Cleric Who Fought Land Deal Axed

According to the News, Father Jim O’Shea is out at Our Lady of Monserrate, and Churches United has been dissolved. The News says this is all fallout from the Broadway Triangle fight (does this mean Wednesday’s charrette is off?), but CU was also the major backer of the Domino project. I assume this is developing, as they say.

[Thanks, Phil]

UPDATE: According to inside sources, there was an “attempted coup” by some members of the CU board. It remains to be seen if the dissolution will hold up.

More Gripes Over Grand Street Bike Lane

Not our Grand Street – the one in Manhattan.

Once again, DOT paints first and asks questions later. The lanes are down and the no stopping signs are up, but all the other stuff necessary to make the bike lanes less of an imposition are still being installed. At least this time, DOT cops to the backwards planning: “[the] most important thing to emphasize is that this project is still being installed”.

Confusing Bike Lanes

Once again, DOT has done half a job. This time, its the bicyclists who are paying the fines, at least until DOT finishes marking out the bike lanes and making it clear that (in this case) bicycles are allowed on the sidewalk.
Is it really too much to ask that DOT think about what they’re doing before they break out the paint striper? Maybe the machine is just so much fun that they can’t stop the guys from going out and painting lines before the higher ups have thought the whole plan through.

22 Nov: India Street End Park Design Review

OSA and GWAPP are hosting a design review meeting this Saturday to see that latest plans for the India Street End Park design. (Hopefully there will be a discussion about park naming too.)
For information, check out GWAPP or OSA.



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24 Nov: Transportation Town Hall Meeting

Next Monday, Councilman David Yassky and State Senator-elect Daniel Squadron will be hosting a Transportation Town Hall meeting. Representatives from the Department of Transportation and the Metropolitan Transit Authority will be there to answer community questions and concerns.
There probably won’t be much to talk about. But maybe you can think of a concern.
Or two.
Or three
.
Date: Monday, 24 November
Time: 6:00 pm
Location: Swinging Sixties Senior Center
211 Ainslie Street, corner Manhattan Avenue
(Graham Avenue L stop, if you can get on the train)



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Sugar and Spice and Everything Not So Nice

Good, quick piece in the *Eagle* on the Havemeyer’s Sugar Trust and the efforts of Arbuckle Coffee to break it.
In the late 19th century, the Sugar Trust included not only the Domino Refinery (the “jewel in the crown”), but at least five or six other refineries along the Williamsburg and Greenpoint waterfront. Others were located in DUMBO and in New Jersey.
The lone holdout was the Mollenhauer Refinery, which was located on the Certified Lumber site on Kent between Division and South 11th Street. Mollenhauer was a speciality sugar manufacturer, and thus not a threat to the Trust. The suspicion at the time was the the Havemeyer’s let Mollenhauer operate unimpeded so that the Sugar Trust wouldn’t be accused of controlling 100% of the market. They only controlled 98% of it.

Hasidic Harmony

Matisyahu:

I guess my feelings on gentrification are that cities grow, and people need places to live and it’s just what happens. At one point I had a motorcycle I bought from a guy named Slick who owns a repair and used motorcycle shop, Japanese bikes, over in Williamsburg. And you know, he’s been there for years and years and he bought it for very cheap and it’s this old shack with all these cycles sitting out in the street. And he’s been offered millions and millions of dollars for his property and he’s like, “Nah,” just holding on. When you hear stories like that [pauses] I think that’s a pretty cool thing.

Its hard not miss Slick.

Crain’s Fails Geography

SEIU Local 32BJ is calling on the ex-basketball star to give better health benefits to workers at the luxury condominium building he owns in Williamsburg [emphasis added].

Canyon-Johnson (Magic Johnson’s investment fund) is an investor an investor in the Williamsburgh Savings Bank tower in Downtown Brooklyn.
(Since corrected in Crain’s online version.)