Showing posts with label Long Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Long Island. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Mario Cuomo Long Island Pine Barrens Speech!


On July 14, 1993, then-New York Gov. Mario Cuomo stood before a congregation of environmentalists, civic leaders, and lawmakers amid the lush landscape of Southaven County Park in Shirley and delivered what one environmental activist there that day believes to be the late governor’s best oratorical performance of his political career.

The event was held to celebrate the signing of the Long Island Pine Barrens Protection Act, which effectively banned construction on more than 50,000 acres of Pine Barrens land. The passing of the law capped a bitter legal battle that pitted environmentalists and the Long Island Pine Barrens Society against developers, whom were eager to build on the 100,000 acres of land that stretches across the towns of Brookhaven, Riverhead and Southampton. Environmentalists, concerned that the more than 200 proposed projects on the Pine Barrens site could damage LI’s sensitive drinking water supply, brought the suit.

The lawsuit, initially filed in November 1990, made it all the way to the State Court of Appeals, where it was dismissed, exactly two years after it was first filed. The court said construction could continue without the three towns conducting an environmental impact study, the basis for the suit. The court, however, called on the state Legislature to protect the Pine Barrens.

Lawmakers and environmentalists got to work soon after the ruling. A bill, sponsored by state Sen. Kenneth LaValle (R-Port Jefferson) and then-Assemb. Thomas DiNapoli (D-Great Neck), passed unanimously.

A celebration was planned for Southaven County Park the next summer. Cuomo, who was not instrumental in the bill’s passage, according to Dick Amper, executive director of the Long Island Pine Barrens Society, was nevertheless invited.

Cuomo, who died last week, “delivered a more eloquent speech on the environment, certainly than I’ve ever made and that I’ve ever heard in terms of capturing why the environment is so important,” Amper told the Press. “He was a master orator, even on matters in which he was only peripherally involved.”

“I have delivered at least 500 speeches on the subject of protecting water and open space,” Amper added, “and the best of them put together couldn’t hold a candle to what he said and what he did to that audience that day.”

With his elbows pressed against the podium, and fingers interlocked, as if in prayer, Cuomo tried to paint a glowing picture of New York—not the misconstrued version that many outside the state believed in.

“This is an environmental state, and the Pine Barrens now is its latest, most glorious expression,” Cuomo boomed. “This is what the state is the best at; nobody thinks of us that way. Because if you’re anywhere in the United States, and someone says to you ‘New York,’ the instant Pavlovian response is for your mind to summon up a subway mugging in Manhattan—that’s what happens when you say New York. Nobody thinks of us as environmentalists, but that’s what we are.”

The Long Island Pine Barrens Society replayed the speech at its 36th Annual Environmental Awards Gala in 2013, where it celebrated the 20th anniversary of the Long Island Pine Barrens Protection Act. Honored that night for their roles in the successful passage of the law were LaValle and DiNapoli.

But it’s Cuomo speech that Amper, and other environmentalist present at Southaven County Park that summer day, will never forget.

“I know that way down deep we’re always looking for something bigger than we are, something more beautiful, something we can throw our arms around and wrap our souls around, and say this is right, this is good, this is something I can believe in with passion, this is something I can give myself to,” Cuomo said. “

“Sometimes it’s a person, and then they take them away, they shoot them down and they murder them and they break your heart and you give up on people and you look around for causes, and you run out of them,” he continued. “And you get into public life and you’re not even allowed to say the word morality or God or religion, they rule all of that out. And you find this truly barren land, if you’re looking for something larger than yourself and then it occurs to you: Niagara Falls, the Adirondacks, the Pine Barrens, the water under Long Island, the rivers, the chestnut tree in the park in South Jamaica, Queens, the environment—ecology, preserving it, saving it, fighting for it.”

“With sureness,” Cuomo said, building toward the conclusion, “I go to bed tonight having signed a bill and made it a law knowing that I did the right thing.”

The video was shared with the Long Island Press by the Long Island Pine Barrens Society.
Originally posted here:  http://www.longislandpress.com/?p=39374

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Otis G. Pike, maverick N.Y. congressman, dies at 92 - The Washington Post

My Favorite Congressman from Long Island, N.Y.- Otis G. Pike, maverick N.Y. congressman, dies at 92!


James K. W. Atherton/The Washington Post -Mr. Pike pats the classified material on the 1973 Arab-Israeli war that the White House turned over to the House Intelligence Committee on September 10, 1975.
Otis G. Pike, a nine-term New York congressman who was a persistent critic of Pentagon overspending and led one of the first congressional investigations of abuses by U.S.
intelligence agencies, died Jan. 20 at a hospice in Vero Beach, Fla. He was 92.
His daughter, Lois Pike Eyre, confirmed the death and said she did not yet know the cause.
Mr. Pike, who was elected to the House of Representatives in 1960, was regarded as an independent-minded maverick during his 18 years in Congress. He was a Democrat elected from a Republican-leaning district on Long Island, a Marine Corps veteran who was skeptical of Vietnam War escalation, and a patrician, bow-tied lawyer with a wicked sense of humor, which he used to ridicule wasteful spending.

In 1973, Mr. Pike was credited with single-handedly grounding a $14 million program that awarded extra pay for flight duty to generals and admirals who never piloted anything more aerodynamic than a desk at the Pentagon.



Standing on the floor of the House with his arms outstretched like a plane in flight, Mr. Pike used mockery to plead his case.



“If the in-basket is continually loaded on the starboard, or right-hand, side of the desk, and the out-basket is continually empty on the port, or left-hand, side of the desk,” said Mr. Pike, who flew 120 missions as a Marine pilot in World War II, “wood fatigue sets in, the landing gear tends to buckle and the whole fuselage crashes down on your feet.”

As the chamber echoed with laughter, the flight-pay policy was abolished.

Mr. Pike had his most conspicuous moment in the public eye in 1975, after revelations of the CIA’s “family jewels” — suspected involvement in clandestine operations that may have included killings and coups overseas and spying on U.S. citizens.

In July 1975, he became chairman of a committee that was the House counterpart of a Senate
committee led by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho). Both panels reviewed activities of the CIA and other intelligence agencies, marking the first time Congress had examined secret dealings and suspected abuses by the CIA since the spy agency’s founding in 1947.

During the often-testy hearings, Time magazine called Mr. Pike “the model of a properly pugnacious public servant — sharp-tongued and not easily intimidated.”

Mr. Pike challenged CIA Director William E. Colby to accept greater oversight of the CIA’s budget — then, as now, a secret, off-the-books appropriation. The CIA balked, saying the country’s intelligence operations could be hurt by opening its books.

Mr. Pike was alarmed by CIA excesses, including suspected involvement in efforts to oust leaders in Chile and other countries. After Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger withheld certain documents and limited the number of State Department officials who could testify, the Pike Committee voted to hold him in contempt of Congress.

The contempt went both ways, as Kissinger charged the committee with acting “in a
tendentious, misleading and totally irresponsible fashion.”

Among other findings, the Pike Committee called for central congressional oversight over intelligence operations, a prohibition of CIA-sponsored killings and more transparency in the intelligence budget.

“It took this investigation” into the CIA, Mr. Pike said in a 1976 New Republic interview with Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci, “to convince me that I had always been told lies [and] to make me realize that I was tired of being told lies.”

When Mr. Pike’s committee was scheduled to release its full report in January 1976, the full House of
Representatives voted to keep it secret, citing national security concerns. A copy of the 338-page report was obtained by Daniel Schorr of CBS News and published by the Village Voice in New York.

Summoned to appear before a House committee, Schorr steadfastly refused to name the source of the leak and kept the secret until his death in 2010. Mr. Pike was adamant in conversations with his family and others, his son said, that he did not give the report to Schorr.

In the end, because the document was never officially released, Mr. Pike’s investigation was soon overshadowed by the Senate’s Church Committee, some of whose recommendations were adopted in measures to rein in the excesses of the CIA and other intelligence agencies.

Otis Grey Pike was born Aug. 31, 1921, in Riverhead, N.Y., a town on the northern shore of Long Island then known for its potato farms and fishing fleet. He was an orphan by 6 and was raised by two older sisters and an aunt.

One of his sisters was a social worker during the Depression and told Mr. Pike about a local farm family.

“All they had for Sunday dinner was boiled potatoes,” he recalled in a 1967 interview with the New Yorker magazine. “I was surprised that in a great country like America such a thing could happen. All my family had always been Republicans, but that kind of thing, and what Franklin Roosevelt tried to do about it, turned me into a Democrat.”

Mr. Pike graduated from Princeton University in 1946 and from Columbia University law school in 1948.

He practiced law in his home town, was elected justice of the peace and served on his town council. After losing his first congressional bid in 1958, Mr. Pike defeated the Republican incumbent,
Stuyvesant Wainwright II, two years later. He went on to hold seats on the Armed Services and Ways and Means committees.

Mr. Pike enjoyed singing and playing the piano and ukulele. By the time he decided not to seek reelection in 1978, he lamented to The Washington Post that Congress was no longer much fun and had become dominated by “two kinds of people — millionaires and Boy Scouts.”

 



After his congressional career, he wrote a column on public affairs for Newsday and the Newhouse
News Service until 1999. He retired to Vero Beach.

His first wife, Doris Orth Pike, died in 1996 after 50 years of marriage. A son, Robert Pike, died in 2010.

Survivors include his wife of 10 years, Barbe Bonjour Pike of Vero Beach; two children from his first marriage, Lois Pike Eyre of Riverhead and Douglas Pike of Paoli, Pa.; and two grandchildren.

While speaking out against what he considered outlandish defense spending during the Vietnam War, Mr. Pike cited the example of small metal rods with a retail cost of 50 cents. The Pentagon, which bought them for $25.55 apiece, described them as “precision shafting.”

“For once,” Mr. Pike declared on the House floor, “the American taxpayer got precisely what he paid for.”

LEAP