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Albany’s Dutch-African Spring Festival – New York Almanack

Pinksterfest: Albany’s Dutch-African Spring Festival – New York Almanack

About Pinksterfeest, Harper’s explained:

“The Pinkster festivities commenced on the Monday after Whitesunday, and now began the fun for the Negroes, for Pinkster was the carnival of the African race. The venerable “King of the Blacks” was “Charley of Pinkster Hill,” so called because he was the principal actor in the festivities. Charles originally came from Africa, having in his infancy been brought from Angolo, in the Guinea Gulf; and when but a boy, he became the purchased slave of one of the most ancient and respectable merchant princes of the olden times, Volkert P. Douw of Wolvenhoeck.”

The Talk of Albany – The New York Times

The Talk of Albany – The New York Times

But the changes the 115,000 residents of this city on the hilly west bank of the Hudson River talk about are removed from State Street and the Murmuring heart of state government. They are on Arbor Hill, South Pearl Street and Central Avenue and on the docks by the ice‐clogged Hudson. And, there are even signs of change, at a glacial rate, in the style of Erastus Corning 2d, the Democratic patrician who has been Mayor since 1942.

The Mayor, to the surprise of many here, has begun to respond to his critics, rather than ignore them. His response was prodded, perhaps, because one of the chief critics is a woman, who once held the title of Tulip Queen.

Mrs. Theresa Cooke, the Albany Tulip Queen 15 years ago, now appears at public meetings and holds conferences to denounce the Mayor for what she contends is “fraud” in his budget. And the Mayor seems annoyed, but not flustered.

Albany for many years was home to the Upstate New York’s largest All Electric Building

Albany for many years was home to the Upstate New York’s largest All Electric Building.πŸ”Œ

One Commerce Plaza was an all electric building until 2006, they used reversing valves on the air conditioning units to provide heat. But the system had one costly flaw — they had to use electric resistant heaters to bring the air temperature to above 40 degrees on cold days, which made the building very costly to operate in prolonged cold spells winter.

Now, One Commerce Plaza uses gas pre-heaters, but they don’t heat the building to 72 degrees. Instead, the rather small gas heater brings the outside air to around 45 degrees, then air conditioner units with their reversing valves, compress the heat from “warmed up air” to a comfortable 72 degrees for the offices.

ALBANY

NEW YORK: ALBANY. 10 YEAR OLD STATE-OWNED RDF INCINERATOR SLATED TO BE SHUT DOWN.

When Albany’s incinerator went on line in 1982 it was state-of-the-art. It was designed to burn 600 tpd -but was only able to burn 400 tpd- and is located next to the State capitol buildings, in downtown Albany. Aside from a 10 year history of supplying the area with excessive particulate emissions, the incinerator supplies heat and air conditioning to NY State’s office buildings. According to Judy Enck of the New York Public Interest Research Group this plant has several unique features. 1. It is owned and operated by the State of New York. The state has determined that this notoriously poorly run incinerator (operated by the State!) would need millions of dollars for a retrofit to meet federal air emission standards by 1995, and instead of retrofitting, they have decided to stop burning garbage in the incinerator before February 1995 and, instead, burn a cleaner fuel in the facility: natural gas. 2. A sweetheart contract between the city of Albany and NY State was signed in 1982. (The project was “conceived” by Erastus Corning II, who had served as Mayor of Albany for 40 years -the longest tenured Mayor in America.) The city of Albany gets paid by the State for the garbage it delivers to the incinerator (which includes municipal waste from 14 other communities). The city of Albany receives approximately $10 million a year for delivering garbage to the state-run incinerator and for disposing of the ash! The State owns and operates the RDF incinerator and the shredding operation (which is located “far from habitation” at the Rapp Road landfill site in Albany) and the city owns the landfill. The ash is landfilled at the unlined Rapp Road landfill, which has no leachate collection, located in the middle of the Albany Pine Bush -an ecological pristine area that is home to the Karner blue butterfly, which is soon expected to enter the endangered species list. The city got an expansion to the landfill, and now they want to sell the landfill to a private company. 2. The incinerator has seldom, if ever, been in compliance with its permit conditions for particulate emissions. Pollution controls: a 3-field electrostatic precipitator (ESP). Thomas Jorling, Commissioner of the NY Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), lives within 500 feet of this incinerator, and has stated on several occasions that this incinerator is “abysmal.” The incinerator is operated by New York Office of General Services. 3. The incinerator was cited in 1991 by the NY-based INFORM group for emitting the highest levels of dioxins and furans out of 7 incinerators they had data on – 188 times the state-of-the-art standard on dioxin of 0.10 nanograms per dry normal cubic meter. Albany measured 18.8 ng/dry normal cubic meter. Of the 7 incinerators INFORM reported on, the Albany plant had the highest furnace temperature, 2500°F, and the highest dioxin emissions. (Reference: Burning Garbage in the US: Practice vs. State of the Art, published in 1991 by INFORM, 381 Park Avenue South, NY, NY 10016. Tel: 212-689-4040.) 4. The RDF operation has suffered more than 32 explosions in the last few years. The shredding plant was designed by Smith & Mahoney of Albany. (The boilers were built by Zurn Industries.) 5. In 1986 Dr. Daniel Wartenburg, then with the Harvard School of Public Health, concluded that the plant’s chromium and nickel emissions could cause a significant increase in cancer cases among people living near the plant. Wartenburg calculated a lifetime cancer risk from NY DEC test results of ambient air emissions for chromium and nickel: up to 3,000 cancers per million from the chromium emissions and 300 cancers per million from the nickel emissions. The response of the state was not to shut down the incinerator, but rather to study where the chromium was coming from. Though we never found out where the chromium was coming from, one explanation given was that the chromium might be from from the shredding operation of the garbage to make the refuse derived fuel. According to a report in the Albany Times Union of 11-13-86: “…the equipment used to shred the trash is made of a steel alloy which has a high chromium content. The plant has two shredders, each of which consists of 16 steel hammers. Those hammers periodically wear out…about 1,000 pounds of steel from the hammers decompose into the garbage each month. For the past several years the plant has been using replacement hammers which…contain relatively high amounts of chromium. Although most of the chromium is bonded into the steel alloy, the report states that chromium which is not ‘fixed’ into the steel makes up 2.17 percent of the weight. That would mean that of the 1,000 pounds of steel wearing off the hammers each month, nearly 22 pounds would be chromium…As the shredders wear out, they have to go in and weld on what they call ‘buildup’ onto the walls and the rotors…It has a high chromium and high nickel content. We used about 100 pounds of that a month. Over the past six years, I’d say we used at least 5,000 pounds of weld wire…” 6. Dangerously elevated lead levels have been detected in children who lived near the plant and a lawsuit is under consideration. Of 9 incinerators that INFORM had data on, the Albany incinerator had the highest lead emissions. 7. NY State and Albany have put out bids to sell the incinerator operations, which include the RDF incinerator, the shredding operation and the city owned landfill. 17 companies have responded to the request for bids, including BFI & Wheelabrator. For more information contact Judy Enck at NYPIRG’s Albany office: Tel: 518-436-0876.

Source: http://www.americanhealthstudies.org/wastenot/wn191.htm