Submit your New Year's wishes here.
Monday, December 31, 2007
Make a wish
Submit your New Year's wishes here.
Cleanup crew
Transit workers painted support columns on the platforms and in the passageways of three major Manhattan hubs in recent weeks - all on the eves of press conferences, the Daily News has learned.
Stations spruced up for press events
Two of the events featured Gov. Spitzer and Mayor Bloomberg while the third was held by MTA CEO Elliot Sander.
Maintenance workers who paint the stations earn between $26 and $28.64 an hour.
More than a dozen workers converged on the Rockaway Parkway station on the eastern end of the L line in Canarsie, Brooklyn, Thursday as word spread that Sander would be dropping by Friday, workers said.
They scrubbed the joint, did spot painting and even hung new signs, the workers said.
Sorry this story got lost in the holiday shuffle. I wish a bigwig would visit these stations!
Green Church owner's bad reputation
One World Life Systems
Pastor Crea's letter last May and meeting with his assistant Carmine Perez found no response and nothing done from Assemblyman Keith Wright, who said out loud to a recent Harlem rally "I can do nothing," regarding owners of private buildings...Councilman Bill Perkins and staff contributed to the disabled Pastor losing all his belongings from storage. They failed to follow up their own inadequate, inattentive and insensitive efforts, while seeking 2 million dollar tax write-offs for a slumlord.
One of the slumlords mentioned now owns Bay Ridge's Green Church:
Questions Surface About ‘Green Church’ Developer
Photo from Forgotten NY
Cops told to look the other way
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Trespassing & Vandalism Supported by 104th Precinct
The officer who appeared to be in charge was a big guy with a shaved head, Officer Solomon, from the 104th Precinct. He told me, "We know these guys, they're good kids and we were told to leave them alone. Better they do it down there than on the street where someone could get hurt." I replied that I had been to meetings and had phone conversations with the Queens Commissioner of Parks, Dorothy Lewandowski, as well as Highland Park Administrator, Debbie Kuha. Both said that the paintball players vandalized the fences and trashed the forested basins, but that they've had trouble catching and stopping them. Officer Solomon replied, "I don't know what to tell you, we've been told to leave them alone."
Need an axe?
Bloomberg Moves Closer to Running for President
The key players — virtually the only players — in Mr. Bloomberg’s embryonic campaign are three of his deputy mayors, Kevin Sheekey, Edward Skyler and Patricia E. Harris. Another aide, Patrick Brennan, who was the political director of Mr. Bloomberg’s 2005 re-election campaign, resigned as commissioner of the city’s Community Assistance Unit earlier this year to spend more time exploring the mayor’s possible national campaign.
That's funny, I thought Brennan resigned to join the Parkside Group. Will they be running Bloomberg's campaign?
Oh, and Bloomie, as NY Mag recently put it, "Shit, or get off the pot."
V train still underutilized
V train finds its identity after six years
Loyal V riders love the train for a roomy weekday commute. Many Queens residents spread out to read, nap or balance their checkbooks -- even with several extra stops.
100-year old predictions came true
The World of Tomorrow
“When the expectations of wireless experts are realized, everyone will have his own pocket telephone and may be called wherever he happens to be,” one magazine predicted in 1908. Equally farsighted was a prediction made by Dr. Simon Flexner, the first director of the Rockefeller Institute. The same New Year’s Day that The World was conjuring gyroscopic trains, Dr. Flexner declared that human organ transplants would someday be common.
Some of the 2108 predictions printed in this article are already happening.
Huang house plans questionable
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Sunday, December 30, 2007
The New York Bloomberg Post
MAYOR'S AMBITIOUS NEW YORK RESOLUTIONS
BIG APPLE OF MIKE'S EYE
Let's leave this statement alone, too:
He said a park would be even more costly to build because of remediation issues and pointed out that homes were constructed in the area in anticipation of the golf course.
"While we probably don't have any legal obligation to build one, there's some kind of moral obligation, I suppose," the mayor added.
The hit to taxpayers is estimated at $20 million to $50 million.
FERRY PT. GOLF FLUB WILL COST
No, you have a moral obligation to not waste taxpayer money on a failed golf course project. Especially in the Bronx, the poorest of the boroughs. And last I checked, a golf course is a park. That's why it's being managed by the Parks Department.
Why does this mayor get his ass kissed by the press all the time instead of getting grilled and criticized as previous mayors did?
Stone mansion in the Bronx
Lots of Home Work
In 80 years their son may be selling it to a young couple or, “even better, I hope that my son is passing it to his son.”
Enemies in our midst
Officials call for stop to Fresh Direct audit
City Comptroller William Thompson and U.S. Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-Ridgewood) joined a crowd of Fresh Direct employees at City Hall Friday to ask U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to stop the investigation, which caused a number of workers for the online grocery distributor to quit or be suspended because they could not fill out paperwork for the audit.
Helloooooo?!? We now have a mayoral candidate and a U.S. Congressperson openly supporting people who break federal law. What is this country coming to?
Photo from Queens Chronicle
Labels:
Long Island City,
Nydia Velazquez,
Ridgewood,
William Thompson
Gioia in favor of yuppie travel subsidies
Outraged Brooklyn and Queens commuters Friday called on Mayor Bloomberg to save year-round ferry service on the East River.
The move came after New York Water Taxi, which operates the route, announced it will cut all service from Jan. 1 to May 1 to save money.
"We should be expanding water access, not cutting back," said City Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Queens) at a news conference in Williamsburg.
Councilman David Yassky (D-Brooklyn) urged the city to subsidize the route - which connects DUMBO, Williamsburg and Long Island City to Manhattan - as it does subways and buses.
"Mass transit just doesn't work on its own. It requires government subsidies," he said.
New York Water Taxi has blamed the cuts on skyrocketing fuel costs and the drop in the number of tourists during the winter.
Expanding ferry service was one of 127 proposals listed in PlaNYC, the mayor's ambitious environmental proposal released in the spring.
A Bloomberg spokesman said the mayor is "committed to providing East River ferry service" and is "exploring the best routes and financing options to make service viable."
Let them take the subway with the rest of us. Expensive "taxi" rides should not be paid for with tax dollars.
Photo from Wikipedia.
Padavan: SJU no good
St. John's Off-Campus Dorm Is A Threat To Our Community
Faced with this complete lack of transparency and disclosure and in violation of their own self-proclaimed declaration of being a good neighbor, I have called upon Father Harrington and the St. John's Board of Trustees on numerous occasions to immediately stop building this dorm in the middle of our neighborhood. Countless community members and I have protested three times in front of St. John's to make our opposition to the Henley Road dorm loud and clear.
Beyond questioning the secrecy and motives surrounding St. John's decisions to build this off-campus dorm, I have also questioned St. John's ability to maintain order at this facility. According to St. John's own public records on reported incidences on campus, over the past three years there have been 735 liquor law violations, 106 drug law violations, 84 burglaries, four forcible sex offenses and one arson.
One Hull of a mess
Now there are sawhorses and soft ground where a solid sidewalk should be. One can only imagine what construction debauchery will take place here in 2008. There were only 27 complaints thus far!
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Queens makes 'best crapper' list
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Queens Plaza: What's taking so long?
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Mayor blasted for lagging renovations
U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-Astoria) and several other borough elected officials sent a letter to the mayor in which they said they were concerned with the lack of information about construction start dates for the projects, a delayed groundbreaking for the upgrades, project coordination and that the Long Island City Business District Corporation would bear the cost of maintaining the renovated portions of the plaza.
The letter to the mayor was also signed by Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, state Sen. George Onorato (D-Astoria), state Assemblywoman Catherine Nolan (D-Ridgewood) and City Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside).
Labels:
Astoria,
Carolyn Maloney,
Eric Gioia,
George Onorato,
Long Island City,
Ridgewood,
Sunnyside
Hull of a weekend
And the moral of this story is: if your parking ramp is not long enough to accommodate your vehicle, then don't park on it! This scene is at 68th Street and Hull Avenue in my 'hood.
More Hull Avenue fun coming tomorrow. (The next one is a real doozy!)
P.S. Thank you to Gothamist for linking to this post.
Friday, December 28, 2007
EG in NH
Gioia Time in New Hampshire
As compared to Woodside, I suppose. Actually, just about anywhere is.
St. Paul's Woodside suffers fire damage
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Fire Rips Through Historic Queens Church
Firefighters were called to St. Paul's Episcopal Church on 61st Street and 39th Avenue in Woodside just before midnight. It took firefighters about an hour to bring the flames under control.
Fire destroys Queens landmark church
Fire rips through century-old church
An historic Gothic wooden Episcopal church built in the 1800s with ties to Queens history damaged by fire? There goes your landmarking chance.
Lieber is Bloomberg's choice
By DAVID SEIFMAN, NY Post
December 28, 2007 -- Mayor Bloomberg yesterday named an investment banker with less than a year of government service to replace Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff, Hizzoner's most-trusted economic-development aide.
Bloomberg said Robert Lieber, 53, president of the city's Economic Development Corp. since January, wouldn't need to get up to speed in his new job since he's been actively involved in the major development projects undertaken by the administration.
"I don't think there's any need to change direction," Lieber, a former Lehman Brothers banker recruited by Doctoroff, said at a City Hall press conference. "It's full speed ahead."
Bloomberg also announced a major promotion for Deputy Mayor Ed Skyler, assigning him five agencies that had been in Doctoroff's portfolio - Transportation, Environmental Protection, Buildings, Taxi & Limousine, and Operations/Long-Term Planning and Sustainability.
The mayor said Skyler, 34, had repeatedly proven himself in tough assignments that ranged from overseeing emergency responses to the sifting of remains at Ground Zero.
Photo from City Hall News
Flushing cop guilty of accepting bribes
COP: I GOT DOWN & DIRTY WITH PIMP
By STEFANIE COHEN, NY Post
A corrupt Queens cop pleaded guilty yesterday to federal extortion charges - admitting that he accepted cash and other bribes for supplying a pimp with dirt on rival brothel owners.
But Dennis Kim, 31, formerly of the 109th Precinct, also told Brooklyn federal Judge Sandra Townes that "information provided to me by Geeho Chae allowed me to make many arrests . . . for drug offenses, possession of weapons, robbery, and prostitution-related crimes."
Sources said Kim's partner, Jerry Svoronos, was cooperating with the feds.
Kim is facing 12 to 18 months in prison.
See also:
Officer Admits He Helped Thwart a Brothel’s Rivals
And earlier:
Flushing smuggling & sex ring busted
By STEFANIE COHEN, NY Post
A corrupt Queens cop pleaded guilty yesterday to federal extortion charges - admitting that he accepted cash and other bribes for supplying a pimp with dirt on rival brothel owners.
But Dennis Kim, 31, formerly of the 109th Precinct, also told Brooklyn federal Judge Sandra Townes that "information provided to me by Geeho Chae allowed me to make many arrests . . . for drug offenses, possession of weapons, robbery, and prostitution-related crimes."
Sources said Kim's partner, Jerry Svoronos, was cooperating with the feds.
Kim is facing 12 to 18 months in prison.
See also:
Officer Admits He Helped Thwart a Brothel’s Rivals
And earlier:
Flushing smuggling & sex ring busted
Greeks: Save Astoria from hipsters
Save Astoria from hipsters say Greeks
Its five organizers, all former or current students at Fordham University, note Greeks' history of banding together and becoming "a formidable force" during tough times. They ask followers to support only Greek businesses.
Tree pit advertising
For a good time, call Jonathan
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$79 / 2br - Need a place Fast? Need a place Now? 1 day? 5 days? how many do you need?
Which suite would you like to stay in?
LIC, what hath become of thee?
Passing gas
Thursday, December 27, 2007
What's really happening in Queens
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$40 / 1br - Stylish apt Living room for New Year!!
Woodside: $65 PRIVATE ROOM AND ENTRANCE FOR RENT
Ridgewood: $649 per wk! 2br apartment! Sleeps 4! 15 min train ride to Manhattan!!!!!!
Sunnyside: $60 DON'T WASTE $$$ ON A HOTEL!! Only $60 per night! PRIVATE, CLEAN Room
New Year in New York City
$65 Two Miles Of Times Square
$50 furnished large room available for short term
Elmhurst: $350 / 1br - furnished sunny 1.5 bedroom apt available Jan 1-13
$69 COMFORT&CLEAN 1 BEDROOM WITH PRIVATE BATHROOM
$25 Temporary Shared & Private Rooms Available
Glendale: $45 / 1br - Bedroom, Full Kitchen, and Bath
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$40 1 room from Dec 30th to Jan 25th
Corona: $55 ROOM FOR RENT / IN STUDIO APARTMENT.
Love this one:
"For white or Asian single female only. I have a room nearby Manhattan in 10 minutes by subway. I would like to share it with one female friends temporary, I can provide a full size bed for you. $45/night. if you interesting, introduce youself, send your phone number and a picture by email to me."
$45 for single female traveller.
Farewell, happy place
Motel Sucks: Exploiting a Depression-era loophole, more landlords are booting renters for short-term hotel guests
This type of thing is discouraged by Bloomberg's Department of City Planning. Tourists are more important (see post above).
Photo from Village Voice
Harassment of photographers
I Turn My Camera On
But as much as the decision rests with the MOFTB, it's the NYPD that continually arises as the biggest obstruction to artists' civil liberties. Says Dunn, "The real issue is the cops, which is always, frankly, the biggest issue. That's where most photographers and filmmakers encounter real-life problems."
"Do you think cops will measure the sidewalk to mark how eight feet must be clear?" asked video artist Juliana Luecking at the hearing. "Will they wear [measuring tapes] on their gun belt? Like the first proposal, these regulations give law-enforcement officials the power to prohibit my right to use a camera in public—and shield itself from lawsuits."
The spy who screwed me
JUDGE POINTS 'SCOLD' FINGER
She threw out the bulk of the Sultans' claims against the Connerys and several contractors who have worked on the East 71st Street building the families share.
The Sultans blame the Connerys and their workers for trashing the condo, causing leaks and other damage to the home they share with their two adult daughters.
In one of Sultan's now-dismissed suits, he called Connery a "rude, foul-mouthed, fat old man" who plays "loud music all the time while stomping about" the apartment.
Did you try calling 311 and filing building and noise complaints? We all know how wonderfully that works.
Photo from NY Post
New York lost 1.5 million people since 2000
More people are leaving New York than any other state, new population estimates from the U.S. Census show, making it one of America's most stagnant populations.
Experts blame the exodus — nearly 1.5 million people have moved out of New York since April 2000 — on high property taxes and fewer jobs, among other factors.
Census Shows Many Leaving New York
"Basically what you have is a high-cost state that isn't producing a lot of jobs," a senior fellow at the Center for an Urban Future, Joel Kotkin, said.
A middle-class population, which Mr. Kotkin said includes skilled blue-collar workers and families making $120,000 a year, is leaving the state because of a combination of high taxes and fewer available jobs, he said.
The Census study said New York's population grew by about 1.7% between 2000 and 2007, and now stands at about 19.3 million people. The population has grown slightly, according to the data, because birth rates are higher than death rates and foreign immigrants continue to pour into New York City.
The Census Bureau now ranks New York the eighth-slowest-growing state, behind Massachusetts, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Rhode Island, West Virginia, North Dakota, and Louisiana. Although no new data are available for New York City, researchers say the city has fared better than the state because foreign immigrants are replenishing its population. This year, for the fourth year in a row, the city has successfully challenged the federal Census Bureau's annual population estimates, raising its official population count by more than 36,100, to more than 8.25 million people.
Experts warn, however, that the city and the state may be losing a generation of young professionals who are balking at the high cost of living in New York.
UES historic district heavily altered
Where Historic Town Houses Still Hold Court
...at 4 East 78th Street...a pierced ironwork hanging lamp...has somehow survived both the weather and the drastic removal of the stoop.
The north-side buildings are mostly cut up into apartments and have seen hard wear.
Both rows are fragmented by later alterations...
...No. 14 was altered to its present neo-Classical exterior in 1917...
The house at No. 16 had a conventional 1920s alteration...
No. 18 was modernized in 1955...
At Mr. Styles’s No. 22, the owners, Robert and Roxana Tetenbaum, have EdsonUSA rebuilding the lower section — the stoop and lower floors — in brown stucco to something like the 1871 appearance.
For some reason this type of repair is considered acceptable in preservation circles. But passers-by may judge for themselves whether applying a coating of stucco is really restoration, as it is often called, by comparing No. 22 with its mate at No. 26.
It seems that many of the buildings along East 78th Street between 5th and Madison Avenues have undergone heavy alteration over the years. Yet they were all designated by the Landmarks Commission. Hmmm...this seems rather arbitrary and capricious, since the excuse that LPC always gives for not designating landmarks in Queens is that our buildings have been altered too much.
Ramped up
Meanwhile, across the street....
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Wednesday, December 26, 2007
An end to curb cut self-certification?
Curbing Illegal Curb Cuts by Targeting Self-Certification
Photo from Brownstoner
It's that time of year again...
The reign of Queen Katz is about to come to an end. Will she retain her crown or will one of her colleagues steal it from her?
Is PlaNYC's growth prediction full of crap?
The city’s growth scenario will appeal to the economic sectors that thrive on growth – real estate, finance, construction, and some services. By starting with this scenario and not exploring other possible scenarios, NYC2030 is silently making a major policy decision that favors what some have called “the growth machine.”
Plan NYC 2030
What if the population remains stable? This question would force planners to focus on the improvement of life in the city as we know it, and away from the task of accommodating new construction. Is it unthinkable that the population could even decline a bit? While the thought of a shrinking population base conjures up images of widespread neighborhood abandonment during the 1970s, that doesn’t have to happen in the 21st Century. Many European cities, for example, have lost population or remained stable without suffering abandonment. It all depends on public policy.
This man dares to associate the Mayor's 2030 plan with the accommodation of developers. On the city payroll, eh? Better watch yourself, mister.
Bring those books back on time!
Late at the Library, and in Trouble at the Credit Bureau
The gambit has paid off handsomely. The haul so far: $11.4 million, about half of that in fines. That’s a lot of quarters.
Borrowers who fail to return Queens Library books can be reported to a collection agency and to a credit bureau, with a damaged credit rating as a result — a tactic that so shocked one Far Rockaway rabbi that he filed a lawsuit. The collection policy also has pulled libraries — places where generations of children have learned moral lessons about returning what they borrow — into the debate on just how much punishment is appropriate for failing to return a library book.
Photo from NY Times
Why the LPC is a laughingstock
New waterfront park coming soon
Supporters of the $150 million park plan believe the landmarked building would bisect the park, interrupting its continuity and blocking views of the river.
But despite protests from preservationists bent on saving the Art Deco building, the Landmarks Preservation Commission voted in favor of demolishing it in 2006.
"It's further evidence that the [Empire State Development Corp.] cares so little about what the community thinks," said Judi Francis, president of the Brooklyn Bridge Park Defense Fund. "All parties, for and against the project, have wanted to preserve it because it's a landmark."
LPC designates buildings and then green lights their demolition. So what exactly is the agency's purpose, anyway, other than to protect the property values of the rich?
Photo from Brownstoner
Hollaback girl
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“Someone was grabbing a hold of my crotch and holding on for dear life,” she said.
She snapped a picture of the man — the same man she believes fondled her on the E train two years ago — and showed the picture to a cop when she got out at West 4th Street. The officer expressed little interest, so she later called 311 (as advised by her boss who saw her crying about the incident) and two other officers were dispatched to her office. They suggested she get mace and a gun — “perhaps sarcastically” — but took no statement on the incident, Verde said.
Woman hollas at E perv
Statistics seem to indicate that crime is down. Probably because the police are refusing to take reports.
Photo from Bridge and Tunnel Club
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
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