New York City has quietly approved a controversial green plan to require pizzerias and matzah bakeries using decades-old wood- and coal-fired stoves to chop their smoky pollutants by 75%.
Mayor Eric Adams’ Department of Environmental Protection said the fresh edict takes effect April 27, with some city businesses having already coughed up greater than $600,000 for new smoke-eating systems in anticipation of the expected mandate.
“You might be going after pizza? Glorious New York pizza?” groused Mike Dabin in a recent online comment to the town DEP. “Can’t you go after Diesel Trucks as an alternative of pizza ovens?”
Businesses using wood and anthracite stoves can apply for a variance but need evidence to prove they’re unable to comply with the mandate.
Pizza lovers and a few entrepreneurs went bonkers when The Post first reported on the proposed rule last summer, anxious that the dough needed to comply with the measure would put beloved spots out of business — or no less than affect the taste of their tomato and mozzarella slices.
But Adams has defended the mandate for the Big Apple, which was recently named the most costly city to get a slice of pizza within the country.
“The scientific evidence is obvious that reducing emissions of tremendous particulate matter will improve the health of New Yorkers and reduce hospital visits and costs, without changing the amazing taste of NYC pizza,” DEP rep Edward Timbers insisted in an emailed statement to The Post on Sunday.
About 130 Big Apple businesses might be affected by the new rule, the town said.
The DEP received 155 online comments about the plan before it was approved, with most opposing it.
“That is an egregious overstep of the state and native government, and puts an unreasonable burden on small businesses which have already endured tremendous hardships over the past 3 years,” said Marc Hellman.
“If the federal government wants to enhance air quality, and force businesses to do it, it should provide the equipment freed from charge slightly than putting the burden on the companies themselves. This simply isn’t a priority in a city that’s in desperate need of diverse improvements,” Hellman wrote.
Joan Barons added, “Please grandfather old coal oven institutions without requiring them to put in scrubbers.
“This rule is a joke,” Barons said. “Don’t punish small business and pizza lovers!”
Some pie-flippers who make pizza using the standard baking method said they’ve already eaten the additional cost and implemented the required new air-filtration systems — often called a flue exhaust — to abide by the upcoming edict.
Grimaldi’s Pizza, which has coal-brick restaurants in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens, has or is within the technique of installing the smoke-eating systems in any respect three locations, said co-owner Anthony Piscina.
It’s costing Grimaldi’s at Limelight in Manhattan $50,000 to put in the filtration system due to added costs to guard the integrity of the historic gothic structure that was once a church before becoming a nightclub, Piscina said.
“We now have to do it. We are able to’t cook pizza some other way,” Piscina said.
He said the ovens have to achieve a temperature of 1,200 degrees to properly cook the slice, and only coal-fired ovens try this.
Popular Paulie Gee’s Pizza in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, which uses wood-fired ovens, installed a smoke-reduction emissions exhaust system before the coronavirus pandemic hit, when the proposed rule was first discussed after which postponed.
“It’s an enormous deal. I did what I needed to do. It’s higher than closing,” said Paulie Gee’s owner Paul Giannone, celebrating his 14th yr in business.
It cost $20,000 in dough to comply, he said.
Giannone said a neighbor had complained concerning the smoke spewing from the pizzeria.
While he said there’s merit to curbing smokey exhaust and bolstering public health, it has turn into harder for pizzerias wanting to make use of the standard baking method to open, given the new added cost. Most other pie joints use gas-powered ovens.
“I don’t see many individuals opening wood- and charcoal-fired pizzerias. It’s an excessive amount of of an expense,” Giannone said.
John’s of Bleecker Street — one in all the oldest coal-fired pizzerias within the country — spent greater than $100,000 to put in its smoke-reduction system.
“We were told we had no selection. We now have no business without our oven,” said manager Joey Schirripa. “We understand the direction the town is getting into. We would like to be environmentally friendly.”
Schirippa said the business’s infiltration system — which snakes six stories up through the chimney — has not affected the taste of its famed coal-charred pies.
Alter Eckstein, a manager of the Satmar Broadway Matzah Bakery, has said his shop has already spent greater than $600,000 on filtering systems in anticipation of the new rules.
But he said the change isn’t all about money.
“That is the religious tradition. … That is how we bake for the past 1000’s of years, and we don’t want to vary anything,” he told The Post over the summer.
The rule covers ovens installed before May 2016.
The DEP said the new rule is enforcing a law approved in 2015 by the City Council and then-Mayor Bill de Blasio requiring pollutant-spewing coal- and wood-fired pizzerias to dramatically curb their unhealthy emission of particulate matter, which is thought to cause asthma and other respiratory ills.
The department said it consulted with an advisory committee consisting of restaurateurs to return up with the rule.
Under the mandate, eateries using coal- and wood-fired stoves must install an emission control system to reduce air pollutants by 75%.
If a pie-maker or bakery can’t cut emissions by that much, the owner must submit an assessment explaining why, with the goal then being no less than 25%.