Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Mayor Mary Marvin Weekly Column.

 Mayor’s Column: September 26, 2022.

In last week’s column, I spoke to summer improvements in two major areas: traffic safety/walkability and underground infrastructure. This week’s column is a continuation delineating all other projects undertaken, completed or in the final stages of completion during the summer months.

Road Paving 


Road  resurfacing will continue on Hawthorne Road, Willow Road, Locust Lane, Greenfield Avenue, Red  Oak Road and portions of Valley Road, Prescott Avenue, Avon Road and Pondfield Road.

Street Lighting 

We continue our initiative to gradually replace residential street lighting with more energy efficient LED bulbs. We are currently in the process of choosing which streets shall be in this next phase.

Charging Stations  

Electric vehicle charging stations will be installed in the Garden Avenue parking lot during the fall months. We expect to be adding two charging stations in this location to complement those in the Parkway Road Lot and Kensington Garage.

Metro North

Metro North began some underpass work just last week. It is being done during the overnight hours and the process will be slow but it already appears that beams have been sealed from rust, etc. Metro North will then repaint them to match our beams and we continue to work with the MTA to collaborate on clearly needed aesthetic improvements as well as the structural ones being addressed.

The MTA did complete installation of cameras along all our platforms, which we have historically requested, and are so pleased the project reached fruition. 
In concert, the Village camera system, which is now five years old, will be upgraded this fall, essentially implementing a point-to-point system to allow for continuity and a more stable, reliable system.

Tree Preservation 

The Trustees will be scheduling a public hearing at our October Board Meeting which will then be held 30 days later at our November 14th Board Meeting to discuss a draft tree preservation ordinance for the village.

We are in the process of clarifying and simplifying language in the proposed ordinance for ease of comprehension and enforcement.

At the same time, in the belief of leading by example, the Village is working on identifying locations on municipal property where trees need to be planted that were lost to recent weather events.

Open Spaces

At Sagamore Park we will be replacing playground equipment and at Bacon Woods Park, which connects Sagamore Road to Kensington Road (and thanks to the homeowners of the Hillcrest Cooperative), we have added an irrigation system so that the open grassy space will be able to thrive. 

We will also be doing extensive tree pruning in both the open space area as well as in the wooded area of the park. In addition, we continue to evaluate an upgrade to the existing stairs that will allow commuters and shoppers to quickly traverse from Sagamore Road to Kensington Road, not only to make them more attractive but also a safer passage.

Green Initiatives

Just within the past week, New York State awarded Bronxville a Bronze Certification from the Climate Smart Communities Program which is an initiative the Trustees adopted to provide a framework for tackling climate change and sustainability on the local level.

Our Climate Smart Task Force was spearheaded from Village Hall by Trustee Helen Knapp and Assistant Village Administrator Stephen Shallo. They teamed up with the Village Green Committee championed by the efforts of Chair Ellen Edwards, Carole Upshur and Maria Terjanian who did so much of the analytical work to get us this coveted certification. Twenty action steps were needed to reach this level. After 18 months of work and documentation, the initiatives that helped us reach this level included undertaking a greenhouse gas inventory at all municipal operations as well as one for the entire Village of Bronxville, documenting  the installation of electric vehicles charging stations, the addition of LED traffic signals, our new food scrap recycling program and our “Take  Back” recycling day.

Recreation

The paddle hut was repainted this summer, the court screening replaced and the main platform leveled. Paddle facilities will also be reopened for league play this year.

 

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Bronxville Insider: Mayor Mary Marvin Weekly Column: Mayor's Column week of September 20, 2022.

Mayor’s Column: September 19, 2022.

In my long tenure in Village government, I know for certain this has been the busiest spring and fall in terms of tackling some serious projects, with priority on safety, walkability and our aging infrastructure and its consequential deterioration.

The following are just highlights of projects, large and small, quiet and quite disruptive, that have occurred around the village since late spring and continue today.

Our two utilities, Con Edison and our water company, had to come in and do major repairs, again primarily relating to their portion of our aging infrastructure so we coordinated accordingly with their pressing needs.

Top on our internal Village priority list were two issues: flooding and traffic safety.  
To address the first, we undertook an extensive sanitary and storm sewer cleaning and televising project throughout the Village’s entire drainage system with a first priority on our five or six most recently flood prone areas.

As example in the Midland Valley Drainage Basin, we retained Cook Contracting to clean out the principal gravity line running all the way from the Village of Tuckahoe to our public school: we televised the entire line followed by the cleaning and removal of sediment and other materials that were reducing 100% capacity. In addition, we did a smoke testing program in and around the same area looking for any stormwater connections to ensure that no stormwater was entering the sanitary sewer system. The Village of Tuckahoe most kindly cooperated with us and did the same smoke testing in their portion of the sewer line that ties into ours.

We also abandoned an old sanitary sewer line behind Midland Avenue and then tied three homes into a brand new line. 

In the Paxton Avenue/Parkway Road zone, we applied for county funding to complete a flood study for the entire Bronx River Corridor located in the Village to find short and long-term solutions. In the short term, we decided to add a check valve to an existing outfall pipe at the Bronx River to stop river water from entering our storm water pipe system.

In the Alder Lane, Dusenberry Road and Forest Avenue neighborhood, we spent much of the summer televising the stormwater conveyance system to identify possible obstructions and debris. We also joined with our colleagues in the Town of Eastchester and are presently designing long-term improvements to expand existing conveyance systems in the area. Village-wide, we did major cleaning on Parkway Road and Palmer Avenue, and completed spot repairs on Kensington Road, Sagamore Road and Garden Avenue where some minor obstructions were found.

In the area of traffic safety, we are upgrading the intersections, pedestrian crossing capability and timing of lights to sync more efficiently for traffic flow, especially during school hours, at the intersections of Pondfield Road and Midland Avenue, Pondfield Road and Gramatan Avenue and Midland Avenue and Kraft Avenue.

We have also undertaken a comprehensive study of the Westside Circle and have put in bollards and hatching representing the solutions we plan to make on a permanent basis to increase safe walk ability. The rather unsightly but temporary stanchions are there as we tweak the size and exact location of the changes based on engineering advice, traffic pattern observance and comments by villagers who use that area on a continuous basis.

Prioritizing our goal of increased walkability, we are also adding a new crosswalk on Route 22, most especially for the young people who need to traverse that street to get to schools on a daily basis. In addition, you will see a new sidewalk on Route 22 from South Road to Paddington Circle which will be installed this fall. We plan to hold a work session this fall to discuss our program so coined “Safe Streets” to find more walking venues for our young people to take to our various schools as we expect the Route 22 project to be just the first of many.

In addition, the State Legislature, now with the Governor’s signature, passed a bill allowing communities to lower speed limits either Village wide or designated streets to 25 mph. Prior to this, a local community had no control over speed limits with 30 being  the absolute slowest allowed, save for school zones. At a recent Board of Trustees Meeting, the Trustees voted to hold a public hearing on the subject of lowering the speed limit at our next board meeting on October 12. In this 30 day interlude, we welcome your comments both written and verbal to guide us in making decisions on this potentially new opportunity to increase safety.

In the same vein, we are striping just about every crosswalk and double yellow line in the Village for increased visibility for both pedestrians and drivers. We are trying to emulate more of the European village model where roads for cars are shrunk and spaces for individuals to walk safely are increased versus the American concept of widening roads and narrowing sidewalks if sidewalks indeed exist at all.

In next week’s column, I will share other summer priorities in the maintenance and updates to our parkland and streetscape.