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Signatures 28 total

Page: 1

  1. 1
    Name: Shino Tanikawa on Aug 4, 2010
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  2. 2
    Name: Lee Miller on Aug 5, 2010
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  3. 3
    Name: Tricia Martin, President NY American Society Of Landscape Architects on Aug 5, 2010
    Comments: Green infrastructure is the obvious first step in ensuring that al our waterbodies are clean. In stream remediation methods are moot without a green infrastructure strategy that mitigates the CSO event. Feel free to call me at 347-236-0142 for further comment.
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  4. 4
    Name: Yaron on Aug 6, 2010
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  5. 5
    Name: Nicole Sahady on Aug 9, 2010
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  6. 6
    Name: Rondi Davies on Aug 9, 2010
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  7. 7
    Name: Tatiana Morin on Aug 10, 2010
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  8. 8
    Name: Marlene Donnelly on Sep 9, 2010
    Comments: NYC is no longer an 19th century town, it needs infrastructure for the 21st century--infrastructure and green planning that is prepared to handle the changes brought on by global warming. It's just not OK to allow millions of gallons of sewage to run into the Gowanus Canal just because the sewer lines were built that way over 150 years ago. And it's not OK to plan on continuing to collect sewage in the canal only to flush it all out into the harbor with a better "flush". Fixing these problems is the "building" work for our generation.
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  9. 9
    Name: Maryann Young on Sep 9, 2010
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  10. 10
    Name: Rita Miller on Sep 9, 2010
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  11. 11
    Name: Miriam Trautmann on Sep 9, 2010
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  12. 12
    Name: Carol Milano on Sep 9, 2010
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  13. 13
    Name: The Urban Divers Estuary Conservancy on Sep 10, 2010
    Comments: a quality and healthy environment where it is safe to swim and fish in only fair... considering the amount of money New Yorker pays for real estate and property taxes. Isn't that investment worth protecting the public health? after all clean air, clean water, clean soil is a human right... this on going neglect make NYC GOV one of the biggest violators
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  14. 14
    Name: The Urban Divers Estuary Conservancy on Sep 10, 2010
    Comments: a quality and healthy environment where it is safe to swim and fish in only fair... considering the amount of money New Yorker pays for real estate and property taxes. Isn't that investment worth protecting the public health? after all clean air, clean water, clean soil is a human right... this on going neglect make NYC GOV one of the biggest violators
    Flag
  15. 15
    Name: Ken Baer on Sep 17, 2010
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  16. 16
    Name: Raul Rothblatt on Sep 26, 2010
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  17. 17
    Name: Anonymous on Oct 1, 2010
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  18. 18
    Name: Albert Key on Oct 4, 2010
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  19. 19
    Name: Graham Ray on Oct 7, 2010
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  20. 20
    Name: Gloria Weiss on Nov 3, 2010
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  21. 21
    Name: Leslie A. Barnett on Nov 5, 2010
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  22. 22
    Name: Anonymous on Jan 4, 2011
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  23. 23
    Name: Ofelia Mangen on Mar 23, 2011
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  24. 24
    Name: John McDermott on Jul 6, 2011
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  25. 25
    Name: Cynthia Strauss on Jul 31, 2011
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  26. 26
    Name: Alexandra Derby on Aug 13, 2011
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  27. 27
    Name: Carol Choi on Oct 31, 2011
    Comments: I support swimable and fishable waterways in New York. I am a resident and frequent user of the waterways via small manpowered watercraft, and am personally impacted each time by the storm runoffs. I want to see more green infrastructure in our city. Thank you.
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  28. 28
    Name: Daria Mazey on Feb 20, 2012
    Comments: Green Infrastructure makes so much sense for NYC! It's a much needed win-win investment.
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