1/31/09

Parking Matters

In an earlier post, I posited that you could almost tell by the facts of the story which New York neighborhood it happened in.

If the story involves Santa Claus getting a parking ticket, for example, it probably happened in Bay Ridge.

As anyone who lives in or visits this neighborhood knows, parking here is very, very tight. Yet cars are such a persistent feature of the Bay Ridge lifestyle that homeowners will sacrifice their front yards just to have a guaranteed parking space.

Bay Ridge drivers fear and loathe traffic agents the way young Black men do the police.

Are they out to get us?

The article from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle:
http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/category.php?category_id=27&id=26106

More from Fox:
http://www.myfoxny.com/dpp/news/090127_Bay_Ridge_Tired_of_Parking_Tickets

Council Member Vincent Gentile wants you to know that he takes parking very seriously:
http://vincentgentile.blogspot.com/2009/01/mark-your-calendars-bay-ridge-parking.html

There is a solution, of course, but it will cost you about $250.00 a month -- assuming you can pass the credit check: http://newyork.craigslist.org/brk/prk/1013846125.html

Want a free parking spot? Go work for the federal government, from the New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/24/nyregion/24scofflaw.html

Santa Chip Cafiero takes the rap, from the Daily News:
http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/brooklyn/2009/02/22/2009-02-22_doubleparked_santa_chip_cafiero_cant_bea.html

More on Cafiero's conviction from MSNBC:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29331735/

More Cafiero coverage from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle:
http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/category.php?category_id=27&id=26567

Cafiero story picked up by UPI's Odd News:
http://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2009/02/23/Santa_loses_ticket_appeal/UPI-68251235435165/

Outrage over parking tickets grows, from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle:
http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/category.php?category_id=27&id=26810

1/30/09

City Gets More Bad News

Mayor Bloomberg's budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 counts on spending cuts, new sales taxes, union concessions, an Albany bailout and federal funding to make up the difference between the $4 billion the city needs and the $2 billion it has.

Bloomberg's $43.4 billion budget is $123 million bigger than last year's.

The latest round of cuts and taxes comes on top of $1 billion in cuts and $1.5 billion in tax hikes as the national economy and the near-collapse of Wall Street continue shorting the city's revenue stream.

The mayor's budget depends on city unions agreeing to pay 10% toward the cost of their health benefits, raising $350 million, and getting an additional $200 million from lowering health care costs.

Bloomberg's budget calls for service cuts: 30 ambulance tours, 1 firefighter from each of 64 engine companies, and cuts in homeless prevention and child care.

The budget would raise taxes and fees: charging 5 cents per plastic bag, raising parking meter rates, issuing more fines for health code violations, repealing the sales tax exemption on clothes and raising the sales tax another 1/4 of a percent.

The Mayor also plans to cut city jobs: 1,000 at NYPD, 1,440 non-classroom employees and nearly 14,000 teachers and classroom assistants at the Department of Education, 167 seasonal workers at the Parks Department, and 549 workers at the Children's Services Administration.

Of the 22,919 job cuts the Mayor is calling for, only 7,686 would come from attrition. The other 15,233 cuts would come from layoffs - the bulk of them at the Department of Education.

Bloomberg likened the demands of the city's workforce to "getting blood from a stone".

Bloomberg blames teacher layoffs on Gov. Paterson's proposed budget, which cuts funding for city schools by $771 million.

The Mayor's budget includes the $1 billion in new Medicaid money from the federal stimulus bill, but not the $1+ billion included for education -- apparently because the money has to pass through Albany on the way to New York City.

Bloomberg's budget projects property tax revenues of 7.2%. Taxes that depend on the economy - like income, sales and real estate transfer - are expected to fall 13.2%, however.

Bloomberg's forecasters don't see the economy bottoming out until sometime in 2010, by which time a projected 300,000 New Yorkers will have lost their jobs -- 46,000 from Wall Street -- and the city will have lost an estimated $39 billion in wages -- not to mention those fat Wall Street bonuses that helped inflate the real estate bubble.

The article from the Daily News:
http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/01/30/2009-01-30_mayor_bloomberg_paints_grim_economic_pic.html

Cat Adoption Event Tomorrow

The animal rescue organization K9 Kastle is hosting a cat adoption event tomorrow, Saturday, January 31st, from 11:30 AM to 5 PM in front of Animal Pantry at 693 86th Street in Bay Ridge.

There will be many beautiful cats and kittens available for adoption, some with special needs.

For additional information, call Tara at 917-748-2504.

An adoption process and fee apply.

K9 Kastle is a 501(c)(3 not-for-profit.

1/29/09

"Under-Reported and Poorly Handled"

Luis Montalvan and Aaron Glantz, writing for Huffpost, called the "woefully inefficient, corruption-riddled" New York Regional Veterans' Affairs Office an "underreported and poorly handled" story.

In 1956, when one-half of the American population consisted of veterans and servicemen and caring for vets was a national priority, the Veterans' Administration helped returning vets adjust to civilian life.

The New York regional VA headquarters is at the same address as it was in 1956, at 245 W. Houston St. in Manhattan, and is still supposed to:

"...provide benefits and services to veterans and their dependents in an accurate and timely manner which our customers recognize as compassionate and responsive."

But according to VA sources, the New York Regional Office has the second slowest turnaround rate for processing veterans' disability claims of the 57 state offices.

Wounded veterans have to wait from months to years to receive badly-needed disability benefits.

There are 600,000 wounded vets on the national waiting list for disability benefits.

In November last year, Joseph Collorafi, division chief of the New York Regional VA Office, was suspended after an investigation revealed that veterans' claims documents were being intentionally backdated.

Internal audits revealed that over half of all disability claims processed through the New York regional office had been illegally altered, and that the office ignored incoming mail.

In a letter last month to outgoing Veterans Affairs Secretary James Peake, Sen. Hillary Clinton wrote, "It is my understanding that several employees confessed that they were instructed by their supervisors to enter incorrect dates on the claims in an attempt to manipulate processing times."

Mayor Bloomberg has been "invisible" on this issue, according to the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA).

No Congressional hearings have been held.

New York Regional VA director Patricia Amberg-Blyskal and her subordinates have been transferred, but not disciplined, and no criminal charges have been filed.

Wounded Iraq and Afghanistan vets deserve better from us -- and our elected officials -- than this.

The article from Huffington Post:

Local Lawyer Charged

Bay Ridge attorney Steven Rondos and the law firm Raia and Rondos at 466 Bay Ridge Parkway have been indicted by a Manhattan grand jury on one 1 count of money laundering, 1 count of 1st-degree grand larceny, 9 counts of 2nd degree grand larceny, 5 counts of 3rd degree grand larceny, 1 count of a scheme to defraud, and one count of offering a false instrument for filing.

Between 2001 and 2008, Rondos allegedly stole more than $4 million from the accounts of 23 incapacitated clients for whom he acted as a court-appointed guardian -- 14 of them in Brooklyn. If convicted of the most serious of the charges, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

His victims included a 32-year-old quadriplegic with cerebral palsy, who lost more than $1 million, and a now-deceased mental patient he tapped for over $400,000.

Octogenarian Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau bluntly termed Rondos, a Canadian-born U.S. citizen, a "son of a bitch".

While serving as court-appointed guardian for incapacitated children and adults, Rondos used clients' funds to renovate -- landscaping, new kitchen, a home theatre -- and pay off the mortgage on his Ridgewood, NJ. home.

He was arrested at home as a fugitive from justice and is booked under the alias "Stavras Rontoyiannis" at Bergen County Jail in New Jersey, awaiting extradition.  He may also may face charges in New Jersey, where he has consented to disbarment.

According to his lawyer, Rondos is clinically depressed.

Rondos' wife and law partner Camille Raia has not been charged, but the investigation is continuing.

A Brooklyn Law School graduate, Rondos handled guardianship cases across the city. His victims included disabled elderly people and birth-injured children.

When confronted with the thefts, according to the Manhattan D.A.'s Office, Rondos stole funds from other victims to replace the missing money. In some instances, he took money from dead clients' accounts.

The Morgenthau investigation began last summer after co-guardians of 12 incapacitated persons contacted Smith Barney account representatives about large withdrawals by either Raia or Rondos. One of those guardians was Ralph Spagnoletti, from whose sister Andrea Spagnoletti, for whom Camille Raia was guardian, Steven Rondos allegedly stole more than $1 million.

When Spagnoletti contacted Raia and Rondos about a $200,000 withdrawal from his sister's account between 2007 and 2008 and Rondos told Spagnoletti the withdrawal was "a mistake", Spagnoletti and a Louisiana attorney who was a friend of one of Rondos' wards went to the district attorney.

In guardianship cases where Raia had been appointed, investigators say she let Rondos stand in for her, without court permission, and make unauthorized account withdrawals.

Investigators say that Rondos admitted making withdrawals without court approval, but that Raia disclaimed all knowledge of the fraud, claiming ignorance of her husband's handling of the accounts.

According to the New York State Office of Court Administration (OCA), Rondos was involved in more than 50 guardianship proceedings over the past 5 years, and was paid $200,000 in legal fees.  The AP reports that Rondos managed between $20 million and $30 million in assets, with the largest estate being worth just over $5 million.

Admitted to the bar in 1991, Rondos worked at the New York City Department of Finance from 1995 to 1996. He served as vice chairman of the guardianship committee of the Elder Law Section of the New York State Bar Association in 2203. In 2002, he chaired the Bay Ridge Lawyers Association.

Cases usually don't come back before a judge unless there is something the judge actively has to do. The New York Office of Court Administration (OCA) admitted that Rondos' actions were apparently the result of law oversight by court examiners, and that some of the examiners monitoring guardian accounts had been asked to resign.

Judges appoint examiners from a list of lawyers and others certified by the Appellate Division to review guardians' annual reports.  Examiners, who are supposed to examine guardians' reports and bills, are reimbursed annually based on the size of the estates they monitor.

Examiners are called the "key to guardian oversight in New York", and the "eyes and ears" of the court, but financial reviews are often cursory, guardians' reports are not vetted, guardians are rarely interviewed face-to-face, clerical staff handle many of the details, and examiners and guardians have little contact.

Sixteen different examiners signed off on the cases in the indictment, including a Manhattan surrogate's court attorney.

Five court examiners have resigned and one has been suspended as a result of the Rondos investigation.

OCA, by creating the title of court examiner specialist, has added another layer of oversight to the guardianship system.  And, starting immediately, OCA has mandated compliance hearings between guardians and courts whenever a filing or accounting is late.

Former Supreme Court Justice Leonard Scholnick, the Brooklyn judge who appointed Rondos to oversee at least 7 of the guardianship accounts Rondos is charged with fleecing, said he thought Rondos was "one of the good guys", but that nothing shocks him anymore.

Scholnick said he appointed Rondos in a case involving a "family feud" because he felt Mr. Rondos' Greek heritage could help resolve the dispute.

The post from Gothamist. 

Additional details from New York Lawyer, a New York Law Journal publication.

More from the Daily News.

More from the New York Times.

More from the New York Post.

More from the National Law Journal.

Hard Times Hit the Slope

Small businesses in Park Slope, one of Brooklyn's wealthiest and most stable neighborhoods, are beginning to feel the effects of the recession.

Jonathan Bowles of the Center for an Urban Future says that it took a while for the effects to be felt in the Slope, which was not affected by foreclosures or -- at least initially -- job losses.

Now, even people who haven't lost their jobs are worried, and their spending reflects it.

Businesses like florists, hair salons and spas, which people can get by without, are particularly hard-hit, with one Park Slope florist reporting a 50% drop in business since last year.

The article from the Daily News:
http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/brooklyn/2009/01/19/2009-01-19_small_businesses_in_park_slope_socked_by.html

1/28/09

Bloggers Get Press Credentials

As reported by Brooklyn Ron, former New York Civil Liberties Union head Normal Siegel, who is running for Public Advocate, has successfully sued the city on behalf of three bloggers who were refused NYPD press credentials.

The NYPD normally issues passes only to reporters for major newspapers and TV and radio stations.

The bloggers who sued were Rafael Martínez Alequin, of YourFreePress, David Wallis of Featurewell and Ralph E. Smith of The Guardian Chronicle.

Siegel said that the struggle to relax NYPD restrictions on press passes continues despite the win. Media access to the NYPD is two-tiered. Only reporters carrying first-tier credentials can cross police lines. Second-tier credentials merely identify the carrier as a recognized media representative.

Martinez Alequin, Wallis and Smith have received only second-tier credentials.

The post from Brooklyn Ron:
http://www.brooklynron.com/2009/01/norm-siegel-wins-big-victory-for-bloggers-3-are-granted-nypd-credentials.html

1/27/09

He's the Man -- So Far

According to a Quinnipiac poll of the 2009 mayoral election, Michael Bloomberg would beat Democratic challengers Anthony Weiner and William Thompson in a head-to-head.

Bloomberg leads them both.

Bloomberg did well among Democratic voters, tying Thompson at 42% and leading Weiner.

In a runoff between Thompson and Weiner, 47% of Democrats are undecided, with Weiner leading Thompson among the rest.

Bloomberg beats Thompson among independent voters, but has a less commanding lead over Weiner.

A majority of voters think the mayor's self-financed campaign makes him a more independent candidate.

An earlier NY 1 poll showed Bloomberg leading Anthony Weiner by a slim margin.

The article from Politicker:
http://www.politickerny.com/1669/mayoral-poll-bloomberg-leads

More from the New York Post:
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01282009/news/politics/bloomberg__weiner_remain_polls_apart_152329.htm

Bloomberg's approval rating is at 69%, from Gothamist:
http://gothamist.com/2009/01/27/poll_bloombergs_approval_rating_at.php

Feeling the Squeeze

According to a Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce survey, the borough's businesses were hit hard in 2008 by the economic slowdown and tight credit, and 75% of owners expect things to be even tougher this year.

Half of Brooklyn’s businesses broke even or lost money last year compared to 2007 due to the downturn and the credit crunch.

One survey respondent had tried to expand his company’s line of credit but found the increase wasn't worth the upfront fees and collateral.

According to Chamber director Carl Hum, Brooklyn businesses are "scared out of their wits".

More than half of respondents said they weren't hiring new employees, and a quarter are expected to lay off workers. All saw the rising costs of providing health insurance as the biggest deterrent to new hiring.

Respondents saw a stimulus package from the Obama administration, including tax incentives and measures to ease credit for small businesses, as crucial to their survival.

“Small businesses right now need to invest,” said Mr. Hum.

The toll and tax increases proposed by the Ravitch Commission to close the $1.2 billion gap in the MTA's budget are seen as a further obstacle to small business.

The article from Crain's New York:
http://www.crainsnewyork.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090126/SMALLBIZ/901269963&SearchID=73343473703686

The First Dude

A young Barack Obama working a Panama hat and a cigarette.

1/26/09

Paterson Steps in It

The consensus seems to be that Governor David Paterson, in making a politically shrewd Senate appointment, has stumbled.

The extent of the damage he's done himself has become apparent in the aftermath of his awkward appointment of Kirsten Gillibrand to Hillary Clinton's U.S. Senate seat.

The reasons for Caroline Kennedy's last-minute withdrawal from consideration for the post may never be known, but Paterson's sin was in not leaving well enough alone.

Once Kennedy withdrew, Paterson was free to appoint Gillibrand without appearing to diss Kennedy or the Democratic establishment, but Paterson's people couldn't stop themselves, in the chaos surrounding Kennedy's withdrawal, from spreading gossip that Kennedy had some sort of baggage that ruined her chances.

It was classless and unnecessary, and Paterson should have held himself above it, but he didn't.

Now, there's political hell to pay: the Kennedy family is irate and Paterson's rival, Andrew Cuomo, smells blood.

Paterson's popularity is down, with the economy tanking and his budget plan finding little support in Albany.

Paterson, an accidental governor most New Yorkers had never heard of before he stepped in for the disgraced Elliot Spitzer, is still a relative unknown. The Kennedy fiasco will make him more vulnerable.

According to a highly-placed Democratic source, "the governor's going to pay for this."

Andrew Cuomo is now the Governor's chief rival in 2010.

Just over 5 years ago, Cuomo committed the same sin that Paterson has: using the press to sully a Kennedy, by accusing his soon-to-be ex-wife, Kerry Kennedy Cuomo, of cheating on him with one of his best friends.

It backfired.

The article from the Oberserver:

City Gets $3.4 Billion in Federal Relief

In a deal that Senator Charles Schumer and Representative Charles Rangel have negotiated with the Obama administration, the city will receive a stimulus package totaling $3.4 billion in direct federal funding to help it close the gaping hole in its budget over the next 2 years.

The plan would provide at least $1.6 billion in education funding and $1.8 billion in Medicaid reimbursement, freeing money budgeted for those two items.

Education and Medicaid are New York City's two biggest expenditures.

The city's Independent Budget Office has estimated New York's deficit at $11.3 billion over the next 2½ years, due to sinking revenues.

Mayor Bloomberg, who will present the city's budget for the next fiscal year on Friday, called the stimulus package the "biggest shot in the arm" the federal government has given New York City in a "very, very long time".

The article from the New York Post:
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01262009/news/politics/obama_plans_3_4b_shot_in_arm_for_nyc_152056.htm

The press release on NYC.Gov:
http://nyc.gov/portal/site/nycgov/menuitem.c0935b9a57bb4ef3daf2f1c701c789a0/index.jsp?pageID=mayor_press_release&catID=1194&doc_name=http%3A%2F%2Fnyc.gov%2Fhtml%2Fom%2Fhtml%2F2009a%2Fpr039-09.html&cc=unused1978&rc=1194&ndi=1

Chinese New Year

Today is the first day of the Lunar New Year, celebrated in China and by Chinese people around the world.

This is the year of the Ox, which in the Chinese Zodiac represents prosperity through fortitude and hard work.

The first day of the Chinese New Year falls on a different date each year, because the full moon was traditionally used to fix the date of each new year.

The Chinese have been calculating the New Year longer than any other country on earth. This year will mark 4,707 years of Chinese recorded history.

1/25/09

Adopt a Valentine

There will be a Valentine's Day "Love Wanted" pet adoption event on Saturday, February 7th, from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., at Salem Church, 450 67th Street (between 4th and 5th Avenues) in Bay Ridge.

The event will take place rain or shine.

Proof of ID and an adoption fee are required.

All animals are provided courtesy of NYC Animal Care and Control and North Shore Animal League.

The recession has been hard on pets, who are being surrendered in greater numbers by cash-strapped owners.

Save a life: adopt a shelter pet.

In a Parallel Universe

Have you ever noticed that, just by reading the facts of a particular story, you can almost tell which New York City neighborhood it happened in?

There is a neighborhood flavor to fact patterns.

Reading about the struggle to get this Russian Orthodox Cathedral in the East Village designated a local landmark, I was sadly reminded that this story could not have happened in Bay Ridge. In fact, it probably couldn't have happened in Brooklyn.

This is a Manhattan -- more particularly a Village -- story.

Community Board 3 in the East Village has a Landmarks Committee, which decided last week not to abandon its efforts to landmark the 1891 Russian Orthodox Cathedral at 59 East 2nd Street, and to help the financially troubled church find the funding it needs to survive.

Yes, CB 3 has a committee that is not only dedicated to landmarking historically significant buildings in the district and aware of the relationship between the financial survival of congregations and the physical survival of their historic churches, but willing to get involved in the struggle.

Imagine how the kind of consciousness, commitment and advocacy evidenced by CB 3's Landmarks Committee might have changed the outcome of the battle for the Green Church.

Built across from the New York Marble Cemetery as the Olivet Memorial Church of the New York City Mission Society, the Kentucky limestone-faced church was bought in 1943 by the Orthodox Church of America and renamed the Cathedral of the Holy Virgin Protection.

As in the case of the Green Church, the owner opposes landmarking for financial reasons. The cathedral parish council told the LPC on Jan. 15 that it fears landmark protection would make it more expensive to maintain the building.

And inevitably, there is a developer involved. Last year, the parish council made a deal with a developer to build an 8-story residential addition on top of the church to raise money.

But last November, the City Council approved the East Village/Lower East Side rezoning, limiting the height of most new buildings to 80 feet, so the development deal fell through.

In October, the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation and the East Village Community Coalition had called upon the LPC to expedite calendaring the landmark hearing for the cathedral based on the developer's application for a building permit.

But the LPC and the parish council signed a standstill agreement, which expires in April of this year, whereby the church agreed not to alter the building, and the commission agreed not to calendar the proposed landmark hearing.

Now, the CB 3 Landmarks Committee is asking the LPC to extend the standstill agreement for 6 months to give it time to find ways to help the church save its historic building.

Enter Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, who has asked to meet with church leaders to talk about the available restoration options.

The parish council has said it will listen to anyone willing to help the church financially.

The article from the Villager:
http://www.thevillager.com/villager_299/hopingfor.html

1/24/09

Easy on the Salt

I've noticed, since it's snowed, that some people have really gone overboard with the rock salt, and that's not a good thing.

Rock salt cracks pavement, corrodes bridges and cars, seeps into groundwater, damages plants, endangers wildlife, and damages aquatic habitat in lakes and streams.

It also hurts your doggie's paws.

Rock salt, usually just sodium chloride (NaCl), was first used to de-ice streets in the 1930s. Now, some 10 million tons or more are used every year to de-ice roads in the U.S.

In 1991, the federal DOT Transportation Research Board did a study comparing the environmental impacts of salt and calcium magnesium acetate (CMA), a less harmful alternative, and found that a shift was unwarranted because CMA was more expensive than rock salt.

Since then, transportation agencies have reduced salt usage through improved spreading techniques, better timing and other de-icing methods, and engineers have figured out methods to reduce the impact of salt on cars and infrastructure.

But the environmental impacts of salt remain.

You, as a home or shop owner, are directly contributing to the salt overload when you indiscriminately dump it on your driveway, walk and stoop.

Some best practices:
  • Shovel early and often. Don't let snow pile up. The less snow, the more effective the salt -- and, by shoveling, you may eliminate the need for de-icing.

  • Apply de-icer early and sparingly.

  • Use CMA if you can afford to.

  • If you can't afford CMA, the next best choice is Potassium acetate (KA).

  • After KA, the next best choice is calcium chloride, which can be used in smaller amounts than sodium chloride.

  • A mix of sodium chloride or calcium chloride and CMA or KA is better than calcium chloride or sodium chloride alone.

Bruno Indicted

According to the Albany Times-Union, a federal grand jury has indicted former state Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno on felony charges, alleging that he used his position as an elected official to extract $3.2 million in influence-peddling fees.

Bruno, the only defendant in the 8-count indictment, called the U.S. Attorney and the FBI "overzealous'' and the investigation ''politicized''.

Bruno held a brief news conference after his appearance before a federal magistrate Friday, vowing to go to trial and accusing federal authorities of conducting ''a three-year fishing expedition".

The 79-year-old Brunswick Republican faces a maximum of 20 years if convicted on any of the charges, although he is not likely, if convicted, to serve that kind of time.

The indictment covers a period of more than 10 years where Bruno, serving as majority leader of the state senate, allegedly concealed payments steered to him by people and organizations seeking political influence.

According to the indictment, Bruno filed false, misleading and incomplete annual financial disclosure statements -- required by the state's Ethics in Government Law -- every year from 1993 through 2005.

During that period, Bruno controlled the ethics committee, and was effectively policing his own practices.

The Department of Justice, Internal Revenue Service and Department of Labor, which joined forces in the investigation 3 years ago, discovered a series of questionable deals dating back 15 years.

The investigation was impeded by what the U.S. Attorney and FBI called New York's "byzantine'' legislative structure, in which important political decisions, on things like bills and spending measures, are made in secret.

The indictment focuses on a series of deals and business arrangements dating back to 1993 in which individuals or businesses with an interest in state government allegedly either paid Bruno or Bruno, acting as a "consultant", steered government contracts to labor unions.

The indictment also focuses on Bruno's involvement in thoroughbred horse racing.

Allegedly, the lion's share of Bruno's ill-gotten gains -- more than $2 million -- came from his efforts to steer the pension funds of New York labor unions into a Connecticut investment firm he was involved in.

State legislators like Bruno work part-time, and can pursue other employment or business activities, but, the indictment charges, Bruno, in his capacity as "consultant", exploited his elected office and concealed conflicts of interest, in violation of state ethics and reporting laws.

Bruno has pleaded not guilty through his attorney William Dreyer, and has been released on his own recognizance.

Bruno was once one of the most powerful lawmakers in New York, and was considered state senator Martin Golden's political mentor.

Bruno, who rose from poverty to become one of the 3 most powerful men in Albany, retired from his senate seat in July, after 32 years in the legislature. He is now a lobbyist, and heads CMA Consulting in Latham.

The investigation dogged Bruno during the last two years of his political career, as the FBI delved into his real-estate dealings, investments, political decisions, and involvement in thoroughbred horse racing.

The investigation apparently began three years ago when FBI agents from an Albany white-collar crime unit began looking at a series of chartered jet flights Bruno gave to businesss and political associates. The flights, sometimes costing thousands an hour, took Bruno to private South Florida vacations, political fundraisers, government functions, and a Kentucky horse farm.

The article from the Albany Times-Union:
http://timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=762888

The text of the indictment against Bruno:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/11228629/Bruno-Indictment

1/23/09

Paterson Chooses Gillibrand

As reported by the Daily News, Gov. Paterson has chosen an upstate congresswoman with close ties to Hillary Clinton as our next U.S. Senator.

After two months of rampant speculation, Paterson settled today on 42-year-old Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-Hudson) to fill Clinton's seat.

Sources say the left wing of the Democratic Party sees Gillibrand as too conservative: she's an NRA member and voted against the federal bailout. Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-L.I.) and Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer are weighing a primary run against her in 2010.

Paterson also considered Caroline Kennedy, Andrew Cuomo, Carolyn Maloney, Steve Israel and Randi Weingarten for the job, but Gillibrand best matched Paterson's criteria for appointment because she is an upstate woman who got elected -- twice -- in a heavily Republican district.

The "whip smart, hard working" Gillibrand has deep ties to upstate New York. She lives in Columbia County with her husband Jonathan Gillibrand and two young sons, and is the granddaughter of Polly Noonan, founder of the powerful Albany Democratic Women's Club, and the daughter of Doug Rutnik, a well-known Albany lobbyist.

Gillibrand graduated magna cum laude from Dartmouth College in 1988 with a major in Asian studies, and is a graduate of UCLA Law School.

Big Manhattan firms Davis Polk & Wardwell and Boies, Schiller and Flexner stud her resume.

Gillibrand raised funds for Hillary Clinton's 2000 Senate run -- and in 2006, the Clintons returned the favor by campaigning for her.

The article from the New York Daily News:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2009/01/22/2009-01-22_who_is_kirsten_gillibrand_new_york_congr.html

More from Huffpost:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/22/kirsten-gillibrand-new-yo_n_160195.html

Dynastic dish from the Village Voice Runnin' Scared blog:
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/archives/2009/01/the_new_frontru.php

1/22/09

Mitchell Chosen as Envoy to Middle East

Today, President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced the choice of former Senator George Mitchell as special envoy for Middle East Peace.

Mitchell successfully brokered the peace in Northern Ireland.

Mitchell's appointment raised some hackles, but the President and Secretary of State chose him anyway.

For eight years, the United States has failed to make meaningful efforts to bring an end to the Arab-Israeli conflict.

On his first day in office, President Obama called Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, and Jordanian King Abdullah, and committed the United States to active partnership in Middle East peacemaking, to securing the fragile Gazan truce, and to stopping weapons smuggling into Gaza.

There will be pushback from warmongers on both sides, but as the President said, they're on the wrong side of history.

Mitchell, who is of Irish and Arab descent, has said about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: "For those of you in the Middle East who are discouraged, I understand your feelings. But from my experience in Northern Ireland I formed the conviction that there is no such thing as a conflict that can't be ended. Conflicts are created and conducted by human beings. They can be ended by human beings. I saw it happen in Northern Ireland although admittedly it took a very long time. I believe deeply that with committed, persevering and active diplomacy it can happen in the Middle East."

Godspeed.

1/21/09

New York for Sale

Tom Angotti, Director of the Center for Community Planning and Development at Hunter College, has poured his experience as a city planner, community organizer and academic into a new book, New York for Sale: Community Planning Confronts Global Real Estate, published by MIT Press.

Angotti sees community planning as the rallying cry for New York City residents excluded from the city's land use planning process.

His book surveys the land use process, from real estate development to not-for-profit public land trusts to neighborhood struggles for land-use self-determination.

Angotti's “Chronology of Major Planning Events in New York City” traces the emergence of community planning to 1961, when community activist Jane Jacobs published her classic treatise, “The Death and Life of Great American Cities.”

That year, the city passed a zoning resolution updating a 45-year old enactment under which the outer boros were “unrestricted” -- a zone where industrial and commerical uses existed side-by-side with people’s homes.

The same year, a group of neighbors formed the Cooper Square Community Development Committee and Businessmen’s Association to save their stretch of the Lower East Side from Robert Moses, who had marked 11 blocks of the neighborhood for “urban renewal.”

The Cooper Square Committee countered with a study showing that 93% of the people whose homes were slated for “urban renewal” wouldn't be able to afford the new housing.

The city challenged the group to come up with its own proposal, and it responded by creating the city's first-ever community-based plan.

The proposal begins: “A renewal effort has to be conceived as a process of building on the inherent social and economic values of a local community. Neglecting these values through programs of massive clearance and redevelopment can disrupt an entire community.”

That statement could have been drafted by community activists staring down Forest Ratner in downtown Brooklyn, Joe Sitt in Coney Island, or one of countless other mega-developers unleashed on the city's neighborhoods.

After nine years, the city approved the much-revised Cooper Square plan, and the city charter was revised to create both community boards and the Urban Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP).

In 1989, the charter was again revised to empower the community boards to create “197-a” plans as guides to development in their communities. (Bay Ridge does not have an 197-a plan.)

Angotti sees 197-a plans, created through an inclusive process, as the “building blocks" of city planning policy in New York. But the Department of City Planning has ensured, through its regulations, that 197-a plans are unenforceable: “The existence of an adopted 197-a plan shall not preclude the sponsor or any other city agency from developing other plans or taking actions not contemplated by the 197-a plan that may affect the same geographic area or subject matter.”

In the 20 years since 197-a plans were enacted, only 10 have been adopted by the DCP. Communities have invested years putting together a 197-a plan only to see it die in the DCP, as happened with CB4’s plan for Chelsea, CB3's plan for the Bronx, and the plans for Red Hook, Greenpoint and Williamsburg.

At best, the city has ignored the 197-a process; at worst, it has done the opposite of what they recommend.

Acknowledging the flaws in the 197-a process, Angotti cites their inclusivity, although some 197-a plans, like the 2003 Riverdale plan, have been used for the opposite purpose.

A case study features ¡Nos Quedamos!— “We Stay”—a coalition of South Bronx homeowners, tenants, businesspeople, property owners and institutions that came up with a community plan outside the 197-a process.

The coalition's public protests forced the city to the table in the early 1990s.

Given 6 months to come up with an alternative to urban renewal, ¡Nos Quedamos! held 168 public meetings, completed the ULURP process, and has gotten more than 700 units of new housing built.

Angotti cites the Organization of Waterfront Neighborhoods as another successful community-based planning effort that skirted the 197-a process.

The 197-a process currently seems far more effective at co-opting community organizing and planning than achieving them. Its critics regard it as an example of irresponsible government passing the buck.

Angotti's book argues that reform starts with making 197-a plans binding and adequately staffing community boards.

In Seattle and Rochester, agencies have been created to facilitate public participation in the budgetary and planning processes, making planning both proactive and accessible to non-developers.

In Boston, the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative started a community land trust and got the city to delegate eminent domain powers to the neighborhood, so it could acquire land without displacing residents.

Angotti sees this kind of community control over land use as crucial to urban planning.

He sees as wasted opportunity the hundreds of vacant lots, dilapidated buildings, and burned-out husks the city acquired during the Koch administration, after the city's near-collapse in the 60s and 70s.

Instead of enabling a feeding frenzy by real estate speculators, the city could have established an extensive land bank.

Now, as foreclosures sweep the city, the credit markets seize up and development projects go belly-up, the city may again find itself in the real estate business.

Angotti sees opportunity in that: “The city should cede full control over city-owned vacant land to organizations that will use it in accordance with democratic, community-initiated 197-a plans.”

Angotti's vision of a dynamic, inclusive community planning process is both timely and relevant.

The article from City Limits:
http://www.citylimits.org/content/articles/viewarticle.cfm?article_id=3682&content_type=1&media_type=4

The First Couple

It's cool to be American again.

1/20/09

Please pardon the interruption...

My laptop had to go to J&R. It'll take a few days (and $50) to find out what's wrong.

I used the excuse to update to a newer version. You really need a spare anyway.

And every time you buy a new laptop, there's new software and goodies like Webcams, video calling, etc. -- to fool around with.

Will post again in an hour or so.

It feels like a different America today, doesn't it? A better, more hopeful one.

1/19/09

The Myth of "Clean Coal"

This nationally-important story has not received the coverage it deserves.

Most of us know that coal combustion is a leading source of global warming pollution. Fewer know that coal plants threaten the environment not just because of the coal they burn, but also because of the by-products coal burning that they store, as shown by the recent coal slurry spill at the Tennesee Valley Authority's Kingston Fossil Plant.

On December 22, 2008, the earthen wall of a containment pond at the Kingston Plant collapsed, releasing 1.7 million cubic yards (1.1 billion gallons) of fly ash — a liquid by-product of coal combustion.  The release, the biggest in U.S. history, was 50 times bigger than the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill.

The river of toxic sludge ran downhill, burying some 300 acres -- 6 feet deep in places -- and entered the nearby Emory River.

The TVA cited heavy rains and freezing temperatures in the weeks leading up to the spill as a causative factor.

According to the TVA, byproducts of the Kingston Plant included arsenic, lead, chromium, manganese and barium. The first independent test results have shown significantly elevated levels of toxic metals, which can cause cancer and liver damage, in slurry and river samples.

A hearing on the spill took place before the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on January 8.

The devastating environmental impacts have yet to be fully determined.  The cleanup may take years.

We need stronger debate about the environmental safety of coal-fired power plants. The myth of "clean coal" needs to be exploded:  there is no such thing.

The article from NASA.

Happy Birthday

Green Church Bulletin

There was activity at the Green Church site today, perhaps related to the recent announcement by CB 10 that the city's School Construction Authority proposes to build a school there.

The city has reportedly fined Abeco contractor Cavalier Construction $12,000 for violating the Building Code in the demolition of the Green Church and the limestone rowhouse that was once the BRUMC parsonage.

The Kimballs, who own the house next door to the demolished parsonage, are considering legal action based on the damage the demolition caused to their property.

Cavalier may be trying to mitigate damages.

Seen on the Green Church lot today was a man in a jacket with the word "INVESTIGATION" on the back and an ID hanging from his neck. It isn't known who or what he was working for.

The owner of Cavalier Construction, whose name is Lickman, was also at the site. His crew told the Kimballs they would be adding water and fire proofing to the wall once the weather clears.

Today, the crew swept the parsonage lot clear of snow and banked the Kimballs' wall with freshly dug soil, probably in an effort to slow the leaks that are causing the Kimballs' basement to flood.

Rumor has it that Betesh is flipping the Green Church property for $9 million. I haven't seen any comparables, but my guess is that the current market value of the property is lower than that -- by half.

I don't see any yellow posters on that blue wall. You?

1/18/09

Property Tax Numbers Game

Last month, New York City homeowners were hit with a 7% property tax increase.

This month, there's more bad news.

The market value of homes in New York City has fallen, with a new property tax increase in the pipeline.

This year, the city's Finance Department, which normally releases its projected property assessment roll for the next fiscal year at a press conference, has quietly posted its 2010 projections on its Website -- a little more communicative than putting up posters.

And I think I see why.

According to Finance, the overall value of all city properties has declined by 1.2%.

The market value of a one-family home has fallen more steeply, by nearly 7%, as the assessed value of that home has increased by 4.2.%, with the property tax on that home, including a carryover, set to go up by $265 annually.

The assessed value of a two-family home has increased by 4.9%, against a decrease in value of 4.7%, with taxes on that home set to increase by $279 annually.

Co-op and condo values lost just 1.1% in value, but owners face comparatively larger tax hikes.

The city's July 2009 property tax bills will be issued based on Finance's projected assessment numbers.

The article from the New York Post:
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01162009/news/regionalnews/a_pain_in_the_assess_150418.htm

The Middle Way

The Israeli government has halted military operations in Gaza and Hamas has announced it will stop rocket fire and other resistance for one week.

Will the Obama Administration seize this opportunity for diplomatic re-engagement? Will the deeper Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the root of the violence be addressed?

Click here for media coverage from J Street and the response to the Gaza crisis.

Read a collection of 44 thoughtful Congressional statements about the Gaza crisis.

Click here for some recommended reading on the Gaza crisis from leading policy experts, political leaders, and intellectuals.

J Street's blog: Word on the Street


J Street describes itself as part of the "pro-Israel, pro-peace" movement. It was founded to promote meaningful American leadership to end the Arab-Israeli and Palestinian-Israel conflicts peacefully and diplomatically. It supports a new direction for American policy in the Middle East and a broad public and policy debate about the U.S. role in the region.

Musical Chairs

Three obstinate GOP county chairs may block Mayor Bloomberg's bid to run on the Republican line in the 2009 mayoral election.

Because Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-Independent Bloomberg ditched the GOP in 2007 to explore a presidential run, he now needs the permission of 3 of the city's 5 GOP party chairs to run on the Republican ballot line again.

But the GOP chairs from Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx are holding out. In their view, Bloomberg has committed a host of transgressions: a lack of patronage jobs, the wildly unpopular congestion pricing proposal, and the ram-through of the self-serving term limits extension.

According to a GOP source, the 3 support John Catsimatidis for mayor -- even if he runs as a Democrat.

Supermarket tycoon Catsimatidis, a Democrat-turned-Republican, recently met with all 5 GOP county chairs, and is exploring a mayoral run.

Unlike Bloomberg, Catsimatidis doesn't need permission to run as a Republican.

Catsimatidis has hired a campaign staff and has loaned his campaign committee $1 million.

The 3 GOP chairs want to back a candidate who will "grow the party" and help win back seats in Albany before resdistricting strikes again.

Democrats Bill Thompson and Anthony Weiner are headed for a primary battle to determine which will run against the billionaire mayor in the general election.

Playing both sides of the aisle, Bloomberg has cozied up to Democratic elected officials and county chairs as his aides reach out to the GOP.

The Mayor is, at the same time, positioning himself for a run on the Independence Party line, as he did in both of his previous campaigns.

The city's Independence Party leaders, whose permission Bloomberg needs, are lukewarm.

The post from Queens Crap: http://queenscrap.blogspot.com/

The Daily News source article:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2009/01/17/2009-01-17_peeved_republicans_may_deny_mike_bloombe.html

It seems that the number of GOP county chairs telling Bloomberg to keep his money is not just 3, but 5:
http://nymag.com/news/intelligencer/53600/

Abandoned Brooklyn

A new multimedia exhibit by photographer-filmmaker Nathan Kensinger documents his five-year exploration of Brooklyn's industrial neighborhoods.

Abandoned Brooklyn opens at the collaborative Union Docs at 322 Union Avenue in Williamsburg on Saturday, January 24th at 7 PM.

Kensinger's images of deserted train stations and empty powerhouses document a poignant transition in Brooklyn's history, as its iconic industrial past recedes before an advancing wave of luxury apartments and chainstores.

The exhibit kicks off Union Docs' new season and their Documentary Bodega screening series.

On opening night, Kensinger's film Covered Tracks, a short documentary about an abandoned homeless city underneath Manhattan, will be screened, along with another short documentary about Kensinger's photos filmed inside an abandoned Brooklyn sanitation depot.

The post on Kensinger's blog:
http://kensinger.blogspot.com/2009/01/abandoned-brooklyn.html

Saving Brooklyn's industrial heritage, from MAS:
http://www.saveindustrialbrooklyn.org/

1/17/09

Lamartine Place Historic District

Chelsea Now reports that on January 13, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a designation hearing for the Lamartine Place Historic District, including the Hopper Gibbons House (behind scaffolding) at 339 W. 29th St. between 8th and 9th Avenues and 11 adjacent buildings.

Historic preservation advocates who testified at the hearing cited the historical significance of the 12 houses as their strongest claim to landmark status.

The houses have been both home to noted New Yorkers and part of the Underground Railroad.

Advocacy groups Friends of Lamartine Place Historic District and Hopper Gibbons Underground Railroad Site emphasized the link between the houses and the 19th Century abolitionist movement in New York City.

Slavery was a fact of life in New York City until 1827.

The Hopper Gibbons House was the home of famed abolitionists Abigail Hopper Gibbons and her husband James Sloan Gibbons, and a station on the Underground Railroad, housing as many as 14 runaway slaves at a time.

The Gibbons family, who were Quakers, and their abolitionist neighbors entertained such noted figures as Horace Greeley and John Brown, who told his hosts in 1859 about his planned raid on the federal arsenal in Harper's Ferry.

New York's mercantile wealth was built on slavery, and most Quakers were not abolitionists.

The Gibbons House was stormed during the Civil War Anti-Draft Riot of 1863 by a mob that ransacked, looted and torched it in their attempt to lynch the family.

The Gibbonses escaped by climbing to the roof, running over the rooftops and going down through the first house to the street, where a friend was waiting with a carriage.

The Draft Riots of 1863 have been called the largest civil insurrection in American history.

Manhattan Community Board 4 had known of the block's significance since the 1990s, but the Board’s Landmark Task Force had thought designation was unlikely because the buildings had been modified.

In April 2008, advocates found documentary proof that the Hopper Gibbons House was part of the Underground Railroad, in a letter from Joseph H. Choate, a friend of the Gibbons family, who described the house as “a great resort of abolitionists and extreme antislavery people from all parts of the land, as it was one of the stations of the underground railroad by which fugitive slaves found their way from the South to Canada.”

The discovery of this information was key to moving the designation battle forward -- even though by then a penthouse was being added to the Hopper Gibbons House.

The Department of Buildings withdrew the permit for the addition and the LPC calendared the district for designation.

The article from Chelsea Now.

Additional details on Lamartine Place from Chelsea Now.

Additional coverage from Chelsea Now.

Additional coverage from WCAX.

An update from DNA Info.

A further update from DNA Info.

More from the New York Times.

1/16/09

The State of the City

Mayor Bloomberg unveiled a nine-part "recovery package" during his annual State of the City address before 2,300 people at Brooklyn College yesterday -- seen by many as the kickoff of his 2009 campaign.

Gotham Gazette described the Mayor's presentation as "meticulously orchestrated" and themed, featuring irrepressible Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, a "Brooklyn Dodgers" marching band, a Brooklyn elementary school chorus and a Ric Burns documentary short.

The Mayor focused on crime prevention and the recession, including a proposal to create 400,000 jobs.

His most ambitious proposal was rescinding the unincorporated business tax -- which requires state approval -- to create jobs through capital programs like the Willets Point development.

Like rescinding the unincorporated business tax, many of the Mayor's proposals to spur job growth would need either Albany approval or funding from the federal government, including his call for Washington to pay for new air traffic control systems at the city's airports.

The Mayor wants to identify a dozen habitual quality of life offenders in each borough -- "the dirty dozen" -- for "special attention" from law enforcement He will ask the state legislature to create a new quality-of-life felony. He also proposes putting surveillance cameras in neighborhoods with the highest murder rates.

The Mayor said he will continue rolling out his education and development agenda, with continued rezoning in the outer boroughs, and will seek renewed state legislative approval of mayoral control of the schools -- which expires this year.

He again called for the creation of a new tier in the city pension system, which he said would save billions.

Comptroller William Thompson, Bloomberg's rival, commented that the Mayor had lifted some of his ideas, like supporting small business and self-employed people.

Others found the Mayor's address reassuring.

The article from Gotham Gazette:
http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/searchlight/20090116/203/2795

Barry Popik comments on the Mayor's speech on Room 8:
http://www.r8ny.com/blog/barry_popik/nyc_to_create_400_000_new_jobs_bloombergs_state_of_city_address.html

Free Tax Preparation

State Senator Martin Golden is offering free tax preparation services at his district office at 7408 5th Avenue as part of the IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program (VITA).

Only residents of the district who earn less than $42,000 are eligible. The program cannot assist with complex or out of state returns.

Appointments are available from Thursday, February 5, 2009 through Saturday, April 11, 2009 on Thursdays from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. and on Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Call Senator Golden’s office at (718) 238-6044 to schedule an appointment.


Link to Martin Golden's Website:
http://www.senatorgolden.com/22/news.aspx?nid=18098

Looking for Work?

The U.S. Census Bureau is hiring temporary part-time workers to help with the 2010 Census.

The job pays $14.00 - $21.00 an hour.

You must be 18 or older, pass a multiple choice test and have a social security number.

U.S. citizens are given preference.

Call 866-861-2010 to schedule a test.

Forget the View


The vote takes Two Trees a step closer to getting what Curbed calls "the lurking mass" approved.

Forget seeing the Brooklyn Bridge from DUMBO if Dock Street gets built.

The developer sold the project to CB 2 by adding a public middle school.

The project still faces ULURP review and approval by the Department of City Planning, the City Council and the Mayor.

Two Trees reportedly spent about $180,000 on lobbying and promotion last year.

The project includes 325 market rate rentals and 65 affordable rentals.

Dock Street has divided DUMBO into two factions: fervent supporters, and an angry opposition, including Council Member David Yassky and the DUMBO Neighborhood Association.

The post from Curbed:
http://curbed.com/archives/2009/01/15/controversial_walentas_dock_street_project_gets_first_okay.php
More from the New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/21/nyregion/21dumbo.html?fta=y

More from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle:
http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/category.php?category_id=5&id=28450

1/15/09

Green Church Bulletin

A Brooklyn Daily Eagle article, published today, reports that Community Board 10 has posted notices on "the blue wall of death" surrounding the Green Church demolition site.

According to the Eagle, the notices are printed on yellow paper and read:
“Dear Resident:
We are writing to invite you to two very important meetings.
Community Board 10 was notified by the NYC School Construction Authority (SCA) requesting comment on a proposed site selection for a new public primary school facility at the former site of the Bay Ridge United Methodist Church located on the southwest corner of Fourth Avenue and Ovington Avenue.”
No one I've talked to has seen the notices, nor have I.

I wonder when CB 10 was notified by the SCA, because the first "important meeting" (of CB 10's joint Education Committee and Zoning/Land Use Committee), is now over: it took place tonight at 7 PM at CB10's office at 621 86th Street.

The SCA was scheduled to present their proposal at that meeting.

Comments will also be received at CB 10's next general meeting on January 26 at 7:15 PM at the Shore Hill Community Room at 91st between Colonial and Shore Road.

To schedule your 3 minutes at the mike, call (718) 745-6827.

Site plans and a summary of the proposal can be viewed at CB 10.

Send written comments to: NYC-SCA, 30-30 Thomson Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101.

The public comment period closes February 27.

Note: former members of the Green Church Committee who attended the CB 10 meeting on January 26, included Bob Cassara and Susan Pulaski.

Reporters Helen Klein, Ben Muessig and Harold Egeln were also there.

According to my source, a man name Antoine (last name unknown) who owns the big apartment building on the corner of Fourth and Ovington, and an unnamed doctor who owns a medical center near that corner, voiced strong opposed the school construction plan.

The vocal opposition of these local property and business owners was apparently overlooked in the press coverage of the CB 10 meeting.

Council Member Vincent Gentile, who pitched the site to the SCA, called Community School District 20 "the most overcrowded in the city".

The SCA’s public review process is apparently being fast-tracked for budgetary reasons -- the fiscal year ends in June.

The SCA is targeting Block 5891, Lot 48 and any other immediately adjacent property necessary to construct an approximately 680-seat public primary school.

Abe Betesh, holder of the contract of sale for the Green Church property, has apparently agreed to flip the property to the SCA. According to accounts I've read, the purchase price, to be paid to Abe Betesh out of our tax dollars, is the face value of the contract he holds: $9.75 million.

The article from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

Vincent Gentile to the New York Post, December 18, 2008.

Federal Term Limits Lawsuit Dismissed

A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed on November 10 challenging the City Council legislation that cleared the way for Mayor Bloomberg run for a third term.

Among the 25 plaintiffs who joined the lawsuit were City Comptroller William Thompson and Council Member Bill de Blasio.

Many city voters are still steaming about the term limits extension law, signed on November 3 in the aftermath of one of the most divisive debates in the city's political history.

Brooklyn Federal District Court Judge Charles Sifton, in a 64-page opinion, rejected plaintiffs' claims, calling their arguments “spurious.”

Mayor Bloomberg, once an outspoken advocate of term limits, flipped on the issue last year as his political alternatives evaporated, and is campaigning on his fiscal expertise.

Former deputy mayor Randy Mastro, plaintiffs' lead counsel, called term limits extension "illegal", and is weighing an appeal.

The Civil Rights Division of the federal Justice Department must approve term limits extension under a provision of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 called preclearance, which is meant to avoid changes in election laws that adversely impact racial or ethnic minorities.

A bill pending in Albany would mandate a referendum by any municipality seeking to change term limits laws.

The article from the New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/14/nyregion/14termlimits.html

Federal court of appeals upholds the dismissal of the term limits lawsuit:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2009/04/29/2009-04-29_court_upholds_term_limits_extension_that_will_allow_mayor_bloombergs_bid_for_thi.html

This, They Landmarked

The 19th Century Hubbard House, at 2138 McDonald Avenue in Gravesend, was among the latest crop of landmarks designated by the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission.

The house was built for Nelly Hubbard, daughter of a Dutch farmer who married into an old Gravesend family. It was built by Lawrence Ryder, a local carpenter.

The small, simple residence is framed in the traditional Dutch “H-bent construction” and retains its curving eaves, gabled roof, window frames and wide-pine clapboard siding.

It was a tenant house in the last half of the 19th century, and was bought in 1904 by Italian garment worker Vincenzo Lucchelli, who added the two-story, hipped-roof wing in 1924.

Present owner John Antonides bought the house in the 1990s.

Other buildings designated by the LPC this week included the 1931 Art Deco skyscraper at 275 Madison Avenue designed by Kenneth Franzheim; the 1915 Georgian Revival George Bruce Branch of the New York Public Library at 518 West 125th Street, designed by Carrère & Hastings; the 1904 125th Street Branch of the New York Public Library at 224 East 125th Street, designed in an Italian Renaissance style by McKim, Mead & White, renowned designer of the Brooklyn Museum; and the Italianate 1880 Elsworth House, at 90 Bayview Avenue in the Prince’s Bay section of Staten Island.

The LPC is in the process of scheduling hearings to determine whether 1-block-long Fillmore Place in Williamsburg will become the newest historic district in Brooklyn.

The article from the New York Times:
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/13/art-deco-tower-is-among-5-new-landmarks/

1/14/09

Only the Dead Know Brooklyn

by Thomas Wolfe

Dere’s no guy livin’ dat knows Brooklyn t’roo an’ t’roo, because it’d take a guy a lifetime just to find his way aroun’ duh goddam town.

So like I say, I’m waitin’ for my train t’come when I sees dis big guy standin’ deh - dis is duh foist I eveh see of him. Well, he’s lookin’ wild, y’know, an’ I can see dat he’s had plenty, but still he’s holdin’ it; he talks good an’ is walkin’ straight enough.

So den, dis big guy steps up to a little guy dat’s standin’ deh, an’ says, “How d’yuh get t’ Eighteent’ Avenoo an’ Sixty-sevent’ Street?” he says.

“Jesus! Yuh got me, chief,” duh little guy says to him. “I ain’t been heah long myself. Where is duh place?” he says. “Out in duh Flatbush section somewhere?”

“Nah,” duh big guy says. “it’s out in Bensonhoist. But I was neveh deh befoeh. How d’yuh get deh?"

“Jesus,” duh little guy says, scratchin’ his head, y’know - yuh could see duh litle guy didn’t know his way about - “yuh got me, chief, I neveh hoid of it. Do any of youse guys know where it is?” he says to me.

“Sure,” I says. “It’s out in Bensonhoist. Yuh take duh Fourt’ Avenoo express, get off at Fifty-nint’ Street, change to a Sea Beach local deh, get off at Eighteent’ Avenoo an’ Sixty-toid, and walk down foeh blocks. Dat’s all yuh got to do,” I says.

“G’wan!” some wise guy dat I neveh seen befoeh pipes up. “Whatcha talkin’ about?” he says - oh, he was wise, y’know. “Duh guy is crazy! I tell yuh what yuh do,” he says to duh big guy. “Yuh change to duh West End line at Toity-sixt’,” he tells him. “Walk two blocks oveh, foeh blocks up,” he says, “an’ you’ll be right deh.” Oh, a wise guy, y’know.

“Oh, yeah?” I says. “Who told you so much?” He got me sore because he was so wise about it. “How long you been livin’ heah?” I says.

“All my life,” he says. “I was bawn in Williamsboig,” he says. “An’ I can tell you t’ings about dis town you neveh hoid of,” he says.

“Yeah?” I says.

“Yeah,” he says.

“Well, den, you can tell me t’ings about dis town dat nobody else has eveh hoid of, either. Maybe you make it all up yoehself at night,” I says, “befoeh you go to sleep - like cuttin’ out papeh dolls, or somp’n.”

“Oh, yeah?” he says. “You’re pretty wise, ain’t yuh?”

“Oh, I don’t know,” I says. “Duh boids ain’t usin’ my head for Lincoln’s statue yet,” I says. “But I’m wise enough to know a phony when I see one.”

“Yeah?” he says. “A wise guy, huh? Well, you’re so wise date some one’s goin’ t’bust yuh one right on duh snoot some day,” he says. “Dat’s how wise you are.”

Well, my train was comin’, or I’da smacked him den and dere, but when I seen duh train was comin’, all I said was, “All right, mugg! I’m sorry I can’t stay to take keh of you, but I’ll be seein’ yuh sometime, I hope, out in duh cemetery.”

So den I says to duh big guy, who’d been standin’ deh all duh time, “You come wit me,” I says.

So when we gets onto duh train I says to him, “Where yuh goin’ out in Bensonhoist?” I says. “What numbeh are yuh lookin’ for?” I says. You know - I t’ought if he told me duh address I might be able to help him out.

“Oh,” he says, “I’m not lookin’ for no one. I don’t know no one out deh.”

“Then whatcha goin’ out deh for?” I says.

“Oh,” duh guy says, “I’m just goin’ out to see duh place,” he says. “I like duh sound of duh name - Bensonhoist, y’know - so I t’ought I’d go out an’ have a look at it.”

“Whatcha tryin’ t’hand me?” I says. “Whatcha tryin’ t’do - kid me?” You know, I t’ought duh guy was bein’ wise wit me.

“No,” he says. “I’m tellin’ yuh duh troot. I like to go out an’ take a look at places wit nice names like dat. I like to go out an’ look at all kinds of places,” he says.

“How’d yuh know deh was such a place,” I says, “if yuh neveh been deh befoeh?”

“Oh,” he says, “I got a map.”

“A map?” I says.

“Sure,” he says, “I got a map dat tells me about all dese places. I take it wit me every time I come out heah,” he says.

And Jesus! Wit dat, he pulls it out of his pocket, an’ so help me, but he’s got it - he’s tellin’ duh troot - a big map of duh whole goddam place with all duh different pahts mahked out. You know - Canarsie an’ East Noo Yawk an’ Flatbush, Bensonhoist, Sout’ Brooklyn, duh Heights, Bay Ridge, Greenpernt - duh whole goddam layout, he’s got it right deh on duh map.

“You been to any of dose places?” I says.

“Sure,” he says. “I been to most of ‘em. I was down in Red Hook just last night,” he says.

“Jesus! Red Hook!” I says. “Whatcha do down deh?”

“Oh,” he says, “nuttin’ much. I just walked aroun’. I went into a coupla places an’ had a drink,” he says, “but most of the time I just walked aroun’.”

“Just walked aroun’?” I says.

“Sure,” he says, “just lookin’ at t’ings, y’know.”

“Where’d yuh go?” I asts him.

“Oh,” he says, “I don’t know duh name of duh place, but I could find it on my map,” he says.

“One time I was walkin’ across some big fields where deh ain’t no houses,” he says, “but I could see ships oveh deh all lighted up. Dey was loadin’. So I walks across duh fields,” he says, “to where duh ships are.”

“Sure,” I says, “I know where you was. You was down to duh Erie Basin.”

“Yeah,” he says. “I guess dat was it. Dey had some of dose big elevators an’ cranes an’ dey was loadin’ ships, an’ I could see some ships in drydock all lighted up, so I walks across duh fields to where dey are,” he says.

“Den what did yuh do?” I says.

“Oh,” he says, “nuttin’ much. I came on back across duh fields after a while an’ went into a coupla places an’ had a drink.”

“Didn’t nuttin’ happen while yuh was in dere?” I says.

“No,” he says. “Nuttin’ much. A coupla guys was drunk in one of duh places an’ started a fight, but dey bounced ‘em out,” he says, “an’ den one of duh guys stahted to come back again, but duh bartender gets his baseball bat out from under duh counteh, so duh guy goes on.”

“Jesus!” I said. “Red Hook!”

“Sure,” he says. “Dat’s where it was, all right.”

“Well, you keep outa deh,” I says. “You stay away from deh.”

“Why?” he says. “What’s wrong wit it?”

“Oh,” I says, “it’s a good place to stay away from, dat’s all. It’s a good place to keep out of.”

“Why?” he says. “Why is it?”

Jesus! Whatcha gonna do wit a guy as dumb as that! I saw it wasn’t no use to try to tell him nuttin’, he wouldn’t know what I was talkin’ about, so I just says to him, “Oh, nuttin’. Yuh might get lost down deh, dat’s all.”

“Lost?” he says. “No, I wouldn’t get lost. I got a map,” he says.

A map! Red Hook! Jesus!

So den duh guy begins to ast me all kinds of nutty questions: how big was Brooklyn an’ could I find my way aroun’ in it, an’ how long would it take a guy to know duh place.

“Listen!” I says. “You get dat idea outa yoeh head right now,” I says. “You ain’t neveh gonna get to know Brooklyn,” I says. “Not in a hunderd yeahs. I been livin’ heah all my life,” I says, “an’ I don’t even know all deh is to know about it, so how do you expect to know duh town,” I says, “when you don’t even live heah?”

“Yes,” he says, “but I got a map to help me find my way about.”

“Map or no map,” I says, “yuh ain’t gonna get to know Brooklyn wit no map,” I says.

“Can you swim?” he says, just like dat. Jesus! By dat time, y’know, I begun to see dat duh guy was some kind of nut. He’d had plenty to drink, of course, but he had dat crazy look in his eye I didn’t like. “Can you swim?” he says.

“Sure,” I says. “Can’t you?”

“No,” he says. “Not more’n a stroke or two. I neveh loined good.”

“Well, it’s easy,” I says. “All yuh need is a little confidence. Duh way I loined, me older bruddeh pitched me off duh dock one day when I was eight yeahs old, cloes an’ all. ‘You’ll swim,’ he says. ‘You’ll swim all right - or drown.’ An’, believe me, I swam! When yuh know yuh got to, you’ll do it. Duh only t’ing yuh need is confidence. An’ once you’ve loined,” I says, “you’ve got nuttin’ else to worry about. You’ll neveh forget it. It’s somp’n dat stays wit yuh as long as yuh live.”

“Can yuh swim good?” he says.

“Like a fish,” I tells him. “I’m a regulah fish in duh wateh,” I says. “I loined to swim right off duh docks wit all duh oddeh kids,” I says.

“What would you do if yuh saw a man drownin’?” duh guy says.

“Do? Why, I’d jump in an’ pull him out,” I says. “Dat’s what I’d do.”

“Did yuh eveh see a man drown?” he says.

“Sure, ” I says. “I see two guys - bot’ times at Coney Island. Dey got out too far, an’ neider one could swim. Dey drowned befoeh any one could get to ‘em.”

“What becomes of people after dey’ve drowned out heah?” he says.

“Drowned out where?” I says.

“Out heah in Brooklyn.”

“I don’t know whatcha mean,” I says. “Neveh hoid of no one drownin’ heah in Brooklyn, unless you mean a swimmin’ pool. Yuh can’t drown in Brooklyn,” I says. “Yuh gotta drown somewhere else - in duh ocean, where dere’s wateh.”

“Drownin’,” duh guy says, lookin’ at his map. “Drownin’.” Jesus! I could see by den he was some kind of nut, he had dat crazy expression in his eyes when he looked at you, an’ I didn’t know what he might do. So we was comin’ to a station, an’ it wasn’t my stop, but I got off anyway, an’ waited for duh next train.

“Well, so long, chief,” I says. “Take it easy, now.”

“Drownin’,” duh guy says, lookin’ at his map. “Drownin’.”

Jesus! I’ve t’ought about dat guy a t’ousand times since den an’ wondered what eveh happened to ‘m goin’ out to look at Bensonhoist because he liked duh name! Walkin’ aroun’ t’roo Red Hook by himself at night an’ lookin’ at his map! How many people did I see get drowned out heah in Brooklyn! How long would it take a guy wit a good map to know all deh was to know about Brooklyn!

Jesus! What a nut he was! I wondeh what eveh happened to ‘im, anyway! I wondeh if some one knocked him on duh head, or if he’s still wanderin’ aroun’ in duh subway in duh middle of duh night wit his little map! Duh poor guy! Say, I’ve got to laugh, at dat, when I t’ink about him!

Maybe he’s found out by now dat he’ll neveh live long enough to know duh whole of Brooklyn. It’d take a guy a lifetime to know Brooklyn t’roo an’ t’roo. An’ even den, yuh wouldn’t know it all.

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"Life is like a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving." -- Albert Einstein

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