Directs the state attorney general to intervene on behalf of the plaintiffs in Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc., et al. v United States General Services et al. seeking to invalidate the decision of the federal government to sell Plum Island and to take all additional legal action necessary for the conservation of Plum Island.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
S. 3722 A. 5515
2019-2020 Regular Sessions
SENATE - ASSEMBLY
February 13, 2019
___________
IN SENATE -- Introduced by Sen. LAVALLE -- read twice and ordered print-
ed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Judiciary
IN ASSEMBLY -- Introduced by M. of A. THIELE -- read once and referred
to the Committee on Judiciary
AN ACT directing the state attorney general to intervene on behalf of
the plaintiffs in Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc., et al. v
United States General Services et al. seeking to invalidate the deci-
sion of the federal government to sell Plum Island and to take all
additional legal action necessary for the conservation of Plum Island
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Legislative Findings. Plum Island, a small island off the
2 coast of Long Island, New York, is owned by the federal government.
3 First operated as a coastal artillery post, Plum Island has been a
4 federal research facility for animal diseases from 1954 to the present.
5 Because of the federal research facility operations, access to Plum
6 Island has been extremely limited, with human activity on the 840-acre
7 island largely restricted to approximately 170 acres.
8 The remaining 670 acres is a unique and extraordinary nature preserve
9 that is home to several federal endangered species, has a critical
10 ecological link to Long Island Sound and the marine species that inhabit
11 it, and serves as habitat for over 200 species of birds. Plum Island's
12 undisturbed habitat includes 196 acres of upland forest, 96 acres of
13 freshwater wetlands, and 101 acres of a beach/dune system.
14 In January 2009, the United States Department of Homeland Security
15 (DHS) decided to relocate its animal disease research facility, known as
16 the Plum Island Animal Disease Center ("PIADC") to Manhattan, Kansas.
17 DHS also began preparations to sell Plum Island. The federal government
18 prepared an Environmental Impact Statement ("EIS") for the sale of the
19 PIADC and Plum Island, and issued its final decision to move forward
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD03298-01-9
S. 3722 2 A. 5515
1 with the sale of the island to the highest bidder in a Record of Deci-
2 sion ("ROD").
3 The EIS process was fundamentally flawed. The federal government
4 misconstrued its statutory directive, interpreting their authority to
5 only permit a public auction of the entirety of Plum Island to the high-
6 est bidder. This interpretation excluded a conservation sale from their
7 alternatives analysis.
8 The federal government violated the National Environmental Policy Act
9 (NEPA) by failing to consider important government interests and
10 programs in arriving at its decision, including the protection of feder-
11 ally-listed and state-listed endangered and threatened species, compli-
12 ance with New York and Connecticut coastal consistency determinations,
13 and the adverse economic impacts of a potential sale of Plum Island.
14 The federal government violated NEPA by failing to adequately consider
15 alternatives to a public auction to the highest bidder, such as a bifur-
16 cated sale of discrete parcels or a single unitary sale with conserva-
17 tion easements attached to the property or conservation of those parts
18 not supporting the PIADC operations, even though consideration of such
19 alternatives were repeatedly requested.
20 The federal government violated NEPA by failing to consult with and
21 rely upon the expertise of the appropriate federal agencies with respect
22 to endangered species, coastal zone and environmental cleanup.
23 The federal government violated NEPA and the Coastal Zone Management
24 Act (CZMA) by failing to engage in consistency determinations with the
25 appropriate state agencies.
26 Finally, the federal government violated NEPA by basing their decision
27 on inadequate ecological data and failed to detail how they would clean
28 up contamination associated with the PIADC.
29 The federal government issued this EIS notwithstanding the fact that
30 they were made aware of each of these violations through repeated
31 comments from state agencies, other federal agencies and non-profit
32 organizations.
33 The federal government's ill-considered decision to sell Plum Island,
34 and the fundamentally flawed EIS supporting that decision, threaten the
35 continued existence of the endangered species that inhabit Plum Island,
36 the ecology of Long Island Sound, and violate numerous Federal laws.
37 The Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc. (d/b/a Save the Sound)
38 and other plaintiffs, including several from New York State, have
39 brought an action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief in the
40 United States District Court in the Eastern District. The action seeks a
41 declaration that the federal government's decision to sell the entirety
42 of Plum Island at public auction, as well as the EIS and ROD supporting
43 that decision is in violation of law and seeks to enjoin the federal
44 government from selling Plum Island.
45 The legislature finds that the sale of Plum Island for development
46 violates several long stated important policies of the State of New York
47 relating to historic preservation, the environment, water quality, coas-
48 tal protection, municipal home rule and local land use controls, climate
49 change, sea level rise, and ecology and habitat. The Governor and the
50 State Department of Environmental Conservation have previously expressed
51 the need to preserve the island for public benefit.
52 It is the purpose of this act to direct the state attorney general to
53 intervene in the legal action initiated by the Connecticut Fund for the
54 Environment, Inc., on behalf of the plaintiffs, and to take all other
55 necessary legal action to protect the aforementioned legitimate inter-
56 ests of the state of New York.
S. 3722 3 A. 5515
1 § 2. The state attorney general is hereby directed to intervene in the
2 legal action entitled Connecticut Fund for the Environment, Inc., et al.
3 v United States General Services et al., on behalf of the plaintiffs.
4 Said action seeks to invalidate the decision of the federal government
5 to sell the entirety of Plum Island at public auction, as well as the
6 EIS and ROD supporting that decision and seeks to enjoin the federal
7 government from selling Plum Island. The state attorney general is also
8 authorized to take any and all additional legal action necessary
9 consistent with the findings of this act enumerated in section one of
10 this act, to preclude the sale of Plum Island for development purposes
11 and to seek its conservation.
12 § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.