The Villager Express - August 15, 2019

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V i s i t u s o n l i n e a t w w w .T h e V i l l a g e r. c o m

THE

S S E R P X E

August 15, 2019 Volume 4 • Number 17

The Paper of Record for East and West Villages, Little Italy, Lower ower East Ea E a st s t Side, S id i d e, e , Soho, S oho Noho, and Chinatown

BUSWAY BUSTER Lawyer a lightning rod after blocking 14th St. plan

Page 6 PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Ar thur Schwar tz, right, at a press conference Wednesday on restoring bus stops ps on the M14, h has two lawsuits filed against the cit y’s 14th St. scheme. Transpor tation Alternatives planned to protest later outside his Village A member of Disabled in Action spoke at the mic. ge home. hom me e.. me

HILLARY’S 2020 VISION Clinton & Caban pump up progressive Dems Page 8

PHOTO BY JENNIFER FRIEDMANN / ARENA

Arena members Liuba Grechen Shirley, left, and Monica Klein, right, posed with former Queens D. A . candidate Tiffany Caban last Thursday. Addressing Arena members, Hillar y Clinton predicted there will be G.O.P.-led “suppression� in the 2020 presidential election.

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August 15, 2019

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Broker dies after cyclist hit: Police BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

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wenty-third St. and Sixth Ave., tragically, continues to live up to its reputation as one of the city’s most dangerous intersections. A man who was struck by a cyclist there at the end of July died of his injuries earlier this week, police reported. Police said Michael Collopy, 60, of 170 W. 23rd St., was standing in the bike lane on Sixth Ave. at 11:53 p.m. on Wed., July 31, when he was hit by a cyclist riding northbound in the lane who did not stop or remain at the scene. Officers responding to a 911 call found Collopy at the location with head trauma. An E.M.S. ambulance transported him to Bellevue Medical Center, where he succumbed to his injuries on Mon., Aug. 5. According to police, on Wed., Aug. 7, the city’s medical examiner determined his cause of death was from being struck by the cyclist. There are no arrests and the investigation is ongoing. However, the New York Post reported that on Thursday the medical examiner said it had made no such determination, and that there was “a misunderstanding by N.Y.P.D. detectives.” “For clarity, the cause and manner of death in this case is pending determination,” the M.E. said in a statement, the Post reported. For the past five years, Collopy was an associate broker for residential sales with City Connections, whose office is at 71 W. 23rd St., just one block from his home and just steps away from where he was killed. He had been a real estate broker since 2003. Prior to that, he was an auditor and also worked in finance. Collopy was a graduate of New York University’s Stern School of Business, and got his B.A. in accounting from Fairfield University. Collopy’s death at the dangerous intersection came slightly more than a month after Robyn Hightman, a 20-year-old bike messenger, was killed near that spot while riding in traffic on the avenue and hit by a truck. David Schlamm, president of City Connections, said Collopy was single, close to his nieces and nephews, an avid Yankees fan and frequently skied in Vermont. He said no one is sure what Collopy was doing outside the office right before he was killed. “He was a kind, generous guy,” Schlamm said. He said the company is trying to plan a group outing to Yankees game in the late co-worker’s honor, and they hope they’ll be able to get his photo shown on a large screen. A memorial is planned at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, on Fifth Ave., on Aug. 24 at 10 a.m. Lien Corey, an artist who lives at 21st St. and Seventh Ave., said she witnessed Collopy splayed out on the street after he was hit, as well as the accident

COURTESY CITY CONNECTIONS REALTY

Chelsea resident Michael Collopy died after being struck by a c yclist at 23rd St. and Sixth Ave., just a block away from his home.

scene in June a few hours after Hightman was fatally struck. (Full disclosure: This writer is a friend of Corey’s and she had mentioned to him the previous Friday that she had seen a bloodied man lying in the bike lane who had been hit by a cyclist.) She said the carnage at the deadly intersection has been taking an emotional toll on her. Every day, Corey, who is in her 60s, goes to 23rd St. and Sixth Ave. around noon to get her amNY newspaper at the box outside the Citibank branch at the northwest corner. “What I saw was an older man, probably in his 70s, with blood,” Corey said, “right in front of Citibank. He was, like, lying right in the bike lane…kind of a little bit diagonal, head toward Citibank. And hovering over him were, like, two bike messengers. “I saw his jaw moving, so I said, ‘Good, he’s alive.’ I saw movement in his lower jaw,” she recalled. Corey said after medics came to aid the man, she went to get some coffee at Starbucks on Sixth Ave. between 21st and 22nd Sts. “I just walked away,” she said. “I couldn’t take it.” When she returned to the spot afterward, the broker had already been taken to the hospital. A biker herself, Corey said she was deeply affected by Hightman’s death on June 24, particularly by seeing a pool of blood on the street at the scene. Then seeing

blood, once again, a month later, around the gravely injured man’s head was overwhelming for her. “I just saw blood flowing,” she said of Collopy, “and I was absolutely distraught because when that girl died, I just cried and cried. The bike was still there [in the street], her helmet was still there, blood was still there. “I bike all the time,” Corey said. “I thought, ‘It could be me.’ I’ve been hit a couple of times. There’s always some reckless driver. They don’t see you or they open their door and hit you.” She said the Chelsea/Flatiron intersection simply is very dangerous, but that cyclists also must ride more carefully. “Twenty-third and Sixth is very deadly,” she said. “These cyclists, they are either killing themselves or killing others. The messengers, they’re just trying to get where they’re going. They’re not paying attention.” Corey said she witnessed an intense moment after leaving the scene of Hightman’s death. She went into the Doughnut Plant, the only ground-floor commercial tenant in the currently under-renovation Hotel Chelsea, to get a donut. She said the driver who hit Hightman then happened to pull up his box truck right outside the shop. “There was a swarm of bikers and they tried to pull the guy out,” she said. “There was a lot of police and they got the bikers away. I saw the bikers. They were very, very upset.” Corey said the fatal intersection has gotten extremely crowded due to a surge in foot traffic, which she feels is definitely a factor in the accidents and fatalities. “I think it’s the sheer amount of people,” she said, adding, “Have you ever been on 23rd St. at lunchtime?” With that many people, she noted, it’s simply “the law of averages” that serious problems are going to happen. According to Streetsblog, since 2016, the intersection at W. 23rd St. and Sixth Ave. has seen six cyclists, 18 pedestrians and 15 drivers injured. The cyclingadvocacy blog said that, annually, in New York City, less than one pedestrian is killed by cyclists, while 138 pedestrians are killed by cars. In yet another traffic fatality in Chelsea, police reported that on Thurs., Aug. 8, pedestrian Iris Crespo, 77, of 60 Amsterdam Ave., was killed by a yellow cab driver at Eighth Ave. and 22nd St. at 5:02 p.m. The hack, Daniel Fusaro, 82, continued to drive north until hitting a parked car. He was charged with leaving the scene of an accident, failure to yield to a pedestrian, failure to obey a traffic signal and failure to exercise due care.

More Chelsea carnage as cab kills woman BY GABE HERMAN

A

n older woman walking in Chelsea was killed on Thurs., Aug. 8, after being hit by a taxi around 1 p.m., according to police. The 77-year-old victim was identified as Iris Crespo, of 60 Amsterdam Ave., at W. 62nd St. She was trying to cross W. 22nd St. at Eighth Ave., and was within the marked crosswalk, when she was struck by the taxi heading uptown on Eighth Ave. The force of the collision caused Crespo to land underneath a parked car, Schneps Media

officials said. After hitting Crespo, the hack, Daniel Fusaro, 82, a Queens resident, continued driving north before ramming into a parked vehicle, police said. When officers arrived at the scene, they found Crespo unconscious and unresponsive on the street, with trauma to her head and body. E.M.S. took her to Bellevue Hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Fusaro reportedly talked to police at the scene, and said he never saw the woman, and that he had the light. “I don’t know. What can I tell you? I don’t know anyTVG

thing. I don’t know what happened,” Fusaro said. “They told me that I hit a woman. I didn’t see a woman. That’s all.” Witnesses disputed Fusaro’s account that he had the light, according to WABC-TV. The cabbie was taken into custody and charged with leaving the scene of an accident, failure to yield to a pedestrian, failure to obey a traffic signal and failure to exercise due care. An investigation into the incident is ongoing by the Police Department’s Collision Investigation Squad. August 15, 2019

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Police Blotter NINTH PRECINCT

Anti-gay grafďŹ ti Police are seeking the public’s help in identifying a man wanted in connection with a criminal mischief incident that has been classified a hate crime in the East Village’s Ninth Precinct. Police said that on Thurs., Aug. 8, around 2:40 a.m., the suspect reportedly walked up to an abandoned building at 11 Avenue A, between First and Second Sts., and sprayed “KILL THE GAY AWAYâ€? on a roll-down gate in black spray paint. The man is described as white, around 5 feet 6 inches tall, with curly long blond hair, wearing a green shirt and toting a yellow messenger bag. Police released surveillance video of the suspect walking north on Avenue A. Anyone with information should call the Police Department’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). Tips can also be submitted

CENTRAL PARK PRECINCT

E.V. senior Dead by the pool

attacked An elderly man was robbed in the East Village on Tuesday afternoon, according to police. Around 4:40 p.m. on Aug. 6, inside a residential building near E. 11th St. and Second Ave., a man approached the 82-year-old victim from behind and pushed him to the ground. The attacker then took the victim’s wallet from his back pocket, and fled toward Second Ave. The wallet contained four credit cards, $50 in cash, a driver’s license and an insurance card. The victim suffered a minor injury to his arm and was taken to Beth Israel

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Medi c a l Center for treatment. Police released surveillance images, taken near the incident, of the man wanted for the robbery. He was last

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Police suspect a man found at Central Park’s Lasker Pool was murdered. ABC 7 reported that on Tues., Aug. 6, a camp counselor found the body of a man with head trauma on the park pool’s upper terrace, located at E. 106th St. and the park’s East Drive at about 10:39 a.m. Police believe that the man, whose body was covered by a blanket when found, could have been homeless and about 30 years old. The man’s identity has yet to be released by authorities.

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August 15, 2019

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August 15, 2019

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Wheely mad: TransAlt rages at attorney BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

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all it busway rage. Transportation Alternatives, the pro-cycling and mass-transit advocacy group, is seething that Village and Chelsea residents have dared to throw a monkey wrench into the city’s “experimental” pilot plan for a 14th St. busway. And they are especially furious at one man, a Villager whose name is synonymous for them with a gunkedup bike derailleur, if not a busted front fork: Arthur Schwartz. And they’re not just stewing about it: They planned to protest at the activist attorney’s W. 12th St. townhouse on the evening of Wed., Aug. 14, and demand that he withdraw his lawsuit, which is currently derailing the busway. Perhaps instead of pitchforks and torches, they’ll be angrily brandishing quick-release wheels, bicycle pumps and MetroCards. A press release for TransAlt’s protest urges: “Protest Rich Residents From Stopping 14th St. Busway.” Meanwhile, Schwartz is firing back that TransAlt are a bunch of fascistic bullies for trying to intimidate him — likening them to no less than Donald Trump and the Ku Klux Klan. Going on the offensive, on Tuesday morning, he preemptively protested TransAlt’s protesting him at the group’s 111 John St. offices. He fumed that the group crossed a line by blasting out his home address. Last Friday, Schwartz succeeded in getting a last-minute court-ordered stay from an Appellate Division court to postpone the no-cars busway plan, which was set to kick off this Mon., Aug. 12. The stay was issued because Schwartz on Friday filed an appeal of the ruling that had been issued just days earlier on their anti-busway lawsuit by a State Supreme Court justice, who cleared the traffic plan to start on Monday. Schwartz has also been contesting the new crosstown bike lanes on 12th and 13th Sts. In a press release Monday afternoon, Thomas DeVito, TransAlt’s senior director of advocacy, railed against the community litigation as a “frivolous lawsuit.” “The West Villagers who filed the suit have used every dirty trick in the book to delay needed improvements along New York’s slowest bus line,” DeVito fumed in the e-mail blast. “For them, it doesn’t matter how slow and unreliable our buses are for working New Yorkers, or how straightforward and obvious the fi xes are. Their only concern is preserving parking for themselves and keeping anyone else off their street.” DeVito apparently was quoting from The Villager’s report on the stay being

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August 15, 2019

PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

Village District Leader Ar thur Schwar tz, right, was joined by Michael Schweinsburg, of 504 Democrats and Disabled in Action, at Wednesday’s rally about Schwar tz’s lawsuit to restore M14 bus stops.

granted last Friday, when he wrote, “Their lead lawyer, Arthur Schwartz, has asked publicly ‘who uses the bus?’ and he has flippantly acknowledged that his clients gladly chipped in ‘a thousand dollars here, a thousand dollars there’ to perpetuate his capricious lawsuits.” The Villager article read: “The attorney said that, after Tuesday’s deflating State Supreme Court ruling, he had asked members of [block associations] fighting the city’s plan if they supported appealing the decision, and the answer was overwhelming. “ ‘I said it might cost $5,000 to $10,000 to print the record,’ he said, referring to the paperwork — in multiple copies — required to file the appeal. ‘I got a great reaction… Everyone was pledging $1,000 here, $1,000 there.’ ” DeVito’s e-mail continued, “What’s happening today on 14th St. [is] a hyper-empowered minority using their wealth to deny better bus service for 27,000 working commuters.” The transit advocate noted the protesters planned “to congregate in front of Arthur Schwartz’s $10 million brownstone to demand he drop the lawsuit.” In a statement to this paper early Monday evening, Schwartz unloaded on TransAlt, calling them nothing less than un-American Trumpian fascistic bullies. “TransAlt, in deciding to picket the house of a lawyer, who represents clients, to demand that ‘I drop’ their case, is engaging in a form of bullying which is in the tradition of Donald Trump, and has nothing to do with how we function in a non-fascistic Democratic society,” he declared. “I do not drop that word lightly, and I am asking lawyers from around the city, and my elected representatives, to join me on my stoop. “I might also add that for an organization whose top officials make $200,000 per year running a non-

profit, their complaint that Village and Chelsea residents active in block associations are ‘rich,’ is demagoguery similar to that we see emanating from the White House.” About six hours later, Schwartz sent out an e-mail announcing he intended to hold a press conference Tuesday morning outside the Lower Manhattan office of TransAlt, which the attorney described as “the $4.5-million-per-year cyclist lobbying group.” “This kind of undemocratic bullying, reminiscent of how white-hooded zealots would threaten white lawyers who represented black people in the South, or dictators who threaten lawyers who represent unpopular figures, needs to be called out,” Schwartz proclaimed. “I represent everyday residents of Chelsea and Greenwich Village,” he said, “people who speak for Greenwich Village, and Transportation Alternatives is taking the fight to my home, where I live with my wife and teenage children, for one purpose only — to intimidate me.” Schwartz, who is the Village’s male Democratic district leader, called on other elected leaders, including Mayor Bill de Blasio, Comptroller Scott Stringer, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and Council Speaker Corey Johnson, “to stand with him” on Wednesday night when the enraged TransAlt protesters were to descend on his home. It didn’t sound like he had any takers, though. Meanwhile, Schwartz also called a press conference for Wednesday morning, at 11 a.m., on the south side of 14th St., just east of Fifth Ave. — where a bus stop was recently removed as part of the newly implemented Select Bus Service on the M14 route. At the press conference, Schwartz announced his second lawsuit related to the 14th St. traffic changes — to demand that the city restore the removed

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bus stops. His plaintiff in that case will be Disabled in Action, a group representing disabled New Yorkers. In a quote announcing the event, Schwartz said, “We need to talk about how the city, in its quest for [bus] speed, has abandoned folks in wheelchairs and walkers, has not addressed the real concerns of the affected communities, how we are not a ‘wealthy minority group of landowners,’ but representatives of thousands of people who live in the Village, Chelsea and Flatiron and have for decades.” The Steering Committee of the 14th St. Coalition urged its members, “Bring handmade signs with messages like: ‘COMMUTERS ARE NOT MORE IMPORTANT THAN COMMUNITIES’; ‘STREETS ARE FOR EVERYONE’; ‘THE BUSWAY PROMOTES ABLEISM’; ‘WE ARE NOT AN EXPERIMENT’; ‘NOT EVERYONE CAN RIDE A BIKE’; and ‘SAFETY BEFORE LOBBYISTS.’” Members of the Coalition, which includes Village and Chelsea block associations and large residential condo buildings, fear if the busway happens, neighboring side streets would be flooded with cars diverted from 14th St., and that the first-of-its-kind scheme in New York would wreak havoc on 14th St., as well. They were disappointed by two tweets Comptroller Stringer made last week about the issue. “Today should have been a triumphant day for bus riders in Manhattan,” Stringer tweeted last Friday, after the stay blocking the busway was issued. “Instead we are stuck with the failed status quo. I stand with those fighting for a world-class bus system in New York. We need projects like the 14th St. busway.” In an earlier tweet, last Tuesday, Stringer praised the first ruling, which would have allowed the project to go forward: “This is terrific news,” he trumpeted. “Thanks to all the advocates who fought tirelessly to make this day a reality. Now — let’s get our buses moving!” The 14th St. Coalition members took Stringer’s tweets personally, saying it was “calling us the failed status quo.” The Coalition, which was the lead plaintiff in Schwartz’s previous two lawsuits on the 14th St. plan, actually is not part of this latest suit, though a number of its block association members are. Stringer is a candidate for mayor, as is Speaker Johnson, who has vowed to “break car culture” in New York City.

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7


PHOTO BY JENNIFER FRIEDMANN / ARENA

Proudly standing with former Queens D. A . candidate Tiffany Caban at the Aug. 8 event, were Arena members Liuba Grechen Shirley, the founder of Vote Mama, who ran against Congressmember Peter King, left, and Monica Klein, founder of Seneca Strategies, a political consulting firm.

Clinton warns of G.O.P. ‘voter suppression’ BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

H

illary Clinton told a gathering of young Democrats in Lower Manhattan Thursday night that “voter suppression” by the Republicans will be more extreme than ever before in the 2020 presidential election. An enthusiastic crowd of members of Arena — an organization promoting young progressive candidates to “jump into the arena” and run for office — convened at Convene, at 32 Old Slip, to hear Clinton’s remarks. The former secretary of state said she was “optimistic” after seeing the work of Arena and similar groups that have launched in the wake of Donald Trump’s winning the presidency. Arena runs a “training academy” to help get people involved in political campaigns. “But,” Clinton added, “I also have to say I’m also realistic about what we’re up against.” She noted, to laughter from the crowd, that she had met with “18 or 20 or so of the candidates” running for the Democratic nomination. “I told them that,” she said, “based on my own experiences, you could not only win the nomination, you could win the popular vote, but not get the job because of all these other forces and activities we are up against. “Voter suppression is going to be even worse coming up in 2020,” she warned, pointedly. “It will absolutely be front and center.” The former New York senator predicted with assurance that the Republicans will resort to “the misuse of information, whether it is online propaganda, disinformation.” “I believe that the other side is really geared to do

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August 15, 2019

PHOTO BY JENNIFER FRIEDMANN / ARENA

Hillar y Clinton addressing Arena members in the Financial District on Thurs., Aug. 8.

that,” she asserted. “And I think we’re going to face even more doubts about our electoral machinery.” In addition, in the wake of last weekend’s mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton, Clinton slammed Republicans for continuing to stand in the way of sensible gun control. “The refusal of the other party to step up and take responsibility for keeping people safe is outrageous,” TVG

she declared. Clinton said political change won’t come overnight, but will take a long, determined slog, or, as she put it, “the hard boring of hard boards.” “It doesn’t happen overnight,” she said. “It happens day after day.” Also speaking at the event was Tiffany Caban, who had conceded the Queens district attorney Democratic primary race to Melinda Katz the day before, as well as Comptroller Scott Stringer and Council Speaker Corey Johnson, plus Alvin Bragg, a candidate for Manhattan district attorney. Bragg is a visiting professor at New York University School of Law and co-director of its Racial Justice Project. Chris Marte, the Lower East Side Democratic State Committeeman for the 65th District, who leads Arena’s New York community and candidate support, also gave remarks. “The event was a great success with over 300 people in attendance,” Marte said. “It was the first public appearance from Tiffany Caban since her concession speech, and Alvin Bragg’s first public speech as a Manhattan D.A. candidate. “In addition to having the frontrunners of the mayoral race, Scott Stringer and Corey Johnson, Hillary topped off the night by inspiring everyone to remain engaged in politics and build the Democratic bench for staffers to take on Trump in 2020. “In addition, it was the launch of our Five Borough Future Project, which is a three-part program to write bold polices, train the future staffers of New York City progressive campaigns, and educate individuals on how to achieve government reform and claw back power to New York City from Albany.” Schneps Media


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Visit our Chelsea branch at 111 West 26th Street, between 6th and 7th Avenues. Everyone can bank at Bethpage.∞ 855-248-0050 | lovebethpage.com/refresh *Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective 8/5/2019 and is subject to change, including after account opening, without notice. 4.00% APY and dividend rate are earned on balances up to $1,000; balances higher than $1,000 earn 0.35% APY and dividend rate. Fees or other conditions could reduce earnings. Certain restrictions may apply. Additional verification may be requested for Youth Savings or Young Adult Savings Account opening. Program and terms subject to change. At the age of 18, Youth Savings Accounts are automatically converted to Young Adult Savings Accounts. At the age of 21, Young Adult Savings Accounts are automatically converted to a basic savings account. †Youth Savings Account - ages 17 and under. Young Adult Savings Account - ages 18-20. **Limit 1 Water Bottle per person that opens a Youth Savings or Young Adult Savings Account. Water Bottle offer valid 07/01/2019 through 08/31/2019, or while supplies last. ∞Membership requires a $5 minimum share account.

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DEMAND JUSTICE

COURTESY DOWNTOWN ALLIANCE

Jessica Lappin, Downtown Alliance president, left, presented Jo Black, of Boundless Plains Espresso, with a Digital Innovation Grant.

Victims of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy or by authority figures at school have rights.

Online grants click with small business

NEW YORK AND NEW JERSEY LAW HAVE EXTENDED THE TIME PERIOD IN WHICH TO FILE YOUR SEXUAL ABUSE CLAIM. ACT NOW TO GET YOUR CLAIM TIMELY FILED.

BY GABE HERMAN

W

ith much of retail business continuing to shift to the Internet, two Lower Manhattan businesses were recently awarded grants to improve their online presence and help them compete. The Downtown Alliance gave the $10,000 Digital Innovation Grants to B & Co, a sandwich shop, at 22 Park Place, and Boundless Plains Espresso, at 19 Rector St. “Small businesses fuel Lower Manhattan physically and emotionally,� said Jessica Lappin, the Downtown Alliance’ president. “But many are challenged by the digital shift in consumer behavior. We’ve created a digital grant program to support local shops like B & Co and Boundless Plains Espresso and help them compete online.� Boundless Plains was opened by local Jo Black, originally from Australia. Her shop serves espresso drinks, along with other items, like organic salads and avocado toast. She plans to use the grant for an online ordering and delivery platform, and also to create a social

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media strategy to spread word about the business, plus train staff for online engagement with new customers. “We pride ourselves on building a community among staff and guests,� Black said. “The Downtown Digital Innovation Grant will allow us to use online connections to help bring people together face to face in the store, and allow my business — and community — to grow with improvements I wouldn’t otherwise have been able to afford.� B & Co, formerly Bits and Bites, was founded in 1997. The deli plans to make its Web site more mobile friendly. “When we started, our business came from walk-ins and calls,� founder Robert Gander said. “With so many people ordering lunch with a tap of their phone, this grant will allow us to build a mobile-friendly Web site and meet our customers where they are.� The Downtown Digital Innovation Grant program was launched last year, with Martin Busch Jewelers, at 85 John St., using the grant to improve its Web site and grow its presence on social media. The store has had a nearly 50 percent increase in visits to its Web site. Schneps Media


WE ARE HIRING! The Board of Elections in the City of New York is hiring Poll Workers to serve at poll sites across New York City. Become an Election Day Worker and you can earn up to $2,800 for completing the training course, passing the exam and working ten Election Days.

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

At the Aug. 8 Chick-fil-A grand opening in Chelsea, there were no protests, just a line that wrapped around the block.

ELECTION INSPECTOR

INTERPRETER

REQUIREMENTS

REQUIREMENTS

• Registered voter residing in the City of New York • Enrolled in the Democratic or Republican party

• A permanent U.S. resident over 18 years of age and a resident of New York City

• Able to read and write English

• Fluent in English and the interpreter’s language • Spanish interpreters needed in all boroughs

DUTIES

Antigay Chick-fil-A is open in Chelsea BY GABE HERMAN

C

hick-fil-A just opened a location in Chelsea, making it the fastfood company’s ninth in Manhattan. But despite long lines for the grand opening at Sixth Ave. and W. 22nd St. on Thurs., Aug. 8, not everyone in the area is welcoming the business, which has drawn criticism for its stance on same-sex marriage. Chick-fil-A sparked a firestorm of protest in 2012 when current C.E.O. Dan Cathy expressed antigay marriage views and the company was found to be contributing to groups that opposed same-sex marriage. There was backlash against the chain, including boycotts. Then there was backlash to the backlash by those supporting the company’s views. Cathy and the company then tried to pull back from public involvement in the gay marriage debate. Although the issue is not as hotly debated nationwide now as seven years ago, the company’s marriage views have stayed in the news. Tax filings from 2017 showed Chick-fil-A has continued to contribute to antigay groups, ThinkProgress recently reported. But the Atlanta-based chicken-sandwich chain has continued to grow in recent years, including in progressive Manhattan. The company has been in the New York University food court at 5 University Place since 2004, and its first public location opened in Midtown in 2015. Other Chick-fil-A eateries have since opened in Midtown and Tribeca and on the Upper East Side. But Chelsea, in particular, is not a neighborhood where the chicken chain belongs, according to one local. Chelsea resident Scott D., who asked not to print his last name, told this paper that he is “upset” about them moving in. “They’re not the type of fast-food restaurant that belongs in Chelsea — a part of the city that is about inclusion and embracing diversity,” Scott said. “For years they’ve gotten away with homophobia, and have worked hard — and heavily funded Schneps Media

• Prepare the poll site for voters • Assist voters during the voting process • Close the poll site • Canvass and report election results • Assist other poll workers as needed

TRAINING

• Korean, Hindi and Bengali interpreters needed in Queens For Hindi Interpreters: Please note on your application if you can also speak Punjabi.

• Does not have to be a registered voter

DUTIES

• All Inspectors must attend a training class and pass the exam

efforts — to deny gay marriage, etc. “I don’t have to support them and will not,” he continued. “But I know that the average person who knows nothing about their exclusionary history will go in and spend money — that’s the saddest part. They’ve excelled at taking any negative publicity and burying it while growing into the third-largest fast-food corporation in America. “I believe there should be a lot of protests,” he said. “They come to suck profits out of New York City while preaching hate, and they don’t represent the diversity of New York.” Council Speaker Corey Johnson, whose area includes Chelsea and who is openly gay, told this paper, “I hope as Chick-fil-A moves into an extremely L.G.B.T.Q. friendly neighborhood they use this opportunity to reconsider their outdated and homophobic stance.” There were no protests at the Chelsea location’s opening on Aug. 8. There were only crowds coming for the food, and a lunchtime line that stretched outside and around the corner. State Senator Brad Hoylman, whose district includes Chelsea, Midtown and the West Village, told this paper, “I wouldn’t suggest, like Chicken Little, that the sky is falling. There’s been a Chick-fil-A at N.Y.U. for years now, in addition to stores in my district in Midtown.” Hoylman, who is also openly gay, added, “Sadly there are plenty of C.E.O.’s who support homophobia and rightwing causes.” He cited the planned Hamptons fundraiser for Donald Trump last Friday, at $100,000 a person, by Stephen Ross, C.E.O. of Related, which owns Hudson Yards and other businesses, including SoulCycle and Equinox gyms. “People can make their own decisions about supporting a business that has given millions to antigay causes,” Hoylman said. “But we should also be asking how they treat their workers, do they engage in sustainable practices, and are they good corporate citizens in New York City.”

• Chinese interpreters needed in Manhattan, Brooklyn & Queens

• Assist non-English speaking voters by translating voting information into covered languages during the voting process

TRAINING • All Interpreters must attend a training class and pass the exam

HOURS/LOCATION FOR PRIMARY/GENERAL ELECTION • 5:00 a.m. until the polls are closed and results reported, which will be after 9:00 p.m. • Must be willing to travel within the borough for assignment to a poll site

9 EARLY VOTING DAYS • Please visit website for detailed hours and dates • Must be willing to travel within the borough for assignment to a poll site

HOW TO APPLY Visit nyc.electiondayworker.com to apply. If you have any questions, please call: 866-VOTE-NYC (866-868-3692). TTY Number 212-487-5496

For more news & events happening now visit www.TheVillager.com TVG

August 15, 2019

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Editorial

MANHAT TAN

SNAPS

The crumbling M.T.A.

T

wo reports released by State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli and City Comptroller Scott Stringer this week highlight the woeful conditions that straphangers who rely on subways and commuter rail lines can attest to daily. And while it’s easy to see the neglect and incompetence, it seems much harder to find a way to fi x the damage. DiNapoli announced the results of a study that revealed something that seems obvious by now: Most New York City subway stations are crumbling. The run-down components cited in the study range from from platform edges to ventilators, both of which are quite obviously key to rider safety. Broken platform edges increase the risk of potentially tragic slips and falls, and malfunctioning ventilators are both short- and long-term health hazards for anyone who sets foot on an underground subway station platform. The second half of this one-two transit punch came from Stringer’s letter to Long Island Rail Road President Phil Eng, criticizing the commuter rail line for its own station problems, namely a lack of accessibility. For example, just five Long Island Rail Road stations in all of Brooklyn and Queens meet federal A.D.A. (Americans with Disabilities Act) compliance. And yet, the LIRR has either dragged its feet on — or scrapped altogether — projects designed to bring the stops up to code. The portrait of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority in 2019 as painted in the reports is far from flattering. Politicians have been quick to condemn the M.T.A. and promise reform and “transformation” to make everything better. We’ve heard this before, and the end result has always equated to reshuffling deck chairs on the Titanic. City and state leaders should streamline the authority’s overhead and empower it (financially and politically) with the means to get things done — and then, do them. We don’t need another Robert Moses — an all-powerful master builder who treated the public with contempt — but rather leaders who can at least get the M.T.A. and the riders it serves out of this mess. Enough talking about it. Let’s get the M.T.A. moving toward progress again.

A photo in the May 18, 1972 issue of The Villager captured a Hare Krishna proselytizing to a crowd in Washington Square Park. The caption read: “An interesting study in faces was captured recently by photographer Fermin Benedetti who watched a Hare Krishna devotee explain his philosophy to group of Villagers in the park.”

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PUBLISHER’S LIABILITY FOR ERROR The Publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The publisher’s liability for others errors or omissions in connection with an advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issue. Published by Schneps Media One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201 Phone: (718) 260-2500 Fax: (212) 229-2790 On-line: www.thevillager.com E-mail: news@thevillager.com © 2019 Schneps Media

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

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Op-Ed

Letters to the Editor

Mayor, give back hotel owners’ cash BY ED HAMILTON AND DEBBIE MARTIN

M

ayor de Blasio, we are calling on you to return Richard Born’s and Ira Drukier’s campaign contributions and the $90,000 that was raised at their March fundraiser for you. With the presidential primaries underway and your reputation for standing up for tenants on the line, you must make it crystal clear to them that they cannot buy a Certificate of No Harassment! As you know, Born and Drukier are the principals of BD Hotels, and they are principals in an LLC that presently owns the famed Chelsea Hotel, where, since 2007, dozens of residents, most of them in the arts, have been evicted to make way for luxury accommodations. Since August 2011, the remaining residents have endured years of seemingly never-ending demolition and construction — often involving demolishing new construction and rebuilding over again. The Certificate of No Harassment (CONH), issued by the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development, is intended to protect tenants from exactly this sort of abuse. Born and Drukier well knew of the requirement for a CONH, as they have applied for CONHs at other buildings they own. Additionally, they were fired from the Chelsea Hotel once before, in 2008, for their refusal to apply for a CONH. They have been doing construction without this required certificate for three years while tenants continue to experience interruptions of basic services, leaks, exposure to toxic dust and constant ear-splitting noise. Mr. Mayor, we invite you to visit the Chelsea Hotel and experience for yourself the conditions of the building. Currently, a portion of the tenants in the building have been without cooking gas for Schneps Media

Walking tax coming next?

Jazzy Gem Spa hit spot for Monk

To The Editor: Re “Court: 14th St. car ban can start” (news article, Aug. 1): The local citizens should be able to vote on our fate through a referendum at the ballot box. The next dictate will be a sidewalk walk tax.

To The Editor: Re “News flash: Gem Spa is struggling” (city business, Aug. 8): I once spotted Thelonious Monk having an egg cream in Gem Spa in the late 1960s. Alan Flacks

Perry Rothenberg

$5 egg creams? There goes the neigborhood

It’s ‘Zero Vision’

PHOTO BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

The writers say the mayor must return campaign contributions he received from Chelsea Hotel owners Richard Born and Ira Drukier, who are seeking a Cer tificate of No Harassment from the cit y for the historic building’s ongoing renovation.

a month and the entire building has been without hot water for more than 24 hours. In any event, you must not allow your reputation as a tenants’ advocate to be besmirched by this appearance of impropriety. That’s why we are asking you to return the $57,000 donated to your campaign by Richard Born, Ira Drukier and their associates. Return the $90,000 raised at the March 4 fundraiser. Only then can the public be assured that H.P.D.’s ongoing investigation into the harassment of the tenants of the Chelsea Hotel will be allowed to continue without undue interference. We hope you will do the right thing. Hamilton and Martin are Chelsea Hotel bloggers.

To The Editor: Re “Court: 14th St. car ban can start” (news article, Aug. 1): Under Bloomberg and de Blasio, the Department of Transportation has been ruining New York City, making every street more dangerous for drivers, pedestrians and bikes. As more and more people become unwilling to drive into Manhattan, unwilling to be subject to the insane chaos of painted markings, bus lanes, bike lanes, speed cameras, intersection cameras and D.O.T. goons issuing summonses on every street, more stores will close, the economy will suffer and many more bike riders will be injured or die. Vision Zero has Zero Vision. Robert Lederman

Amoral leaders To The Editor: Re “Two Bridges project needs public review: Judge” (news article, Aug. 8): The Two Bridges luxury towers will destroy Chinatown and the Lower East Side! We need to vote these people who approved this out of office! You don’t need religion to have morals. If you can’t determine right from wrong, then you lack compassion, not religion. I’m an L.E.S. resident since 1945! Victor Colon

Enigmatic killer To The Editor: Re “Message to Republi-

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PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY

Five-dollar egg creams at Gem Spa? Could the depar ted Zoltar even have foreseen that?

cans: Do something” (editorial, Aug. 8): I’d like to see the evidence that the Dayton shooter was an “antifa activist” and “avowed socialist.” He was an open misogynist who was in a band that had songs glorifyng rape, and apparently maintained a “rape list.” He made a couple of tweets in support of antifa. Please do not play into the bogus equivalism, Villager. Bill Weinberg

More than just ‘anti-vaxx’ To The Editor: Re “‘Anti-vaxxers’ try to mob rent-laws town hall” (news article, Aug. 1): It’s upsetting to see this protest made out to be about being “anti-vaxx.” It’s about being pro-medical choice, proreligion, pro-family and proparental decisions. Giving the government the rights over our bodies is a dangerous decision. This law was passed on June 13 and there are already bills to mandate the flu and HPV vaccines to attend school and to give 14-year-olds the right to make medical decisions without their parents’ consent or knowledge. We value certain freedoms in America and these freedoms are under attack. That is the reason for this demonstration.

To The Editor: Re “News flash: Gem Spa is struggling” (news article, Aug. 8): When I stopped by this afternoon for a pricey ($5) vanilla egg cream, the daughter of ailing owner Ray Patel made it plain that the landlord is giving Gem Spa grief. She said the rent has just climbed to $17,000-plus a month. So this is a sadly familiar story about East Village gentrification. Mary Reinholz

Please, no Astor market! To The Editor: Re “Astor Place mulled for a new market” (news article, Aug. 8): Hate that bad holiday market in Union Square and hope that does not happen here. It’s not well curated and there is a lot of kitschy junk. I would prefer morning tai chi, yoga, a weekly soapbox opportunity, learning events and so forth. Mary Judge E-mail letters, not longer than 250 words in length, to news@thevillager.com or fax to 212-229-2790 or mail to The Villager, Letters to the Editor, 1 MetroTech North, 10th floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201. Please include phone number for confirmation purposes. The Villager reserves the right to edit letters for space, grammar, clarity and libel. Anonymous letters will not be published.

Heather Clare August 15, 2019

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Child Victims Act ads launch BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELL DOMENECH

A

new public-service ad campaign for the Child Victims Act was launched in Times Square on Tuesday. Safe Horizon, the largest victim-services nonprofit in the U.S., along with Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul, unveiled the campaign, designed to educate adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse of their rights under the Child Victims Act enacted this year. The launch included a video and public-service announcements on Times Square billboards, featuring state Senator Alessandra Biaggi, Assemblymembers Catalina Cruz, Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou and Rodneyse Bichotte, all survivors of sexual abuse. One of the ads quotes a tweet by Hochul: “There’s a special place in hell for child abusers and leaders of institutions who protected them. With #ChildVictimsAct – the day of reckoning is here.� The legislation allows accusers to file a criminal claim against their abusers until age 28 and file a civil claim until age 55. The new New York law also includes a look-back period — a one-year window — starting on Wed., Aug. 14, that allows for cases that have expired to be revived. Before the law was enacted earlier this year, New York State required that such lawsuits be filed by the time the victim was age 23. The campaign is multi-platform and includes ads on Facebook and YouTube, as well as placement before movie previews in theaters starting this November. The PSA stills featuring the legislators and fellow survivor Brian Toale, will rotate on Clear Channel’s Times Square screens.

Squirrel bite fright at B.P.C. BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELL-DOMENECH

B Chelsea: 242 West 23RD 3T s 4 !$$)4)/.!, /&&)#%3 ). Fordham (Little Italy) % 4( 3T s 4 Lenox Hill 34 !VE s 4 -ON 4HURS n &RI 3AT 3UN CLOSED &ORDHAM 3AT FOR A COMPLETE LIST OF LOCATIONS AND HOURS, GO TO NECB.COM

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eware of aggressive squirrels in Rockefeller Park. On Aug. 9, the Battery Park City Authority published a warning on its Web site stating that it has received reports of aggressive squirrels biting visitors around the playground in Rockefeller Park. According to ABC7 Eyewitness News, the New York City Health Department receives about 30 reports of squirrel bites annually, and since it started doing rabies surveillance in 1992, has yet to find a single squirrel with rabies. “Squirrels exhibiting aggressive behavior have usually been fed by humans before — and are looking to eat again, or feel threatened,� the Lower Manhattan authority’s Web site states, after warning park visitors not to feed the animals. B.P.C.A. is meeting with the city Department of Health officials this week to address the situation so that park visitors can better enjoy the space. Those bitten by an aggressive Battery Park squirrel should report it to the Department of Health, as Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou tweeted on Tuesday. Schneps Media


N.Y.U. dental center caters to disabled BY GABE HERMAN

T

he New York University College of Dentistry opened a facility this year that treats patients with physical, developmental and cognitive disabilities. The Oral Health Center for People with Disabilities opened in February at First Ave. and E. 24 St. The 8,000-square-foot space includes nine patient treatment rooms, featuring extra space for wheelchairs or accompaniment by family or a caretaker. The treatment rooms also have lights that change colors for a soothing effect, plus iPads to attach to patient chairs. There are also two sedation suites, which prevent most patients from having to be referred to hospitals for treatment, according to Dr. Ronald Kosinski, the center’s clinical director and clinical associate professor at the N.Y.U. College of Dentistry. Other special features include a lobby with a noise-dampening ceiling, and reception desks at wheelchair height. There is also a multisensory room to calm patients who might start to get upset. The room includes different colored lighting and materials like a mat and heavy blankets, and is a work in progress that includes efforts from other N.Y.U. schools, including engineers, artists and health specialists. Sometimes an exam will be done on the floor of that room for an upset patient, Kosinski said. Along with the center’s staff, all N.Y.U. dental students will now pass through the facility as part of their training. Previously, it was only students in an honors program that learned to treat people with disabilities, in a Special Patient Care Program that started in 1971. Kosinski said the new center will take about a year to become fully operational. “Every day’s a little better and we have an unbelievable staff,” he said. He noted that there is no specialty in special-care dentistry, and traditionally it’s mostly pediatric dentists that have trained to work with disabled patients. In general, there is often a lack of care available for adults with disabilities. “Numerous studies have shown generally poor access to vital health services for both children and adults with disabilities,” said Marco Damiani, C.E.O. of AHRC New York City, a nonprofit that serves people with disabilities. “The N.Y.U. Dentistry Oral Health Center for People with Disabilities will promote greatly improved access. But it exceeds basic expectations by enabling access to a welcoming state-of-the art facility, dental treatment services from highly experienced and engaged faculty, and a service vision that underscores dignity, respect and coordination of care.” Research has shown that disabled people have worse oral health than the general public, and less access to care. There are about 950,000 New Yorkers with a disability of some kind, including 99,000 wheelchair users. The new $12 million N.Y.U. center accommodates wheelchair users with a special wheelchair lift/tipper that avoids the need for the patient to be transferred into a conventional dental chair. This

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COURTESY N.Y.U. PHOTO BUREAU: ROEMER

The new N.Y.U. center features nine spacious patient treatment rooms, including one with a reclining wheelchair platform that allows patients to be treated in their wheelchair instead of being transferred to a dental chair.

was a major benefit for patient Christine Mace, a quadriplegic who lives in the Flatiron District. Mace said that being treated in the tilted chair made the experience “more hassle-free” than the typical dental experience, which she said involves an annoying transfer out of her chair. “Just the option of not having to get out of my chair was the reason I chose to go to the clinic,” she said. “It definitely was a pleasant change.” Mace said the new facility will be her go-to place for dental visits, and she hopes that kind of accessibility spreads for others. Mace became disabled after a spinal cord injury in 2002 at age 19. She noted that she has experienced life with and without a disability, and that awareness must be raised about disabled people’s needs in businesses and society, in general. “It’s definitely a nice change,” she said of the care at the new center, “and something that would be nice if they could implement around the city.” Kosinski noted there have been facilities around the country that treat disabled patients, but they have traditionally been philanthropic projects. And compared to N.Y.U.’s new center, “nobody’s done it in such a big way.” He added it could be the start of a trend, with TVG

other schools initiating the process to create similar facilities, including at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Texas at San Antonio. Part of students’ training is overcoming fear of how to deal with disabled patients, Kosinski said, by having students spend time with the patients and learn about their needs. “It’s patience and understanding,” he said. “Those are the two qualities we’re trying to teach the students.” For their part, patients generally give good feedback, calling the center a dignified and respectful place to be treated, Kosinksi said. “This is for me a dream come true,” he said. “To be able to see the smiles, that’s what makes it all worthwhile, when you can change a person’s life from a dental exam.” While N.Y.U. Dentistry has had about 3,000 appointments annually for people with disabilities, it’s expected the new center will see 8,000 visits the first year and more than 10,000 the second year. Kosinski said, so far, they are on pace to reach the first year’s goal. “I feel like we’re doing the right thing,” he said. “This community has had no voice in the dental community.” August 15, 2019

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PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

The Bower y Mural Wall continues to feature a rotating selection of ar t.

Strong art: ‘Sector report’ is bullish BY GABE HERMAN

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anhattan has for years been getting harder for many artists to live in because of rising prices, as this paper has often covered. But a new report says that the overall arts and cultural sector — both in the city and in Manhattan — is doing well, with good employment numbers and wages. After a request from Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, the city’s Independent Budget Office released a study this summer showing that from 2014 to 2017, the city’s arts and cultural sector saw employment increases of 2.7 percent, a bit above the overall city average of 2.3 percent. The study included independent artists, but also others, like theaters, theater and dance companies, performing arts and museums. The study found that annual wage growth was also better within arts and cultural groups, at 5.9 percent, versus the city as a whole, at 4.4 percent. The Big Apple had about 3,900 arts and cultural organizations in 2017 and more than 44,000 employees. With total wages of $3.3 billion in the city’s arts and culture sector, the average artist / employee was thus paid $75,183, according to the report, indicating that more than just starving artists were included in the survey. The highest portion of jobs within the sector were

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The sculpture “Brick House,” by ar tist Simone Leigh, on the High Line’s newly opened Spur.

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in the “Theater Companies and Dinner Theaters” category, which had 26.5 percent of the city’s arts and culture jobs. That was followed by museum jobs, with 22.2 percent of the sector’s employees, and arts promoters with facilities, at 14.8 percent of the jobs. Independent artists, writers and performers were the next biggest group, making up 8 percent of the sector’s jobs. Manhattan is the center of the city’s arts and cultural scene, at least based on the jobs data. The borough had 80.7 percent of the jobs, and 87.7 percent of the sector’s wages. After the report was released, Brewer said of the findings, “Manhattan continues to prove to be a hub of artistic and cultural life, and I am happy to share this good news about the sector’s growing employment and wage levels. “The fact that the arts and cultural sector is growing faster than the citywide average,” Brewer added, “highlights the importance of arts and cultural organizations in our city, not only as a means of entertainment and enrichment, but also as a vital element of our ever-changing economy. “I have always fought for the arts’ place in our city,” she said, “and I hope this data serves to raise more awareness for the role that the arts and cultural sector plays in both our economy and society at large.” Schneps Media


At last, centenarian’s work on view BY GABE HERMAN

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new outdoor exhibition at City Hall Park features sculptures by a 104-year-old local artist who has only recently started to get recognition in the art world. Carmen Herrera was born in Havana, Cuba, in 1915, and has lived in New York since the 1950s. She has created abstract paintings for more than 70 years, often focusing on the beauty of straight lines and simple geometric forms. The concepts were influenced by her architecture studies in Havana in the 1930s, according to the exhibition’s curator, Daniel S. Palmer of the Public Art Fund. The artwork in Lower Manhattan is called “Estructuras Monumentales.” It’s the first major exhibition of outdoor sculptures by Herrera, and is based on sketches she started doing in the 1960s. There are five sculptures, each a large work of painted aluminum, each with its own shape and distinct meaning. One piece, “Untitled Estructura (Red),” (1962/2018), features two multisided lines that seem to interconnect and confront each other. The work’s description says it could refer to the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis and the conflict between Herrera’s adopted country of the U.S. and her native Cuba. During the conflict, Herrera and her husband helped loved ones and refugees to escape the conflict. Another piece, “Pavanne,” (1967/2017), while from a distance, looks like one big piece of blue metal, is actually three pieces that interlock together. The work was conceived by Herrera as a tribute to her younger brother,

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

“Untitled Estructura (Red),” (1962/2018), by Carmen Herrera.

Mariano, who was dying of cancer. The title references a musical term for a slow processional dance that has funereal overtones. “This is such a special opportunity for us at Public Art Fund to work with an artist like Carmen Herrera,” said the curator Daniel S. Palmer in a Public Art Fund video discussing the exhibition, “to share her powerful work with the entirety of the city and the world.” The five sculptures are spread around in different parts of City Hall Park and will be on view until Nov. 8.

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

“Estructura Verde,” (1966/2018), by Carmen Herrera.

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

“Amarillo Tres,” (1971/2018), by Carmen Herrera. Schneps Media

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Eats

Vegan fave by CHLOE to Coffee Shop spot BY GABE HERMAN

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fter Union Square staple The Coffee Shop closed last October after 28 years in business, a picture has started to form of some of the shops slated to fill the former Brazilian-American restaurant’s space. The ground-floor property, at E. 16th St. and Union Square West, will be split into four retail spaces. One of them will be filled by a new location for by CHLOE, the popular vegan eatery, according to Eater. The interior of by CHLOE will reportedly honor The Coffee Shop’s legacy, including featuring curved banquette seating and an homage to the diner’s neon sign. A fast-casual restaurant, by CHLOE has been expanding a great deal lately, after its first location opened in the Village in 2015, at the corner of Bleecker and MacDougal Sts. That location is still going strong. A bakery offshoot, Sweets by CHLOE, opened the following year next door at 185 Bleecker. The business is expanding glob-

PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN

The first by CHLOE restaurant, at Bleecker and MacDougal Sts., has been popular since opening in 2015.

ally and around the U.S., including six more Manhattan locations. Last week another by CHLOE opened at 1385 Broadway, at W. 38th St., and in October its first takeout-only location will come to Lexington Ave. and E. 54th St., according to Eater. The new Union Square location will reportedly open this December. Another space that was part of The Coffee Shop will become a Chase bank branch. The other two commercial spaces reportedly will be filled by other restaurants, which have not been announced yet. Gail Fox, the former co-chairperson of the Union Square Community Coalition, said she did not understand the need for another Chase bank in the area, unless it was a convenient pop-up size, but that she was pleased with the news about by CHLOE. “I am looking forward to CHLOE’s opening in The Coffee Shop space,” Fox said. “Sounds like they will add vibrancy to the square and will preserve and respect The Coffee Shop memory and artifacts — a themed space, plus tasty vegan.”

I T’ S T IM E for clergy sexual abuse to stop.

52 Duane Street, 7th Floor New York, NY 10007 Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

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Contact us confidentially.

646-741-5051 ItsTimeNewYork.com Schneps Media


Manhattan Happenings BY MICAEL A MACAGNONE

MUSEUMS “Basquiat’s ‘Defacement’: The Untold Story”:This exhibition takes as its starting point the painting “The Death of Michael Stewart,” informally known as “Defacement,” created by Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1983. The work commemorates the fate of the young black artist Michael Stewart at the hands of New York City Transit police after he allegedly tagged a wall in an East Village subway station. With the painting as its centerpiece, this exhibition examines Basquiat’s exploration of black identity, his protest against police brutality, and his attempts to craft a singular aesthetic language of empowerment. Through Nov. 6. Admission $25 general, $18 students/seniors, paywhat-you-wish Saturdays from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. At the Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Ave. “Nature” — Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial,co-organized with Cube design museum, presents the work of 62 international design teams. Collaborations involve scientists, engineers, advocates for social and environmental justice, artists and philosophers, engaging with nature in innovative and groundbreaking ways, driven by a profound awareness of climate change and ecological crises, as much as advances in science and technology. On view through Jan. 20. Tours are complimentary with museum admission and take place every Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. Adults $16, seniors $10, and students $7. Saturdays from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. are pay-what-you-wish admission. At The Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in Carnegie Mansion, Two E. 91st St.

MOVIES Intrepid Summer Movie Series:The deck of the U.S.S. Intrepid does double duty as an open-air theater for this free summer film series on Fridays throughout the summer. This week, they will have a “community choice pick” for the movie. Admission tickets (free of charge) will be distributed on a firstcome, first-served basis before the show. The flight deck opens at 7 p.m., and the movie begins at sunset, weather permitting. Doors close at 8:30 p.m. Hudson Riverflicks Presents “Big”:After wishing to be made big, a teenage boy wakes the next morning to find himself mysteriously in the body of an adult. The 1988 flick features Tom Hanks, Elizabeth Perkins and Robert Loggia. Aug. 21, 8:30 p.m., in Hudson River Park at the Pier 63 lawn at W 23rd St. Schneps Media

The focus of the current Cooper Hewitt Triennial is nature.

Metropolitan Opera Summer HD Festival:Opera’s biggest stars get their close-ups on the big screen during the Met’s free HD Festival. Held outdoors in Lincoln Center Plaza, the event brings back nearly a dozen productions from the Met’s “Live in HD” simulcast series. There will also be a pre-festival screening of the Audrey Hepburn film “Funny Face,” with songs by George and Ira Gershwin, on Aug. 23. There are thousands of seats in the plaza — but they do fill up, so grab a good one well before the 8 p.m. start time. A full calender of screenings can be found at https://www.metopera.org.

plus the basics about materials, color mixing and composition. And you get to take home your painting. Supplies are provided and no experience is necessary. Space is limited, so reserve your spot on Eventbrite at painttd.eventbrite. com. Thurs., Aug. 22, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., at the Tony Dapolito Recreation Center, at 1 Clarkson St., at Seventh Ave. South. Bryant Park: Moves with Limon Dance:Led by dancers from the worldrenowned Limón Dance Company, this modern dance class is open to all levels and ages. On the northeast corner of the Bryant Park Lawn Saturday mornings this summer, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Summer on the Hudson: FlyNYC:Music and kites fill the air at this festival for all ages. Kite kits are provided free for children (while supplies last), or bring your own favorite kite from home. Sat., Aug. 17, 12:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m at Pier I in Riverside Park South, West 70th Street .

KIDS Hudson River Park’s Big City Fishing Mondays: Adults and kids ages 5 and up learn how to fish while engaging with trained environmental educators about river science topics. Rods, reels and instruction provided. At Tribeca’s Pier 25 (cross at North Moore St.), at 5 p.m., until Aug. 26.

MUSIC Selena for Sanctuary:Building off the success of last year’s Selena for Sanctuary, a free Selena-themed outdoor concert in support of immigration rights, organizer, artist manager and activist Doris Muñoz is bringing the event to Central Park’s SummerStage for 2019. Muñoz’s dance parties raise funds to help immigrants navigate U.S. immigration policy to set them on the path to citizenship. This year’s headlin-

OUTDOORS 2019 Rooftop Painting Series:Enjoy an outdoor watercolor painting and monotype printmaking workshop at sunset on the rooftop of the Village’s Tony Dapolito Recreation Center. Participants, 18 years of age or older, will learn how to paint from observation, TVG

er is Kali Uchis, a Colombian-American singer with a critically acclaimed debut LP (2018’s “Isolation”) and collaborations with Gorillaz, Juanes and Daniel Caesar. Sun., Aug. 18, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m, at Rumsey Playfield in Central Park. Emerging Music Festival:Music lovers pack the lawn to hear New York City’s best up-and-coming bands, including indie rock, soul and funk. This event is free and open to the public, with no tickets and no lines. Bring a picnic, if you like. Food and drink are also available for purchase on site. Fri., Aug. 23, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., on the Lawn at Bryant Park. Women of Early Jazz:The Jefferson Market Garden’s last world music concert for the summer features the New York Jazzharmonic Trad-Jazz Sextet presenting the first performance of a new program, “Women of Early Jazz.” The concert will focus on compositions of talented women of the 1920s and ’30s who contributed to the development of American music, but who have been largely forgotten. Among them are Lillian Hardin, wife of and pianist and co-composer with Louis Armstrong and pianist Lovie Austin, plus the still-famous vocalists Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey and Ethel Waters. Joining the sextet will be vocalist Queen Esther, who has been performing in the traditional style for many years. Sun., Aug. 18, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., at the Jefferson Market Garden, at Greenwich and Sixth Aves.

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News flash: Gem Spa is struggling BY BILL WEINBERG

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t was slightly traumatic for old-school East Village residents when they last approached Gem Spa to buy a paper at the newsstand that had long stood outside the corner store. The newsstand, a fi xture for generations, displaying a multilingual selection reflecting the neighborhood’s diversity, was gone — not a scrap of printed matter was to be found at Gem Spa. Parul Patel is behind the counter every day now, putting her “life on hold” to save the family business. The newsstand was a necessary sacrifice, she said. “We don’t make money on newspapers,” she explained. “Six or eight dollars each day — if nobody steals any. My dad was doing it as a community service.” Her father, Ray Patel, now ailing with Parkinson’s disease, purchased Gem Spa in 1986. “My father loves newspapers, he’s from that generation,” she said. “He carried the torch at his own expense.” Old-timers who still buy newspapers could be accommodated — until a twist of fate plunged the business into crisis. Sales initially dropped 80 percent in April, when the store’s cigarette license was suspended. Patel said a “rogue employee” (subsequently fired) sold butts on two occasions to undercover snoops from the city’s Department of Consumer Affairs. “It’s not in line with our philosophy,” Patel said. “We wouldn’t be here 33 years otherwise.” She pointed out the pop-up sign on the register that prompts cashiers to ask if tobacco purchasers are 21 years old. A city judge imposed no penalty on Gem Spa after the rogue cigarette sales last year, noting the store’s clean prior record. But word of the sales was automatically shared with state authorities, who imposed a six-month suspension in April. The newsstand was removed in early June, partly at the urging of the landlord’s management company, which sought a cleaner look. Zoltar, the mechanical fortune teller, was also removed. The inside magazine racks were likewise removed. Patel said the distributer, Hudson News, “scooped up” the entire stock of magazines following a financial dispute. She said newspaper and magazine sales took a plunge some 10 years ago, as digital media became ubiquitous. The loss of the newsstand exemplifies a cultural shift. Opinion differs on when Gem Spa first opened. Certainly, the store has been at the corner of Second Ave. and St. Mark’s Place since the 1950s. But sources maintain it had an earlier incarnation at the location under a different name in the ’20s. It is widely credited as the first place in New York to sell egg creams. It began selling Yiddish newspapers, but became an outlet for the underground press in the counterculture of the ’60s. Allen Ginsberg and Patti Smith invoked Gem Spa in their writings, and the New York Dolls shot the back-cover photo of their 1973 debut album in front of the iconic store. When the New Jersey-based Patel family bought

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PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY

Did he even see it coming? Zoltar, the for tune teller, was removed from the front of Gem Spa in June, allegedly to give the storefront a “cleaner” look.

the store, they learned how to make egg creams from the previous owners. “I’ve been making egg creams since I was a teenager,” Parul Patel boasted. What’s critical now is making it to October, when the tobacco license will be restored, according to Patel. She’s added CBD items to try to take up the slack — and vegan egg creams with almond milk. “We’re catering to new segments of the neighborhood,” she said. Patel anticipates eventually restoring magazines and newspapers — although not the outdoor newsstand — on a limited basis. But she said it would just be the “main titles, not all the exotic stuff we carried, in Chinese, Polish, Italian and Spanish.” “I’m overwhelmed by how many people have come forward to help us,” she said. But she was quick to add, “I have to triple what I’m doing right now. We’re just surviving, with no pay for myself. I never see my kids.” Harry Bubbins of Village Preservation notes rumors that a Citibank is planned for the space. This could be allowed under the terms of the East VilTVG

lage Historic District, as long as the exterior is not changed. Village Preservation is pushing for a “special commercial district” for the East Village, which would restrict new chain outlets from opening between E. 14th and E. Houston Sts. from Second Ave. to Avenue D. Community Board 3 approved the idea in June, but the plan must first pass muster with the City Planning Department before going to the City Council for a deciding vote. “St. Mark’s is not dead, and it’s because of businesses like Gem Spa that have been in the neighborhood for decades,” Bubbins declared. “It’s a quintessential East Village corner store.” Patel said supporters are planning a benefit for Gem Spa, and she’s promoting the store on social media. She said that despite having been a successful businessman, her father has little money. A devout Hindu, originally from Gujarat, India, he gave much of his earnings to charity. “I need this business to take care of my dad’s medical needs. And it meant so much to him,” Patel said, wiping away a tear. “I want him to die with dignity.” Schneps Media


Judge: Do Two Bridges review Last December, the City Planning Commission voted to green-light the three-tower project. City Planning plugged the projects’ benefits, emphasizing nearly 700 of its 2,775 units would be affordable. Brewer and the City Council sued the de Blasio administration, holding that the “minor modification” argument was absurd, and that the project must go through the city’s Uniform Land Use Review Procedure a.k.a. ULURP. Brewer, Speaker Corey Johnson and Councilmember Margaret Chin issued a joint press release with statements on Justice Arthur Engoron’s ruling. The court found that “[T]he irreparable harm here is twofold. First, a community will be drastically altered without having had its proper say. Second, and arguably more important, allowing this project to proceed without the City Council’s imprimatur would distort the city’s carefully crafted system of checks and balances. ... Without

BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

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he Two Bridges megaproject does not get a pass from the city’s ULURP public-review process. That was the ruling by a State Supreme Court justice, who on Thursday decided in favor of a lawsuit on the Lower East Side megaproject filed by the New York City Council and Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer. The Two Bridges megaproject includes an 80-story building by JDS Development Group, 62- and 69-story towers by L+M Development Partners and the CIM Group, and a 63-story tower by Starrett Group. Three years ago, Department of City Planning staff said that the proposed projects in Two Bridges, between the Brooklyn and Manhattan bridges — which would rise as tall as 80 stories — were merely “minor modifications” to the site’s existing large-scale residential development, or L.S.R.D., zoning.

PHOTO BY ALEJAN-

DRA O’CONNELLDOMENECH

On June 5, Borough President Gale Brewer with Councilmember Margaret Chin, demanded the Two Bridges plan go through ULURP.

ULURP, the city’s Legislature is cut out of the picture entirely.” The project site is located in Chin’s Lower Manhattan Council District 1. “For three years, we have rallied and petitioned,” Chin said. “As a final step, we sued... . Judge Engoron’s decision vindicates our efforts and...empowers the voices of those most impacted by the displacement and gentrification of the proposed megatowers.” However, local community groups that have been battling the project — and who have also filed their own lawsuit against it — expressed skepticism that Thursday’s ruling would, in the end, matter. The groups, Lower East Side Organized Neighbors (LESON), and the Coalition to Protect Chinatown and the Lower East Side, released a hard-hitting statement on the judge’s decision to proceed with a ULURP, and slammed Chin as ineffective in fighting the towers. They decried as “cheap buyouts” the infrastructure improvements that the developers have promised. “[T]he influx of thousands of new residents will overburden any structural investments,” they said. “Even more serious is the massive displacement that will be caused by over 2,000 market-rate units.”

‘Green Wave’ will boost bike safety: Mayor BY GABE HERMAN

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s the grim tally of bicyclist deaths in the city this year continues to rise, city officials have been implementing and proposing new rules aimed at creating a better biking infrastructure. There have been 18 cyclist deaths in the city so far in 2019, compared to 10 deaths in all of 2018. In response, Mayor de Blasio announced on July 25 a strategy called Green Wave: A Plan for Cycling in New York City. The Green Wave plan has been allocated $58.4 million in city funding for the next five years. The initiative includes adding 30 miles of protected bike lanes every year. Fifty intersections will get “turn-calming treatments” to slow down drivers. The plan also calls for police enforcement to increase at 100 of the most dangerous intersections, based on crash data, with a focus on risky actions, like speeding, failure to yield, blocking bike lanes and trucks that are oversized or off route. There will be a continuation of Operation Bicycle Safe Passage, which was announced as a temporary action

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promised New Yorkers we’d do everything we could to end traffic fatalities,” the mayor said at the plan’s announcement. “No loss of life on our streets is acceptable. With a dangerous surge in cyclist fatalities, we have to keep pushing the envelope and increasing our efforts. That’s what this plan is about. It’s a continuation of our promise. This time, specifically to bikers.” Several local politicians were supportive of the mayor’s new plan. “I’m grateful to Mayor de Blasio for building on his commitment to Vision Zero with today’s investments,” said state Senator Brad Hoylman. “With bike ridership set to increase even more dramatically in the coming years, these new measures and protections could not come soon enough.” “New Yorkers deserve safer streets,” said Borough President Gale Brewer. “The uptick in cyclist fatalities this year is unacceptable, and I’m glad the administration is taking steps to prevent future incidents.” Councilmember Ydanis Rodriguez, whose 10th District includes Upper Manhattan, and who chairs the Council’s Transportation Committee, said even more must be done. While it’s

for early July and included many of the enforcement policies mentioned above. According to the city, in July’s first three weeks, police doubled enforcement against cars parked in bicycle lanes, issuing more than 8,600 summonses. Police will also send supervisors to crash sites to investigate if right-of-way laws should be applied, and cyclists will no longer be ticketed at sites of fatal bike crashes. The mayor’s plan also includes the Department of Transportation installing 2,000 bicycle parking spaces annually in the city by using bike corrals. D.O.T. will also put out a request for expressions of interest, or R.F.E.I., to get ideas for a new high-capacity parking system for bikes. The mayor also said there will be a focus on implementing a law recently passed by the City Council that lets cyclists ride on pedestrian signals and gives them a head start at thousands of intersections across the city. In addition, de Blasio said he would work with Council Speaker Corey Johnson and councilmembers on other bills, including requiring a 3-foot passing distance between cars and bicycles. “When we came into office, we

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good to add 30 miles of protected bike lanes every year, he said, “we should be aiming to have 100 miles of protected bike lanes a year.” Speaker Johnson, whose West Side district includes Chelsea, the West Village and Hell’s Kitchen, introduced legislation in May requiring at least 50 miles of protected bike lanes to be added each year, along with at least 30 miles of new bus lanes each year that are separated from other traffic. Meanwhile, a list has been compiled of the 10 most dangerous intersections in the city for bicyclists, with several of them in Lower Manhattan. The rankings are from localize.city, which used data from 2014 to 2018 on bicycle injuries and deaths. The city’s most dangerous intersection, according to the list, is in Chelsea at Sixth Ave. and W. 23rd St., where bike messenger Robyn Hightman, 20, died in June after being hit by a truck. Third Ave. and E. 14th St. was found to be the city’s fourth-worst intersection for cyclists. Others in Lower Manhattan on the top-10 dangerous list for bikers included two spots on the Lower East Side, at Chrystie and Delancey Sts., and at Allen and E. Houston Sts.

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Real Estate

Still something to Strive for in Harlem BY MARTHA WILKIE

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trivers’ Row in Harlem (official name: St. Nicholas Historic District) is a late-19th-century set of row houses famed for its elegant architecture and unified facades. Located on 138th and 139th Sts., between Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and Frederick Douglass boulevards, this enclave was home to notable AfricanAmerican figures, such as Adam Clayton Powell Jr. — back when the adjacent boulevard was plain old Seventh Ave. Famed architects such as Stanford White designed the striking area in different architectural styles. The original developer restricted it to “whites only,” but he went bankrupt, and by 1919, the Equitable Life Insurance Company opened it up to people of color. “Prevented from buying these houses made them irresistibly attractive to African-Americans who had been told the houses were too ‘good’ for them,” said Michael Henry Adams, author of “Harlem: Lost and Found, an Architectural and Social History.” “When Robert Moses wanted to demolish Strivers’ Row in the 1930s, the homeowners — mostly black by this time — universally protested the destruction of their homes.” Michael Henry Adams knows Harlem. Trained in historic preservation at Columbia, he conducts tours in Harlem and writes; his next book will be “Homo Harlem: Lesbian and Gay Life in the African-American Cultural Capital.” As lovely as Strivers’ Row is, it’s a challenge to maintain the original level of unity. “Strivers’ Row has been diminished in recent years,” Adams said, “by ineffective regulation by the Landmarks Preservation Commission to ensure that the unifying elements are maintained, as opposed to the natural impulse that many have to give their homes individual character. Also important is how it’s been misinterpreted. Signs refer to horses, imply-

The elegant facade of 250 W. 139th St.

This sumptuously renovated Strivers’ Row five-bedroom is on the market for $4.25 million.

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ing a stable once stood in the service alleys behind the houses.” Here are two listings on Strivers’ Row and two more in Harlem: A row house at 246 W. 139th St. is on the market, featuring a nicely renovated kitchen and bathrooms, roof deck and rare private garage. Four bedrooms, four-and-a-half baths. $3 million. Right nearby, at 250 W. 139th St., a sumptuously renovated five-bedroom, five-bath row house with

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windows on three sides is also up for sale. $4.25 million. Also in Harlem, at 171 E. 117th St., a rental with two decorative fireplaces, three bedrooms, and one bath is asking $3,250 a month. For sale in West Harlem, at 537 W. 133rd St., is a two-bedroom, one-bath, with an affordable price (and income restrictions) and a newly renovated kitchen, for $269,000.

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Preservationists decry Tech Hub, again BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH

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embers of the Village’s leading preservation group protested the 14th St. Tech Hub, during its groundbreaking ceremony earlier this month. Village Preservation has repeatedly decried the development of the Union Square Tech Training Center, at 124 E. 14th St., arguing that promised protective measures should have been implemented and that the project is an extension of “Midtown South” and “Silicon Alley” into the Village. The preservation society is also calling for an investigation into what it calls a “sweetheart deal” for RAL, the project’s developers. “Rather than a cause for celebration, the groundbreaking ceremony for the 14th St. Tech Hub calls for serious examination of the corrupt process which led to its approval and the sweetheart deal it had to several donors to the mayor,” the preservation group said in a statement. “This sad saga is rife with broken commitments and promises made by both the mayor and Councilmember Carlina Rivera regarding protections and mitigations for the surrounding neighborhood,” the statement added. During her 2017 City Council cam-

COURTESY VILLAGE PRESERVATION

Activists with Village Preser vation protested at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Union Square Tech Hub on E. 14th St.

paign, Rivera expressed support for the Tech Hub, but only provided the city enact some zoning measures to protect the surrounding area from what the preservationists warned would be an ongoing surge of commercial and residential development. Yet, last August,

the City Council unanimously approved the Tech Hub without protections or height caps for the surrounding area. After the groundbreaking, Village Preservation released a report outlining information found via Freedom of Information Law requests that reveal

lower rent payments for RAL than the site’s previous tenant. According to the records, RAL is set to pay around $5 million for the first three years it occupies the property, or about $1.6 million a year. For the following five years, the developer would pay $2.3 million a year. The previous tenant, PC Richard & Son, paid $1.7 million annually for a two-story building. Other documents in the report show the city has no written record of why RAL was selected to take on the project over other bidders that did ask for an upzoning request, allowing for the creation of more commercial office space. In 2015, RAL made a least a $10,000 contribution to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s nonprofit Campaign for One New York, according to the New York Post. The Union Square Tech Training Center is scheduled to open by 2020. The 21-story building will include a digital-skills training space operated by nonprofit Civic Hall, in addition to a co-working space for startups and established tech companies alike. One floor will have space for community organizations, as well as a food hall, retail spaces, and small businesses, according to the city’s Economic Development Corporation.

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$10

Open a new Flushing Bank Complete Checking account and you will be eligible to receive a $10 Starbucks gift card1 and up to $100.2,3 Plus, all new Complete Checking accounts can get a CASH BONUS up to $200.2,4 For more information, visit your local Flushing Bank branch (locations in Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and on Long Island), speak with a Flushing Bank representative at 800.581.2889 (855.540.2274 TTY/TDD), or go to www.FlushingBank.com.

Small enough to know you. Large enough to help you.® Effective August 2, 2019. 1) Limit one (1) Starbucks gift card per new Complete Checking account, minimum opening balance of $1,000 or more required. Starbucks is not a sponsor or participant of this promotion. 2) New Complete Checking account with new money only. Existing checking account customers are not eligible. A new checking account is defined as any new checking account that does not have any authorized signatures in common with any other existing Flushing Bank checking account(s). An existing checking customer is defined as anyone who currently has or has had a Flushing Bank checking account within the last 24 months. New money is defined as money not currently on deposit with Flushing Bank. 3) The Cash Bonus is limited to one (1) account credit per new Complete Checking account. To qualify for the Cash Bonus, a new Complete Checking account must be opened with a minimum opening balance of $1,000 or more. The Cash Bonus credit will be based on the monthly average account balance of the first three (3) full months after account opening. The monthly average account balance tiers and respective account credits are as follows: Tier 1: $1,000 - $4,999 a $10 account credit, Tier 2: $5,000 - $9,999 a $50 account credit, Tier 3: $10,000+ a $100 account credit. The Cash Bonus credit will be posted to the account on or about the end of the subsequent month following the account’s three (3) month anniversary. A 1099 will be issued in the amount of the account credit. The new Complete Checking account must remain open, active and in good standing for six months. If the account is closed prior to six months or prior to receiving the credit, the account credit will be forfeited. Other fees and restrictions may apply. Notwithstanding the Cash Bonus offer, a minimum deposit of $25 is required to open the Complete Checking account. 4) This offer is limited to one Complete Checking account per household. Minimum deposit required to open a new Complete Checking account is $25. No minimum balance required to be eligible for the Bonus. Direct Deposit– You will receive $100 for signing up for and receiving a recurring direct deposit. Each direct deposit must be $250 or more. Tax refund checks do not qualify as direct deposit. Direct Deposits must be completed prior to 90 days after the account is opened. Debit Card Purchases – You will receive $50 for the completion of 5 debit card purchases. Each debit card purchase must be $25 or more. Online Banking bill payments – You will receive $50 for completing 5 online banking bill payments via Flushing Bank’s Online Banking portal. Each online bill pay must be $25 or more. Debit Card Purchases and Online Banking bill payments must be completed prior to 60 days after the account is opened. THE MAXIMUM AMOUNT ANY CUSTOMER CAN RECEIVE IS $200. The compensation will be credited to the checking account on or about the end of the month following the completion of the above qualifying transactions within the required time after account opening. A 1099 will be issued in the amount credited to your account. Other fees and restrictions may apply. The promotion and offer are subject to change and termination without prior notice at any time. Flushing Bank is a registered trademark

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NEW LOW PRICES PERMANENTLY AND FOREVER!

Just Call Us

212-772-3211 929 Lexington Ave, New York, NY 10065

WWW.GARNETWINE.COM USE THESE DISCOUNTS EVERY TIME YOU SHOP FOR THE NEXT 12 MONTHS

USE THESE DISCOUNTS EVERY TIME YOU SHOP FOR THE NEXT 12 MONTHS

20% OFF 30% OFF ALL LIQUORS*

ALL STILL WINES*

DELIVERY IN MANHATTAN

DELIVERY IN MANHATTAN

Coupon Code: VP20 *Regular Price

Coupon Code: VP30 *Regular Price

MINIMUM DELIVERY ORDER $100.

MINIMUM DELIVERY ORDER $100.

*$51(7 Wines & Liquors

.... NEW YORK CITY .... Open: Mon-Wed 8am - 9pm Thurs-Sat 8am - 10pm Sun 12pm - 7pm

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