Port Authority hires group to conduct airport noise study

Airplane NoiseFollowing years of advocacy from the communities surrounding area airports, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has signed an agreement with Environmental Science Associates to conduct a Part 150 airport noise study of the city’s two airports.

The estimated $8 million study, expected to run from October 2014 to August 2017, will analyze land-use compatibility issues, asses the viability of potential noise mitigation solutions and produce noise exposure maps of JFK and LaGuardia airports. Studies are also planned for Newark and Terboro airports.

“Working in concert with residents, elected officials, industry partners and FAA representatives, the agency’s consultant will perform the intensive, complex studies necessary at these four airports to evaluate noise levels and propose and analyze potential efforts to alleviate the problem,” said Thomas Bosco, the Port Authority’s aviation director.

Janet McEneaney, president of Queens Quiet Skies (QQS), said while she is happy to see the hard work of advocacy groups calling for more noise mitigation for residents affected by the airports is beginning to net results, the group is still pressuring the Port Authority to hire a community representative for the process.

“Hiring a noise expert to work with the first consultant would produce a more comprehensive study,” McEneaney said.

The group has also been calling for the day-night average sound level (DNL) reduction from 65 to 55 dB, as well as for a more comprehensive roundtable, which the governor called for last year.

Currently, the Port Authority is pushing for separate roundtables for JFK and LaGuardia, while McEneaney and other members of QQS would like to see on comprehensive group.

“All of these parts work together,” she explained. “It’s all part of a package, and you can’t have one without the other.”

QQS member Susan Carroll said she is “cautiously optimistic” about the news that the Part 150 study is moving forward, but hopes to see some results before the three-year timeline is up.

“I hope there are intermediate steps and we don’t have to wait three years,” Carroll said. “When you have low landings and planes flying by for hours on end, that’s just way too much for anyone to have to endure.”

Carroll said planes often fly by her Flushing home every 30 seconds to a minute for the last two years.

She said that a personal noise monitor, while not a professional tool, has often measured noise levels anywhere from the 70 to 90 decibels.

“I applaud the Port Authority, but I’m afraid it’s going to just find what we already know,” she added.

[QE]

Flushing resident Richard Reif says, “BOE needs new leaders.”

Dear Editor:

Despite your endorsements for city and state office seekers, many readers couldn’t vote for anyone on November 4 because they have no accessible polling place.

This is painfully true in Kew Gardens Hills, where the Board of Elections closed P.S. 164, a polling site for nearly 60 years, and replaced it with an alternate site that most voters can only reach by car or two bus lines.

The BOE deemed P.S. 164 and other polling sites inaccessible to disabled voters. There’s a simple solution: provide absentee ballots to disabled voters who can cast

their ballots at home.

But the BOE’s brain-dead decision-makers don’t have enough sense to do that. The BOE is a bottomless pit of political patronage.

Fire the hacks and install competent leaders.

Sincerely,

Richard Reif

Flushing

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Central Library Teen Space and Children’s Discovery Center to close for two days

alg-queens-library-childrens-jpg-2The Teen Space and Children’s Library Discovery Center at the Queens Library’s central branch will be closed for two days on November 6 and 7 to permit installation of new flooring, according to Joanne King, the library’s director of communications.

The work, says King, is part of the full, phased renovation of the library branch at 89-11 Merrick Blvd.

Phase one of Olmsted Center renovation complete at Flushing Meadows

BKSK architects, the firm responsible for the renovation of the historic Olmsted Center at Flushing Meadows Corona Park, completed the first phase of the project last week.

The center was used as the administrative building for the World’s Fair in 1964 and 1965, and continues to serve as the headquarters for the Parks department. It was named in honor of Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., who designed the landscape architecture for some of America’s most notable park systems, including Central Park in Manhattan and Prospect Park in Brooklyn.

In a release from BKSK architects, they outlined the specifics of work completed so far:

“Phase I of the 60,000 square foot project includes a 10,000 square foot addition, which features distinctive exposedsteel honoring the original structure’s design along with abundant daylight and park views. The Capital Projects Division of the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation now also benefits from several new offices, a new public procurement/bidding room, and other new meeting rooms. Notably, staff members remained at Olmsted Center throughout Phase I construction, ensuring business continuity.”

The second and final phase of the project is scheduled for wrap up next year, and includes installation of raised water channels to ensure the space will be protected from floodwaters in the future.