STATEMENT FROM THE
ADIRONDACK COUNCIL ON
THE NYS LEGISLATURE'S FINAL PASSAGE OF CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
THAT WILL HELP
A SMALL ADIRONDACK VILLAGE
Amendment Will Go Before the Voters at the November 3rd General
Election
For more information:
John F. Sheehan
518-432-1770 (ofc)
518-441-1340 (cell)
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Lost amongst the intrigues of
the past few weeks in the NYS Legislature was the final passage
of a Constitutional Amendment (A.2802/S.8284) designed to allow
a small Adirondack village to build a back-up power line to prevent
frequent mid-winter blackouts created by storm damage to its
single electrical supply.
The village has permission to tap into the Stark Falls Reservoir
power dam on the Raquette River, but must get permission from
the public before the new power line can legally cross the public
Forest Preserve to reach Tupper Lake. The Forest Preserve is
protected against logging and development by Article 14, Section
1 of the NYS Constitution, also known as the Forever Wild Clause.
This amendment will be placed before the voters at the November
3 general election, removing a handful of acres from the preserve
and replacing them with lands of equal or greater value to the
public and the preserve.
It is important to let people know about this, since there are
no statewide elections this fall that would bring a large turnout
to the polls. We will work to promote this in NYC, where Bloomberg
is running for re-election and where turnout will be high. I
will tour the state this summer to speak with editorial boards
about supporting and promoting the referendum. I don't believe
anyone else is doing this.
There are no other statewide ballot issues anticipated this year.
Below is a more detailed description of the amendment:
There will be a Constitutional Amendment on the Nov. 3 ballot,
allowing for the construction of a power line on the roadside
of State Route 56 in St. Lawrence County (Town of Colton) to
connect Tupper Lake to a hydro-power back-up for its unreliable,
sole power supply line from Saranac Lake. The new connection
would be made to the Stark Falls Reservoir hydro-electric powerhouse,
located on the Raquette River.
Power outages over the past few
winters have required the village to put people in shelters so
they didn't freeze to death. A power line from the hydro dams
would made a more reliable circuit and either shorten or eliminate
most village-wide outages.
Tupper Lake is virtually surrounded
by Forest Preserve, which is protected from logging or development
by Article 14, Section 1 of the NYS Constitution, also known
as the Forever Wild Clause. When the Forest Preserve was first
created, Route 56 was a town road, but was not closed to traffic
when the state acquired the land on both sides of, and under,
the highway. It is now the main thoroughfare between the college
towns (Canton, Potsdam) in the St. Lawrence Valley and the big
lakes (Tupper, Cranberry, Star) in the Adirondack Park.
When the power line was first
proposed, the NY Power Authority sought to avoid conflict with
environmental organizations by detouring the power line away
from the Forest Preserve on the roadside and into the adjoining
woods. But the only clear path available to avoid the strip of
public lands would have required a 3.5-mile detour through a
pristine white pine old-growth forest, through the state's best
habitat for the endangered Spruce Grouse (near Seveys Corners).
The route would cross 95 separate streams and wetlands. This
would be a new maintenance road in the woods, creating a permanent
barrier to future wilderness preservation west of Route 56.
Instead, the Adirondack Council
and others asked the Power Authority and National Grid to build
the line on the roadside, through the Forest Preserve. We said
we would lead an effort to approve a Constitutional Amendment
allowing the Legislature to swap a few acres of roadside Forest
Preserve for a wilder parcel away from the highway. This would
add back to the Forest Preserve lands of equal or greater value
to the public than the former Forest Preserve lands occupied
by the power poles. This would also free National Grid to clear
new trees from the right of way.
There are no ecologically significant
natural resources on the roadside where the power poles go. In
fact, the construction will hasten the removal of an non-native
scotch pine plantation encroaching on the Forest Preserve from
the northern portion of the western roadside.
There are two ways to amend the
NYS Constitution. The first is via constitutional convention.
The constitution calls for the voters to be asked at least once
every 19 years whether they want to hold a convention.
The second is via the Legislature.
However, no single Legislature can act alone. Constitutional
Amendments must be passed twice, by separately elected Legislatures.
This amendment passed both houses of the Legislature in 2008.
The November 2008 elections sent a new Legislature to Albany
in January of this year. Since then, both the Senate and Assembly
have passed it a second time.
It next goes to the voters on
November 3.
If it is approved by the voters,
the Legislature would pass "enabling legislation" in
January 2010 carrying out the specific details of the land swap
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