The Ridgewood Reservoir in Highland Park has officially been designated a wetland by the NYS DEC after 11 years of advocacy by a coalition of environmental and historic preservation activists.  Here is a link to a copy the official declaration.   The order was signed by DEC on October 24, 2018 although the Queens Parks Commissioner was not made aware of it until late December. This is a huge victory for all of us who advocated for protection as well as park goers who enjoy visiting the Reservoir. 

There are dozens of individuals and organizations that deserve credit for this, especially Queens Community Board 5, which was on board from the beginning, but for a concise history of who did what and when, please see Page 8 of  The Clapper Rail

Background:

The Parks Department, under the leadership of former Commissioner Adrian Benepe, originally wanted to remove the natural habitat and build ball fields in the reservoir's basins. An opposition effort was  spearheaded in 2007  by birders and artists, mainly from Brooklyn. They grew a coalition that included organizations such as Newtown Historical Society as well as heavy hitters like NYC Audubon and Riverkeeper. Comptroller William Thompson and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.'s 2008  NY Times op-ed  raised the visibility of the reservoir's predicament citywide. In 2009, certified wetlands delineator Mickey Cohen volunteered to map the wetlands inside the Ridgewood Reservoir basins for the Highland Park-Ridgewood Reservoir Alliance (previously known as the Ridgewood Reservoir Education & Preservation Project). A review of the activists' 2010 application to the DEC was delayed due to Hurricane Sandy and other environmental issues in the state. DEC later claimed each basin was an individual wetland, each of which were too small to meet the criteria for designation. 

A lack of funding caused Parks to abandon their development plan, but they proceeded with  phase 1 and 2  of restoration of the paths around the perimeter and between basins 2 and 3. Historic preservation and natural conservation eventually won over, but the DEC had the reservoir classified as a "high-hazard" dam, and the Parks Dept then was put in the position of having to  breach the walls  of the basins in order to comply with DEC's safety regulations, which would have put the habitats in peril. In 2014, the Parks Dept requested that the DEC reclassify the reservoir as a "low hazard" dam, and in 2017 then-Queens Parks Commissioner Dorothy Lewandowski  announced that she completed the application  to accomplish that, which eliminated the need to alter the walls of the basins.

In November 2017, Basil Seggos wrote to Assembly Member Cathy Nolan to explain that there was another criteria that could be used to designate the Reservoir as wetlands. The basins' " unusual local importance " made them eligible. A hearing was held and the comment period ended in March of last year. Then, it was just a matter of waiting for final approval.

The Newtown Historical Society is proud to have been a part of this amazing effort. We believe that environmentalism and historic preservation go hand-in-hand. We are still looking forward to seeing the pathway between basins 1 and 2 restored and for the invasive species within the basins to be replaced with native plants, and hope the gatehouse and pumphouse will someday be restored, but now is a time to celebrate achieving a long-sought victory.  

Christina Wilkinson
President