JANUARY 2021 Interstate Certified Shellfish * Shippers List
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A Strategic Planning Framework for Arverne East
Planning for a Resilient Rockaways: A Strategic Planning Framework for Arverne East Waterfront Solutions (NYU): Alda Chan, Sa Liu, Jon McGrath, Rossana Tudo, Kathleen Walczak Acknowledgements This project was made possible thanks to the support of many individuals and organizations. Waterfront Solutions would like to thank everyone at Rockaway Waterfront Alliance and NYU Wagner who contributed to this endeavor. We are grateful to a number of experts and individuals who provided participated in meetings and shared information to support this report. Thanks to Arjan Braamskamp and Robert Proos (Consulate General of the Netherlands in New York), David Bragdon (NYC Department of Parks and Recreation), John Boule, (Parsons Brinkerhoff), John Young and Barry Dinerstein (NYC Department of City Planning), Jonathan Gaska (Queens Community District 14); Gerry Romski (Arverne by the Sea), Michael Polo (NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development), Ron Schiffman (Pratt Institute); Ron Moelis and Rick Gropper (L+M Development), and Steven Bluestone (The Bluestone Organization). We would like to express our gratitude towards Robert Balder (Cornell Architecture, Art and Planning) and Walter Meyer (Local Office Landscape) for their guidance and insight during the research process. Our sincere thanks to faculty advisors Michael Keane and Claire Weisz for their feedback and support throughout this process. Front and back cover photo credit: Joe Mabel Table of Contents Executive Summary.........................................................02 -
The Surge, Wave, and Tide Hydrodynamics (Swath) Network of the U.S
The Surge, Wave, and Tide Hydrodynamics (SWaTH) Network of the U.S. Geological Survey Past and Future Implementation of Storm-Response Monitoring, Data Collection, and Data Delivery Circular 1431 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover. Background images: Satellite images of Hurricane Sandy on October 28, 2012. Images courtesy of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Inset images from top to bottom: Top, sand deposited from washover and inundation at Long Beach, New York, during Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Photograph by the U.S. Geological Survey. Center, Hurricane Joaquin washed out a road at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, in 2015. Photograph courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Bottom, house damaged by Hurricane Sandy in Mantoloking, New Jersey, in 2012. Photograph by the U.S. Geological Survey. The Surge, Wave, and Tide Hydrodynamics (SWaTH) Network of the U.S. Geological Survey Past and Future Implementation of Storm-Response Monitoring, Data Collection, and Data Delivery By Richard J. Verdi, R. Russell Lotspeich, Jeanne C. Robbins, Ronald J. Busciolano, John R. Mullaney, Andrew J. Massey, William S. Banks, Mark A. Roland, Harry L. Jenter, Marie C. Peppler, Tom P. Suro, Chris E. Schubert, and Mark R. Nardi Circular 1431 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior RYAN K. ZINKE, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey William H. Werkheiser, Acting Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2017 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment—visit https://www.usgs.gov/ or call 1–888–ASK–USGS. -
Sector Reports Blank (Part Opener) Chapter 3 Sea-Level Rise and Coasts
PART 2 SECTOR REPORTS BLANK (PART OPENER) CHAPTER 3 SEA-LEVEL RISE AND COASTS nticipated climate changes will greatly amplify risks where water temperatures have risen an average of 0.1°F A to coastal populations. By the end of the century, a (0.06°C) between 1955 and 1995, down to a depth of two to five-fold increase in rates of global sea-level rise around 10,000 feet (3000 meters); (Levitus et al., 2000). could lead to inundation of low-lying coastal regions, Most of the observed sea-level rise can be attributed to including wetlands, more frequent flooding due to storm thermal expansion of the upper ocean layers and melting surges, and worsening beach erosion (IPCC, 1996a,b). of mountain glaciers, with nearly zero contributions from Saltwater could penetrate further up rivers and estuaries polar ice sheets at present (Warrick et al., 1996). Human and infiltrate coastal aquifers, thereby contaminating modification of the hydrologic cycle could also affect sea- urban water supplies. level rise. Sequestration of water on land in reservoirs and In the metropolitan New York, Connecticut, and New through irrigation losses could exceed amounts transferred Jersey region, as elsewhere, the coastal zone is squeezed seaward by groundwater mining and increased runoff due between the hazards of flooding, beach erosion, and sea- to urbanization and deforestation. The net effect of these level rise on the one hand, and development pressures on processes could slow sea-level rise by 0.04±0.02 inches/ the other hand. In the region, ongoing sea-level rise and year (0.9±0.5 millimeters/year) (Gornitz et al., 1997; land subsidence have historically contributed to beach Gornitz, 2000). -
To: Richard Brodsky
Preliminary Report on New York City Emergency Response and Evacuation Plans in the Event of a Weather-Related Emergency “People would stop evacuating simply because they were unable to evacuate.” -New York Hurricane Evacuation Study, April 20051 Richard L. Brodsky Chairman Committee on Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions September 15, 2005 1 Hurricane Evacuation Study Program, (April 2005) New York City Hurricane Evacuation Study Behavioral Analysis Findings [online] Available: http://chps.sam.usace.army.mil/USHESdata/NY/NY_city_behave_report.htm [September 8, 2005]. TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction………………………………………………………….......1 II. History of New York Hurricanes………………………………….......2 III. Weather-Related Evacuations………………………………………….3 1. Reliability of Evacuation Plans………………………………………...3 a. Number of People Needing Evacuation……………………………3 b. Available Evacuation Resources……………………………….......4 c. Lead Time…………………………………………………………......5 d. Process, Accessibility, and Distance of Evacuation Routes and Shelters………………………………………………….6 i. Process…………………………………….....................6 ii. Accessibility and Distance………………………......6 e. Special Populations………………………………………………….7 f. Vulnerable Tunnels, Roadways, and Bridges……………………..7 g. Participation and Training of Public Employees………………...8 h. “Self Evacuation”…………………………………………………....9 i. Coordination between Municipalities and Agencies…………….10 2. Public Awareness and Education………………………………………10 3. Sufficient Shelter Space and Services……………………………........12 a. Services to Those Who Can Not or Do Not -
Risk Assessment Page 80 of 179 New York City Natural Hazard Mitigation Plan March 2009
New York City Natural Hazard Mitigation Plan March 2009 7) Coastal Storms: Multi-Hazard Analysis for New York City a) Hazard Profile i) Hazard Description Coastal storms, including nor'easters, tropical storms, and hurricanes, can and do affect New York City. New York’s densely populated and highly developed coastline makes the City among the most vulnerable to hurricane-related damage. Tropical Storms and Hurricanes A hurricane is a type of tropical cyclone, which is a generic term for a low-pressure system that generally forms in the tropics. Thunderstorms and, in the Northern Hemisphere, a counterclockwise circulation of winds near the earth’s surface accompany the cyclone. Tropical cyclones are classified as follows: • A tropical depression is an organized system of clouds and thunderstorms, with a defined surface circulation, and maximum sustained winds of 38 miles per hour or less. • A tropical storm is an organized system of strong thunderstorms, with a defined surface circulation, and maximum sustained winds of 39 to 73 miles per hour. • A hurricane is an intense tropical weather system of strong thunderstorms, with a well-defined surface circulation, and maximum sustained winds of 74 miles per hour or higher. Atlantic hurricanes form off the coast of Africa or in the southern Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, or Gulf of Mexico. Hurricanes require warm tropical oceans, moisture, and light winds above them to form. A hurricane can produce violent winds, tornadoes (primarily on the leading and trailing edges of the hurricane), powerful waves and storm surge, and torrential rains and floods. Atlantic hurricane season lasts from June to November, averaging 11 tropical storms each year, six of which turn into hurricanes. -
Storm-Induced Habitat Modifications Caused by Hurricane Sandy Within the U.S
Storm-induced Habitat Modifications caused by Hurricane Sandy within the U.S. Atlantic Coast Breeding Range of the Piping Plover (Charadrius melodus)1 Tracy Monegan Rice Terwilliger Consulting, Inc. December 2015 Tidal inlet and sandy beach habitats have been modified throughout the entire United States (U.S.) Atlantic Coast breeding range of the piping plover (Charadrius melodus), from Maine to North Carolina. A recent series of reports provided detailed inventories of these two habitat types for the northern and southern portions of the U.S. Atlantic Coast breeding range of the piping plover. The results of the habitat inventories for the northern portion of the breeding range include data on the tidal inlet (Rice 2015a) and sandy beach habitats (Rice 2015b) of the exposed shorelines of Maine (ME), New Hampshire (NH), Massachusetts (MA), Rhode Island (RI), Connecticut (CT), and the Long Island Sound and Peconic Estuary shorelines of New York (NY). The results of the habitat inventories for the southern portion of the breeding range include data on the tidal inlet (Rice 2014) and sandy beach habitats (Rice 2015c) of the Atlantic Ocean shoreline of NY, New Jersey (NJ), Delaware (DE), Maryland (MD), and Virginia (VA). Data on the sandy beaches of North Carolina (NC) were included in the inventories for tidal inlet (Rice 2012a) and sandy beach habitat (Rice 2012b) in the migratory and overwintering range of the piping plover, since habitats in that state support all phases of the species’ annual cycle. Combining the data from these six reports, the status of tidal inlet and sandy beach habitat prior to Hurricane Sandy within each recovery unit of the piping plover were evaluated in a synthesis report (Rice 2015d). -
Interstate Certified Shellfish Shippers
JULY 2021 Interstate Certified Shellfish * Shippers List * Fresh and Frozen Oysters, Clams, Mussels, Whole or Roe-on Scallops U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Public Health Service Food and Drug Administration INTRODUCTION THE SHIPPERS LISTED HAVE BEEN CERTIFIED BY REGULATORY AUTHORITIES IN THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, KOREA, MEXICO AND NEW ZEALAND UNDER THE UNIFORM SANITATION REQUIREMENTS OF THE NATIONAL SHELLFISH PROGRAM. CONTROL MEASURES OF THE STATES ARE EVALUATED BY THE UNITED STATES FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (FDA). CANADIAN, KOREAN, MEXICAN AND NEW ZEALAND SHIPPERS ARE INCLUDED UNDER THE TERMS OF THE SHELLFISH SANITATION AGREEMENTS BETWEEN FDA AND THE GOVERNMENTS OF THESE COUNTRIES. Persons interested in receiving information and publications F. Raymond Burditt about the National Shellfish Sanitation Program contact: National Shellfish Standard Office of Food Safety Division of Seafood Safety 5001 Campus Drive College Park, MD 20740-3835 (240) 402-1562 CELL: 202-573-0325 (FAX) 301-436-2601 [email protected] Persons interested in receiving information about the Charlotte V. Epps Interstate Certified Shellfish Shippers List (ICSSL) contact: Retail Food & Cooperative Programs Coordination Staff, HFS-320 Food and Drug Administration 5001 Campus Drive College Park, MD 20740-3835 (240) 402-2154 (FAX) 301-436-2632 Persons interested in receiving information about the ISSC Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference (ISSC) contact: Attn: Keith Skiles, Executive Director 4801 Hermitage Road, Suite 102 Richmond, VA 23227 (804) 330-6380 Email: [email protected] Web Page: http://www.issc.org CFSAN Information Line 1-888-SAFEFOOD (723)-3366 ICSSL Monthly Listing FDA/CFSAN Web Homepage http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/ucm2006753.htm NSSP Model Ordinance http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/ucm2006754.htm 2 Definitions: Shellfish - All edible species of oysters, clams, mussels, and scallops;* either shucked or in the shell, fresh or frozen, whole or in part. -
A Political Ecology of Rockaway Beach After Hurricane Sandy
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 6-2016 Beaches, People, and Change: A Political Ecology of Rockaway Beach after Hurricane Sandy Bryce B. DuBois Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/1353 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] BEACHES, PEOPLE, AND CHANGE: A POLITICAL ECOLOGY OF ROCKAWAY BEACH AFTER HURRICANE SANDY By BRYCE BEAL DUBOIS A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Psychology in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2016 © 2016 BRYCE BEAL DUBOIS All Rights Reserved ii This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Psychology to satisfy the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Setha Low _______________ ______________________________________________ Date Chair of Examining Committee Maureen O’Connor ______________ ______________________________________________ Date Executive Officer Setha Low David Chapin Leigh Graham Keith Tidball William Kornblum Dana Taplin Supervisory Committee THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii Abstract BEACHES, PEOPLE, AND CHANGE: A POLITICAL ECOLOGY OF ROCKAWAY BEACH AFTER HURRICANE SANDY By Bryce Beal DuBois Adviser: Professor Setha Low This dissertation uses restoration practices of Rockaway beach post-Hurricane Sandy as a lens to investigate tensions between nature and society on urban coasts. By focusing on this New York City beach, this dissertation aims to examine the interaction between the beach, residents, city and federal agencies, and local environmental grassroots stewards in their response to coastal flooding and erosion. -
Interstate Certufied Shellfish Shippers List
AUGUST 2020 Interstate Certified Shellfish * Shippers List * Fresh and Frozen Oysters, Clams, Mussels, Whole or Roe-on Scallops U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Public Health Service Food and Drug Administration INTRODUCTION THE SHIPPERS LISTED HAVE BEEN CERTIFIED BY REGULATORY AUTHORITIES IN THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, KOREA, MEXICO AND NEW ZEALAND UNDER THE UNIFORM SANITATION REQUIREMENTS OF THE NATIONAL SHELLFISH PROGRAM. CONTROL MEASURES OF THE STATES ARE EVALUATED BY THE UNITED STATES FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (FDA). CANADIAN, KOREAN, MEXICAN AND NEW ZEALAND SHIPPERS ARE INCLUDED UNDER THE TERMS OF THE SHELLFISH SANITATION AGREEMENTS BETWEEN FDA AND THE GOVERNMENTS OF THESE COUNTRIES. Persons interested in receiving information and publications F. Raymond Burditt about the National Shellfish Sanitation Program contact: National Shellfish Standard Office of Food Safety Division of Seafood Safety 5001 Campus Drive College Park, MD 20740-3835 (240) 402-1562 (FAX) 301-436-2601 [email protected] Persons interested in receiving information about the Charlotte V. Epps Interstate Certified Shellfish Shippers List (ICSSL) contact: Retail Food & Cooperative Programs Coordination Staff, HFS-320 Food and Drug Administration 5001 Campus Drive College Park, MD 20740-3835 (240) 402-2154 (FAX) 301-436-2632 Persons interested in receiving information about the ISSC Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference (ISSC) contact: Attn: Ken B. Moore, Executive Director 209-2 Dawson Road Columbia, SC 29223 (803) 788-7559 (FAX) 803-788-7576 Email: [email protected] Web Page: http://www.issc.org CFSAN Information Line 1-888-SAFEFOOD (723)-3366 ICSSL Monthly Listing FDA/CFSAN Web Homepage http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/ucm2006753.htm NSSP Model Ordinance http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/ucm2006754.htm 2 Definitions: Shellfish - All edible species of oysters, clams, mussels, and scallops;* either shucked or in the shell, fresh or frozen, whole or in part. -
Long Island : Its Early Days and Development Brooklyn, N.Y
ITS EARLY DAYS AND DEVELOPMENT ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS By EUGENE L ARMBRUSTER 19 14, by E. Z Ambmakr) 2 Eagle Library-LONG ISLAND; ITS EARLY DAB AND DEVELOPMENT. The Queens County Trust Company Offices and Safe Deposit Vaults, 3 75 Fulton St., Jamaica, A. Y. CAPITAL, $600,000.00 BANKING DEPARTMENT Deposits Subject to Checks. Special Deposits not Subject to Check. Interest Allowed on Daily Balances. Foreign Exchange, Travelers Cheques TRUST DEPARTMENT Executor Estates Managed Administrator Registrar Guardian Transfer Agent Trustee Legal Depository for Receiver moneys paid into Court SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS Boxes rented $5.00 per year and upward. Robert B. Austin, Pres. Willis H. Young, V. Pres. Thomas Napier, V. Pres- W. E. Stecher, Sect');. Leander B. Faber, Counsel. Queens County Trust Co., Jamaica, Queens Borough. Conducts a General Banking Business. BRANCH OFFICE I Queens Plaza North, Long Island City, N. Y. ) Eagle Library-LONG ISLAND; ITS EARLY DAYS AND DEVELOPMENT. DR. BERNARD LISSEY One of Queens Borough's leading dentists is Dr. Bernard Lissey, with offices at 339 Fulton street,. Jamaica, and his dental operating room, a picture of which is shown above, has been declared the best equipped and the most elaborate and costly on Long Island. As an artisan is judged by his tools and ~lisworkmanship, so a dentist is judged by his appliances and his pleased or displeased patrons. The fact that Dr. Lissey has a large clientele and that his pa- tients invariably leave his office with pleased expressions on their faces, is sufficient proof of Dr. Lissey's worth. Dr. Lissey desires to please his patrons by not only giving them the best possible workmanship and dental surgery under absolute aseptic conditions, but by giving surrounding cleanliness and comfort. -
Pigs in New York City; a Study on 19Th Century Urban “Sanitation”
Pigs in New York City; a Study on 19th Century Urban “Sanitation” ENRIQUE ALONSO & ANA RECARTE (Claudia Alonso Recarte contributed to the main part of this Case Study consisting on the review of, and research on, American and English 19th century literature on N.Y. City and its surroundings) Friends of Thoreau Environmental Program Research Institute of North American Studies University of Alcalá, Spain. Scholars Debate Guiding Students´ Discussion Works Cited Links to Online Resources Acknowledgements and Illustration Credits MAIN PAGE 1.- Introduction The Soaplocks, or Bowery Boys. Source: Nicolino Calyo, c. 1847, watercolor on paper. Collection of the New-York Historical Society 1 “This 1847 watercolor depicted the young men who habituated New York's working- class entertainment area, the Bowery. They wore the fashionable long sideburns that gave them the nickname "soaplocks." Around them, posters advertised some of the Bowery attractions the "B'hoys" attended after their workday ended. For two decades in pre Civil War New York City, the Bowery b’hoy were icons of working-class high spirits and urban America’s feisty democratic culture” (The Bowery Culture Archive) The watercolor is interesting not only because it introduces us to the B´hoys [about the B´hoys “urban tribe” subculture see the Section on Guiding Students´ Discussion] and to one of the typical areas of the first half on 19th Century Manhattan, the Bowery, which was both the name of a street and a small neighborhood in its southern portion (see map below), but also because it includes an additional detail (which is almost the centerstage of the picture): the ubiquitous New York City hog, pig, or swine, which show up in most pictures from those times. -
A Survey of the Natural and Urbanized Shorelines on Long Island, New York - a Dilemma in Coastal Management
A Survey of the Natural and Urbanized Shorelines on Long Island, New York - A Dilemma in Coastal Management Manfred P. Wolff(l), Nicholas K. Coch(2), Robert W. Johnson(3) 1) Geology Department, Hofstra University (2) Department of Geology, Queens College, CUNY (3) Biology Department, Hofstra University INTRODUCTION This trip will examine six stops on the barrier island beaches along the south shore of Long Island (Figure 1). Such beaches were probably fIrst formed during the Pleistocene glaciation from eroded and reworked continental Cretaceous-Tertiary strata 100Km. seaward of their present location. They were then gradually submerged and modifIed into shoals, lagoons, barrier islands and inlets by the current marine transgression. During the past 25,000 years of glacial melting and deposition the rising sea reached the outer edge of the glacial outwash and moraine deposits, perhaps 3-5 Km. seaward of their present location (Wolff, 1982). It is this newer source of Pleistocene glacial sediments that continue to undergo the transitory processes that modify them into the current coastal features. Ultimately, they will be eroded and deposited offshore, on the shoreface, and below wavebase on the inner continental shelf--as the Holocene transgression continues. We accept the concept of of "barrier island migration" with the rising sea, and will provide evidence for it. This emphasizes the idea that the barrier islands have not been "drowned" but instead, continue to be preserved by progressive landward sand migration. This migration occurs during the shoaling associated inlet formation, and during the flooding and overwash deposition associated with the wave surge from major storms (Wolff, 1989).