Dubai Telegraph - Within sight of New York City, a despoiled river comes back to life

EUR -
AED 4.307662
AFN 75.65645
ALL 95.455382
AMD 433.035491
ANG 2.099447
AOA 1076.768783
ARS 1636.860327
AUD 1.626298
AWG 2.111312
AZN 1.99669
BAM 1.95591
BBD 2.370113
BDT 144.388141
BGN 1.956602
BHD 0.444402
BIF 3502.307889
BMD 1.172951
BND 1.489746
BOB 8.131389
BRL 5.80165
BSD 1.176766
BTN 110.920564
BWP 15.755888
BYN 3.325559
BYR 22989.842205
BZD 2.366713
CAD 1.602169
CDF 2716.554865
CHF 0.915682
CLF 0.026553
CLP 1045.063663
CNY 7.981991
CNH 7.981616
COP 4385.546991
CRC 539.802822
CUC 1.172951
CUP 31.083205
CVE 110.272157
CZK 24.311053
DJF 209.550028
DKK 7.473452
DOP 69.980366
DZD 155.132327
EGP 61.837278
ERN 17.594267
ETB 183.735061
FJD 2.567297
FKP 0.862672
GBP 0.865245
GEL 3.143253
GGP 0.862672
GHS 13.238746
GIP 0.862672
GMD 85.625652
GNF 10327.318134
GTQ 8.985736
GYD 246.203881
HKD 9.183732
HNL 31.283497
HRK 7.535741
HTG 154.124748
HUF 357.026418
IDR 20376.096548
ILS 3.403148
IMP 0.862672
INR 110.814383
IQD 1541.586917
IRR 1539967.542208
ISK 143.815622
JEP 0.862672
JMD 185.35045
JOD 0.831578
JPY 184.015502
KES 151.920982
KGS 102.539973
KHR 4720.06492
KMF 491.466945
KPW 1055.668813
KRW 1717.505805
KWD 0.361199
KYD 0.980655
KZT 544.970726
LAK 25824.235848
LBP 105018.682784
LKR 378.928134
LRD 215.948619
LSL 19.199619
LTL 3.463419
LVL 0.709507
LYD 7.443356
MAD 10.785516
MDL 20.245969
MGA 4886.004719
MKD 61.666615
MMK 2463.011404
MNT 4199.687323
MOP 9.491735
MRU 47.080447
MUR 54.800109
MVR 18.127941
MWK 2040.401971
MXN 20.276983
MYR 4.596825
MZN 74.956934
NAD 19.199783
NGN 1597.01982
NIO 43.301888
NOK 10.926269
NPR 177.458928
NZD 1.975285
OMR 0.450996
PAB 1.176766
PEN 4.07603
PGK 5.121049
PHP 70.959441
PKR 327.879986
PLN 4.231562
PYG 7202.344676
QAR 4.289452
RON 5.263969
RSD 117.404627
RUB 87.561202
RWF 1725.197269
SAR 4.433959
SBD 9.421446
SCR 16.245024
SDG 704.357949
SEK 10.887686
SGD 1.488639
SHP 0.875726
SLE 28.854149
SLL 24596.194285
SOS 672.537919
SRD 43.904758
STD 24277.720273
STN 24.500233
SVC 10.296581
SYP 129.667759
SZL 19.194082
THB 37.824741
TJS 10.997348
TMT 4.117058
TND 3.41348
TOP 2.824185
TRY 53.175691
TTD 7.960449
TWD 36.83395
TZS 3050.721524
UAH 51.52615
UGX 4401.24815
USD 1.172951
UYU 47.054659
UZS 14259.803991
VES 582.028979
VND 30863.863161
VUV 138.51814
WST 3.180472
XAF 655.957634
XAG 0.014717
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.169959
XCG 2.12082
XDR 0.815801
XOF 655.993986
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.87078
ZAR 19.295866
ZMK 10557.966547
ZMW 22.417073
ZWL 377.689786
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.18

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.42

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.97

    -0.17%

  • NGG

    -1.9400

    85.91

    -2.26%

  • BCC

    -1.4800

    72.76

    -2.03%

  • RIO

    -2.4000

    103.11

    -2.33%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    24.57

    +1.38%

  • BTI

    -1.4800

    58.08

    -2.55%

  • RELX

    -1.5900

    34.16

    -4.65%

  • AZN

    -2.4000

    182.52

    -1.31%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.5

    -0.06%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.15

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    17.45

    -0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.4400

    15.69

    -2.8%

  • BP

    -0.8200

    43.81

    -1.87%

Within sight of New York City, a despoiled river comes back to life
Within sight of New York City, a despoiled river comes back to life / Photo: KENA BETANCUR - AFP

Within sight of New York City, a despoiled river comes back to life

He is not a lawyer, finance guy or a politician, but activist Bill Sheehan has moved mountains to clean up the Hackensack River in New Jersey just outside Manhattan, which for decades has been a dumping ground for industrial chemicals.

Text size:

Even still, the former taxi driver says, there is still so much to do to protect the waterway.

"The North Jersey area here, just across from New York, is like the cradle of the Industrial Revolution," says Sheehan, sporting his signature cap. "For over 200 years, people were doing everything they could to lay waste to this river."

Once the 74-year-old Sheehan bought a boat, he witnessed the dire situation in the Hackensack River, along which he played as a child.

"It didn't take me long to realize that the river that flows through my hometown... needed a full-time advocate," he says of the Hackensack, which is wedged into a densely populated urban area.

In 1997, he founded Hackensack Riverkeeper, an organization devoted to preserving the watershed and raising awareness about the importance of conservation efforts.

So far, Sheehan -- a one-time professional drummer with a full mustache and an earring -- has managed to block property developers and companies from doing further damage, after 60 percent of the swamps were drained for construction.

After a litany of negotiations and legal maneuvering, he also saw to it that a nature preserve was created covering about 8,400 acres (3,400 hectares) -- without spending a dime.

From a treatment plant upstream to a hotel down south, Captain Sheehan -- as he is often called -- has put a stop to the illegal dumping of wastewater, thanks to court rulings and coverage on local television news.

He launched a lawsuit that led to industrial conglomerate Honeywell being found liable for the cleanup of a site in Jersey City along the river that was contaminated with chromium residue, at a cost of several hundred million dollars.

"This nonsense that's been going on here for so long had to stop," says Sheehan, as his boat heads up the river, the wind whipping.

- 'A lot cleaner' -

Marc Yaggi, the CEO of Waterkeeper Alliance, an umbrella group for more than 300 associations in 47 countries, said Sheehan is "a mentor, friend, and hero to me and countless clean water advocates around the world."

With numerous industrial sites shut down, swampland now protected and wastewater dumping halted, nature has already partially taken its course in the watershed.

Several bird species have returned, including the great blue heron, snowy egrets and ospreys.

"The river has gotten a lot cleaner, and we have to thank Captain Bill for that," says Michael Gonnelli, the mayor of Secaucus, which is located along the river.

In Laurel Hill Park, south of Secaucus, fishermen catch eels at a rapid clip.

"I catch and release a lot of the fish here," says Evan Ypsilanti, who often makes the trip from north of New York City, though he notes: "In my opinion, you wouldn't really want to eat it."

Indeed, local officials recommend not eating fish caught in the Hackensack -- which still contains multiple pollutants -- even if many people do.

In the riverbed, there is a dangerous lingering cocktail of arsenic, chromium, lead, mercury and the infamous "forever chemicals" -- polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs.

"When we put up our signs that said 'Don't eat the crabs,' they said, 'I've been eating them all my life, and they haven't hurt me yet,'" recalls Sheehan.

"A lot of guys aren't with us anymore. They wound up getting cancer, going into the hospital and not coming back."

- Back from the brink -

Decontaminating river sediment is Sheehan's ultimate goal, but he is ready to get some help with that task, after years of working with only a small crew of six.

"I kind of figured it out that if I was to try and sue everybody that had a hand in polluting this river, I'd have to live to be about 300 years old," he joked.

Last September, after several years of research, the US government added the Hackensack River to its list of Superfund sites, making it eligible for federal funding to aid cleanup efforts.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will now look to all companies and municipalities that had a hand, directly or indirectly, in polluting the river to get the necessary money, says project supervisor Michael Sivak.

"It's a tremendously challenging site," Sivak told AFP. "We don't want it to take decades like some of our past sites have."

Given that cleaning up the entire waterway seems unrealistic, the EPA is looking at the possibility of only handling the most contaminated zones.

But even then, Sheehan figures billions of dollars should pour in.

"I'm a live-in-the-moment kind of guy," he says. "To bring it back from that brink is not going to happen overnight."

"We're talking not in my lifetime. But I'm in this for the long game."

J.Alaqanone--DT