The View from My Block

Monday, June 29, 2009

The 69th Street Pier at Dusk






Digital Vampire?

Crain's New York reports that, in a recent speech, Dow Jones CEO Les Hinton, publisher of the Wall Street Journal, called Google a "vampire sucking the blood" out of newspapers -- and said that big media is sharpening a stake.

Hinton sees the newspaper industry, by allowing free access to its content on the Web, as offering its virtual neck to Google's "fangs".

Hinton's speech reflects the growing outrage of newspaper publishers about Google making money from their content. They are trying to find ways to start charging for access, like the Wall Street Journal does.

Hinton says his division is developing a new Web-based business platform that will essentially bundle subscriptions to the Journal and other publications.

The article -- free for now -- from Crain's NY.

A Gift to the Community

OTBKB reports that Old First Reformed Church in Park Slope, with the help of 39 volunteers from a sister church in Ohio, is restoring its historic sanctuary.

The volunteers include 30 youth and 9 adults from New Hope Reformed Church of Powell, Ohio, who arrived on Saturday, June 20 to work for a week painting the sanctuary.

The Gothic Revival Old First was dedicated in 1891. Its interior is considered one of the finest examples of arts and crafts design in the U.S.

The plan calls for restoring the walls to their original earthy Florentine tones .

Through the Reformed Church’s "Project Samuel", volunteers from across the U.S. work on church renovations and in shelters, soup kitchens, and missions.

Old First is regarded by its members as a spiritual offering to the community and as a sanctuary for all.

The public is welcome to stop by the watch the restoration work.

Uncle Bernie Gets the Max

AP reports that disgraced 71-year-old fraudster Bernie Madoff has been sentenced to 150 years in federal prison.

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin called Madoff's fraud so "extraordinarily evil" that he wanted to give Madoff's victims satisfaction -- and send a message to potential copycats.

Scattered applause and whoops of joy broke out in Judge Chin's packed Manhattan courtoom when the sentence was delivered.

Chin brushed off Madoff's requests for leniency, characterizing Madoff's crime as "staggering": Madoff's victims lost more than $13 billion.

Madoff showed no emotion as 9 of his victims testified, some weeping openly.

Allocuted by the court, Madoff minimized his crimes, and his wife, Ruth, claimed she was a victim, too.

A $171 billion forfeiture order has stripped Madoff of all his property. A $7 million Manhattan apartment where Ruth Madoff still lives, an $11 million Palm Beach estate, a $4 million home on Long Island, and a $2.2 million boat will be liquidated.

Once a trusted money manager, Madoff confided to his sons last year as Wall Street tumbled that it was "all just one big lie."

Madoff pleaded guilty in March to securities fraud and related charges.

Madoff's liquidated assets will be used to compensate the thousands of victims who have filed claims, but only a fraction of their losses will be covered.

Madoff never invested any of the money entrusted to him.

The article from the AP.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Coney Island Hot Dog Eating Contest

South Brooklyn is fast becoming a competitive eating destination.

On July 4th, Nathan's hot dog stand will again host the Coney Island Hot Dog Eating Contest.

Title-holder Joey "Jaws" Chestnut will face veteran champion and arch rival Takeru Kobayashi.

Last year, the two champions tied at 59 frankfurters in 10 minutes and ended up in a 5-dog overtime munchdown.

Italian national champion Franco Camerini and graduates of Nathan's 16-city American farm system will also compete, but Chestnut and Kobayashi are expected to dominate the contest for the mustard belt.

In the runup to the main event on July 3rd, a team of three humans will face down a three-elephant team from Ringling Brothers Barnum & Bailey Circus in a hot dog bun eating contest.

The post from Serious Eats.

Second Annual Fourth of July Picnic

If you plan to be in town 4th of July weekend, stop by the 2nd Annual Bay Ridge Fourth of July Picnic at the 82nd Street Field @ Shore Road.

The event, hosted by State Senator Martin Golden and sponsored by Ben Bay Kiwanis, Super-Roofer and Frankie Marra, will take place from 11 AM to 9 PM on July 4th.

In addition to music, food, games and prizes, there will be sprinkers and rides for kids.

Admission is free.

Bring a picnic or buy hot dogs, hamburgers, sausages, drinks, ice cream and more from the outdoor grill.

Blankets, chairs, family and friends are welcome -- but please don't bring your grill or beach umbrella.

Music will be provided by 7 live bands: Pill Hill Radio, High Tides, The Ridge, John Lepore & the Silver Falcons, The Rockinghams, Prodigal Child -- and of course, Frankie Marra and his band.

The proceeds will be donated to the 68th Precinct Youth Council , CERT 1 NYC and Bravo.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Rainbow on the Block

Just as I was coming out of the subway on Friday evening, the sun came out while it was raining, a phenomenon my grandmother used to call "the Devil meeting his wife".

As I turned the corner on Fourth Avenue, I saw a rainbow over my block, which seemed to be a good-luck sign.

Later, walking toward Dyker Heights, I saw these uniquely-formed clouds illuminated by the sunset.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Only Himself to Blame?

Michael Bloomberg calls the city's pension system "out of control", accusing it of threatening to bankrupt the city.

But the New York Times says that, while he blames Albany and the city's unionized workers, Bloomberg himself is most responsible for the growth in city pension costs over the last 8 years.

Since he took office, the city's pension contributions have quintupled from 1.4 to to $6.3 billion and now account for one out of every 10 dollars in the city budget.

How did this happen? In a word: pay increases. Bloomberg has approved salary increases that account for almost 30% of the spike in city pension costs from FY 2002 through 2008 — about $1.2 billion.

Bloomberg blames the spike on the economy, Albany, and the unions, but in fact, he has supported state legislation sweetening pensions for uniformed city workers and offering teachers early retirement.

The mayor’s biggest contribution to pension costs has been the pay increases he claims have raised "productivity" and attracted "more qualified" job candidates to the city workforce.

In his first term, Bloomberg bargained hard with city unions, demanding lower starting salaries and fewer sick and vacation days. But in his second term, his stance softened, and Albany and the city's unions are not likely to give back his concessions now.

Bloomberg's critics accuse him of using collective bargaining concessions to buy union votes.

The article from the New York Times.

Queens Crap, via Room 8, characterizes Bloomberg as a "vile little man".

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Link Roundup

Bay Ridge post office faces closure. Marty Golden writes a letter.

More on the post office closing.

The Brooklyn Fourth of July Parade.

The latest front in the Bay Ridge food cart wars.

Vanishing New York's Michael Jackson tribute: The Wiz

Cityroom post on IPod volume garners 111 comments.

The 68's Fourth of July fireworks crackdown.

Fifth Avenue Festival the best ever.

Flikr slideshow of the 2009 Coney Island Mermaid Parade.

The latest on the Bay Ridge spite wall -- Gershon vs. Cunningham.

The N and R trains fare poorly on a Straphanger survey.

Paterson goes to court seeking help in ending the three-week standoff in the State Senate.

Michael Jackson tribute at Dreamland Roller Rink in Coney Island.

Prospect Heights Landmarked

The city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission has designated a new historic district in Prospect Heights encompassing some 850 single-family row houses, apartment houses and institutional and commercial buildings built between the mid-19th and early 20th centuries.

The Prospect Heights Historic District is the largest created since the Upper West Side-Central Park West Historic District was designated in 1990.

The new district, north of Prospect Park, is bounded by Atlantic Avenue, Eastern Parkway, Flatbush Avenue and Washington Avenue.

The Prospect Heights neighborhood was developed after the completion of the 585-acre Prospect Park in 1873 -- and the coming of rapid transit.

Two 1850s frame buildings at 578 and 580 Carlton Avenue are the earliest structures in the neighborhood. The earliest row houses, mostly in the neo-Grec, Italianate, Anglo Italianate or Second Empire styles, date from the mid-1800s, with later Romanesque and Renaissance Revival style houses dating from the late 1800s. Several buildings are in early 20th century retro styles like Colonial Revival and neo-Georgian.

The district includes the Romanesque Revival Duryea Presbyterian Church, the 1885 Public School 9 Annex and the 1938 Art Moderne Mount Prospect Laboratory, which now houses Community School District 13.

The article from the Times Cityroom Blog.

Mayor Bloomberg's press release on the new historic district, from NYC.Gov.

Queens Crap puts the new landmark district in context.

Record Year for Construction

According to the New York Building Congress analysis, a record $31.8 billion was spent on construction in New York City in 2008.

Public sector projects funded by city, state and federal agencies and state and regional authorities accounted for $15.0 billion -- or about half of all construction spending for the year.

Non-residential construction -- office space, institutional development and sports/entertainment venues -- has more than tripled in the past 5 years.

Residential construction also boomed last year, with the number of new units produced topping 30,000.

Construction employment was up for the 11th straight year in 2008, with more than 100,000 workers engaged.

This year? An estimated 17 big projects are stuck in the pipeline.

The article from New York City Construction Outlook.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Fort Greene Building Collapse

Monsoon rains, neglect and poor enforcement have put the former residents of 493 Myrtle Avenue, a 4-story apartment building in Fort Greene, on the street with little more than their lives.

The city's Department of Buildings will now determine what caused the building to fall down.

A DOB inspector issued a violation on May 1 because of a longstanding crack running all the way from the first floor to the roof of the building, finding it was not necessary to evacuate.

The contractor hired by the owner to fix the crack covered the whole side of the building with scaffolding, which may have put too much weight on the building.

Neighboring 491 Myrtle now has to be demolished, and two other buildings, 489 and 497, remain vacant after evacuation.

Former residents of 493 told the Post that the landlord had known about the crack for years.

The article from the Post.

Unbought

As Theodore Hamm, editor of the Brooklyn Rail, points out, we have a 1976 U.S. Supreme Court case, Buckley v. Valeo, to thank for the fact that Michael Bloomberg can spend unlimited cash to buy a third term in office.

The estimable Thurgood Marshall, dissenting from that portion of the Buckley opinion dealing with self-financed campaigns, advocated financing restrictions to reduce the "natural advantage of the wealthy candidate" and promote equal access by all qualified political candidates.

Marshall's words strike Hamm as "quaint" in Post-Reagan America.

The city’s public financing system, which provides matching funds at a ratio of up to 6-1 in mismatched elections like this year's mayoral race, aims to level the playing field, but self-financed political campaigns like Bloomberg's are protected by Buckley as "free speech" under the First Amendment.

Of course Bloomberg's speech isn't free: it's all paid for.

Now that Bloomberg has bought his way around term limits, our last defense against his financial might, and owns the mainstream media, why, wonders Hamm, would he bother beating up on reporters who dare to ask him challenging questions?

Maybe because he's reminded that there is something he can't buy: a free press.

The link.

Bennett House

Once in a blue moon, Bay Ridge gets historic preservation right.

The wood-frame Greek Revival Joseph Bennett house, originally built around 1847 on Shore Road overlooking the Narrows, was moved to 199 95th Street in 1913.

The house, with Fort Hamilton, is one of the few buildings that predate the development of Bay Ridge in the 1930s.

The Delliturri family, which bought the house in 2000, has fully restored it -- with the help of the New York Landmarks Conservancy Historic Properties Fund.

When the previous owner died in 1997, the estate put the property on the market. Astute neighbors, knowing it was a prime development site, got in touch with the New York Landmarks Conservancy, which advocated with the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission to designate the house as a local landmark.

The house was designated as an individual landmark in 1999.

The Delliturris have restored it in stages. The architect they used for the exterior restoration, referred by the Conservancy, encouraged them to apply to the Historic Properties Fund.

They were approved for a $200,000 loan in April, 2003.

Using historic family photos, the architect prepared plans and specs for the work, including a new roof, skylight, drainage systems, window restoration, shutter replacement, clapboard repair, exterior repainting, porch restoration, stucco removal, and historic brick restoration.

The Delliturris chose to rebuild the historic parapet, which runs along the roofline and at the front and rear porches, as seen in historic photos of the house.

The link.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Kunstler Documentary

On Thursday, June 25th, Rooftop Films will screen the documentary film William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe, an intimate look at famed civil rights lawyer William Kunstler, arguably the most loved and hated celebrity lawyer of all time.

The film will be screened in the parking lot across from BAM Cinematek @ Fulton and Ashland in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Take the 2/3/4/5/B/Q to Atlantic Ave or D/M/N/R to Pacific St.

Doors open at 8 PM; live music at 8: 30 PM; screening at 9:00 PM; after-party from 11:00 PM–12:30 AM.

Tickets are at $11 and can be purchased online.


On Saturday, June 27th, Rooftop Films presents Voices from El-Sayed, a documentary about the impact of technology on
the world’s largest community of deaf people in Gowanus, on the roof of the Old American Can Factory, 232 3RD St. @ 3rd Ave. in Gowanus/ Park Slope, Brooklyn. Take the F/G to Carroll St. or the M/R to Union Ave.

Doors open at 8:00 PM; live music at 8:30 PM; screening at 9:00 PM; reception from 11:00 PM–12:30 AM.

Tickets are $9-$25 and can be purchased online.


The July schedule for Rooftop films.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

First Dad Obama on Fatherhood

"As the father of two young girls who have shown such poise, humor, and patience in the unconventional life into which they have been thrust, I mark this Father’s Day—our first in the White House—with a deep sense of gratitude. One of the greatest benefits of being President is that I now live right above the office. I see my girls off to school nearly every morning and have dinner with them nearly every night. It is a welcome change after so many years out on the campaign trail and commuting between Chicago and Capitol Hill.

But I observe this Father’s Day not just as a father grateful to be present in my daughters’ lives but also as a son who grew up without a father in my own life. My father left my family when I was 2 years old, and I knew him mainly from the letters he wrote and the stories my family told. And while I was lucky to have two wonderful grandparents who poured everything they had into helping my mother raise my sister and me, I still felt the weight of his absence throughout my childhood.

As an adult, working as a community organizer and later as a legislator, I would often walk through the streets of Chicago’s South Side and see boys marked by that same absence—boys without supervision or direction or anyone to help them as they struggled to grow into men. I identified with their frustration and disengagement—with their sense of having been let down.

In many ways, I came to understand the importance of fatherhood through its absence—both in my life and in the lives of others. I came to understand that the hole a man leaves when he abandons his responsibility to his children is one that no government can fill. We can do everything possible to provide good jobs and good schools and safe streets for our kids, but it will never be enough to fully make up the difference.

That is why we need fathers to step up, to realize that their job does not end at conception; that what makes you a man is not the ability to have a child but the courage to raise one.

As fathers, we need to be involved in our children’s lives not just when it’s convenient or easy, and not just when they’re doing well—but when it’s difficult and thankless, and they’re struggling. That is when they need us most.

And it’s not enough to just be physically present. Too often, especially during tough economic times like these, we are emotionally absent: distracted, consumed by what’s happening in our own lives, worried about keeping our jobs and paying our bills, unsure if we’ll be able to give our kids the same opportunities we had.

Our children can tell. They know when we’re not fully there. And that disengagement sends a clear message—whether we mean it or not—about where among our priorities they fall.

So we need to step out of our own heads and tune in. We need to turn off the television and start talking with our kids, and listening to them, and understanding what’s going on in their lives.

We need to set limits and expectations. We need to replace that video game with a book and make sure that homework gets done. We need to say to our daughters, Don’t ever let images on TV tell you what you are worth, because I expect you to dream without limit and reach for your goals. We need to tell our sons, Those songs on the radio may glorify violence, but in our house, we find glory in achievement, self-respect, and hard work.

We need to realize that we are our children’s first and best teachers. When we are selfish or inconsiderate, when we mistreat our wives or girlfriends, when we cut corners or fail to control our tempers, our children learn from that—and it’s no surprise when we see those behaviors in our schools or on our streets.

But it also works the other way around. When we work hard, treat others with respect, spend within our means, and contribute to our communities, those are the lessons our children learn. And that is what so many fathers are doing every day—coaching soccer and Little League, going to those school assemblies and parent-teacher conferences, scrimping and saving and working that extra shift so their kids can go to college. They are fulfilling their most fundamental duty as fathers: to show their children, by example, the kind of people they want them to become.

It is rarely easy. There are plenty of days of struggle and heartache when, despite our best efforts, we fail to live up to our responsibilities. I know I have been an imperfect father. I know I have made mistakes. I have lost count of all the times, over the years, when the demands of work have taken me from the duties of fatherhood. There were many days out on the campaign trail when I felt like my family was a million miles away, and I knew I was missing moments of my daughters’ lives that I’d never get back. It is a loss I will never fully accept.

But on this Father’s Day, I think back to the day I drove Michelle and a newborn Malia home from the hospital nearly 11 years ago—crawling along, miles under the speed limit, feeling the weight of my daughter’s future resting in my hands. I think about the pledge I made to her that day: that I would give her what I never had—that if I could be anything in life, I would be a good father. I knew that day that my own life wouldn’t count for much unless she had every opportunity in hers. And I knew I had an obligation, as we all do, to help create those opportunities and leave a better world for her and all our children.

On this Father’s Day, I am recommitting myself to that work, to those duties that all parents share: to build a foundation for our children's dreams, to give them the love and support they need to fulfill them, and to stick with them the whole way through, no matter what doubts we may feel or difficulties we may face. That is my prayer for all of us on this Father’s Day, and that is my hope for this nation in the months and years ahead."

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Pollution? What Pollution?

Every Brooklynite knows that the Gowanus Canal is a liquid toxic waste dump, so why shouldn't it be a Superfund site?

Because this is New York City, where every square inch, even if befouled by a century's worth of toxic sludge, is a potential development site.

Blogger Lost City reports that the bid to Superfund the Gowanus, announced by the federal Environmental Protection Agency in April, is getting serious push-back from developers and their friends in city government -- including the "environment-friendly" Bloomberg administration.

Why, you ask, wouldn't Superfunding be a good thing for the Gowanus? In a word, timing.

Before the Real Estate Bubble popped, the Toll Brothers got approval from the city to build highrise luxury housing on the Gowanus. Superfunding the Gowanus now would delay the development and make the Toll Brothers participate in the cost of cleanup, so they're arguing that the canal isn't that dirty and that they can clean it up themselves.

The Bloomberg administration and local Councilmember Bill DeBlasio side with the Toll Brothers, who spent almost half a million lobbying for the zoning change that let them build on the Gowanus.

Josh Skaller, one of 5 people campaigning for DeBlasio's soon-to-be-vacant City Council seat (DiBlasio is running for Public Advocate), sides with The Carroll Gardens Coalition for Respectful Development (C.G. CORD) and the Friends and Residents of the Gowanus Canal (FROGG) against the developers.

At a recent press conference outlining his position on the Superfund issue, Skaller said the Toll Brothers are using the same environmental "expert" and public relations firm Bruce Ratner hired for his disastrous Atlantic Yards project in downtown Brooklyn to challenge the EPA's Superfund track record, while failing to mention that the city has never attempted a cleanup on the scale of the Gowanus.

LC suspects that, if the EPA were to back out, the Toll Brothers would never clean up the canal, nor would the Bloomberg administration, which came up with a cleanup plan only after the Superfund designation was announced.

The Toll Brothers have been flyering the area, trying to turn residents against Superfunding.

The Mayor's Office, without formal notice to the residents of surrounding neighborhoods, has scheduled two meetings on the Superfund issue at 6 PM on June 23 and June 24 at P.S. 32 at 317 Hoyt Street, near President.

Like The Simpsons episode where Marge confronts Montgomery Burns with the three-eyed fish, LC wants to see Bloomberg, the Toll Brothers and DeBlasio prove the Gowanus isn't that bad by taking a swim in it.

The excellent post from Lost City.

More from Found in Brooklyn.

More from Brooklyn the Borough.

(Photo from Pardon Me for Asking.)

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Link Roundup

Strawberry eating contest at the Bay Ridge Greenmarket tomorrow at 11:00 AM.

Twilight tattoo at Dyker Park Ballfield at 6:00 PM tomorrow evening.

The Brooklyn Public Library's budget spared.

The Department of City Planning approves Coney Island redevelopment plan.

City's unemployment rate hits 9%.

Tom Robbins riffs on Monster Rat and Espada.

Espada in dust-up with fellow senator.

Albany coupmeister Tom Golisano's PAC, Responsible New York, under investigation.

Charter schools bring federal $$$ to New York City.

Green Church Bulletin



As evidenced by the permits posted on the blue wall, and the fact that all of the windows had been removed from the building this morning, the demolition of the Methodist Sunday school building, on Fourth Avenue between Ovington and 72nd, has begun.

More from the New York Post.

Juneteenth at 227 Duffield

Tomorrow is African-American Emancipation Day or "Juneteenth".

Juneteenth, which was first celebrated in Galveston, Texas in 1865, is now observed across the U.S. and around the world.

Over the years, Juneteenth has evolved into a cross-cultural commemoration of African-American culture and achievement.

The Board of Directors of 227 Duffield Street, Brooklyn's first Abolitionist Museum, will celebrate Juneteenth this year with an evening of events, including informal discussions with local historians, community leaders and special guests, a documentary film, a tour of the museum, and drumming and dancing.

The celebration begins at 8:00 PM at 227 Duffield Street (a/k/a 227 Abolitionist Place).

Food and drink
will be served. The suggested donation is $25.

For more information e-mail Raul Rothblatt at: 227abolitionplace@gmail.com.


Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Judge to Senate: "Not My Problem"

In an decision issued yesterday, Albany State Supreme Court justice Thomas McNamara refused to intervene in the legislative death match in the State Senate, telling the Democrats and Republicans that they'll have to find a way to work it out between themselves.

McNamara ruled that the controversy before him was "wholly internal" to the State Senate, and that it would be "improvident" for the court to intervene in the business of the state legislature, since it is a "co-equal branch of government".

In other words, the judge told the State Senate to grow up.

In filing the lawsuit, the Democrats sought to invalidate the election of Pedro Espada to replace Malcolm Smith as president pro tem of the Senate, and to invalidate Smith's replacement as majority leader with Republican Senator Dean Skelos of Rockville Centre.

There will apparently be no appeal.

Senator John Sampson, a Brooklyn Democrat, who will take over as "conference leader" of the Senate Democrats, said that Democrats will do as Justice McNamara directed and try to negotiate an end to the standoff with the Republicans.

The temporary restraining order that kept Espada out of the line of succession for the Governor's office expired with Justice McNamara's decision, meaning that Espada could serve as the state's top executive if David Paterson is incapacitated.

The decision, published in today's New York Law Journal, is Smith v. Espada, 4912-09.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Existential?

Columnist Michael Wolfe sees Michael Bloomberg's position in his third term run as "existential": he's unwanted by most voters, but apparently undefeatable because of his wealth.

The wealth didn't bother New Yorkers so much the first 2 times he ran, but now that the good times are over on Wall Street, the $20 million Bloomberg has spent on his campaign jars.

Wolfe thinks the mayor's biggest problem may be that he's so flush at a time when so many New Yorkers are hurting.

He got even richer during the financial collapse.

Wolfe sees Bloomberg's term-limits extension move in the City Council, where he used his financial muscle to buy off his opponents, as a voter turnoff -- but one the mayor seems to have seen as a worthwhile risk.

And then, says Wolfe, there's Bloomberg's brittle, arrogant, cruel treatment of reporters.

But Bloomberg wants that third term and he can afford it, making it a "why not", Wolfe says.

The mayoralty as luxury goods? I like that.

The article from Newser.

Updating Air Traffic Control Systems

Maybe, like me, you assumed that commercial airlines were using GPS by now. After all, you've got GPS in your cell phone, so why wouldn't it be guiding airplanes?

But we'd both be wrong.

According to a report from the Associated Press, the FAA has yet to upgrade to a satellite-based air-traffic control system. U.S. aviation is still using a WWII-era air traffic control network that wastes billions of dollars in fuel by forcing planes to take longer, less direct routes.

The AP analogizes our current system, compared to GPS, to using an electric typewriter when others are using computers.

The "NextGen" upgrade, which would replace the radar system with GPS technology, would cost $35 billion. Proponents say it would triple air traffic capacity, cut delays by at least half, improve safety, and curb greenhouse gas emissions.

The AP estimates that, if the upgrade were in place, airlines could have saved more than $5 billion in fuel costs this year alone.

But lack of funding, technical complexity and politics have delayed NextGen for a decade, and it is not likely to be fully operational until the 2020s, if then.

Many European countries, China and Mongolia already use GPS technology.

U.S. airlines would spend about $200,000 per plane -- an estimated total of $15 billion -- to equip their fleets with GPS, but most carriers don't want to retrofit their planes until the U.S. completes the NextGen upgrade.

Experts say that NextGen would allow aircraft to land, fly and takeoff closer together, reducing delays; and although more planes would be up, the technology would reduce the risk of collisions.

The article from USA Today in the Sky Blog.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Green Church Bulletin

The City Council has approved a proposal by the city's School Construction Authority to build a 680-seat elementary school on the corner of Ovington and Fourth Avenues, named for the historic Bay Ridge United Methodist Church (" The Green Church").

Last fall, developer Abe Betesh, holder of a contract of sale for the property, demolished the Green Church, which was listed in the State and National Registers of Historic Places, supposedly to make room for a new 72-condo development.

Local preservationists who fought a two-year battle to save the church were denied a designation hearing by the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission.

The city's Department of Buildings, after the church was down, refused to approve the planned condo development.

According to the Brooklyn Paper, the property is now off the market, presumably because Betesh is flipping the parcel to the SCA for an undisclosed amount.

Cavalier, Betesh's demolition contractor, has a permit from the DOB to demolish the former Methodist Sunday school building, the last structure standing on the site.

There is a "stop-work" order on the "blue wall of death" in front of the Sunday school building. It appears that the order pertains to the wall itself, constructed before the DOB issued the demolition permit for the Sunday school building.

The article from the Brooklyn Paper.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Cap Your Own Carbon

Here are 10 things you can do -- at home or at the office -- to help reduce global warming and lower your bills:
  • Buy organic and locally-grown food. Chemicals used in factory farming are energy-intensive to produce and pollute our drinking water. And carry a reusable shopping bag.
  • Hang your clothes out to dry. Line-drying clothes instead of using a dryer saves up to 700 pounds of carbon dioxide and cuts your electric bill.
  • Replace incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescent bulbs, which use 66% less energy. By replacing just 3 of the bulbs you use most frequently, you can save 300 pounds of carbon dioxide and lower your electric bill.
  • Buy a hybrid, or at least a car that gets good mileage. On average, driving a hybrid saves 16,000 pounds of carbon dioxide and $3,750 on gas a year.
  • Keep your tires properly inflated and change your air filter regularly. You can waste as much as 250 pounds of carbon dioxide and $840 in gas money a year by running your tires too low.
  • Use less hot water. Set the thermostat on your water heater no higher than 120 degrees Fahrenheit to save money and reduce emissions. Save even more by insulating the water heater. Better yet, switch to tankless to save 300 pounds of carbon dioxide and shave $390 off your electric bill annually.
  • Shorten your shower. Showers account for two-thirds of all water heating costs, so taking a shorter shower can save 350 pounds of carbon dioxide a year. Installing a low-flow showerhead saves another 350 pounds of carbon dioxide.
  • Unplug unused appliances. Even when an electronic appliance is turned off, it uses energy as long as its plugged in. Unplugging saves more than 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide and $256 a year.
  • Turn down the thermostat. Turning the thermostat up 2 degrees up in summer and down 2 degrees in winter can save 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide and $98 a year.
  • Plant a tree. Trees clean the air by sucking up carbon dioxide. One tree can save 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide a year.
And here are 10 more things you can do:

Go vegetarian. A meatless or low meat diet can have big benefits in terms of climate change mitigation, including freeing up pastureland for forests. Forests soak up large amounts of carbon dioxide and can make a dent in global warming pollution when combined with reduced methane emissions from animals. Click here to read more.

Stop mowing. Let your lawn grow tall or spread wildflower seeds, etc., which will eventually lead to a more naturalized environment, encouraging wildlife back to sterile areas.

If you’re going to mow, push. Use your muscles instead of fossil fuels, get some exercise, and save an average of 80 pounds of carbon dioxide per year. Click here to learn more.

Use recycled paper. Making sure your printer paper is 100 percent post-consumer recycled paper can save up to five pounds of carbon dioxide per ream (500 pages) of paper. Click here to learn more.

Don’t idle. Idling your car wastes money and gas and generates pollution and global warming-causing emissions. Except when you’re in traffic, turn your engine off if you sit for more than 30 seconds. Click here to learn more.

Reduce garbage. Buying products with less packaging and recycling paper, plastic and glass can save as much as 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide per year. Click here to learn more.

Use a reusable water bottle. Every hour in the U.S. , 2.5 million individual plastic water bottles are thrown away. Start using a reusable water bottle and just say no to plastic! Click here to learn more.

Get a home energy audit. Many utilities offer free home energy audits. Find out if your home is poorly insulated or energy inefficient. You can save up to 30% off your energy bill and 1,000 pounds of carbon dioxide a year. Click here to read more.

Try a staycation. Air travel produces large amounts of emissions, so cutting back how much you fly by even one or two trips a year can reduce your emissions significantly. You can also offset your air travel carbon emissions by investing in renewable energy projects. Click here to learn more.

Encourage others to conserve. Share information about recycling and energy conservation with your friends, neighbors and co-workers, and take the opportunity to encourage public officials to establish programs and policies that are good for the environment.



For more information: http://www.stop-global-warming.com/

Thompson Hitting the Street

City Comptroller Bill Thompson, running for mayor against billionaire Michael Bloomberg, may not be spending large on advertising, but he's clearly burning up a lot of shoe leather walking the streets of New York's neighborhoods.

Thompson has been stumping in neighborhoods throughout the city every weekend, talking to voters. He spent all last weekend running a ground campaign in Queens.

Thompson has accused Mayor Bloomberg of cutting New Yorkers out of the "conversation" about New York City's future, saying that you can't understand what voters want if you don't listen to them.

Instead of spending nearly $20 million on a media blitz, said Thompson, the mayor should go outside and talk to people on the street.

This week, Thompson will host "meet and greet sessions" in neighborhood venues in all five boroughs.

"Late Nights with Bill", on the downtown/Brooklyn axis: http://www.thompson2009.com/page/s/nightswithbill1

Lappin: LPC Must Account for RFEs

City Council Member Jessica Lappin, who chairs the City Council's landmarks subcommittee, has introduced legislation that would reform the process by which the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission handles requests for evaluation (RFEs) from the public.

Lappin's introduction responds to last year's State Supreme Court decision directing that the LPC set rules requiring all RFEs to be submitted, within 120 days, to an evaluation committee, which would then have to report its decision on the record to the full commission.

The LPC is appealing that Supreme Court decision, claiming it would be too much of a burden for it to have to evaluate all the requests it receives and accusing the court of interfering with its autonomy.

But Lappin said the agency has to be more responsive, and that people have a right to know what happens to their requests for evalution.

Second that.

The article from the New York Times:

Council Rolls for Dock Street

The City Council, by a vote of 40 to 9, has approved developer Two Trees' Dock Street Dumbo project, steps from the Brooklyn Bridge -- over the angry protests of neighbors, community activists and prominent figures like documentary filmmaker Ken Burns.

The vote gives Two Trees the go-ahead to build a luxury high-rise residential tower just east of the bridge in Dumbo, wiping out the view.

Two Trees lobbied for years for the project, in the process tarting up the highrise with a new middle school, "affordable housing" and "green" features.

Neighborhood resistance to the project remains fierce. The Dumbo Neighborhood Alliance, which gathered more than 25,000 signatures and postcards from people who oppose the tower, is now exploring its legal options.

City Council Member Eric Gioia, who opposed the tower, has uncovered e-mail correspondence indicating a possible sweetheart deal between the city and Two Trees.

"A lot of people rightfully suspect that the game is rigged,” said Gioia.

The article from the New York Times Cityroom Blog.

Dock Street approved after developer donation.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Walking to Brooklyn
















U-Cops on the Block?

The buzz on the block last night was that there had been a series of drug-related arrests on 5th Avenue between Ovington and 73rd Streets in Bay Ridge.

The action apparently happened at street level and targeted dealers working the corners -- although some arrests were reportedly made inside nearby buildings.

No local press coverage so far.

"Vested Rights"

A bill under consideration in the New York State Assembly would freeze all municipal zoning, planning and environmental regulations for 6 months after a developer files a new project application. The freeze would be called "vesting".

During the 6-month "vesting" period, the developer would be shielded from any new protective regulations the municipality passes.

If passed, this bill would cripple the ability of New York municipalities to curb over-development. The developer's rights would"vest" on the day the application is filed. After the 6-month "vesting" period is over, those rights would be locked in before the public knows the application has been filed. By the time the municipality could complete the public vetting or environmental review process, only those rules and regulations enacted prior to the "vesting" period would apply.

The bill also undercuts New York’s environmental review laws by putting the burden on the municipality to show that the developer's project is likely to cause harm to the public and the environment. Under current law, it is the developer's responsibility to prove that a project is not harmful. Many local governments don't have the technical or financial resources to meet this burden of proof.

More from Environmental Advocates of New York:

http://actionnetwork.org/campaign/assemblyVR_2009

Mermaid Parade

This year's Coney Island Mermaid Parade will take place on Saturday, June 20th at 2 PM, rain or shine.

King Neptune will be Harvey Keitel.


Special Appearances include the Uptown String Band from The Philadelphia Mummers Parade, recording artists They Might Be Giants, Monster Truck ‘Blue Thunder', and performers from Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey’s Boom A Ring.

Click here for more information:
http://www.coneyisland.com/mermaid.shtml

Friday, June 12, 2009

Greening the Ridge 2009

This year's Greening the Ridge Festival will take place from 10 AM to 6 PM this Sunday, June 14th, at the 69th Street Pier in Bay Ridge.

The festival, hosted by the Sunset-Ridge Waterfront Alliance, brings together vendors, agencies, programs and community residents for an educational event focused on "greening" Bay Ridge.

For further information about the festival, click here:

http://www.insideurbangreen.org/2009/06/2nd-annual-greening-the-ridge-festival-in-bay-ridge.htm

Canada Geese to Die

I remember thinking, when U.S. Airways Flight 1549 went down in the Hudson after a bird strike, "The birds are going to get it now."

And that's just what's happening. The Bloomberg administration and the Port Authority plan to kill 2,000 birds, principally Canada Geese, living within 5 miles of the city's airports, which are located in coastal wetlands.

At 40 city parks and other locations near LaGuardia and Kennedy, the U.S. Department of Agriculture will trap the geese during their molting season -- when they are unable to fly -- and kill them.

The city has been trapping and killing geese on Rikers Island for 6 years now, but Flight 1549 upped the ante.

Not surprisingly, given that New York's airports are located in their habitat, 74% of bird strikes -- 77 in the past 10 years -- have been at or near the airports.

Golden Calls It "Reform"

State Senator Martin Golden, who the Brooklyn Daily Eagle said was "not involved" in the Albany coup, sounded very much involved in a Brooklyn Heights Courier interview published today.

The coup, said Golden, was about "reform", about trying to "move the state in the right direction".

Golden said he was confident the coup will "stick". "I don't care what court you go to", he said, "anybody who can count knows that...[it's] whoever has the 32 votes."

The Democrats, said Golden, seemed to know their days were numbered.

According to Golden, the "liberal agenda" -- presumably gay marriage -- was "pushed too far", with not enough attention paid to taxes and jobs.

Golden believes that gay marriage is something that should be decided by a referendum.

Um, you mean like term limits?

Golden accused Democrats of taxing everything but the "air you breathe". The junta, he said, will cut the budget.

"Gang of Four" member Carl Kruger, will be allowed to continue in his six-figure job as chair of the senate finance committee, said Golden -- if he joins the junta.

The article from the Brooklyn Heights Courier:
http://www.yournabe.com/articles/2009/06/12/brooklyn/brooklyn_newszzgifjc06112009.txt

The Brooklyn Eagle chimes in again.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Rat-Infested Albany Sickens Ed

In typically blunt fashion, former New York City Mayor Ed Koch, asked by the New York Times what he thought of the Albany coup and the role state senators Pedro Espada Jr. and Hiram Montserrate played in giving the senate chamber back to the Republicans, called it "sickening".

Espada and Montserrate Koch characterized as "rats".

The column from the New York Times Cityroom Blog:
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/11/koch-endorses-snyder-and-scolds-senate-renegades/

June at the Greenmarket

The Bay Ridge Greenmarket, open every Saturday from 8 AM to 3 PM at 95th Street and 3rd Avenue in the old Key Food parking lot, offers fresh strawberries this month, along with other locally-grown foods, local music and local artwork.

Vendors from Upstate New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey offer fresh seasonal fruits and vegetables, as well as meat and seafood, every week.

Special events at the Greenmarket in June include:
  • Saturday, June 13th: non-profit Solar One will host a solar panel exhibit in the morning. Music from local band Stone Kite at noon.
  • Saturday, June 20th: Paul Cassone, Executive Director of the Guild for Exceptional Children in Bay Ridge, performs with his son Christopher at 11:30 AM.
  • Saturday, June 27th: Brooklyn Public Library band Lost in the Stacks performs at 11 AM.

Define "Positive Change"

Bay Ridge has another new Democratic club: the United Americans Democratic Organization.

Speaking at the club's first meeting at the Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd, "District Male Leader" Ralph Perfetto said he formed the club in response to feedback from local Democrats seeking "positive change".

The meeting was by invitation only. Perfetto invited Steve Harrison and other local Democratic "stalwarts".

Public advocate candidate Mark Green and Brooklyn D.A. Charlie Hynes, who is running for re-election, were there.

In his invitation, Perfetto had kind words for other local Democratic clubs American Heritage Organization and Democrats for Change, but implied that they weren't rallying the base.

The new club has endorsed Bill Thompson for mayor, David Yassky for city comptroller, Marty Markowitz for borough president, Vincent Gentile for councilman, and Rachel Adams and Reginald Boddie for civil court judge.

The article from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Community Boards Endangered?

According to Gotham Gazette, a re-elected Mayor Bloomberg could eliminate the city's 59 community boards.

Although the Bloomberg adminstration denies it, elected officials and civic leaders say that a new charter review commission, such as the one Bloomberg proposed in 2008, could restructure -- or even eliminate -- the community boards.

Every development or rezoning application goes through the boards, which make non-binding but influential recommendations to the city planning commission and the city council. The boards have no executive powers.

In his January 2008 state of the city address, Mayor Bloomberg said he would appoint a charter review commission to take a "top-to-bottom" look at city government. The last time that happened, the Board of Estimate was eliminated.

Bloomberg said his charter review commission would make city government more "open, accountable and efficient".

Many pols see a re-elected Mayor Bloomberg, once the term limits battle has blown over, appointing another charter review commission -- and targeting community boards and land use.

Although the boards have been criticized for being too political, too "social", no one questions the fact that they give the community a chance to participate and a place to be heard.

But even without charter revision, Bloomberg's proposed budget cuts threaten the continued existence of the community boards. This year's proposed budget cut of nearly 8% will probably mean job losses at each of the city's 59 boards.

Board members and district managers say that the budget cuts amount to a slow death by attrition, something the city council may not be able to stop.

The article from Gotham Gazette:
http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/issueoftheweek/20090608/200/2936

Back from Brooklyn

The Bay Ridge Norwegian community will host a documentary film this Friday about Norwegian immigrants who returned to Norway after a life spent in Brooklyn.

The film will be screened at 7:30 PM, Friday, June 12 at Our Savior's Church, 414 80th Street, Bay Ridge. (Use the 4th Avenue entrance.)

The film depicts the American customs, vehicles, fashions, place names, furniture -- and Brooklyn memories -- that these Norwegians brought back with them.

As far as I know, there is no admission fee.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Persona Non Grata

On Saturday, June 13th at 8pm, Rooftop Films will screen Persona Non Grata, a documentary about radical left-wing Belgian missionary Franz Wuytack, on the roof of the old American Can Factory at 232 3rd Street @ 3rd Avenue in Brooklyn.

Tickets are $9.

For more information:
http://rooftopfilms.bside.com/2009/films/personanongrata_rooftopfilms2009

"Sodom and Gomorrah"

Fourth Avenue "slogger" (sidewalk+log) Rosary Guy weighs in on the subject of same-sex marriage.

Green Church Bulletin

Abe Betesh's demolition company, Cavalier Construction, has been issued a permit by the city's Department of Buildings for the full demolition of the former Methodist Sunday School on Fourth Avenue between Ovington and 72nd Street.

Cavalier, applied for, but was a denied, permission to use heavy equipment to knock the building down. The DOB, in denying demolition "by mechanical means", cited the fact that there is "no safety zone" between the Sunday school and the neighboring apartment building on Fourth Avenue.

Interestingly, John Donlon, president of the board of trustees of the Bay Ridge United Methodist Church and signer of the contract of sale with Abe Betesh, listed himself as "pastor" on the application. Has anyone seen Robert Emerick lately?

Any day now, I expect to see another gang of immigrant day laborers with sledge hammers -- and no protective gear -- as I pass by the site on my way to the subway.

The details from the DOB BIS database, with thanks to DK:
http://a810-bisweb.nyc.gov/bisweb/JobsQueryByNumberServlet?requestid=1&passjobnumber=320013114&passdocnumber=01

Related article from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle:
http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/category.php?category_id=27&id=28834

Monday, June 8, 2009

Condos for the Homeless

The city is renting luxury condos in a Crown Heights building to house the homeless.

Not finding buyers for the $350,000 units in a tanking market, the developer has become part of the city's effort to get an "unprecedented" number of homeless families off the street.

Neighbors are furious that the homeless tenants of the 67-unit building on East New York Avenue are living better than they are.

Developer Avi Shriki, when his gamble on the luxury housing market didn't pay off, signed a 10-year contract with the Bushwick Economic Development Group to turn his building into a homeless shelter.

The city is paying him $90 a night -- about $2,700 a month -- for the units, which come with social services.

The city's Department of Homeless Services defended the move as a win-win.

"Don't blame us", say the lucky homeless families.

Sick Moves in Albany

The Republicans have pulled off a coup de etat in the state senate.

Democrats, after being out of power for 40 years, regained the majority just 4 months ago. Now Republicans -- joined by rogue Democrats Pedro Espada Jr. and Hiram Montserrate -- have commandeered the senate chamber and voted the Democrats out of power.

With Montserrate and Espada on board, the Republicans gained a 32-30 voting edge on a fast-tracked resolution, flipping leadership of the senate.

The problem with the Republican "majority" is that neither Espada nor Monserrate have changed their party affiliation.

After the coup, Republicans appointed Espada president pro temp and Nassau County Republican Dean Skelos vice president and majority leader of the senate.

With Espada and Skelos in the two most powerful positions in the chamber, the junta can highjack legislation and reallocate committee and leadership positions.

Democrats, who tried to flee the chamber when the coup went down -- even briefly turning out the lights -- are headed to court.

Same-sex marriage is in peril: the legislation is stalled in the Senate and the Republicans -- and Bronx Democrat Ruben Diaz -- oppose it.

Senate Republicans, Bloomberg ops, will re-up mayoral control of the schools.

The junta has already passed new rules for the chamber and has adjourned until Wednesday to continue its rampage -- unless a judge steps in.

The article from the Associated Press:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090608/ap_on_re_us/us_ny_senate_majority

More from Newsday:
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/politics/ny-pojani0912857578jun08,0,7750625.column

Republican State Senator Martin Golden denies any responsibility for the Albany coup. Does that mean that Golden's wasn't one of the 32 votes?

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Fossella at Hedge Fund

Bob Capano's old boss Vito Fossella, after serving his two weekends in jail for DWI, has gone to work for a hedge fund on Fifth Avenue.

Vito's new employer, Superfund Investment Group, is run by Christian Baha, a globe-trotting Austrian ex-cop who hobnobs with celebrities like Teri Hatcher.

Superfund has offices in 16 countries and manages $1.6 billion in assets for 50,000 customers.

Fossella works in the firm's Manhattan office on Fifth Avenue, across from the New York Public Library.

No one knows what Fossella, a graduate of Penn's Wharton School of Business, does at Superfund, but he's been spotted on Capitol Hill this spring, leading to speculation that he's a lobbyist.

In the U.S., only investors worth $1 million or having a two-year income of $200,000 can invest in hedge funds, but Baha invites people with as little as $5,000 to put their money into investments that take hedge fund-like risks.

After a warning from the SEC, Baha now calls his investments "managed futures".

The article from Staten Island Live: http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2009/04/former_staten_island_rep_vito.html

Friday, June 5, 2009

Capano Challenges Gentile

Republican Bob Capano has formally announced his run for Vincent Gentile's city council seat.

Capano has worked for former U.S. Representative Vito Fossella, a Republican, and Democratic Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz.

He told the Brooklyn Paper his campaign would focus on youth, seniors and small business.

Capano sees himself as more in touch with the local constituency than Gentile, whose opposition to Mayor Bloomberg Capano says has "made things worse" for Bay Ridge.

But Bay Ridge seems to be going Democratic, re-electing Gentile in 2007 and electing Mike McMahon to succeed Fossella in congress last year.

Gentile cited his "proven record", including increasing public school funding and siting new school construction, while opposing new property taxes, East River Bridge tolls and term limits extension.

Capano countered that taking a position didn't mean winning.

Capano sees himself as the "anti-Gentile", but from my outsider perspective, the two men seem very similar: chubby, smiley, ubiquitous South Brooklyn Italian Catholic career pols who seem to have very much the same political style.

For me, the Green Church is the litmus test. Could Capano have saved the most beautiful historic building in the neighborhood? Would the Green Church now be a performance space and cultural center, as many envisioned? Would the Methodist Sunday school basement, with its basketball court, still be in use?

Would the "Bay Ridge Bastards" have been brought to heel?

Would "getting along" with Mayor Bloomberg have "made things better" for Bay Ridge?

The article from the Brooklyn Paper.

Capano and supporters on why he's the "anti-Gentile" and an "average Joe", from the Brooklyn Paper.

Capano endorsed by Conservatives and Republicans.

High Line Park Opens

The advocacy group Friends of the High Line reports that Section 1 of High Line Park, from Gansevoort Street to 20th Street, will open Tuesday, June 9.

Although still under construction, visitors can "preview" the park this month.

Enter the park at the Gansevoort Street access point and exit at Gansevoort, 14th, 16th, 18th or 20th Streets.

Section 2 of the Park, from 20th Street to 30th Street, is still under construction.

The High Line will be open daily from 7:00 AM to 10:00 PM. Early mornings and weekdays are the best times to go.

Here is a complete list of park rules.

Dock Street Goes Forward

Over the objection of local City Council Member David Yassky and DUMBO residents, the Council's Land Use Committee has approved Two Trees' Dock Street DUMBO development.

The 325-unit development will wipe out the view of Manhattan and the Brooklyn Bridge from DUMBO.

Support for the divisive project hinges on Two Trees' promise to put a school into the project -- at a projected cost to the city of $42 million.

Two Trees has also promised 65 units of "affordable housing".

Usually, the City Council defers to the local member on land use, but Speaker Christine Quinn supports Dock Street.

The committee vote was 17 to 4, with Eric Gioia, John Liu, Tony Avella and Charles Barron -- to their credit--dissenting.

Yassky isn't on the committee.

Gioia and Yassky raised questions about a sweetheart relationship between the city's School Construction Authority, which sites new schools, and Two Trees. Gioia read aloud an e-mail between two officials at the authority, which he got through a FOIA request, indicating that the authority may have been working with the developers to sell the project to the city.

Yassky wants the deal investigated.

Supporters of the project said that the applicable zoning allows developers to go larger than Dock Street.

Term limits extension supporter Simcha Felder, who voted for Dock Street, absurdly implied that the view of the bridge only matters if you happen to live in DUMBO.

The project will now go to the full council.

The article from Gotham Gazette:
http://www.gothamgazette.com/blogs/wonkster/2009/06/04/dock-street-gets-committee-approval/

City Council rubber-stamps Dock Street.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Muslim Voices, Arts and Ideas

This Friday marks the start of a 10-day celebration of Muslim culture in Brooklyn, which will include a souk, an outdoor market offering food, crafts and music from various Muslim cultures, this weekend.

For more information, visit the Website:
http://muslimvoicesfestival.org/

Muslim Bay Ridge, from the New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/arts/05musl.html?ref=arts

DOE Endgame

Before Michael Bloomberg dismantled the New York City Board of Education, appointed lawyer-businessman Joel Klein schools chancellor and reorganized the New York City schools, the system was run by educators.

But no more: most of the 16 members of Klein’s leadership team are lawyers, MBAs and political ops. Only 2 have backgrounds in education.

Bloomberg, as he said in his 2003 State of the City speech, sees himself as the CEO of New York City, and his job as running New York the same way he ran Bloomberg LLP -- by the bottom line.

Education, under Bloomberg, has become a market-and-statistics-driven business enterprise.

Klein's people have compared the schools system to a monopoly that only anti-trust lawyer Klein could "blow up".

Klein, who has no credentials as an educator, needed special state waivers to become schools chancellor. He doesn't see that as a problem: he sees himself as a manager.

When, in 2003, Bloomberg, Klein and their team of corporate consultants applied the "sharp, bright edge of the marketplace" to consolidate the city's 32 educational districts into 10 regions, cutting teachers off from one another and from professional development, educators say they went too far.

Klein's allies are CEOs, investment bankers, business titans, philanthropists and other "patrician liberals" whose kids don't go to public schools. They distrust educators, who are merely subjects in their experiment. Their system focuses on "product" -- greater efficiency, better graduation rates and higher test scores -- rather than "process" -- teaching and learning.

Klein and his allies have no common ground with educators and the community -- no shared language. Under Klein, principals are CEOs who are held responsible and fired if their schools fail.

The once-premier post of Deputy Chancellor for Teaching and Learning has been held by 5 different people in the past 7 years, and has come to be regarded as superfluous in a DOE increasingly focused on data management.

Principals get $25,000 bonuses when their kids do well on state standardized tests. Teachers have been reduced to technicians.

Teach for America and the city's Teaching Fellows program recruit non-teachers -- top tier graduates and career-changers -- and put them into classrooms as a kind of work-study job while they earn masters degrees. Many soon move on. Klein has been accused of having a "Peace Corps" vision of the public schools as a place where you spend a couple of years teaching before moving on to your "real" career.

Klein has said he wants, over time, to reduce the numbers of teachers by 30%, raising the pay of the survivors. Klein sees teachers as the problem, not the solution, and wants, over time, to eliminate them altogether. Klein sees kids eventually getting most of their education online.

Klein’s long-term goal is financial: halve the number of public schools, double the number of charter schools, cut the number of retirees and spend less per capita on charter schools.

The article from City Limits:

http://www.citylimits.org/content/articles/viewarticle.cfm?article_id=3749&content_type=1&media_type=3

Bloomberg Opens Bay Ridge Office

Michael Bloomberg has officially opened a campaign office at 8315 5th Avenue in Bay Ridge.

Doesn't look like Queens Blogger Crappy will be manning a Bloomberg phone bank anytime soon, though:
http://queenscrap.blogspot.com/2009/06/money-cant-buy-self-respect.html

I guess we can also count out the blogger who recently mounted the site "You're a Disgrace, Mayor Bloomberg": http://queenscrap.blogspot.com/2009/06/bloombergs-latest-fan-site.html

Brooklyn Preservation Council Meets

The Brooklyn Preservation Council will meet on Tuesday, June 9 at Brooklyn Borough Hall, in the Second Floor Conference Room.

Among the items on Tuesday's agenda will be the Carroll Gardens Landmark District, the Brooklyn Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Application and the proposed Brooklyn landmarks list.

Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway Benefit

The Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway Initiative will host a fundraiser from 6-9 PM on Thursday, June 18 along the new Greenway segment at the Brooklyn IKEA in Erie Basin Park.

Honored guests will include PATH Executive Director Chris Ward, IKEA Store Manager Mike Baker, and Transportation Alternatives.

The Brooklyn Greenway Initiative is a tax-exempt not-for-profit organization
advocating for the creation and long-term stewardship of the Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway.

When completed, the Greenway will connect 14 miles of waterfront
neighborhoods, parks and open spaces from Greenpoint to Bay Ridge.

For tickets to the event: http://www.brooklyngreenway.org/gala09.htm

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Invasion of the Charter Schools

Here's how it happens:
  • Schools Chancellor Joel Klein decrees, without warning, that your local public school has to surrender scarce classroom space to a new charter school.
  • There is no meeting with parents or faculty to find out if anyone wants a charter school, and no vote of the local Community Education Council.
  • The DOE's Office of Portfolio Development arrives at the school one day and orders that the rooms be re-allocated.
Klein wants 100,000 new charter school seats over the next few years.

Yesterday afternoon at PS123 in Harlem, angry parents fought back. They say DOE wants to cap the growth of PS 123 while doubling the size of Harlem Success Academy II, a charter school run by former city councilmember Eva Moskowitz that shares the building with the public school.

Moskowitz wants to double enrollment this fall.

Klein says thousands of kids want to get into Moskowitz' schools. What he doesn't say is that Moskowitz has run a well-financed publicity campaign, using DOE-sponsored phone banks, to push parents into transferring their kids to the Harlem Success schools.

Public schools don't have a marketing arm.

But the parents of PS 123 organized their own recruitment campaign this year, holding four neighborhood open houses and getting 644 parents to apply to their new middle school.

Half the fifth-graders at PS 123 have been transferred -- perhaps involuntarily -- to make room for Moskowitz' charter school expansion this fall.

This isn't just happening in Harlem. It's happening at PS 160 in Co-op City in the Bronx; it's happening at PS 278 in Gerritson Beach; and it's happening in Sunset Park.

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/education/2009/06/03/2009-06-03_dont_these_kids_count_too_students_at_ps_123_are_pushed_aside_for_charter_school.html

Stingray Sam

Rooftop Films will screen feature length film Stingray Sam on the roof at Brooklyn Tech, 29 Fort Greene Place, on Saturday, June 6 at 9 PM.

Admission is $9.

Stingray Sam, written and directed by American Astronaut's Cory McAbee, who stars in the film, is a six-episode, western-themed musical comedy set in outer space.

Sounds like my kind of movie.

Watch the trailer at:
http://stingraysam.com/trailer.html

Tickets: http://newyork.going.com/event-602737;Rooftop_Films_Stingray_Sam

Complete Rooftop Films schedule: www.rooftopfilms.com.

BIFF

You might also want to check out the Brooklyn International Film Festival (BIFF) in Brooklyn Heights: http://www.wbff.org/, as recently blogged by Nathan Kensinger:
http://kensinger.blogspot.com/2009/05/brooklyn-international-film-festival.html

There's also a kid's version of BIFF:
http://kidsfilmfest.org/

PortSide NY Fundraiser

Red Hook-based non-profit PortSide New York, which offers a variety of waterfront-based programs and activities, will host a fundraiser from 6-9 PM on Saturday, June 13 at the Brooklyn Lyceum, 227 Fourth Avenue @ President Street, Brooklyn. Tickets are $50.

Proceeds from the fundraiser will support Portside's programming at Red Hook's Atlantic Basin.

Tickets for the event are available at:
http://portsidefundraiser.eventbrite.com

PortSide, currently based on repurposed 172’ coastal oil tanker Mary A. Whalen, seeks to expand waterfront access and make waterfront policy, in addition to hosting boating and historical events and creating jobs.

PortSide hopes to revitalize the city's waterfront by creating public spaces that harmonize with the city's essential maritime functions and by re-thinking water transport -- the greenest form of transportation.

Since 2006, PortSide has run the city's first (and only) Kayak Valet.

For more information about PortSide, visit: http://www.portsidenewyork.org/index.htm

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Weiner Endorses Thompson

This week, Congressman Anthony Weiner, after withdrawing from the mayoral race, emphatically endorsed former Democratic opponent Bill Thompson for mayor.

In an e-mail blast, Weiner said:

"For the past few years we have seen middle class New Yorkers...the driving force behind our great city, struggle to afford to live here.

It seems that every day our City gets more costly for our middle class and less welcoming to those trying to reach that next rung on the economic ladder.

For three consecutive years, city residents have seen escalating property taxes and assessments and double-digit hikes in water rates...

And while our middle class is getting hit from every side, Michael Bloomberg refuses to help make our taxes more progressive.

It's no surprise that we have rising unemployment, record homelessness and small businesses struggling to stay open.

More than ever, we need a strong voice for all New Yorkers in City Hall.

Bill Thompson will be that voice as Mayor. He has always recognized that New York is a city of five boroughs with dozens of unique neighborhoods that all contribute to our collective success.

That's why I am supporting Bill Thompson.

New York is a city of fighters. We have a history of voting our minds no matter what the political oddsmakers say, and this race will demonstrate that once again.

I'm going to work my hardest to help Bill get elected, and I hope you'll join me by taking your support to the next level. "

Also endorsing Thompson are Kings County Democratic Party boss and state assembly member Vito Lopez, state assembly members Hakeem Jeffires and John Sampson, and state senators Eric Adams, John Sampson and Vermanette Montgomery.

Narrows

Narrows, Virginia is a little town in the New River Valley that I visit each year.

My Auntie, who just turned 89, lives in a nursing home nearby.

Spending time with Auntie at the nursing home has been a profound and beautiful experience -- not at all what I expected when I first walked in the door.























































































Lady Gaga -- Bad Romance


"Life is like a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving." -- Albert Einstein
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Kip
"I am certain of nothing but of the holiness of the Heart's affections and the truth of Imagination..." John Keats
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