August 8, 2019
The Honorable Phil Murphy
Governor
State of New Jersey
125 West State Street
Trenton, New Jersey 08608
Dear Governor Murphy:
Thank you for your support in getting the S-1074 bill approved and signed into legislation. We are thrilled the bill broadens the public’s access to beaches and waterfront areas, enshrining into state law the public trust doctrine, a principle that holds that natural resources such as tidal waters and waterfronts are preserved for public use.
With this law now in place we ask you to honor its purpose and protect Hoboken Cove, the only natural sand beach on either side of the Hudson River south of the George Washington Bridge. For the past 30 years, the citizens of Hoboken and its elected officials have embodied the spirit of S-1074 in working together to create a contiguous, public waterfront park, going well beyond the state’s requirement for a 30-foot public walkway along the Hudson River. This has required an investment of tens of millions of dollars in private and public funds. There is only one missing link to completing the waterfront park’s 30 year vision, the former site of the Union Dry Dock located at Hoboken Cove. Since 2017, the City of Hoboken has committed to acquiring the site for public access, connecting Castle Point Park to Maxwell Place Park.
Hoboken Cove is an ecologically sensitive, intertidal zone where horseshoe crabs lay their eggs, diamondback terrapins can be found and scores of migratory fish have been identified. It is the home of the Hoboken Cove Community Boathouse, a volunteer organization that puts over 6,000 kayakers into this protected part of the Hudson River each year. Just to the south of the Union Dry Dock is a popular public fishing pier and a skateboard park, one of the few in the region. There is a children’s playground nearby at Maxwell Place Park where kids pass the day on swings and slides. Scores of runners, walkers and bicyclers utilize the multi-purpose path on a daily basis. In summary, the waterfront park at Hoboken Cove is a living breathing example of what the S-1074 legislation stands for.
Preserving Hoboken Cove for public use is now under attack with New York Waterway proposing to locate a ferry maintenance, refueling and berthing facility at the Union Dry Dock site. As stated this site is the final missing link to completing the 30 year vision of a continuous publicly accessible waterfront along the Hudson River coast. The ferry operator plans to operate 18 hours a day, 7 days per week, making an estimated 80 ferry trips daily to and from the depot. Most of these ferries operate with Tier 1 diesel engines, the most polluting class of marine engines. In addition, the City estimates that ferry crews commuting to work will be making 240 vehicular trips to the Hoboken waterfront. In summary, NYWW’s proposed use of the Hoboken Cove Union Dry Dock site is the antithesis of what S-1074 stands for.
In addition, exhaustive studies completed by NJ Transit (2009, Ferry Berthing and Maintenance Facility — Alternate Site Analysis) as well as the City of Hoboken (2018, Boswell Engineering) identified there are multiple sites more suitable than the Union Dry Dock at Hoboken Cove property. Both studies ranked first, by a considerable margin, the Hoboken Terminal, formerly known as the Erie Lackawanna Station. This 80-acre property, one of New Jersey’s premier multi-modal transportation hubs, is owned by NJ Transit and designated for transportation and maintenance purposes.
We the undersigned, on behalf of the citizens and elected officials of Hudson County, urge you to show the people of NJ that not only did you sign the S-1074 legislation you are enforcing it and putting it into action in protecting Hoboken Cove allowing the City of Hoboken to finalize a 30 year vision of giving the waterfront back to the people. NYWW can locate its ferry maintenance, berthing and refueling operations at Hoboken Terminal as detailed in the plans developed by NJ Transit in 2009, without interfering with any public use of the waterfront. The Hudson River Waterfront Walkway is routed through the train station at this location where it connects the public walk in Jersey City to Hoboken.
The decision on where to locate this ferry maintenance facility must be made by the State of New Jersey, not a private ferry operator. The facts as stated above should make this an easy decision for you to make. Show the people of NJ the S-1074 legislation is more than a signature, it’s a living breathing vision that will be brought to life.
Ron Hine, Executive Director, Fund for a Better Waterfront
Greg Remaud, Chief Executive Officer, NYNJ Baykeeper
Donald Stitzenberg, President, Hudson River Waterfront Conservancy
Janna Chernetz, Deputy Director, Tri-State Transportation Campaign
Sam Pesin, President, Friends of Liberty State Park
Tim Dillingham, Executive Director, American Littoral Society
Doug O’Malley, Environment New Jersey
Captain Bill Sheehan, Hackensack Riverkeeper
Anne Poole, President, NJ Environmental Lobby
Ed Potosnak, Executive Director, New Jersey League of Conservation Voters
Jeff Tittel, Director, New Jersey Sierra Club
Dan Harrison, President, Hudson River Fishermen’s Association
John Weber, Mid Atlantic Regional Manager, Surfrider Foundation
Daniel E. Estrin, General Counsel & Advocacy Director, Waterkeeper Alliance
Michele Byers, Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation
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The site that no one knew about that could end NYWW-Hoboken fight Jersey Journal
Meet Phil Murphy’s inside man: The guy with access to the governor The Record 10-31-2018
Gov. Phil Murphy, Hoboken Mayor Ravi Bhalla at odds over Union Dry Dock vote – The Record 4-3-2018
Related Documents
NJ Transit option agreement with NY Waterway
Boswell Engineering Analysis of NJ Transit studies 8-20-19
NJT Ferry Maintenance Facility Evaluation: Hoboken Terminal South Site
NJDOT Ferry Maintenance Facility Study: MOTBY vs. Union Dry Dock
Environmental Groups Letter to Gov Murphy 8-8-2019
Port Imperial Marina Agreement (Weehaken)
Maraziti Falcon Letter to Governor’s Office March 8, 2019
Brendan Gill memo to Matt Platkin re: “eviction letter”
Romulus (Imperatore) ownership of Port Imperial Marina site block 45.01 lot 3.01
NJT 2009 Alternative Site Analysis
NJDEP 2009 permit to NJT showing detailed plans for facility at Hoboken Terminal
Boswell 2018 Alternative Site Analysis Report
Noelle Thurlow Biodiversity study at Hoboken waterfront
FBW submission to Army Corps 5-24-2018
Public Strategies Impact Lobbying Report First Quarter 2019
Public Strategies Impact Lobbying Report First Quarter 2018
Related Links
City to make offer to buy Union Dry Dock
City Council faced with standing room only crowd urging completion of waterfront park
15 environmental organizations urge Gov. to preserve Union Dry Dock as public space
3,000-year old outrigger canoe tradition lives on at the Hoboken Cove
NY Waterway’s improbable tale of eviction from Weehawken’s waterfront
Union Dry Dock is not an option for a ferry homeport but other sites are
FAQs on the ferry diesel depot proposed for Union Dry Dock site
NY Waterway lobbyists pressed Murphy administration to reverse course on Union Dry Dock
NY Waterway’s bogus talking points
The Life and Death of the Hoboken Cove
Hoboken mounts challenge to Army Corps/NJDEP permits
NJ Transit study identifies 5 sites more suitable than Union Dry Dock
FAQs: We answer your questions on NY Waterway depot in Hoboken
A brief history of NY Waterway and its founder, Arthur Imperatore
Tell NJ Transit Board to vote ‘no’ on MLK Day
Ferry homeport would reverse decades of progress at Hoboken waterfront
Public Park or Refueling Depot?
FBW letter opposing NJDEP permit application
NJ Transit’s dreadful plan for Hoboken waterfront
In 2012, NJ Transit abandons plans to acquire Union Dry Dock
FBW petition underscores Hoboken’s love of its waterfront
Union Dry Dock: Potential Parkland for Sale