
 
        
         
		Pol calls to relocate  
 Coney ferry stop 
 BY ROSE ADAMS 
 Coney Island Assemblywoman  
 Mathylde Frontus is  
 calling on the city to relocate  
 the terminal for the upcoming  
 Coney Island ferry, arguing  
 that the current location poses  
 health risks to the community. 
 “The Coney Island Creek is  
 simply not a safe or viable location  
 due to a myriad of environmental  
 concerns,” Frontus said  
 at  an Aug.  26  press  conference  
 in Kaiser Park, where city offi - 
 cials plan to build the ferry stop.  
 “Right  behind  us  at  this  creek  
 are decades of illegal sewage  
 discharges, industrial waste,  
 stormwater pollution, and  
 known toxins.” 
 The ferry, which will make  
 stops in Bay Ridge and lower  
 Manhattan, will cut the travel  
 time from Coney Island’s west  
 end to Manhattan by about 30  
 minutes, offi cals say. 
 The new line is part of Mayor  
 Bill  de  Blasio’s  plan  to  expand  
 ferry service citywide. Tickets  
 costs the same as a subway ride  
 and allows for one transfer — although  
 each requires a hefty $10  
 subsidy from the city, EDC said  
 in March.  
 In March, representatives  
 from EDC announced that they  
 “strongly recommended” building  
 the terminal on the Kaiser  
 Park pier by W. 30th Street and  
 Bayview Avenue. The agency  
 chose the spot, located on Coney  
 Island Creek, because of its relatively  
 deep water and its existing  
 pier, which reduces the cost  
 of construction, reps said.  
 The location has spurred  
 controversy among locals, who  
 charge that dredging in the fetid  
 creek puts the health of residents  
 and park-goers at risk.  
 “This is all about the issue of  
 possible exposure to toxins over  
 the long term,” said Ida Sanoff, a  
 local environmentalist who has  
 long opposed the terminal’s construction  
 in the creek. “There  
 are  just  so  many  unanswered  
 questions.” 
 The creek, which is currently  
 being considered for possible Superfund  
 status, contains dangerous  
 levels of mercury, lead, and  
 pesticides after nearby factories  
 used it as a dumping ground for  
 decades. The waterway also contains  
 fecal matter — in 2016, the  
 city busted a Gravesend apartment  
 complex for dumping more  
 than 200,000 gallons of raw sewage  
 into the creek per day, possibly  
 for years. 
 Swimmers and fi sherman  
 still frequent the canal, which  
 has become marginally safer  
 since the contaminants have  
 settled into a toxic silt on the  
 creek’s bottom. Dredging, however, 
  would suspend the toxins  
 once more, potentially harming  
 locals, Sanoff explained. 
 “It’s right on top of where  
 people are on the shoreline, of  
 people that are in the water,” she  
 said.  
 The creek may also contain  
 unexploded ordinances, Sanoff  
 warned. 
 “I heard during World War  
 II, warships used to unload their  
 emissions near Fort Lafayette,” 
  she said, adding that the  
 late scuba diver Gene Ritter  
 discovered bombs by the nowdestroyed  
 fort, located near the  
 Verrazzano Bridge.  
 However, a spokesman for  
 the Department of Environmental  
 Conservation, which  
 conducted a review of the terminal’s  
 location, said that the  
 agency found little evidence that  
 the creek contained dangerous  
 levels of contamination.  
 “Portions of the dredge area  
 were found to be relatively clean,  
 while other portions contained  
 chemical concentrations common  
 to many locations throughout  
 the harbor,” said Kevin Frazier. 
  Frazier added that the  
 agency did not extend the public  
 comment period, as community  
 leaders requested, because of  
 regulatory restrictions.  
 “To ensure ample opportunity  
 for the public to provide  
 input on the application, DEC  
 extended the public comment  
 period to Aug. 26, for a total of  
 35 days instead of the normal  
 15 days. Due to regulatory constraints, 
  DEC is unable to extend  
 the comment period for 90  
 days as requested,” he said. 
 Critics of the location have  
 also argued that the ferry stop  
 will overwhelm the surrounding  
 residential community  
 with tourists, who will have  
 to walk more than one mile to  
 reach the amusement park.  
 Frountus  agreed,  saying  
 that placing the ferry on the  
 Ocean side of the peninsula  
 would be worth any added  
 costs. 
 “I  know  that  the  pickings  
 are slim, I understand that,”  
 she said. “But the number one  
 location  that  stands out  is  the  
 ocean side.” 
 FARE! MTA’s ‘doomsday’ fare hikes 
 REUTERS/Lucas Jackson 
 COURIER L M BR B G IFE, SEPT. 4–10, 2020 3  
 by  as  much  as  a  full  dollar, 
  accompanied by a 40%  
 reduction  in  overall  transit  
 service.  That  could  be  
 avoided  if  the  federal  government  
 steps  in with billions  
 of dollars in aid. 
 Transit  advocate  
 groups  have  panned  the  
 idea of a fare hike as counter 
 productive  to  increasing  
 ridership  on  the  subways  
 and buses.  
 However, revenues from  
 fares  dropped  considerably  
 during  the  COVID-19  
 pandemic,  which  has  kept  
 most riders away — leaving  
 the agency even shorter on  
 funds than usual. 
 Most  riders  inside  the  
 subway at Atlantic Terminal  
 in  Brooklyn  rejected  
 the  idea  of  a  possible  fare  
 hike, saying the additional  
 cost  wasn’t  acceptable  for  
 a public transit system. 
 “We  don’t  like  it,”  said  
 resident  Tanisha  Alnon,  
 who was with her two children, 
   daughter  Maya  and  
 son Natay on Aug. 26. “It’s  
 too much money.” 
 Other  locals  bemoaned  
 the idea of a fare hike, but  
 understood  the  MTA  had  
 a  fi nancial  problem  maintaining  
 the transit system. 
 “It’s  like  everything  
 else,  it’s  greed,  they’re  
 sucking  us  all  dry.  During  
 the  pandemic,  there  
 was  a  problem,  yes,  they  
 didn’t  get  the  money  and  
 they  were  giving  a  free  
 ride,”  said  Brooklynite  
 Kits  Karth,  who  worried  
 that  the  subway  could  
 soon  become  unaffordable. 
  “They will keep raising  
 it and raising it, where  
 are we supposed to get the  
 money?” 
 One traveler hoped that  
 an  increased  fare  could  
 improve  subway  service,  
 which has lagged in recent  
 years.  
 “It may be worth the extra  
 dollar  for  better  service,” 
   said  straphanger  
 Marisa  Lozano  of  the  
 Bronx.  “But  then,  I  don’t  
 ride the trains that much.  
 Maybe  the  extra  dollar  
 will do something.”