Manhattan Express - May 16, 2019

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WINNING! Tenants and Dems set for big victory in Albany Page 6

BRINGING HOME AUSCHWITZ’S HORRORS Museum of Jewish Heritage hosts exhibit on hellish camp Page 8 State Senator Brad Hoylman with tenants at “Tenant Tuesday” this week in Albany, where the spirit was high. 1 M E T R O T E C H • N YC 112 0 1 • © 2 0 19 S C H N E P S M E D I A


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Nat’l History Museum suit is history the state’s highest court, Raudenbush

BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH

said they unfortunately “lack the resources” to do so.

A

New York State Appellate Court ruled in favor of the American Natural History Museum and the city in a lawsuit fi led by park advocates who wanted to stop the museum’s expansion into Theodore Roosevelt Park. The group sued the museum to block it from building the Gilder Center for Science, Education and Innovation, a five-story, 230,000square-foot learning and exhibition space at 79th St. and Columbus Ave. that would occupy a quarter-acre of the park. Community United to Protect Theodore Roosevelt Park argued that the project should have gone through the city’s land-use review process, the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, or ULURP, plus needed approval from the state Legislature since the public green space would be “alienated” from park use by building the center. On April 18, a panel of five justices with the New York State Supreme Court First Appellate Division ruled that the museum did not require ap-

For its part, the museum argued that it is within its legal right to expand because of its 140-year-old lease with the city, which owns the land on which the museum sits. Now, advocates will wait to see if their fears were founded or not. According to Raudenbush, Community United will make sure to hold Borough President Gale Brewer and Councilmember Helen Rosenthal accountable for the multiple promises they made that the expansion would PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Tennis icon Billie Jean King, right, joined Upper West Siders at a demonstration against the American Museum of Natural Histor y’s Gilder Center project in Februar y.

proval under the city’s ULURP process to build the Gilder Center. “It’s very disappointing,” said William Raudenbush, the chairpeson of Community United. The ruling ends a year-long battle between the museum and the community group, which believes that the

project would take away too much of the Upper West Side’s limited green space, cause noise pollution and strain local subway stations and service due to the 1 million people expected to visit the center in its fi rst year. Although the group could appeal the ruling to the Court of Appeals,

not overwhelm the park with foot traffic and worsen residents’ quality of life. Both local politicians have publicly supported the project. “We look forward to them keeping those promises,” Raudenbush said. The Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education and Innovation is expected to open in 2021.

Work is stopped on ‘Billionaires’ Row’ shelter BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH AND LAURA HANRAHAN

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onstruction on a planned homeless shelter at 158 W. 58th St, commonly referred to as “Billionaires’ Row,” has been temporarily blocked. According to the Commercial Observer, on May 8, Appellate Division Justice David Friedman granted an interim stay to the W. 58th St. Coalition, which has fiercely pushed back against the project. The stay would allow the group to appeal Judge Alexander Tisch’s April 29 ruling allowing the city to transform the former Park Savoy Hotel into a shelter. Both supporters and opponents of the homeless shelter have until May 20 to submit their arguments. Meanwhile, the stay prevents any move-ins to the shelter, expected to house 150 men. The shelter’s opponents say it would increase crime and decrease the affluent area’s property values. They also claim that the shelter poses a fi re risk because of the building’s narrow staircase, a lack of sprinklers and too few exits. But the Fire Department has approved the building’s fi re-protection plan. The Department of Buildings has also approved the hotel’s use as Schneps Media

Neighbors rallied against the shelter more than a year ago.

a homeless shelter. The facility would have a 10 p.m. curfew and be under 24-hour surveillance seven days a

week. This is not the fi rst time the hotly disputed homeless shelter has faced a MEX

roadblock. News quietly broke in mid-January 2018 that the former hotel would eventually be turned into a homeless shelter as part of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Turning the Tide plan. According to the New York Post, residents of Billionaires’ Row were blindsided by the announcement. On Dec. 12, Justice Tisch ruled against residents working to stop the project, stating that a “mere distaste for the presence of homeless men in their neighborhood does not constitute legally cognizable harm.” But Appellate Judge Jeffrey Oing gave the residents’ group temporary relief just two weeks later on Dec. 26, causing construction on the shelter to be put on hold. “We remain focused on opening this site as soon as possible, so that we can provide high-quality shelter and employment services to hard-working New Yorkers experiencing homelessness as they get back on their feet,” said a spokesperson for the city’s Department of Homeless Services. “We are confident that the court will recognize our vital need for these additional beds, and look forward to opening our doors at this location.” May 16 - May 29, 2019

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Police Blotter 20th Precinct

Yes! to necklace A man said oui! to taking off with a pricey necklace on April 17. The owner of Oui! boutique said that around 1 p.m. a 60-year-old man stepped into the jewelry store, at 1031 Lexington Ave., at E. 74th St., grabbed a 14-karat gold diamond necklace worth $2,500 and fled.

Bad allergies A couple walked into a pharmacy and stole thousands of dollars worth of over-the-counter allergy medication. On April 28, at 7:30 p.m. a 35-yearold woman and man walked into the Duane Reade at 1889 Broadway, at W. 63rd St. They went to the pharmacy section of the store and grabbed 110 of boxes of Zyrtec 24 HR, six boxes of Xyzal, 12 boxes of Mucinex DM Max Strength and three boxes of Mucinex Maximum Strength tablets. The combined value of the stolen drugs was $2,946.

Purse grab

Flick pick An Upper West Side woman paid more than $3,000 to go to the movies. On April 27, at 6:45 p.m. a 56-yearold woman went to a show at the AMC Lincoln Square 13 movie theater at 1998 Broadway, at W. 68th St. The patron placed her purse under her seat when the movie started. When the lights turned on in theater after the movie had finished, she looked down for her bag. She noticed it was not in the position she had left it in, having been knocked over on its side. She quickly looked inside her bag to discover her wallet missing. The woman told police that there had been $200 in cash in the wallet. She subsequently discovered her credit cards had $2,715 worth of charges on them.

Whiskey ‘tip’ A liquor store owner was swindled out of more than a dozen bottles of booze by the very men that delivered it. The owner of 67 Liquor Shop, at 179 Columbus Ave., met two deliverymen outside of his store as they dropped off several cases of alcohol. The owner started storing the new merchandise in the store’s basement andleft the delivery guys alone with the cases that he could not carry. After storing the first case, the owner went back to his merchandise at the other end of the store and noticed 16 bottles missing, including two bottles of 17-year-old Hibiki Whiskey, four bottles of 21-year-old Hibiki Whiskey and 12 bottles of Brancott wine. Combined the alcohol was worth $1,342.96

This scooter mugger made a quick getaway after stealing a senior’s purse, police said.

police responded to a 911 call of a residential fire inside 1760 First Ave., apartment No. 6. Firefighters arrived at the building, between E. 91st and 92nd Sts., and after putting out the blaze found an 86-year-old woman in the bathroom. E.M.S. medics pronounced her dead at the scene. The fire marshal will determine the cause of the blaze. The investigation remains ongoing. The identity of the deceased is pending proper family notification. According to the New York Post, she was a teacher and longtime neighborhood resident.

Stolen side mirror The latest in a borough-wide pattern of reported thefts of vehicle side mirrors happened on the Upper West Side. On May 3, a local man went to check on his Audi Q5, which he had parked outside of 201 W. 77th St., near Amsterdam Ave. When he got to his vehicle, he noticed that one side mirror, worth $420, was missing and that side of the car was scratched.

Fake credit card A man thought he could shop till he dropped with a fake credit card. On May 6, the 26-year-old entered the Century 21 at 1972 Broadway, near 66th St., at 4:56 p.m. He picked tried to purchase a $30 pair of Sudio earbuds, a $25 Billionaire Club shirt, two $20 Billionaire Club shirts, a $25 Polo shirt, a $60 pair of Hudson jeans, a $270 Fitbit watch, a $190 pair of Maison Margiela men’s sneakers, a $40 Adidas sweater, a $30 True Religion cap, two pairs of $25 Polo brand underwear, a pair of $40 Wahl clippers, a $55 bottle of Versace fragrance and a $25 DKNY belt. But the cashier noticed that the card he was using was fake.

Mobile mugger A thief used a scooter as his getaway vehicle. According to cops, on May 4, at 3:06 p.m., an 86-year-old woman was walking at the northeast corner of E. 64th St. and First Ave. when a man snuck up behind her on a scooter and snatched her purse, knocking her to the ground. The thief scooted away eastbound on E. 64th St. toward York Ave. After the woman complained about pain in her arm, police on the scene had E.M.S. take her to New York Weill Cornell Medical Center. The purse had the woman’s ID card, keys, glasses, Citibank card and $200 cash. The person wanted for questioning is described as male and last seen wearing a yellow helmet, dark pants and a black-and-white jacket.

19th Precinct Fatal fire On Fri., May 10, around 5:32 p.m.,

On April 22, at 6:30 p.m., a 28-yearold woman was walking north on Second Ave. at E. 93rd St. when someone grabbed her shoulder from behind to turn her around. The woman did not recognize the man she was suddenly facing, who then snatched her purse from off her shoulder. Before he could take off, a mini tug of war took place as the woman tried to take her bag back. The roughly 30year-old bag snatcher then punched the woman in the nose and took off with the $15 Old Navy purse, which contained inside of it an Amazon Kindle Fire, a pair of Apple Air Pods, a Kate Spade Wallet, a monthly MetroCard, a debit card and a New Jersey license.

Offsides A middle schooler was caught asking for donations for a fake sports team at The Penrose bar, police said. On April 30, at 5:33 p.m., the manager of the Upper East Side watering hole at 1590 Second Ave., at E. 82nd St., called police after noticing a teen asking for donations for a team called the “Bronx Steelers.” The boy was jotting down names of donors on a sheet covered with the team’s logo. Police arrested the teen and notified his father at 8:48 p.m. A scalpel blade was found on the boy, police said. In an earlier incident, on April 24, the 14-year-old allegedly grabbed a wallet from the bartop and fled after its owner turned his or her back to the bar.

Wants his Levante On April 30, a man parked his Maserati Levante in front of 421 E. 81st St., police said. When he went to check on the car at 9 a.m. the next morning, it was gone. Police from the 19th Precinct canvassed the area but were unsuccessful in finding the stolen $100,000 car.

Alejandra O’ConnellDomenech

The Villager (USPS 578930) ISSN 0042-6202 Copyright © 2019 by Schneps Media is published weekly by Schneps Media, One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201. 52 times a year. Business and Editorial Offices: One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201. Accounting and Circulation Offices: Schneps Media, One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201. Call 718-260-2500 to subscribe. Periodicals postage prices is paid at New York, N.Y. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Villager, One Metrotech North, 10th floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Annual subscription by mail in Manhattan and Brooklyn $29 ($35 elsewhere). Single copy price at office and newsstands is $1. The entire contents of newspaper, including advertising, are copyrighted and no part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher - © 2019 Schneps Media.

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We’ll win! Tenant advocate sees big gains “This is the year we should finally be able to make a huge change,” he said. “This is a sunset year: The rent laws come up for renewal — they have to renew the laws.” his is shaping up to be the Year of the Tenant. The year Again, McKee predicted, “Cuomo is going to try to water the pendulum swings back in a big way in favor of everything down behind closed doors to help his real estate renters versus landlords. The year when rent regulabuddies who give him campaign cash. He’ll say he’s fighttion could make truly historic gains, not just in New York ing for tenant protections, but everything he’s saying is City — but statewide. vague. So says Michael McKee, the treasurer of TenantsPAC. “Cuomo will be behind vacancy decontrol,” McKee McKee has been fighting in the trenches for decades as said, “but not re-regulation.” one of New York’s longest-serving and most prominent A phone call for comment from the Real Estate Board tenant activists. of New York (REBNY) was referred to a new ad-hoc “We’re going to win,” he assured. “The only quescoalition, Taxpayers for an Affordable New York. The tion is how much.” group — which includes “property owners of all sizes With both houses of the state Legislature now conacross the five boroughs” — released a statement saytrolled by Democrats, and with a Democratic govering that, if these rent reforms are approved, it would nor, the stage is set for sweeping changes benefitting only backfire on tenants and advocates. renters. A package of nine bills is waiting to be passed “Responsible rent reforms protect tenants and ownin the current legislative session, which concludes at ers,” the statement said. “If these proposals pass, ownthe end of June. Together, the bills are being dubbed ers of hundreds of thousands of units won’t be able the “Universal Rent Control Platform.” to afford to invest in maintaining and improving their Vacancy deregulation, for one, is expected to be buildings.” scrapped. The coalition noted that 71 percent of rent-regulated “That’s gone,” McKee said. “Everyone expects that buildings are older, pre-1947, and so need more mainto go.” tenance, while the Manhattan tenants are white, plus Currently, unoccupied apartments renting for appear to be doing O.K. for themselves. $2,775 per month can be removed from rent regulaAccording to a 2017 survey by the city’s Departtion. This provision is a major impetus for harassment: ment of Housing Preservation and Development, on Bad-actor landlords attempt to harass tenants out of the Upper West Side, rent-stabilized households are their homes — through lack of heat or hot water, or 57 percent white with an average household income disruptive renovation work inside buildings — so they of $129,791. Upper East Side rent-stabilized housecan eventually boost rents above the threshold, and holds are 80 percent white with an average household PHOTO BY CHUCK DELANEY turn units market rate. income of $113,726. Chelsea/Clinton rent-stabilized Michael McKee, of TenantsPAC, says this is households are 47 percent white with an average houseThe “End Vacancy Decontrol” bill is sponsored by the year to make big strides on rent regula- hold income of $114,677. Meanwhile, Greenwich VilSenate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and tion, after decades that have seen it progres- lage/Financial District rent-stabilized households are Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal. sively whittled away. In another change that would rock the real-estate 79 percent white with an average household income scene, that same bill would also “re-regulate” apartof $209,912. ments that have been deregulated that currently rent For his part, state Senator Brad Hoylman is raring to Another bill would eliminate the vacancy bonus, for under $5,000 in New York City and $3,500 in approve the rent-regulation bills. His district stretches under which landlords can jack up the rent by 20 per- from the Upper West Side, through Midtown, Hell’s Nassau, Westchester and Rockland counties. McKee cent every time a new tenant takes over an apartment. Kitchen, Chelsea and the Village to Stuyvesant Town, and his fellow tenant advocates want this to apply to Another measure would end landlords’ ability to add the East Village and the Lower East Side. all apartments deregulated since vacancy control first rent hikes based on necessary major capital improvewent into effect — since 1994 in the city, 1997 in the “As a senator who represents tenants living in more ments, or M.C.I.’s, on buildings. Still another would than 50,000 rent-regulated apartments, I can assure suburbs. keep “preferential rent” for the life of one’s tenancy; in you that passing rent-law reform is my top priority in Under rent regulation, landlords would then only be other words, if a landlord is having difficulty filling a these remaining two months of the legislative session,” able to charge annual rent increases based on the rates regulated apartment and gives you a rent below what he he said. “This package of rent-law reform bills will fiset by the local Rent Guidelines Board. can legally charge, he can’t later raise the rent on you. “All these people who moved into these apartments nally correct the decades of injustice served to tenants “I think Cuomo’s going to try to water these down at the hands of the landlord lobby and their sycophants that were deregulated, they would be protected from behind closed doors,” McKee predicted, “but we’re in Albany.” arbitrary rent increases and arbitrary eviction,” the vetwarning our friends in the Legislature to make sure eran tenant organizer said. Assemblymember Harvey Epstein — whose district As for how many apartments could potentially be that doesn’t happen. We know we’re going to win, but covers the Lower East Side, East Village, Stuyvesant re-regulated, McKee said, “Three hundred thousand is we’re going to try to win big.” Town and up to the United Nations — also foresees big probably the low end.” The pro-landlord Republicans are finally out of the gains on rent laws. Landlords voluntarily register apartments they repicture, according to McKee. “I think it’s going to be a good year for tenants,” he move from regulation, but it is not required. So, while “The Republicans are now literally irrelevant in both said. “The question is how much can we improve the the official number of deregulated units is around houses,” he scoffed. lives of tenants around the state.” 155,000, it’s likely much higher according to McKee. As for whether all Democrats would be onboard, he As for re-regulating apartments, Epstein said the However, the current Assembly version of the bill said, “There are Democrats and there are Democrats, reason the Assembly bill — as opposed to what advowould only re-regulate apartments going back to and that’s what we’re working on.” cates want — would only go back only six years and 2013. Of course, Big Real Estate will utilize everything in not to 1994, is because that’s what New York State Also part of the package, a separate bill, “Expand its arsenal to block the bills or dilute them. contracts law allows. the Emergency Tenant Protection Act,” would allow “They’re using their typical tactics of stealth and “I think it’s legal,” he said or re-regulation. rent regulation throughout New York State. Currently, cash,” McKee said. Cuomo supports ending vacancy decontrol, Epstein only New York City and three surrounding counties He said tenant advocates hope a negotiated bill will said. But whether the governor backs re-regulating can opt into the program. be done by late May or early June instead of at the end units is an issue, and also how far back retroactively he McKee said there is interest in many localities for of the legislative session when anything can happen. would support doing that, he added. adding rent regulation. He mentioned Rochester, Buf“Look what happened to the pied-a-terre tax,” he For his part, McKee, of TenantsPAC, will be doing falo, Syracuse, Binghamton, Newburgh, Schenectady, noted. “It was a done deal. It was in the budget — and his utmost to make sure the rent package passes. He’ll Albany, New Paltz, Hudson, “even in Akron, a little all of a sudden, the pied-a-terre tax was out of the bud- be posted in the state capital listening, lobbying — and county near Erie.” get. We expect the landlords will [try to do] the same not budging. “This has never happened in my 49 years of organizthing on rent.” “I’m going to be here every session day until the ing,” he marveled. “It’s very exciting.” end,” he vowed. Nevertheless, the tenant activist remains optimistic.

BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

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Exhibit brings home Auschwitz’s horrors BY GABE HERMAN

A

comprehensive exhibit about the Auschwitz concentration camp has opened at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Battery Park. “Auschwitz. Not long ago. Not far away” is produced in partnership with Musealia, an international exhibition firm, and the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Poland. Featuring more than 700 original objects and 400 photographs, the exhibit spans three floors of the museum. It opened on May 8, the anniversary of VE Day, 1945, when the Allies celebrated Nazi Germany’s surrender in World War II. The artifacts on display are chilling, and include personal items of prisoners and Nazi objects, as well. There are possessions of concentration-camp prisoners, like shoes, buttons and suitcases. There are identification tags and prisoner uniforms. There is a Hitler Youth bugle, an SS belt buckle and dagger, and Heinrich Himmler’s personal SS helmet that he wore. And there are materials that were used for medical experiments on prisoners, such as an operation table, test tubes and other medical instruments. Outside the museum, located at 36 Battery Place, a German World War II-era freight car has also been installed. Also in the exhibit are concrete posts, isolators and barbed wire that were once part of Auschwitz’s perimeter. The devastating objects in the exhibit are too numerous to name. But they each bring to life some of the profound horrors of the concentration camp, where 1 million Jews were murdered, along with tens of thousands of others from groups the Nazis viewed as “inferior” or “undesirable.” Along with the hundreds of objects and photos, there are video testimonials of survivors throughout the exhibit. There are models that show the layout of Auschwitz, which was actually a complex of three main camps and nearly 50 sub-camps. The exhibit is very informative, not only about Auschwitz itself but the historical context of the Nazi rise to power and the history of modern anti-Semitism. Other persecuted groups are also acknowledged, including the Roma and Afro-Germans. “We learn from this exhibition that we cannot be bystanders, it is our sacred duty to educate,” said Bruce Ratner, chairperson of the board of the Museum of Jewish Heritage, at a press conference a week before the exhibit’s opening. “We need to redouble our efforts to educate, espe-

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May 16 - May 29, 2019

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

An identification tag from Auschwitz from 1942. FKL indicates “female concentration camp.” The red triangle indicates a political prisoner, and SL stands for Slovakia.

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

Concrete posts, with porcelain electrical “isolators” and barbed wire that were used on Auschwitz’s perimeter. The camp’s fence was electrified to keep prisoners from escaping.

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

A single red women’s dress shoe from Auschwitz. MEX

cially young people.” A common theme at the press conference was that the hatred on display in the exhibit is not a thing of the past. “We are fighting anti-Semitism every day,” said Ronald Lauder, founder and chairperson of the AuschwitzBirkenau Foundation Committee and president of the World Jewish Congress. “We find out in country after country that young people don’t know about the Holocaust.” Lauder noted that there are a lot of populist ideologies with anti-Semitic elements spreading in present-day Europe. “It’s something we have to fight,” he said. “The only way to beat antiSemitism is through education — teaching children about the horrors of Auschwitz.” Anti-Semitism is an increasing problem in New York City, as well. The New York Police Department announced in early May that hate crimes were up 67 percent in the first quarter of 2019, including an 82 percent increase in anti-Semitic hate crimes. More than 2 million people visit Auschwitz every year, noted Pawel Sawicki, spokesperson for the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. But he said this exhibit in Lower Manhattan can give those who can’t visit the actual site an experience, and prompt them to ask, “What can I do today?” Timed tickets to the exhibit, along with more information, are available at Auschwitz.nyc. The exhibit — which runs through Jan. 3, 2020 — is free for Holocaust survivors, active members of the military and first responders, and New York City public school students and educators. Schneps Media


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Women of Wall St. fetes leaders, urges parity BY SCHNEPS MEDIA

O

n May 7, Schneps Media — the parent company of The Villager, Chelsea Now, Downtown Express and Manhattan Express — honored 26 passionate, ambitious and brilliant women for their influence in banking and fi nance at the Women of Wall Street Awards. It was the awards’ inaugural event. Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams (a founding member of the “Men Who Get It� club) gave remarks. The speakers panel included Cheryl Casone, host of FBN:am on Fox Business Network; Elizabeth St.-Onge, partner at Oliver Wyman, and more, the W.O.W. Awards honorees were recognized for their successes but also their empowerment of the next generation of female financial leaders. The event raised $1,200 for the nonprofit Girls Who Invest, founded by W.O.W. honoree Seema Hingorani. Girls Who Invest is a nonprofit organization founded in April 2015 dedicated to inspiring and empowering young women to pursue invest-

PHOTO BY CORAZON AGUIRRE

Honoree Samantha Saperstein of JPMorgan Chase’s Women on the Move initiative, center, with Schneps Media Publisher Victoria Schneps-Yunis, left, and emcee Cher yl Casone at the Women of Wall Street Awards. Sapserstein won this year’s Trailblazer Award.

ment careers in the asset-management industry — a field challenged by a lack of diversity. The event addressed the issue of gender parity in the banking and finance industry. With many firms making significant investments in programs or benefits for women but not seeing results, there’s a clear need for the culture to change. Participants highlighted the day-today culture, unconscious biases and micro-aggressions that are much harder to address but are required in order to move the needle. Schneps Media is thankful to the event’s generous sponsors for helping bring this important topic to the forefront while championing the women who dedicate themselves to supporting, empowering and promoting more women in the industry. A special thanks to Citigroup, MHR Fund, JPMorgan Chase, Investors Bank and Flushing Bank. If you would like to nominate a deserving woman for the 2020 Women of Wall Street Awards please visit www.schnepsevents.com/ wows2020 .

N Y C I D E N T I F I C AT I O N C A R D

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The City Council is coming for our closets. Choice matters, and the City Council has no right telling us what we can or cannot wear. Today, they’re trying to ban fur sales, tomorrow, it could be leather, silk or wool. Text NOFURBAN to 345345 to tell the City Council to let YOU decide what you want to wear.

Enough Already. STOP THE FUR BAN.

furnyc.org/get-involved Paid for by Fur Information Council of America Schneps Media

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This photo of the original Washington Square Arch was on The Villager’s May 4, 1939, front page with caption: “The opening of the New York World’s Fair, which commemorates the name and inauguration of Washington, makes timely the reproduction of a rare print of the temporary arch of wood, designed by Stanford White, and erected in 1889 in observance of the centenary of the first inauguration. It stood...a few feet north of Waverly Place... Through popular sentiment and public subscription, it was replaced three years later by the present arch.”

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VICTORIA SCHNEPS-YUNIS JOSHUA SCHNEPS LINCOLN ANDERSON GABE HERMAN MICHELE HERMAN BOB KRASNER TEQUILA MINSKY MARY REINHOLZ PAUL SCHINDLER JOHN NAPOLI MARCOS RAMOS CLIFFORD LUSTER (718) 260-2504 CLUSTER@CNGLOCAL.COM MARVIN ROCK GAYLE GREENBURG JIM STEELE JULIO TUMBACO ELIZABETH POLLY

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Op-Ed

Letters to the Editor

I’m all for a 14th St. bus-freight corridor BY CHRIS SAUER

I

live on 15th St., and I have to say that I’m frustrated and a bit embarrassed by the uproar that I’m seeing from some of my neighbors over the idea of a 14th St. devoted to moving buses and freight. I write because I want to make clear that not everyone in the neighborhood is unhappy with the mayor’s announcement. The mayor says he wants to try to get people moving. Is that really objectionable? Don’t get me wrong, I understand the fear that some of these folks are expressing. I don’t want to experience any more traffic than I already do. I’m also sure most New Yorkers feel the same, no matter where they live. Traffic sucks, but the problem is cars, not better infrastructure for buses. There’s nothing “drastic” about efficiently using our public space. The real threat to our neigborhoods from the L-train upheaval is an increased number of single-occupancy vehicles roaming the streets as more New Yorkers take taxis, Ubers and Lyfts to their destinations. Reliable, frequent and quick-moving bus service will reduce the number of vehicles on our streets, making them safer, quieter, less polluted — more of a neighborhood and less of a highway. I want fewer cars on our streets not more. To my eyes, the for-hire vehicle companies were out in force on the first weekend of the L-train slowdown, driving — apparently — thousands of more people into Manhattan by car. Those for-hire vehicles ended up on my block, and the blocks of my neighbors, in huge numbers. I’m sure I’m not the only one who noticed a marked uptick in traffic. New York City is increasingly stratifying along economic lines and that is reflected in the failure of our public transportation system. We’ve allowed our subways and buses to fail, and those with enough expendable income have been able to cushion the blow by resorting to for-hire vehicles. We need to reverse that dynamic, and that requires dramatic improvements to public transit. In the fairest big city in America, you shouldn’t have to be rich to have a reliable way to get around. The 14th St. bus and freight corridor is a revolution in favor of working New Yorkers who take buses. This is why we should support the plan for 14th St.: It will make our lives easier going forward, and it marks a serious attempt by the city to keep surface-level transit working, free from the constant competition of double-parkers “just grabbing a cup of coffee.” Bus priority goes a long way toward solving the immediate crisis of the L-train slowdown, as well as the longer-term crisis of second-rate transit that repels riders and brings unnecessary traffic into our neighborhoods. Most people know that being progressive in this situation means taking a stand for improving public transportation, for the duration of the slowdown and beyond.

We’ve allowed our subways and buses to fail

Schneps Media

Bus plan is the pits To The Editor: Re “Loony to cut Abingdon bus loop, seniors protest” (news article, May 9): At the Community Board 2 meeting on May 2 held at N.Y.U.’s Meyer Hall, about as far from 14th St. as one could be (by contrast City Council Speaker Corey Johnson PHOTO BY held his hearing on ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH the same subject at M14 crosstown buses on 14th St. The New School, adjacent to 14th St.) there were strong and vocal responses from the community, which Lincoln Anderson described so eloquently for To The Editor: The Villager. Re “Loony to cut AbingThe concerns held by the Union Square Coalition, don bus loop, seniors protest” whom I represented, centered (news article, May 9): I have been saying this for around meeting the needs of the riders, as opposed to the years: The Department of New York City Transit Author- Transportation and New York ity, which dwelt more on bus City Transit Authority are not speeds rather than the comfort senior-friendly. They always marginalize those with mobiland convenience of its riders. If buses arrived on reliable ity problems. Sadly, neither is two-minute headways, there Transportation Alternatives, would be no need for Select which has morphed into a biBus Service, with its free rear cycle advocacy group. They entries, since not that many all worship speed over need. The thing is that transporting people would be waiting. The bus stops removed at people is not only about comFifth Ave. and Union Square muters. It’s about getting to should be immediately re- doctors appointments, parks, turned. The Fifth Ave. stop nursery school, visiting family, allows a transfer to the Fifth grocery shopping, etc. Funny they should mention Ave. bus Downtown to N.Y.U. and Washington Square and that ridership has dropped in Uptown to the spine of Man- the past 10 years. Remember hattan. Union Square not only what happened in 2010? They connects with three subway cut bus service to our area and lines but with the Greenmar- changed routes drastically. ket, which serves up to 20,000 Waits became longer, with nopeople four times a week, and where to sit. Here’s a thought: local stops, with Mt. Sinai Hospital. By eliminating bus stops, with seating, during non-rush the Transit Authority forces hours. Keep providing necesriders to walk further to their sary service to non-commuters destinations, thus increasing who need surface transport. — not decreasing — trip time, plus making the trip less con- Lora Tenenbaum venient and comfortable, especially discouraging seniors and others who find walking difficult. I hope the Transit Authority will revise its plans. To The Editor: Re “Loony to cut AbingBarry Benepe don bus loop, seniors protest” (news article, May 9):

Agencies ignore seniors

Getting set to sue

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The removal of the Fifth Ave. and 14th St. bus stop going west is a disaster for those of us who use that 14th St. corridor daily. To have no stop between Sixth Ave. and Union Square is a hardship for seniors and many other others. Now we hear that the M.T.A. plans to eliminate the M14A bus stops on Hudson St. I’m all in for suing the city. It seems they want to get rid of senior citizens and the middle class. Ellen Datlow

Freedom of the press To The Editor: Re “Jaywalking ticket for doing my job” (op-ed, Clayton Patterson, May 9): You don’t need permission to exercise your constitutional rights. Freedom of the press means you can photograph anything in public without some pig interfering. Never stop resisting anti-Amerikan government repression. Nick Zedd E-mail letters, maximum 250 words, to news@thevillager.com or fax to 212-2292790 or mail to The Villager, Letters to the Editor, 1 MetroTech North, 10th floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201. Please include phone number for confirmation. The Villager reserves the right to edit letters for space, grammar, clarity and libel. Anonymous letters will not be published.

May 16, 2019

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May 16, 2019

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Opinion

Don’t rubber stamp our garden! BY EMILY HELLSTROM

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went to my daughter’s closet last Thursday morning to dig through her art bin. I was looking for a rubber stamp. As an Elizabeth St. Garden volunteer and supporter, I decided to bring it to City Hall to hold in my hand while giving testimony in favor of saving Elizabeth St. Garden. You see, we had been told, “Don’t bother showing up at the City Council hearing. They will never vote against the local councilperson out of deference. They just use the rubber stamp.” This rubber stamp is a symbol of what is wrong with the process. How else to explain how this got so far? When land that has been public since the 1800s is sold to a developer for a dollar, decided during a secret backroom deal with former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver without so much as a courtesy call to Community Board 2…rubber stamp. After the residents held hearing after hearing where hundreds of people turned out to show their support for the garden…rubber stamp. When thousands of letters have been written in support of this stunning outdoor community center that many call the soul of our historic Little Italy neighborhood…rubber stamp. The borough president came to our Harvest Festival, saw the diversity of the community gathered together and declared that this space should never be destroyed, but

PHOTO BY THE VILLAGER

Elizabeth St. Garden activists Emily Hellstrom, left, and Jeannine Kiely with a banner at hearing on funding for the city-sponsored housing project slated for the garden.

then out came…rubber stamp. So our grassroots coalition went further. We realized how deep this housing crisis was and pleaded with our

elected officials to help us find an alternative, so that green space and housing would not be pitted against each other, tearing our community apart. And they did! The leaders of our community board found a piece of land that could house up to five times as many seniors and they passed a resolution to allow that swap. And what do we get… rubber stamp. Did our councilmember ever even bother to visit the Elizabeth St. Garden to see why this community has never given up? Sit down with us work on a solution? Did she forge coalitions, and find a win-win compromise, actually do the work of a leader, and harness the boundless energy of garden supporters? She could save the garden and, in return, demand that we unite our efforts in the charge for making more affordable housing. But no, she did not. She is simply relying on this rubber stamp. But I have faith that the City Council knows better. That they will put an end to this cynical process, that robs people of their voice. At the Council hearing earlier this month, joined by well more than 100 garden volunteers and supporters, I asked the councilmembers to vote against the destruction of our precious green space and put away this dreaded rubber stamp. I said that, in doing so, they would have a community ready to get to work. Put away the rubber stamp, because we are ready to participate! Hellstrom is a board member, Friends of Elizabeth St. Garden

Banning fur would be bad for New York BY K AREN GIBERSON

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ban on any fur products is unacceptable. The bill, which was just introduced in late March, is being inexplicably fast-tracked to the hearing stage, which was scheduled for May 15. This does not allow our industry ample time to prepare or accurately study the implications of this decision. We are baffled why there is a sudden rush to pass this legislation. If government can pick and choose to eliminate a specific material, then what’s to stop politicians from telling us what else we can’t wear, eat and create moving forward? As the fashion capital of the world, we must work with textiles and fabrics that our customers are demanding today. Our industry has embraced a variety of materials, including vegan leathers, faux furs and other options that are being developed every day. That said, calf hair, shearling and fur still play a significant and sustainable role in our designs – from shoes, handbags, gloves and hats, to trim and cuffs on coats. Fur is already a heavily regulated industry, with rules covering everything from farming and trapping standards to ethics to labeling. The animal byproducts are used in a variety of other products, from the beauty industry to Schneps Media

York City, the owner has two choices: close up the business and fire all employees or lay off workers and rent space in New Jersey, Yonkers or Nassau County to ship the product. Either way, once again New York City loses muchneeded manufacturing jobs — but this time it’s by its own direct action. Losing valuable blue-collar jobs is not the only unintended consequence of this legislation. Councilmembers have championed environmental issues. In this case, they fail to recognize the negative environmental impacts of synthetic materials. Most fake furs are petroleum-based and are not biodegrade. One faux-fur coat is the equivalent of thousands of plastic straws. My biggest concern, however, is that

compost and fertilizers. We encourage everyone to learn more about the process. If you don’t like these materials, you don’t need to use them, to manufacture with them or buy them as a consumer. New York City is the hub of retail, wholesale, trade shows and commerce for many fashion accessory companies. The ban preventing any sale of these products would cut off one of designers’ largest markets, negatively impacting their livelihoods and those of the suppliers and retail shops they work with. In all, a recent economic study commissioned by the International Fur Federation Americas found the ban would result in $850 million in lost taxable business revenue and cost New York City 7,500 jobs in the first year alone. According to a survey we conducted this month of accessory and outerwear companies in Manhattan’s Garment District, more than 90 of the factories there use these materials, making items such as gloves, handbags and outerwear. One of them, Cockpit USA, makes shearling coats for the United States military. These are specialized experts. If the “fur ban” passes, some of them would need to close their businesses, while others would face significant layoffs. Let’s be realistic: If the law passes and a manufacturer can’t sell in New

a fur ban would be just the start. Animal-rights activists have made no secret of the fact that their eventual goal is to ban the use of all animal products. If the City Council succeeds in banning fur today, they will next take aim at leather, feathers, wool and silk. To wear fur, like any consumer product, is a choice. It’s one New Yorkers have been making for hundreds of years and fur is a product that remains in high demand today. It’s not the job of City Council members to legislate away livelihoods simply because fur is a choice some of them wouldn’t make for themselves. Giberson is president of the Accessories Council, a trade group for accessory, eyewear and footwear brands.

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Village E.D. gets a community checkup level of emergency care. One local resident said she ith Lenox Health Greenwich had both good and bad things Health having been open for to say based on her experience five years now, the Commu- there. She said the facility nity Board 2 Social Services Commit- saved her life, and the place tee held a forum to get a better sense of was clean and the staff were how the emergency department is do- respectful and kind. But she said she had experienced a ing and engaging with the community. The healthcare facility is at 30 Sev- wait of more than an hour. Hellinger said the averenth Ave., between W. 12th and 13th Sts., right across the avenue from the age wait time for a person former site of St. Vincent’s Hospital, to get to a room after registering is four minutes, which closed in 2010. The meeting was held on April 29 and then another eight and led by Susanna Aaron, the com- minutes to see a physician. He said it could mittee’s chairperson. Local residents expressed varying be faster for a pressing views, some claiming good experiences issue or longer if the with Lenox Health Greenwich Vil- facility is very busy. PHOTO BY “We try to be as GABE HERMAN lage, its doctors and staff, while others efficient as possible,” Lenox Health Greenwich Vilvoiced strong dissatisfaction. lage’s freestanding emergenc y depar tment — Negative reviews were often related he said. Some residents meaning it is not physically attached to a hospital with beds — to long wait times, including for when is the first one in Manhattan and just the second in the entire cit y. patients needed ambulances to transfer said it took too long them to a full-service hospital, since for an ambulance Hellinger said people are tested four out of five. L.H.G.V. doesn’t handle trauma cases, to transport them from L.H.G.V. to a Hellinger said the issues over rates and big bills from services that patients higher-level-care facility. One person when they arrive to check their health, said it sometimes took as long as 14 and that people are billed based on and billing were tough to address and weren’t told were optional. L.H.G.V. is Manhattan’s first stand- hours, though ambulances usually ap- their ability to pay. He said L.H.G.V. not unique to L.H.G.V., and he cited has a financial-assistance program and larger challenges within the healthcare alone emergency department, or E.D. pear to be sitting outside. Hellinger and other L.H.G.V. offi- a charity program for writing off some system. But on other issues raised at It was pointed out at the meeting that the meeting, he said, “We’re certainly the facility, unlike St. Vincent’s, is not cials were not able to speak to specific bills. But that response didn’t satisfy sever- going to take all of this feedback. My a trauma center, and that while it does examples cited at the meeting. But a offer urgent-care sevices, it doesn’t patient advocate said the facility has a al locals, who felt that charges weren’t team here and I will go back and we’re handle many of the most dire cases that command center that works to dispatch explained beforehand and people going to look at all the wait times you ambulances as efficiently as possible to weren’t always told that services like discussed.” need an emergency department. ambulances and tests were optional. Alex Hellinger, executive director of various facilities. Tom Connor, a member of C.B. 2, Another resident said he called 911 Anna Allen, co-founder and execu- said he didn’t think people fully unL.H.G.V., said they treat 90 percent of patients who come in, while another 8 because he wasn’t sure if he needed tive director of Say Ah!, a nonprofit derstood what an upsetting experience percent are stabilized and then trans- medical attention, and ended up be- specializing in teaching healthcare lit- it can be to be transported by ambuported to another facility, such as a full- ing taken by ambulance to L.H.G.V. eracy, said there are big gaps in what lance. service hospital, that can provide the He wound up having many tests done people know about using the healthcare “We have to make all of these serappr opr i ate there, which all resulted in big charg- system and its financial aspects. vices more humane,” he said. es despite his actually being in good “We need to do a better job, the inThe senior activist recalled a previhealth. surers, the healthcare system and foous meeting with L.H.G.V. where many rums like this, of educating people on of the same complaints were raised, what we’re responsible for financially, met by similar responses that the probwhat we’re not, and that you can say no lems were a surprise to hear about and to care,” she explained. Positive experiences were also shared people should get in touch about such at the meeting, with some citing friend- issues. “There’s something wrong there,” he ly and thorough care, plus nice facilities said. “Why do you think the commuthat are not overcrowded and chaotic like others in Manhattan. Other attend- nity is still complaining about the same ees, however, said there should be more things that they complained about from beds. By definition, though, a stand- Day One?” He asked for a way for people to easalone E.D. does not have hospital beds, other than a couple for very short-term ily share experiences, good and bad, perhaps in smaller meetings. recovery from procedures. “I don’t want to come to another The L.H.G.V. patient advocate said he was sorry to hear reports about bad meeting in three years and the same experiences with services and wait questions are going to come up,” Contimes, but that over all the facility had nor stated. “And you’re again going to PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN The stand-alone E.D. has ambulances attached to it that can trans- received very high scores. He said 75 say, ‘I didn’t know that was happening, por t patients to a full-ser vice hospital for higher-level care if percent of patients gave a rating of five here’s my card.’ Well, we can’t buy that out of five, and another 20 percent gave anymore.” needed.

BY GABE HERMAN

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Schneps Media is proud to present our eighth annual Stars Under 40 Awards, honoring 28 young professionals under the age of 40 who exemplify outstanding leadership skills, not only in their chosen fields, but also in their communities. Honorees will be celebrated at an awards dinner on Thursday, May 16, at Sirico’s Caterers in Dyker Heights. Procedes from the evening’s raffle will be raised for Humble Heroes–Bini Fund, a group of volunteers who, dis-

RISING STAR

guised as the most infamous superheroes of our time, visit local hospitals and grief centers, bringing hope and joy to kids fighting life’s injustices. The event would not be possible without the support of our wonderful

RISING STAR

sponsors. A huge thank you to Spectrum/Charter, Artisans Of Medicine, JP Morgan Chase, Flushing Bank, Ben Bay Realty, CandyMingles, and New Beginnings Cleaners. Stars Under 40 Awards and Net-

ENTREPRENEUR OF THE YEAR

working Event at Sirico’s Caterers (8023 13th Ave. between 80th and 81st streets in Dyker Heights) on May 16 from 6 to 9 p.m. For more information and tickets, visit www.schnepsmedia.com/stars2019

ROOKIE OF THE YEAR

HEALTH HERO

Dr. Ramsey Joudeh, Artisans of Medicine.

Jonathan Bennett, Brooklyn East Collegeiate Charter School.

DYNAMIC DUO - EDUCATION

Gabriella Castellano, J.D. Candidate 2020.

Abdul Elenani, Cocoa Grinder franchise.

DYNAMIC DUO - ENTREPRENEUR

Jennifer Champagne, Champagne’s Sweets.

DYNAMIC DUO - COMMUNITY OUTREACH

Chanel Adams, The SlimHeart Campaign.

Marguerite Cavalcante and Lisa Connors, Play & Say Pediatric Therapy Services.

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May 16, 2019

Julian Bannister and Yannick JulesBannister, New Beginning Cleaners. TVG

Valerie and Ken Restrepo, Leathernecks Tattoo.

Angela Buccinni, The Muse Brooklyn. Schneps Media


Schneps Media celebrates young leaders

DMV Service Centers LLC / JSA Tags Inc.

Claudia Forero, CandyMingles.

John Garcia, Khols.

Laura A. Hirschman, Compass.

Spectrum / Charter Communications.

Amanda R. Maurer, JP Morgan Chase.

Natoya McGhie, Kings County Supreme Court.

Frank Muraca, Equity Services, Inc.

Tricia Nelson, Earthly Wonders Beauty.

Maria Nitti, Isabella’s Creations.

Hartini Pandis, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty.

George Pristouris, Parkway Restaurant

Gabrielle Spinelli, St. Francis College.

Hadiatou Wann, author, speaker, creator.

Nick Campanile, PC Richard & Son.

Milton Lopera,

Schneps Media

Lynne “Kitty” Cutrone,

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Gottfried sees hope for single-payer care BY GABE HERMAN

A

ssemblymember Richard Gottfried presented details of his single-payer healthcare bill to the Community Board 6 Health and Education Committee in late April. Gottfried — who chairs the Assembly’s Committee on Health — has sponsored the New York Health Act in the state Assembly since 1992. There now seems to be growing momentum among Democrats, including on the national level, for a single-payer system, which has been endorsed by many of the Democratic presidential nominees. The bill would give universal health coverage to all New Yorkers. It would eliminate premiums, deductibles, out-of-pocket costs, co-pays, co-insurance and out-of-network charges. Progressive taxes, including payroll and non-payroll, would help pay for the new health system. Gottfried said at the meeting that, over all, $11 billion would be saved under the new healthcare system. While $44 billion more would be spent to provide coverage to everyone, there would be $55 billion in savings, including $20 billion from administrative costs and savings from lower drug prices and reimbursements to providers, according to the plan. Gottfried stressed the urgent need for reforms in the healthcare system. He said that medical costs are the top reason for personal bankruptcies in New York. He noted that his own parents had their lifetime savings wiped out from medical costs from needed home care. In the current system, often a family member has to give up a career to stay home and care for a sick relative, he said.

A ssemblymember Richard Gottfried.

Gottfried also cited a study that found 60 percent of American households could not afford a sudden expense of $1,000, and he noted that the average family deductible for health insurance is $3,200. “I think this is something that we should all be pretty angry about,” Gottfried said of the current healthcare system. Premiums and deductibles are both rising much faster than wages, Gottfried said, and employers are shifting more of the cost of healthcare to their workers through higher deductibles, which are out-ofpocket expenses. Insurance plans have restricted networks and many insurance companies will unfairly deny coverage for a

service, and assume the customer will get frustrated and eventually go away, Gottfried said. He added that insurers benefit when sick patients go to another company. “Insurance companies really don’t like having customers who use healthcare,” he said. “Think about that the next time you hear that insurance companies compete. They compete by getting people who need their coverage walking away and going to the other company.” New York expends tens of millions of dollars on things that don’t make people healthier, Gottfried said, including bureaucracy, administrative costs, and not having bargaining clout with drug companies on prices. When questions were taken from community board members and the audience, Gottfried was asked if people could buy extra insurance on top of the new plan. Gottfried said that would be allowed if the insurance found something that his bill doesn’t cover. Another person asked about preventing people moving here from other states for the healthcare benefits. Gottfried said New York has expanded its Medicaid eligibility and other health coverage, but that people didn’t migrate here for programs like Medicaid or Child Health Plus, so there was no evidence that would be such a problem. Gottfried’s bill has passed the state Assembly the past four years, but never came to a vote in the Republican-led state Senate. Gottfried told this paper after the meeting that, now with a new Democratic state Senate, he is optimistic the measure can be passed. However, a vote on the bill reportedly won’t come up in the state Senate before 2020, and the issue continues to be debated.

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There are lot of ways to describe AFib. Make sure you know what to listen for. Patients with atrial fibrillation (AFib) have a 5 times greater risk of stroke. We have guidelines and tools that may help you diagnose faster and more easily support your patients.

For more on how to expand your AFib approach visit Heart.org/AfibTools Made possible with funding from Š 2019 American Heart Association, Inc. a 501c(3) not-for-profit. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited.

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PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY

Will Kaufman, a musician and professor, sang Woody Guthrie songs that the famed folkie penned about his landlord Fred C. Trump. There was no music attached to Guthrie’s lyric s, so Kaufman added his own.

Woody Guthrie and the Fred Trump blues BY TEQUIL A MINSK Y

V

illagers and folk-music enthusiasts recently packed the beautiful Church of St. John’s in the Village for a “live documentary” on the life of Woody Guthrie, with a special twist: the singer’s battles with his landlord Fred C. Trump, father of President Donald Trump. Guthrie and his family moved into the Beach Haven apartment complex near Coney Island in December 1950. While conducting research, Will Kaufman discovered writings by Guthrie about his landlord, the senior Trump. Judy Bell, custodian of Guthrie’s archives, also found in files lyrics or song fragments that Guthrie wrote about his landlord. The April 30 event featured songs and spoken word. With no associated music found, Kaufman added his own to the multiverse lyrics by Guthrie, in order to perform “Mister Trump Made a Tramp Out of Me.” Mister Trump has made a tramp out of me; Paid him alla my bonds and savin’s, To move into his Beach Haven; Yes, Trump has made a tramp out of me. “Old Man Trump, Beach Haven Ain’t My Home” is another one of the unearthed Guthrie songs. Kauf-

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May 16, 2019

PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY

Alongside a slide show of archival images of the life of Woody Guthrie, left, images of Fred Trump, right, and Dust Bowl photographs, Will Kaufman presented a songand-spoken word “live documentar y” of Guthrie’s life, highlighting Guthrie’s battles against Fred Trump, his Brooklyn landlord.

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man spoke about how riled the folk-music icon was at the apartment complex’s segregated policies, and also how Fred Trump was able to “work the system,” profiteering when building his public housing the complex. Kaufman, a musician and academic, has written three books on Guthrie (“Mapping Woody Guthrie,” “Woody Guthrie’s Modern World Blues” and “Singing for Peace”). His nearly two-hour presentation, embellished by a slide show of archival photos of Guthrie’s life, included many images of landlord Trump, as well as of the Oklahoma Dust Bowl, where Guthrie was raised. When it comes to folk music, Woody Guthrie is as iconic as it gets. His life and his political, folk and children’s songs have inspired decades of folk singers. Focusing on the life and music of Guthrie seems apt for a fundraiser for the second edition of the upcoming fall local folk-music festival, The Village Trip, founded by Liz Thompson. In addition to Washington Square Park, the festival — which will run Sept. 26 to 29 — will also feature events at six other Greenwich Village venues. Schneps Media


A taste of World’s Fare to whet the appetite BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

T

he smells of cheesecake nachos, lasagna dim sum and woody Filipino coffee hit WeWork users in waves as they came in and out of the office at 222 Broadway last Thursday. The co-working space had transformed into a bite-sized World’s Fare, the massive food and beer festival set to take place at Citi Field on May 18 and 19 that will feature cuisine from 100 different cultures provided by more than 100 vendors. Last week’s event was a special tasting event for the press. Like its namesake, the World’s Fair, this Fare seeks to highlight innovation. Counter space at the Downtown WeWork was filled with cake stand after cake stand with new takes on old classics, like mini cheesecakes made from ube, a purple yam native to the Philippines, and French pastry puffs with Asian-inspired flavors, like black sesame, hojicha and strawberry jasmin, almost too pretty to eat. Tables were filled with rows of paper food boats carrying unique flavor fusions, like Southern pulled pork slathered in spicy Korean barbeque sauce. All of the food present featured a flavor, texture or a look atypical even for the always-changing New York City food scene. And the stories behind the restaurants and pop-ups responsible for these creations are just as delicious as the food. Besides, food is also a means for learning about different cultures and people. Among the vendors on hand was Black 6 Coffee Trading Co., which started two years ago as a veteran-led nonprofit called the Black 6 project that provided disaster relief and charity aid around the world. In 2018, Black 6 traveled to the northern part of the Philippines to respond to a landslide. While there, the group saw a coffee farm and learned about the nation’s coffee history. They decided to bring back some beans

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Buns filled with chicken parmesan were ser ved in bamboo steamer baskets at a food-tasting event at 222 Broadway. Raviolo restaurant, one of the more than 100 vendors at this year’s World’s Fare, takes Italian classic s and ser ves them in traditionally A sian fashions in order to create “t wobite delights.” Schneps Media

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

A tray of Domi pastr y puffs sit waiting to be eaten. Domi’s puffs come in A sian-inspired flavors, such as sesame, jasmine, yuzu curd and green tea and are a twist on the classic French treat.

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PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Miniature ube cheesecakes from the Vietnamese restaurant Ginger and Lemongrass feature a purple yam used in a variety of desser ts, especially in the Philippines.

Performances begin begin 6pm 6pm each each evening evening Performances Saturday: Youth Youth Program Program 1-4pm, 1-4pm, Film Film Program Program 12pm-12am, 12pm-12am, Saturday: Cultural Festival Festival on on East East 10th 10th Street Street 12pm-5pm 12pm-5pm Cultural Sunday: Poetry Poetry Program Program 4-7pm 4-7pm Sunday:

to roast and sell in Queens in order to fund future medical missions. Then there is Bart Hubbuch, owner and founder of Memphis Seol, who started his passion project after being let go from the New York Post for tweeting about President Donald Trump’s election in 2017. “It was the best thing that ever happened to me,” said Hubbuch, who, after 30 years in the newspaper business, was ready for a change. He is happy working for himself. To learn more about the World’s Fare and to buy tickets, visit http://theworldsfare.nyc/ .

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Marching for Mother Earth and an ‘Eco City’ BY BOB KR ASNER

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his is how the East Village throws a parade: colorful and loud, with heart and a sense of purpose. In fact, Saturday’s “Ecological City: Procession for Climate Solutions,” organized by the nonprofit organization Earth Celebrations, was all of that and more. Beginning at the Sixth Street Community Center, the creatively costumed group made their way to the beat of drums to 21 different community gardens and landmarks. They stopped at each one for a short performance, all with the common themes of our climate change and sustainability. Dancers from the Artichoke Dance Company, covered in plastic bags, entertained the crowd at El Sol Brillante garden, on E. 12th St. Elsewhere, poems were read, children sang and performers rolled in the dirt. The battle between Mother Earth and the Evil Pirates was enacted on E. Ninth St. The six-hour extravaganza ended at East River Park, where the city’s reconstruction plan to safeguard against flooding is vigorously opposed.

PHOTO BY BOB KRASNER

This costume was definitely causing some buzz.

PHOTO BY BOB KRASNER

Bazile Deenks blew the shell to star t the parade.

THE HILARIOUS MUSICAL COMEDY RETURNS TO THE YORK

“FLAT-OUT HILARIOUS!”

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STEIN • MUSIC AND LYRICS BY STAN DANIELS JOSEPH STEIN FROM THE NOVEL BY CARL REINER MUSIC DIRECTION BY PHIL RENO CHOREOGRAPHED BY JENNIFER PAULSON-LEE DIRECTION AND MUSICAL STAGING BY STUART ROSS PRESENTED IN ASSOCIATION WITH RIKI KANE LARIMER AND KEYLIGHT PRODUCTIONS BASED ON THE PLAY BY

PHOTO BY BOB KRASNER

The marchers opposed the cit y’s plan to bur y East River Park under nearly a dozen feet of dir t to raise it and protect it from flooding. Schneps Media

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May 16 - May 29, 2019

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Scaffold falls outside 2nd Ave. blast site BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

I

n an eerie follow-up, a sidewalk scaffolding outside the scene of the fatal 2015 East Village gas explosion came crashing down to the ground Friday afternoon. Fortunately, there were no injuries. A Fire Department spokesperson said a call came in at 4:12 p.m. reporting the accident. When this paper called shortly before 5 p.m., the Fire spokesperson said the first responding unit was still on the scene, but was telling other emergency responders — including the Collapse Unit — to either “come in slow or turn around” and go back to their stationhouses. Yvonne Collery, who lives at 125 Second Ave., said it was her understanding that the structure had been hit by a truck, causing it to fall. “I heard the shed fall,” she said. “After going downstairs, I learned a box truck had been cut off by a car and tapped the corner of the shed. That is when it collapsed.” Collery previously wrote in this paper about how her twin cats Laszlo and Lulu survived the gas explosion on the block. In the March 2015 disaster, an illegal gas-siphoning system that had been rigged up in the basement at 121 Second Ave. caused a thunderous explosion that turned into a raging infer

The scene after the sidewalk shed collapse on Second Ave. in the East Village.

PHOTOS BY YVONNE COLLERY

Firefighters responded to the scene at E. Seventh St. and Second Ave. on Friday afternoon after a protective sidewalk shed collapsed. Schneps Media

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May 16 - May 29, 2019

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Real Estate

The coveted London Terrace half-Olympic-size swimming pool.

London Terrace: Charming — and that pool! BY MARTHA WILKIE

Y

ou’ve probably walked by London Terrace, a massive complex of 1,700 rental and co-op apartments in West Chelsea that takes up an entire city block. Those in the know understand it’s actually two entities that are managed separately: London Terrace Towers (co-ops) and London Terrace Gardens (rentals). Construction began in 1929 and the complex once boasted not only porters and doormen, but a bevy of hired help, including nursemaids and pageboys — which you can see today in charming vintage films on the complex’s Facebook page. It was, briefly, the largest apartment building in the world. Bruce Wayne Solomon is an agent with Douglas Elliman and the unofficial “mayor” of London Terrace. He’s lived in four apartments there and brokered sales and rentals in the buildings for more than 20 years. “It’s been my pleasure to welcome almost half of the current residents,” he said. “We all boast about the half-Olympic-sized indoor heated pool that I call the ‘crown jewel’ of the building.” A resident told me, “I’m often the only person swimming in the pool. I do swan dives and languorous laps and feel like a glamorous 1930s movie star.” The complex has always been popular with the creative set and was home to such notables as Debbie Harry, John O’Hara and Susan Sontag. “London Terrace is filled with some of the nicest, smartest and most creative residents — from actors to neurosurgeons,” Solomon said. “It’s the West

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May 16 - May 29, 2019

Chelsea version of The Dakota.” Along with the spectacular pool, amenities include steam rooms and saunas, a gym, a landscaped, furnished roof deck with stunning views, 24-hour attended lobbies, and parking (additional fees apply for some). Pets are welcome. Streetlevel retail offers convenient shopping, plus a post office. However, the days of ringing for a telegraph boy are sadly long gone. A sunny fifth-floor studio co-op with charming views of 19th-century townhouses across the street has an elegant foyer, dressing room and bed alcove. 465 W. 23rd St, Apt. 5I. $625,000. (Elliman.com/new-york-city/465-west-23street-5i-manhattan-kiddbrv) A 15th-floor alcove studio co-op offers Empire State Building views and lovely paneled walls. Heat, hot water, gas and electricity are included in the maintenance. 410 W. 24th St, Apt. 15D. $495,000. (Elliman.com/new-york-city/410west-24-street-15d-manhattan-ooopeyx) This studio co-op has 9-foot beamed ceilings, a dressing room, oak flooring and original steel-frame doorways. $555,000. (Elliman.com/new-york-city/465west-23-street-12k-manhattan-ukvewlj) A rental studio has beamed ceilings, a charming black-and-white bathroom with a vintage look, a dressing room and a sweet little kitchen. $3,000. (Compass.com/listing/405-west23rd-street-unit-3c-manhattan-ny10011/208576906637892513/)

A classic black-and-white tiled bathroom comes with this studio at 405 W. 23rd St. MEX

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“More Parks Sausages Mom!� “Please!�

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by Maurice W. Dorsey VISIT PCRICHARD.COM FOR A STORE NEAREST YOU

More than his ad, Henry G. Parks, Jr. was a man before his time. Pioneering in the American free enterprise system he embarked on a journey leading to a multi-million dollar industry. After many endeavors in business, The H.G. Parks, Inc. trading as Parks Sausage became a reality in 1951. With strong aggressive leadership, brilliant marketing and advertising, Mr. Parks build a business that never posted a losing year under his ownership. Park’s Sausage was the ďŹ rst African American owned business to issue stock publicly. Mr. Park’s success caught the attention of some of the leading corporate boards in this country along with national organizations, city, state, and federal leaders. They sought to bring him aboard to share his knowledge, leadership skills, and ability with other leading American business, government and non-proďŹ t leaders. This is the story of a businessman who was African American and was optimistic and determined while achieving ultimate success.

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