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Plum Island is an island in the town of Southold in Suffolk County, New York. The island is situated in Gardiners Bay, east of Orient Point, off the eastern end of the North Fork coast of Long Island. It is about 3 miles (4.8 km) long and 1 mile (1.6 km) wide at its widest point. Plum Island is the site of the Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC), which was established by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 1954. The Island is also the site of the former U.S. military installation Fort Terry (c. 1897), and the historic Plum Island Light (c. 1869), and its automated replacement. Plum Island is owned in its entirety by the United States government, which was considering sale of the island, but suspended the plan in February 2012. Access to the island is controlled by the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS). On August 29, 2013, the United States General Services Administration (GSA) and United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced a final "Record of Decision (ROD): Public Sale of Plum Island, New York". After years of pressure from organizations including the Preserve Plum Island Coalition (PPIC), the Connecticut Fund for the Environment, along with its permanent regional program Save the Sound and Soundkeeper, Inc., Congress voted in December 2020 to block the sale and preserve Plum Island. In 2020, President Donald Trump signed the legislation. Geology The northern portion of Plum Island is a recessional moraine deposit, part of the Harbor Hill-Roanoke Point-Fishers Island-Charlestown Moraine, and thus is one of the Outer Lands. Boulders in the moraine can be seen in the eroding northern slope of the island. History Plum Island was called "Manittuwond" by the Native American Pequot Nation. It was probably first seen by Europeans in 1614 when Adriaen Block, a Dutchman employed by the Dutch West India Company, charted the area. The island was named from the beach plums that grow along the shores, and an old Dutch map made about 1640 shows the name "Pruym Eyelant" (Plum Island). In 1659, the island was purchased by Samuel Wyllys III (Samuel Willis III), son of the Governor of Connecticut, from Wyandanch, the ruling local Indian Chieftain of Long Island, for a coat, a barrel of biscuits and 100 fishhooks. On August 11, 1775, American General David Wooster dispatched 120 soldiers to the island, then known as Plumb Island, who were immediately fired upon by the British. After firing a single return volley, the soldiers retreated back to Long Island. Although no casualties were reported, this brief skirmish is believed to have represented at least one American military "first": the first amphibious assault by an American army. The historic Plum Island Lighthouse is located at the west end of the island. The original lighthouse on Plum Island was constructed in 1827; the current structure was built in 1869. The light marks the east side of "Plum Gut", a mile-wide entrance to Long Island Sound with extremely strong tidal currents. The light aided navigation near the entrance to Long Island Sound, especially through the "Plum Gut" channel between Orient Point and Plum Island. After passing through the possession of more than 20 families, in 1899, the island was purchased in its entirety by the United States government following the Spanish–American War for approximately $90,000. The U.S. Army established a Coast Artillery post, later known as Fort Terry on the island in 1897. The fort was activated as an anti-submarine base during World War II. Deactivated after the war, the fort was subsequently reactivated and assigned to the Army Chemical Corps. In 1954, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) established the Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC). The center conducts research on animal pathogens to protect farmers, ranchers, and the national food supply. Because of the nature of the research, access to the island and the research facility is restricted. In 2003, the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) assumed ownership of the island and all its facilities. The USDA continues its long running science mission at PIADC jointly with DHS, who are charged with the safe and secure operation of the facility. As one result of the heightened national security initiatives following the 9/11 attacks, Plum Island was considered as a potential site for a new high-security animal diseases lab, National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF). In September 2008, the U.S. Congress passed H.R. 2638 (Sec. 540 - New York) that directed the General Services Administration (GSA) to close the PIADC, sell the island to the public, and to use the proceeds towards the construction of the NBAF, if it were decided that NBAF would be built elsewhere. In January 2009, the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) selected the City of Manhattan, Kansas, as the site for the NBAF, and decided to relocate the PIADC there as well. However, the decline in real estate values stemming from the subprime mortgage crisis and late-2000s recession caused the sale of the island to be considered no longer viable. Because the proceeds from selling the island were needed to construct the new facility in Kansas, the project was effectively cancelled for the short term when the 2013 federal budget request contained no funding for the new facility. As part of the planned sale of Plum Island, the United States Government prepared an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the island, one objective of which is to determine whether the impact of nearly sixty years of animal testing on the island constituted a threat to public health that could preclude the planned sale. In 2008, the U.S. Congress passed, and U.S. President George W. Bush signed H.R. 2638, part of the Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing Appropriations Act, 2009, which required that Plum Island and the Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC) be sold to help fund the new National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility in Manhattan, Kansas. This legislation started the process that would have had all of Plum Island sold to a private party. A regional environmental group, Save the Sound, led the legal aspects of the movement to preserve Plum Island including the repeal of H.R. 2638. In addition, a coalition of conservation, environmental, and civic, organizations formed the Preserve Plum Island Coalition (PPIC) The PPIC advocates a plan for its designation as a National Wildlife Refuge or other protected area. The proposal provides for guided public access to the historic district and a trail area while nature preserve areas at the south and east would be restricted to student and research access. On July 16, 2013, former U.S. Congressman Tim Bishop (First Congressional District of New York) introduced a new bipartisan bill ('Save, Don't Sell Plum Island'). This goal of this bill was to preserve critical biodiversity, and prevent further develop.... Discover the Hunter Shea popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Hunter Shea books.

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  • Rattus New Yorkus synopsis, comments

    Rattus New Yorkus

    Hunter Shea

    A monstrous new breed of rats is taking over New York City in this creature feature horror novel by the author of Jurassic Florida. New York City’s rat population is growing, and D...

  • A Better World synopsis, comments

    A Better World

    Sarah Langan

    The author of Good Neighbors, “one of the creepiest, most unnerving deconstructions of American suburbia I’ve ever read” (NPR), returns with a cunning, outofthebox satirical thrill...

  • Forest of Shadows synopsis, comments

    Forest of Shadows

    Hunter Shea

    The dead still hate! John Backman specializes in inexplicable phenomena. The weirder the better. So when he gets a letter from a terrified man describing an old log home with ...

  • The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels synopsis, comments

    The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels

    Janice Hallett

    A whipsmart and “fastpaced mystery” (The Daily Telegraph, London) from the internationally bestselling author of The Twyford Code and The Appeal about a true crime journalist who r...

  • Jurassic Florida synopsis, comments

    Jurassic Florida

    Hunter Shea

    FLORIDA. IT’S WHERE YOU GO TO DIE.Welcome to Polo Springs, a sleepy little town on Florida’s Gulf Coast. It’s a great place to liveif you don’t mind the hurricanes. Or the flooding...

  • No More Heroes synopsis, comments

    No More Heroes

    Loren Rhoads

    The multispecies crew of the Veracity are enjoying some welldeserved R&R after informing the galaxy about spread of the timebending Messiah drug. Now that the galaxy has been s...

  • The Dangerous Type synopsis, comments

    The Dangerous Type

    Loren Rhoads

    Set in the wake of a galaxy wide war and the destruction of a human empire, The Dangerous Type follows the awakening of one of the galaxies most dangerous assassins and her quest f...

  • The Guns of Tortuga synopsis, comments

    The Guns of Tortuga

    Brad Strickland & Thomas E. Fuller

    Safe Harbor? Five months into their undercover search for the pirate Jack Steele, Captain Hunter and the Aurora head for the island of Tortuga to put in for repairs after a battle...

  • Blood Relations synopsis, comments

    Blood Relations

    Rett MacPherson

    In Rett MacPherson's charming cozy mysteries, genealogist Torie O'Shea always seems to be right in the middle of it all in the goingson in New Kassel, Missouri. When a drought hits...

  • Kill by Numbers synopsis, comments

    Kill by Numbers

    Loren Rhoads

    Former assassin Raena Zacari thinks she’s left the past behind. The Imperial torturer who trained her is dead; the human empire is disbanded; and she is finally free.But Raena is t...

  • Misfits synopsis, comments

    Misfits

    Hunter Shea

    "I don't know how Hunter Shea keeps churning out terrifying stories that feel original, but I want more." – Cedar Hollow ReviewsDuring the height of the 90s grunge era, five high s...

  • Dark Master synopsis, comments

    Dark Master

    Hunter Shea

    "I used to call them pirates.They come here in big ships and take whatever they want. Except they're not here for treasure. They want our souls."Is Sheila Yates crazy, or are her t...