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The Paper of Record for Greenwich Village, East Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Union Square, Chinatown and Noho, Since 1933
March 12, 2015 • $1.00 Volume 84 • Number 41
Graduate student strike averted at N.Y.U. as new deal with union is reached BY AMANDA MORRIS
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GSOC, continued on p. 3
Gas pipeline protests no longer burn, but could problems flare in future? BY EILEEN STUKANE
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oday, it’s all quiet on Gansevoort Peninsula where the Spectra Energy pipeline came ashore in 2013 after having been constructed under the Hudson River from Jersey City. But a couple of years ago there was a lot of noise from Sane Energy Project activ-
PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY
.Y.U.’s graduate student union narrowly avoided a strike and reached a tentative agreement with the university early Tuesday morning. After about five hours of tense negotiations, mediator Martin Scheinman walked
out of the negotiation room at around 1:15 a.m. and said, “Goodnight and congratulations.” The tentative agreement marks what the Graduate Student Organizing Committee-United Auto Workers Local 2110 (GSOC-UAW) hailed as a major triumph
ists, community leaders and Greenwich Villagers, who rallied here to block the new 30-inch high-pressure natural gas pipeline from operating. Possible safety risks of leakage and even explosion, the chance of the gas containing elevated cancer-causing radon levels, and the city’s PIPELINE, continued on p. 8
On Saturday, marking the 50th anniversary of the “Bloody Sunday” march in Selma, President Obama and the surviving “foot soldiers” marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Alabama. In New York, above, from left, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, civil rights attorney Normal Siegel, spiritual leader Karen Daughtry and State Senator Jesse Hamilton led hundreds across the Brooklyn Bridge.
Forum on small businesses offers a solution within reach BY ALBERT AMATEAU
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panel of small-business advocates last week issued a call to action to save “mom-andpop” shops and independent arts groups threatened by the chain stores and bank branches that can afford the city’s sky-high commercial rents. Sponsored by The Villager newspaper and the Village Independent Democrats club, the Thurs., March 5, forum at Judson Memorial Church, on Washington Square South, at-
tracted nearly 100 neighbors who braved snow and frigid temperatures to hear about potential solutions to save small businesses. Nadine Hoffmann, president of V.I.D., gave opening remarks, welcoming the audience and the panel of six experts. The panel was moderated by Lincoln Anderson, The Villager’s editor in chief. “There have been a couple of other local forums over the past year on similar themes,” Anderson noted at the outset.
“But they haven’t always offered solutions because, well, these are very difficult issues. What sets this forum apart is that it will attempt to offer a solution. There is a bill sitting in the City Council, the Small Business Jobs Survival Act — right now — that advocates on this panel say is the solution.” Anderson added that the reason there were no politicians on the panel was precisely because the S.B.J.S.A. S.B.J.S.A., continued on p. 6
Tammany turtle top is toned down.................page 4 Police save woman in East River....................page 10 Editorial: Time to vote on S.B.J.S.A................page 14 Positively Cornelia Street Cafe.....page 18
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