Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Glendale homeless shelter is open for business


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Queens Chronicle

 It’s open.

After community residents voiced concern and anger repeatedly over the project, which was on-again and off-again for several years, the homeless shelter for 200 single men at 78-16 Cooper Ave. in Glendale has started receiving residents.

“Today, we proudly open our doors at the Cooper Rapid Rehousing Center, the first and only transitional housing facility in the Maspeth community, which is now providing high-quality shelter and dedicated employment services to single adult men experiencing homelessness as they work hard to restabilize their lives,” a Department of Homeless Services spokesperson said in an email Friday.

A Manhattan Supreme Court judge last week threw out a lawsuit filed by shelter opponents who said the city bypassed environmental reviews required for the project.
But Councilman Bob Holden (D-Middle Village), a longtime critic of the shelter, said his office was told last Friday that eight men had moved in “despite no contract yet signed nor the property having a certificate of occupancy.”

According to the lawmaker, his chief of staff spoke with the deputy commissioner of DHS and was told the men were moved in without a contract because City Comptroller Scott Stringer had given the green light and the contract was “ready to go.”

Holden said the Comptroller’s Office said that no contract had been registered or signed and that what DHS was doing wasn’t approved by the Comptroller’s Office.

A spokesperson for the Comptroller’s Office told the Chronicle that the office “had no communication with DHS before they moved people in and no contract has been submitted to our office.”

Holden asked Department of Buildings Commissioner Melanie La Rocca and her staff why the property was granted a temporary certificate of occupancy, “considering there is an ongoing audit of the plans and permits, with 14 challenges, two of which are safety issues. The DOB claims that they did their due diligence in granting the temporary certificate of occupancy and will continue the audit.”

A spokesperson from the DOB said safety issues from the audit were resolved on Feb. 12. On the same day, the applicants received a temporary certificate of occupancy after it was determined that the building was safe to occupy.

Holden said challenges filed by the Glendale-Middle Village Coalition would likely have delayed the shelter from opening for six to 12 months, which is why the DHS opted for placement using the temporary certificate of occupancy. The coalition filed objections on various grounds, including zoning and fire code. The next step for the coalition is the Board of Standards and Appeals.

“This is the DHS’s disgraceful attempt at circumventing the legal process that is currently underway from the Glendale community,” Holden said.

“No contract has yet been signed, and there are still legal actions on DOB grounds. This fight is not over, despite the DHS acting as a rogue agency and usurping laws, regulations and process.”

The DHS did not immediately respond for comment.

State Sen. Joe Addabbo Jr. (D-Howard Beach) spoke at different protests against the shelter. He found out about the opening from Glendale residents, not city officials.

“It’s been, I guess, a trademark, really, for this administration not to incorporate the community or the electeds,” he told the Chronicle Monday.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Maybe the bums will take over Atlas Park and kick the teenagers out.

Anonymous said...

Can we blame Trump ? #TDS

Anonymous said...

Let us see if the crime goes up in this area. Someone needs to keep track of this. Cause the Mayor acts as if the neighborhood is going to be the same.

TommyR said...

It's a boon. You now have extra arrows in the communal quiver to go after proponents of dispersed shelters with. Btw, it hasn't really hurt Elmhurst... Rents are only increasing here. Property taxes, too. I'm paying five hundred more a quarter compared to six years back. Fucking ridiculous

Anonymous said...

The only trouble makers I see are obnoxious assholes speeding idling racing all night long in there cheap old race cars and and molesting babies trying to sleep at night. Kids 9f color writing Nazi signs on slides in parks. Yeah Asian and Latino kids spray painting Nazi signs on slides, selling drugs and racing their cheap old race cars, but yeah homeless shelters are out biggest problems. Lol get bent d-bags.

Anonymous said...

Shelters should be for residents of the zip code. Importing the homeless is a bussiness for the well connected party hacks.