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VOLUME 31, NUMBER 24
DECEMBER 13 – DECEMBER 26, 2018
Authority pitches anti-flood walls for the ball fields BY SYDNEY PEREIRA
T
he Battery Park City Authority’s resiliency strategy to protect the Battery Park City ball fields and Asphalt Green Community Center could be completed as soon as 2021, according to the Authority.
More than six years after Superstorm Sandy, the Authority officially recently kicked off one part of its four-part resiliency plan at a public forum. The $14 million, 27-month construction project includes flood-protection walls, with FLOODING continued on p. 7
‘Fearless Girl’ is now standing up to Stock Exchange BY COLIN MIXSON
T
he “Fearless Girl” swapped a “Charging Bull” for a bull market on Monday, when the statue was reinstalled opposite the New York Stock Exchange following her removal from Bowling Green last month.
The wildly popular feminist icon was removed from the small Downtown park at the city’s request due to traffic safety concerns, but will continue to promote gender diversity at a new, safer location on a permanent basis, according GIRL continued on p. 8
PHOTO BY MILO HESS
The South St. Seapor t Holiday Block Par t y earlier this month kicked off the holiday season with a DJ, live music, a choir, free hot chocolate and, of course, the illumination of the enormous Christmas tree.
Mayor makes the call: P.S. 150 kids can stay BY COLIN MIXSON
M
ayor de Blasio tipped the scales in a fight to keep young scholars at an awardwinning Tribeca school from merging with an already overcrowded South St. Seaport-area schoolhouse. De Blasio personally intervened on behalf of Lower Manhat-
Cabaret lives at Pyramid....... p. 19
tan’s youth to hash out a deal that allows kids to keep their current seats until a brandnew school is built in 2022, according to a spokesman for the landlord. Hizzoner’s 11th-hour mediation follows a desperate, community-led effort to prevent developer Vornado Realty from evicting the elementary-school students at
P.S. 150 following the end of their lease next year. Local advocates cheered the outcome as a happy ending to a potentially disastrous situation. “We’re really relieved and very grateful,” said Tricia Joyce, the chairwoman of Community Board 1’s EduSCHOOL continued on p. 3
Push for Office of Hate Crimes Prevention ....... p. 7 90th b’day bash for Village activist Diether ..... p. 13
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