Politics & Government

FEMA Reimburses Westchester $2.4 Million for Sandy Costs

This reimburses the county for efforts to keep the sewage treatment plant serving Bronxville and Tuckahoe operating during the hurricane in 2012.

Written by Dina Sciortino

When Superstorm Sandy tore through Westchester—blustery winds knocked out the power at the Yonkers Joint Wastewater Treatment Plant, while heavy rain threatened to flood out the facility.

The plant serves Bronxville, Tuckahoe and Scarsdale among other communities.

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Westchester County had to put emergency measures in place to ensure that the plant would continue to provide clean drinking water—like running temporary generators, draining flooded areas, rewiring and installing bypass systems, and transporting sludge to other sites to prevent at backup of sewage and harmful waste at the Yonkers Wastewater Treatment Plant, which serves:

  • Tarrytown
  • Sleepy Hollow
  • Mount Vernon
  • New Rochelle
  • White Plains
  • Yonkers
  • Bedford
  • Greenburgh
  • Mount Pleasant
  • Mount Kisco
  • New Castle
  • North Castle
  • Ardsley
  • Briarcliff Manor
  • Bronxville
  • Dobbs Ferry
  • Elmsford
  • Hastings-on-Hudson
  • Irvington
  • Pleasantville
  • Scarsdale
  • Tuckahoe

“Superstorm Sandy devastated our region, taking lives, devastating homes and businesses, and threatening to cripple our region’s infrastructure, including our supply of safe drinking water,” said U.S. Rep. Nita Lowey, the senior Democrat on the Appropriations Committee. “The Yonkers Joint Wastewater Treatment Plant took a direct hit, and Westchester County went to extreme and costly lengths to keep the plant up and running to protect residents’ health."

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Measures taken during Sandy and in the aftermath of the storm put Westchester in the hole for more than $2 million.

However, Lowey announced Aug. 6 that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)’s public assistance program will now reimburse Westchester for 90 percent of the emergency measures taken by the Westchester County Department of Environmental Facilites to secure the water treatment plant. 

The $2,477,959 in funds are a part of the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act, a bipartisan bill that was passed in January to help municipalities affected by Sandy. 

“This badly-needed aid will help ease the financial burden of the County’s Sandy response and limit the impact to taxpayers,” said Lowey. 

Municipalities in Westchester and Rockland counties have received more than $35 million in FEMA grants since the storm hit.

 


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