Toll of Commuting
News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files

Exclusive: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tours Port Morris site to revitalize waterfront

The congresswoman recently secured the first $1 million in federal funding for the project. Early plans include flood‑mitigation upgrades, new oyster reefs and a restored shoreline, improvements advocates say would lay the groundwork for a future public pier.

Heather Fordham

Apr 14, 2026, 5:28 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

A long‑neglected stretch of shoreline in the South Bronx is drawing renewed attention as community groups and elected leaders push to restore public access to the East 132nd Street pier in Port Morris.

What appears at first glance to be a peaceful waterfront along the East River quickly reveals a different reality: a broken fence, a littered shoreline and a dead‑end street that has kept residents cut off from their own waterfront for years.

“This is what it looks like, it’s inaccessible, it’s not friendly, it says ‘dead end,’ but there should be an access point," said Mychal Johnson of South Bronx Unite, "People come here even though there is a fence up, they go through the fence on the other side to go out there to fish and bring family and that's no way we should have access to our water edge."

South Bronx Unite and the Waterfront Alliance have spent years advocating for the pier’s restoration.

RELATED: Grassroots group continues fight to revitalize South Bronx waterfront

On Tuesday, they led a walking tour with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio‑Cortez and state officials to highlight the conditions and outline a vision for the site.

“The Bronx does not lack green space, the Bronx does not lack waterfront,” Ocasio‑Cortez said. “We’ve just been blocked off from it.”

The congresswoman recently secured the first $1 million in federal funding for the project. Early plans include flood‑mitigation upgrades, new oyster reefs and a restored shoreline, improvements advocates say would lay the groundwork for a future public pier.

“There is no reason the Bronx shouldn’t have the beautiful waterfront access and infrastructure that every other borough has,” Ocasio‑Cortez said.

The Waterfront Alliance estimates the full project will cost about $20 million, leaving roughly $19 million still needed. The group is working with city and state partners to secure additional funding.

“That’s going to stabilize the infrastructure here,” said Julie Raskin, the alliance’s president and CEO. “But the full waterfront access plan is about $20 million, and that’s why we’re here today, to hammer in that point.”

Johnson says that if they can secure the remaining funding needed, a revitalized waterfront could become a reality within three to five years.

"We delivered the Clean Water, Clean Air and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act for projects just like this," said Amanda Lefton, commissioner of the New York Department of Environmental Conservation. "As we move forward, the first next step is making sure we are convening everyone together. There is a lot of different city agencies, a lot of different state agencies, and coming together around a shared and align goal and we do that we can make anything happen."

More Stories

Top Stories

01:16
0415garrisoninvestigation_2026-04-15-18-22-46

FBI evidence technicians search along Appalachian Trail in Garrison to assist in local investigation

01:50
F Alert Heat

Record warmth continues before a weekend cooldown

01:17
Screenshot 2026-04-15 101036

Arrest made in killing of 29-year-old woman in Ellenville

00:53
WC 5PM TUES_SawMillCrash_ajc_2026-04-14-17-32-53

Violent rear-end crash on Saw Mill River Parkway leaves CT driver in serious condition

00:54
Wright

Exclusive: Energy Secretary Chris Wright discusses the future of tri-state power, gas prices and the AI surge

AP26105688281469

Jury finds that Ticketmaster and Live Nation had an anticompetitive monopoly over big concert venues

00:23
AP26105587936686

Popular NYC SantaCon charity fundraiser was more con than Claus, authorities say

01:35
Screenshot 2026-04-15 060745

Fire tears through top floor of Yonkers apartment building, displacing residents

00:30
4152026GREENBURGHLAWSUIT_2026-04-15-05-38-30

Judge sets July 13 for start of 2017 wrongful death lawsuit against town of Greenburgh

00:24
4152026LARCHMONTSCAMARRESTS_2026-04-15-05-38-54

Two men charged with targeting 75‑year‑old Larchmont woman in $25,000 scam attempt

01:01
blaise oc rescue

Dozens of animals rescued from filthy, alleged hoarding and breeding case in Orange County

00:30
4152026HAVERSTRAWENTICEMENT_2026-04-15-05-39-32

Haverstraw man awaiting murder trial sentenced to more than 11 years in teen enticement case

01:22
7bb683e9-4a2d-422d-bf18-f0c7433b73d7

Record-breaking heat expected across the tri-state Wednesday

01:36
415whatscooking_2026-04-15-07-28-07

What’s Cooking: Golden beet salad

01:35
RTWCHVPKStationElevatorBrokenBNandy5pm_2026-04-14-17-14-54

Poughkeepsie passengers escort, even carry, others due to broken elevator at MTA train station

01:49
WC 5PM TUE_StoveDekivery_ajc_2026-04-14-17-07-50

New stoves being installed at Yonkers housing complex as work continues to address gas outage

02:02
RTWCHVWPHolocaustCommemoratLDValle5pm_2026-04-14-17-15-54

Annual countywide Yom HaShoah Commemoration held in White Plains

01:44
RTWCHVSVMayorConfDCaruso5pm_2026-04-14-17-24-03

Spring Valley mayor outlines first 100 days, warns of future financial challenges

00:57
blaise margaret corbin

West Point honors Revolutionary War heroine who took over cannon in battle

01:54
0413mtvernonofficer_2026-04-13-22-06-00

Mount Vernon police department sees third officer arrested in recent incidents

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices