Manhattan Express

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School Diversity Plan’s Mixed Reviews on UWS 06

JACKSON CHEN

The Rose Main Reading Room in the New York Public Library’s Stephen A. Schwarzman Building has now been calendared for landmarks consideration.

LANDMARKS POISED TO WEIGH PUBLIC LIBRARY INTERIORS BY JACKSON CHEN The Landmarks Preservation Commission has calendared the Rose Main Reading Room and the Bill Blass Public Catalog Room in the New York Public Library’s Stephen A. Schwarzman Building for consideration as city landmarks. The exterior of the Schwarzman Building, the library’s main branch on Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street, has been landmarked since 1967, and its first floor Astor Hall, third floor McGraw Rotunda, and the staircases that connect them were designated as interior landmarks in 1974. But, the iconic Rose Main Reading Room and the Bill Blass Public Catalog Room that leads into it have to date been left without landmark protection. According to LPC staffer Matt Postal, the main reading room is one of the grandest interiors in the city, rivaling those found in Grand Central Terminal. Landmarking the two spaces, he said, would lend more cohesion to the existing interior landmarks. “The proposed calendaring of the Bill Blass Public Catalog Room and the Rose Main Reading Room... completes the ceremonial route to the primary public space within the library and the heart of its public, civic, and institutional mission,” Postal said at the June 6 LPC meeting. To attract attention to the landmarking cause, the Committee to Save the New York Public Library launched a petition on January 10 that has LANDMARKS continued on p. 4

June 15-28, 2017 | Vol. 03 No. 12

Times Sq Volunteer Push for Hungry Kids 10

TENANT ADVOCATES JOIN DEM CLUBS IN SUPPORTING MARK LEVINE

ED REED/ OFFICE OF THE MAYOR

City Councilmember Mark Levine at a February 12 rally of tenants’ rights advocates.

BY JACKSON CHEN City Councilmember Mark Levine has earned endorsements from a tenant political action committee and six Democratic political clubs throughout District 7 in his bid for a second term. Levine is facing off against two Democratic challengers for his Council seat, in which he represents the Upper West Side, Morningside Heights, West Harlem, and Washington Heights. The incumbent is emphasizing the advantages he brings into the September 12 primary by showcasing the endorsements from the six clubs as well as from TenantsPAC. As its name suggests, TenantsPAC is a political action committee that endorses candidates with a record of support for tenants’ rights and security. According to the group’s treasurer, Michael McKee, its endorsement of Levine was a “no-brainer” and came after a vote at its May 1 monthly meeting. Levine, who said he pushes an “aggressive legislative agenda to protect and support tenants,” explained that his crowning achievement to date has been opening up access to an attorney for low-income tenants

hauled into Housing Court. McKee said that Levine has been instrumental in building support for free legal representation to low-income families who find themselves squaring off against their landlords in Housing Court. Intro 214-A, the Right to Counsel bill, was first introduced by Levine and Bronx Councilmember Vanessa Gibson in 2014 and gained momentum last September with a hearing before the Council’s Courts and Legal Services Committee. The push won a major victory in February when Mayor Bill de Blasio and Speaker Melissa MarkViverito announced an increase of $93 million for tenant legal services for families with annual incomes of less than $50,000. The TenantsPAC treasurer said his group would have endorsed Levine for his work on the Right to Counsel bill alone, but noted his proven track record on tenant advocacy overall. “It’s our job to make tenants into an electoral force LEVINE continued on p. 4

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