Diehls are working overtime on everything from making maple syrup and honey to selling Christmas trees.

They say nothing can persuade them to risk contaminating their beloved land, where Diehl ancestors lie buried among a copse of trees in a broad field.

"Money isn't everything," said Alice's husband Peter, a wiry, bearded man of 65. He looked out over the snow-covered valley. "They can pay you a lot, but if they ruin the land, you have nothing."

Alice Diehl smiled as she recalled a gas company landman coming to the house last summer and promising to make them "multi-millionaires."

"Pete just ran him off," she said.

As New York's authorities get closer to ruling, tensions are running high.

Van Swol compares environmentalists to Soviet dictators and Adams acknowledges that people like van Swol "probably see me as the devil. I'm standing between them and that money."

Peter Diehl even finds himself arguing with his own brothers, who farm other parts of the family's valley. All their signatures would be needed to deal with a gas company.

"It makes things a little tense at Christmas," as Alice Diehl said.

In the Callicoon cafe, the air was full of expectation.

"I want to see those drilling rigs coming into town!" exclaimed one local as he greeted van Swol and Graby.

"You and me both," van Swol answered.

Later, van Swol said: "When those permits get approved here, all hell's going to break loose."

sms/ao/ns

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Action Alert from Catskill Mountainkeeper



























Catskill Mountainkeeper Action Alert
August 26, 2009











We have a crisis on our hands that requires your immediate cmk logo - smallattention



Dear Friends,

WE NEED YOU TO TAKE ACTION NOW TO KEEP MULTIPLE MASSIVE OFF-RESERVATION CASINOS OUT OF THE CATSKILLS

Join us in our campaign by contacting our elected officials and telling them to stop the Catskills casino scheme. Here is why. There are two major developments in the last week that have made the potential of large scale casino gambling in the Catskills much more of a reality.

At the invitation of Congressman Maurice Hinchey, Larry EchoHawk, Assistant Secretary of the Interior met with opponents and supporters on "a listening tour." Mr. EchoHawk is the person who reviews Native American related applications for casinos on the federal level and makes the formal recommendations about whether they should be approved. During that meeting Catskill Mountainkeeper, Sierra Club, the Natural Resources Defense Council and more than a dozen other organizations testified in opposition to casinos. Read about this breaking news story here

The Malaysian company that financed the startup of Foxwoods Resort and Casino in Connecticut and the Seneca Niagara Casino in New York has entered into an investment agreement with Empire Resorts, owner of Monticello Gaming and Racing in Monticello under which the company will invest $55 million and the Seneca's are negotiating to buy the Concord from Developer Louis Cappelli.



Right now there are at least 3 proposals to build gargantuan casinos in the Monticello area. They range from building on 333 acres along a mile stretch of the Neversink River to building an estimated 2,000,000 square foot casino complex in Bridgeville. At least 2 of the proposals estimate that they would each draw 6,000,000 visitors a year. These proposed developments if approved will totally transform our area and have a dramatically negative impact on the character of our region, our air quality and threaten our drinking water supply. The effect of adding hundreds of thousands of cars to our already crowded roadways would have adverse effects on our business and commerce.


The casino scheme is massive and unprecedented

A new "Casino City" with multiple casinos - 3,4,5 even 6 tribes and multiple independent sovereign nations, police forces and interests will be created. So where is the cumulative economic, environmental and social impact study for this? Where is the traffic study? Where is the impact study on crime, addiction, healthcare and emergency services for this new Casino City? The answer is that there is none.



What these casinos will bring is pervasive and compelling environmental, social and economic problems. While they are promoted as helping the local economy by bringing people to the area, each casino will be a self-contained "city" that will have all of the services, food, and retail outlets that visitors would need. They will not bring new business to our existing infrastructure of restaurants, bars, service establishments and small mom and pop businesses as promised. Instead they will create new levels of competition and also bring problems like increased crime, prostitution, poverty, violence, chemical dependency and suicide that will seriously negatively impact everyone who lives in the area.


We know these are strong statements. If you'd like more of the facts behind them please visit the Catskill Mountainkeeper website for an overview of the impact of bringing the proposed large-scale casinos into our area.

The political and business interests advocating the creation of these multiple giant casinos are extremely well connected and financed. They are also moving very quickly with the intent of "closing the deal" before legitimate citizen opposition can be organized and mobilized or even appropriate impact studies can be done. That's why we need your help TODAY!

Please join us by registering your vehement opposition to the potential creation of off-reservations casinos in Monticello and the Town of Thompson.

There are 4 ways that you can help right now

1. Sign a petition to our elected officials urging them to join the fight to stop casinos in the Catskills: Just click here

2. Write a letter or make a phone call to our elected officials and tell them in your own words why you don't want casinos in the Catskills.



Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther

18 Anawana Lake Road
Monticello, NY 12701
845-794-5807

Congressman Maurice Hinchey

City Hall, Third Floor
16 James St.
Middletown, NY 10940
845-344-3211


Senator Kirsten Gillibrand

780 Third Avenue
Suite 2601
New York, New York 10017
212-688-6262

Senator Charles Schumer

One Park Place, Suite 100
Peekskill, NY
914-734-1532


3. Write a letter or make a phone call to the head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs Larry EchoHawk and tell him why you do not want casinos in the Catskills.


Larry EchoHawk, Assistant Secretary, Indian Affairs

Department of the Interior
1849 C Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20240
202-208-3710



4. Pass this email along to your friends and neighbors and ask them to express their opposition to legalized gambling in the Catskills. Use the FORWARD EMAIL function below


Please help Catskill Mountainkeeper fight this important issue, we need your help more than ever. Make a donation today.

Donate Now


TAKE ACTION TO STOP CASINOS IN THE CATSKILLS - SIGN THE PETITION NOW!












About Catskill Mountainkeeper

Catskill Mountainkeeper is a member based advocacy organization dedicated to preserving and protecting the long term health of the six counties of the Catskill Region. As a representative face of the Catskills, we strive to be the eyes, ears and voice that look at issues, listen to concerns and speak on behalf of people who live, work, and recreate here. Recognizing strength in numbers, we organize concerned citizens to protect existing jobs and industry, take care of abundant but exceedingly vulnerable natural resources, and help to utilize available and often unclaimed local, state, and national funds to prevent and cushion the impact of natural disasters









Catskill Mountainkeeper

Ramsay Adams

Executive Director






Catskill Mountainkeeper

Wes Gillingham

Program Director



Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Mountainkeeper Spring 2009 News

(May 2 & 3) Potters of Sullivan County Host Annual Hot Kiln Tour to Benefit Mountainkeeper

This year, for the first time, the Potters of Sullivan County have teamed up with the Catskill Mountainkeeper for the Annual Hot Kiln Tour Weekend on May 2 & 3 from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Although many of the potters have studios and gift shops that are open year round, this is your chance to tour the county, visit the potters, see their process and the new work that has inspired them during the quiet months of winter.

The potters all start with the same lump of
clay, but their finished products are as varied as they are. Potters participating this year are Duke Pottery, Earthgirl Pottery, Honey Hill Pottery, Cecily Fortescue Ceramics, Sunshine Pottery, Hillside Studios, Claryville Pottery and Catskill Artists Gallery. Directions to studios are on the Sullivan Co. Pottery Trail Map. These free maps can be found in area shops & restaurants, or visit the official website of the Potters of Sullivan County, www.seepotsspun.com. Once you start the tour, each potter will be happy to give you directions to the next potter. (A percentage of all sales for the weekend will be donated to Mountainkeeper).

DEC announces partnership with Sullivan County to keep the Beaverkill Campground open for the 2009 season

Youngsville, NY - April 24, 2009 - Catskill Mountainkeeper applauds the NYS DEC's decision to partner with Sullivan County to keep the Beaverkill Campground open during these tough budgetary times.

We would like to thank Commissioner Pete Grannis and Region Three Director Willie Janeway for their efforts on this important issue. Catskill Mountainkeeper organized a campaign to help keep the Beaverkill Campground open including an online petition that received more than 600 signatures in partnership with Friends of the Beaverkill, Roscoe Chamber of Commerce, Livingston Manor Chamber of Commerce and the Sullivan County Visitors Association.

"This is how government should work" said Ramsay Adams, Executive Director of Catskill Mountainkeeper. "Community leaders organized a campaign; the County and State heard the call and worked hard to find a solution."

Catskill Mountainkeeper would also like to thank Senator John Bonacic, Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther, Legislators Elwin Wood and Jonathan Rouis along with the rest of the County Legislators and Sullivan County Manager David Fanslau.

622 people have signed the petition as of Monday April 27, 2009
View the signatures here


Mountainkeeper to Give Talk on Gas Drilling at Cooperstown Village Library

The Friends of the Village Library of Cooperstown announces the April Adult Lecture Series for Thursday, April 30th at 7pm in the Cooperstown Village Meeting Room, just below the village library on Main Street. Ramsay Adams and Wes Gillingham from the Catskill Mountainkeeper organization will present an informative program on gas drilling. This educational lecture will include a general overview of gas drilling, hydraulic fracturing and regulatory issues.

If you have any questions, please contact Lisa Lippitt at 607-547-8154.


(April 15, 2009) Mountainkeeper featured in Earth Island Journal story:

The Battle Over New York's Marcellus Shale

“One thing that’s happened,” says Wes Gillingham, Program Director of Catskill Mountain Keeper, “is that this whole issue has awakened people to the complexity of hydro fracking and the whole issue of regulatory oversight and whether it’s adequate or not. And to the basic question of whether it can be done safely at all.” Read the entire story by Adam Federman, Contributing Writer, Earth Island Journal here


Thursday, March 12, 2009

River Reporter Article on Beaverkill Campground



Groups unite for Beaverkill Campground

A plan to keep the campground open

By FRITZ MAYER

BEAVERKILL, NY — The Beaverkill Campground is one of six state-operated campgrounds in New York that is slated to remain closed this year due to budget considerations. But community groups, county agencies and officials are working diligently to keep it open.

A meeting hosted by Catskill Mountainkeeper in Livingston Manor on March 7 drew members of various organizations who pledged to lobby officials in Albany to open the facility, which contributes to the economic health of area. Ramsey Adams of Mountainkeeper said that the closure would save the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), which operates the campground, perhaps $10,000 to $15,000, but the loss to the region would be far greater.

The DEC has said that the campground has been very much underutilized in the past three years, but campground advocates point out that the past three years have each seen historic floods rampage through the area.

County manager David Fanslau said in a phone interview on March 9 that he is working on a proposal whereby the county would assume operational control of the facility. Under the arrangement, the DEC would not pay for the operation of the campground; the revenue from campground fees would be used to cover expenses.

The county currently has such an arrangement with the Palisades Parks Conservancy (PPC) regarding the public beach at Lake Superior in the Town of Bethel. Under the contract the county has with PPC, the county department of public works runs the facility primarily using seasonal employees.

Under this scenario, according to Roberta Byron-Lockwood, president and CEO of the Sullivan County Visitors Association, her agency would be able to more effectively market the campground on its website and in various publications, and she has signed on to the effort to keep the campground open.

It’s a cause that has widespread support from officials.

On March 5, the Sullivan County Legislature passed a resolution urging the DEC and commissioner Pete Grannis to reconsider their position on the campground. And lawmaker Alan Sorensen issued a press release saying that he not only wants to keep the campground open, but he wants to apply to the state for stimulus dollars to fund other eco-tourism projects like the O&W rails-to-trails initiative and the Upper Delaware Scenic Byway.

Sorensen said the fight to keep the Beaverkill campground open “should also be used as a start to actually expand our efforts to build our ecotourism industry in conjunction with the bed-and-breakfast industry, Bethel Woods and even our farming industry.”

The Sullivan County Partnership for Economic Development has also called to keep the campground open and is urging members to write to William Janeway, director of DEC Region Three, 21 South Putt Corners Road, New Paltz, NY 12561 to advocate for the campground.

Go to www.catskillmountainkeeper.org for an online petition urging the DEC to keep the campground open.

Contributed photo
Pete Grannis, commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), fourth from left, visited the Beaverkill Covered Bridge in August 2008 in recognition of the bridge being placed on the National Register of Historic Places. The bridge sits alongside the Beaverkill Campground, which under current DEC plans will not open this summer. (Click for larger version)

Community groups unite to save the Beaverkill Campground

http://www.midhudsonnews.com/News/2009/March09/04/BvkillCmgnd_CM-04Mar09.html


Covered bridge at the Beaverkill
Campground

ROSCOE – The Catskill Mountainkeeper organization, the Roscoe Chamber of Commerce and the Friends of the Beaverkill are teaming up to lobby for the state to keep the Beaverkill Campground open this summer.

The state Department of Environmental Conservation last week announced the Beaverkill and a handful of other campgrounds would be closed because of low attendance and the need to save money given the state of New York’s fiscal condition.

Catskill Mountainkeeper Executive Director Ramsay Adams said the campground is a key component to the Sullivan County tourism economy.

The savings by closing the campground would be $10,000 to $15,000, said Adams. “The amount of money that the state will save in their cost they pay to keep the campsite open is greatly outweighed by the amount of money Sullivan County is going to lose in tourism dollars, and that’s just in one year.”

The state maintains attendance has been low in recent years, but Adams said that is because during the 2006, 2007 and 2008 camping seasons, the site was hit with three “100 year floods,” the main road to the site was closed or only allowed local traffic and for much of that period, the Beaverkill Covered Bridge was closed for repair, limiting access to the campsites.

Green organizations team up in Sullivan

Green organizations team up in Sullivan

MONTICELLO — Sullivan County environmental groups that oppose gas drilling in western Sullivan, casino gaming in Thompson, the landfill expansion in Monticello and the mushroom plant in the southern Town of Mamakating are getting together.

They're not, they say, teaming up to oppose economic development projects.

"This is not to fight anything," said Janet Newberg, president of Special Protection of the Environment for the County of Sullivan.

Newberg said the concept is modeled on organizations in Pennsylvania, which have pooled their expertise, established goals for environmental protection and sustainable economic development and educated the public.

For example, SPECS has done lots of research on recycling and composting, whereas other groups are experts on solar energy, community cleanup projects, green building practices and the environmental review process.

"People are thirsty for information," she said.

Several of these groups, however, such as SPECS, which opposes the county landfill expansion, have been focused on a single issue.

Tim McCausland, president of the Sullivan County Partnership for Economic Development, said he doesn't feel threatened by the prospect of having to debate a super-sized opponent at public hearings — provided they don't gum things up with unrealistic objectives.

"It comes down to hysteria and total irrelevant issues that are brought up that make my life and economic development projects more difficult," he said.

The groups held their first meeting Thursday in Monticello. Others attending included the Sullivan Alliance for Sustainable Development, Catskill Mountainkeeper, The Delaware Highlands Conservancy and The Basha Kill Area Association. Representatives from the Gerry Foundation and Sullivan County Planning Department also attended.

vwhitman@th-record.com