Tuesday, November 29, 2011
30-year wait for potty is over
From the Times Ledger:
Thirty years after a man walked into a Community Board 7 meeting to request a toilet at a public park — in Flushing of all places — the city has taken up his project.
John Byas, now 78, said tears came to his eyes when he was informed that the city Parks Department would construct a restroom in the park across from IS 237, at 46-21 Colden St.
“I fought like hell for this,” Byas said on a recent walk toward the grassy strip where the city had already begun digging up the foundation for the johns, which are set to be operational in about three months.
Byas has lived in Flushing since 1974, when the neighborhood was a different place.
Where the handball and basketball courts, baseball diamonds and community garden now sit across from the school there was once a patch of untamed foliage.
According to Byas, it served little function besides a dumping ground for criminals who wanted to get rid of evidence.
But by the late 1970s, the sport facilities and garden had all been built.
With one notable omission.
There was no bathroom in the park, and the children who played on the fields and the senior citizens who socialized and toiled in the garden could often not even get into the school across the street, he said, since the doors were locked.
The aptly named John Liu, now city comptroller, agreed to dish out $250,000 to build the WC from discretionary funds he enjoyed as a councilman [in 2009].
The funds were not immediately available, and it took two years for them to work their way through city agencies, culminating in the announcement by Parks two weeks ago that a facility would actually be built.
It will house both boys and girls restrooms — the first containing two toilets and four urinals and the second containing three toilets.
The public toilets will finally provide a basic service to his community, he said, which should not have had to wait through a turn of the century.
Labels:
discretionary funds,
Flushing,
John Liu,
Parks Department,
toilet
5 comments:
Bravo, Sir - fighting for a good demand/service.
30 year wait? In Queens? Sounds about right.
The mega million High Line in Manhattan was completed in 4 years...
How much will it finally cost? Surely more than $250,000.
It should cost around & $1 million when its all said and done. It's absurd how poorly the outer boroughs are treated when it comes to basic necessities.
If you can't be Flushing the Potty, what good be it?
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