Anti-CPV group Protect Orange County “not surprised” at FERC decision

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CPV between Route 6 and I-84

WAWAYANDA – The grassroots organization Protect Orange County,
which has been in the lead opposing construction and operation of the
CPV electric generating plant along Route 6 in the Town of Wawayanda is
“not surprised by CPV and Millennium’s attempt once again to avoid
addressing the impacts to air and water quality.”

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on Friday overruled the state
Department of Environmental Conservation’s decision of weeks ago,
which said insufficient information was provided to demonstrate there
would be no significant threat to the water supply with the construction
of the 7.9 mile extension of the Millennium Pipeline to the power plant,
which has yet to be activated.

Protect Orange County’s Chairwoman Pramilla Malick said this weekend
that the parties bent on building and turning on the plant “have
been getting away with this from the very beginning.” She noted,
though, that 6,000 comments were submitted to the DEC documenting “significant
threats to water quality and species habitat from the proposed Valley
Lateral Project.”

Malick said DEC “took an enormous risk with our water by rejecting
the permit on procedural grounds rather than substantive water impacts.
Now they have a legal and moral responsibility to defend that decision,
immediately request a stay from the appropriate court, and ensure that
the rights of New Yorkers are preserved.”

She said the FERC ruling takes the case “beyond just Orange County
and this one project. This is a matter of state’s rights in the face of
egregious federal overreach.”

She charged Millennium “is seeking to circumvent the state’s authority.
Cuomo and the DEC can regain control by rescinding the state permits and
pulling the plug on CPV once and for all.”