Waterfront Alliance

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Waterfront Alliance
Formation2007
TypeEnvironmental & Urban Planning Organization
Legal statusNon-profit organization
HeadquartersNew York City
Region served
New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary
President & CEO
Cortney Koenig Worrall
Founders
Paul Balser, Kent Barwick, Carter Craft, John Solomon, Paige Sutherland, John Watts
Board Chair
Kathy Robb
Websitewaterfrontalliance.org

Waterfront Alliance is a New York City-based nonprofit. The mission of Waterfront Alliance is to assure accessible, dynamic, working, and resilient shorelines that can withstand the impacts of climate change. Waterfront Alliance initiatives fall under four broad categories: climate preparedness; building stewardship; providing public access; and assuring vibrant waterfronts and coastlines.

Launched as a project in 1999-2000 by the Municipal Art Society to advocate for improved ferry services and the creation of parks and trails along the New York-New Jersey shorelines, Waterfront Alliance evolved in 2007 into a separate non-profit organization offering multi-faceted programs that build, transform, revitalize, and protect regional waterfronts and waterways. Waterfront Alliance has grown into an alliance of more than 1,100 institutions and organizations which include collaborative partnerships of business interests, civic organizations, governmental entities, communities, and neighborhoods working to protect and improve 700 miles of waterfront in the New York–New Jersey Harbor Estuary, one of the most intricate natural harbors in the world and one of the busiest shipping ports in the United States.

Waterfront Alliance launched, manages and supports Rise to Resilience, a campaign-driven coalition advocating for federal, state, and local government laws, policies, appropriations, and investments to support an array of climate resilience initiatives in the broad watershed of the New York-New Jersey harbors.

Waterfront Alliance also administers a national certification program called Waterfront Edge Design Guidelines® (WEDG®) which is considered the gold standard for evaluating, preparing, and verifying resilient waterfronts that can meet the impacts of climate change. WEDG provides technical reviews of waterfront projects, continuing education and credentialing for professionals, and policy and finance guidelines to meet Environment, Social, Governance (ESG) investment strategies. Initially designed for application in the New York-New Jersey region, design guidelines have evolved into WEDG 3.0 to address all types of waterfronts including lake shorefronts and river fronts.

From its inception, Waterfront Alliance has expanded its educational youth programs as part of its commitment to cultivating future environmental stewardship for the area's waterways evolving into Estuary Explorers, a STEM-based environmental program centered around experiential learning at the waterfront. Since the 2009 launch of its newsletter Waterwire, Waterfront Alliance reports on news, policy, initiatives, events, recreation, historic boats, and issues affecting the region.

Waterfront Alliance initiatives are foremost based on sound ecological principles that restore and maintain habitats and ecosystems; preserve and enhance ecosystem connectivity to bolster biodiversity; avoid human disturbance to natural areas; redevelop and clean up degraded sites; practice sustainable fill and soil management; use renewable and resilient energy sources; reduce emissions through carbon management; require environmentally sound construction practices; conserve water; and provide long-term site oversight and monitoring.

History[edit]

Waterfront Alliance initially started as a project in 1999-2000 under the Municipal Art Society to improve ferry service and establish an industrial heritage trail along the East River, a saltwater tidal estuary in New York. The original founders included: Paul Balser, Kent Barwick, Carter Craft, John Solomon, Paige Sutherland, and John Watts. The organization later evolved into an independent nonprofit.

2006, the organization began working with the New York Harbor School to provide educational summer camps for youth.

2007, under the leadership of community activist Roland Lewis, the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance became independent of the Municipal Art Society. (The organization would later be named Waterfront Alliance.) That year, the new organization and the Municipal Art Society released a documentary called City of Water which advocated for a diverse and vibrant New York City waterfront. Roland Lewis described the documentary as encapsulating "the fulcrum issues that face the waterfront right now." He said: “Our generation has been presented with a unique opportunity to change the waterfront. The decisions that are facing us right now will affect our grandchildren."

2008, the first-ever City of Water Day was organized to encourage New Yorkers to interact with the city's waterfront. It continues to be an annual event with water-related activities in all five NYC boroughs.

2008, Waterfront Alliance helped simplify the permitting process for waterfront projects in the New York-New Jersey Harbor by creating a Waterfront Permitting Made Simple website. By November 2008, regional policy makers, activists, planners, and agency representatives introduced an agenda of policy changes and projects called the Waterfront Action Agenda.

2009, Waterfront Alliance launched Waterwire with staff writer Alison Simko, now publisher of The Broadsheet. Waterwire continues to serve as a resource and archive of waterfront and harbor related issues.

2009, Waterfront Alliance helped pass legislation to reinstate the Waterfront Management Advisory Board.

2009 and 2010, Waterfront Alliance worked with the City of New York to develop and execute a public input process to update the Comprehensive Waterfront Plan, a management plan which had not been updated since 1992.  City Council Speaker Christine Quinn announced the multi-year initiative at Waterfront Alliance's City of Water Day to begin the public commenting process

2010, Waterfront Alliance launched and was joined by National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) to create a bi-state coalition of nonprofit organizations to help secure the federal and state funding needed to address New York-New Jersey harbor needs. Coalition members included: The Environmental Defense Fund, Hudson River Foundation, Ironbound Community Corporation, NY/NJ Baykeeper, NYC Environmental Justice Alliance, Regional Plan Association, Trust for Public Land, and WE ACT. The coalition received support from U.S. Representatives Paul Tonko, Jerrold Nadler, Carolyn Maloney, and Nydia Velazquez.  

Recent Projects[edit]

Also in 2008, Waterfront Alliance helped to simplify the permitting process for waterfront projects in the NY-NJ Harbor by creating a Waterfront Permitting Made Simple website.[1]


In 2009 and 2010, the Waterfront Alliance worked with the City of New York to develop and execute a public input process for the update of the Comprehensive Waterfront Plan. MWA initially had worked with the New York City Council to pass legislation requiring the update of the 1992 Comprehensive Waterfront Plan, announced by City Council Speaker Christine Quinn at the Waterfront Alliance's 2008 City of Water Day. The Plan was released by the NYC Department of City Planning in 2011 as Mayor Bloomberg's Vision 2020: New York City Comprehensive Waterfront Plan.[2]

In 2010, Waterfront Alliance joined with the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) to create the New York-New Jersey Harbor Coalition. This bi-state coalition of nonprofit organizations is an advocacy campaign to help secure the federal and state funding needed to transform the NY-NJ Harbor to meet the environmental, recreational, and economic needs of the region's 22 million residents. In addition to the Waterfront Alliance and the NPCA, the current Coalition members include: The Environmental Defense Fund, Hudson River Foundation, Ironbound Community Corporation, NY/NJ Baykeeper, NYC Environmental Justice Alliance, Regional Plan Association, Trust for Public Land and WE ACT. The group received support from U.S. Representatives Paul Tonko, Jerrold Nadler, Carolyn Maloney and Nydia Velazquez at MWA’s Waterfront Conference Floating Follow-Up in 2011.

The Waterfront Alliance began the Open Waters Initiative in 2010 as a program to construct community docks at waterfront sites in New York City. The first dock will be constructed in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn in 2012.[3]

The Waterfront Alliance organizes 6 task forces to discuss and deliberate waterfront policy, they include: Aquatecture, Water Mass Transit, Green Harbor, Harbor Education, Harbor Recreation and the Working Waterfront.

Annual Events[edit]

The Waterfront Alliance's Waterfront Conference is a platform to address current waterfront issues including environmental concerns, climate change, equity and access and financing.

City of Water Day focuses wide-scale public attention on the challenges and opportunities facing the waterfront and the event also highlights solutions. In 2011, 25,000 people participated in the event.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Waterfront Permitting Made Clear - Home". Archived from the original on 2013-05-06. Retrieved 2012-08-07.
  2. ^ "New York City Department of City Planning".
  3. ^ "Eco Dock coming to the 69th Street Pier". Home Reporter News.