Progress at 65 Commercial

David Yassky’s office said tonight that there is (finally) some progress on the City’s acquisition of 65 Commercial Street. The big stumbing block – MTA intransigence – seems to have been overcome, and the agency that answers to no one has agreed to two potential relocation sites. The City now needs to do a feasibility study for the site they select, which is expected to completed by the end of the month. Then, I guess, negotiations begin over the cost of acquisition (not a quick-turnaround process) and then design of construction of housing on the site, development of parks, waterfront esplanade and other open space benefits on adjacent sites.

A long way off, yes, but at least we can see the starting gate from here.



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An Actual Debate in the 34th

WG News + Arts held a candidates forum for the 34th District last night. For a while, it looked like it would be yet another one-sided discussion, this time with just Gerry Esposito (you may remember that the last two times Diana Reyna was the only candidate to show).

Well, at the last minute Diana Reyna decided she would attend. So kudos to her (the only candidate to appear at all four candidate debates/forums). And kudos to Gerry Esposito, who has now attended two of the four (and gets extra credit for appearing at a fifth event that wound up getting cancelled). Notably absent at all one of these events is the third candidate in the race, Maritza Davila.

And while I’m at it, kudos to WG News + Arts and the Brooklyn Rail for organizing the whole event.

The Political Appeal of Renaming Public Places

In that spirit, the Grand Central Parkway could come into play… How about making it the Edward M. Kennedy Parkway?

How about not? (And while I’m on the subject, how about not naming a subway station after Michael Johnson.)

El Diario Endorses Reyna

A leader actively engaged in issues affecting Williamsburg Bushwick and Ridgewood, Reyna has been a firm supporter and funder of youth services, especially in the face of surging gang violence. The Councilwoman has protected senior citizen programs and is pushing for state-of-the-art upgrades in local schools. With longtime constituents vulnerable to soaring rents and the concentration of waste transfer stations, Reyna will continue to be an ardent defender of a community that needs advocacy, not a party boss’ manipulation.

Another big endorsement for Reyna. While we’re on the subject, The Greenpoint Gazette has posted candidate profiles for the 34th District. Here is Reyna’s.

Down & Dirty in NJ

A public service message for my New Jersey reader:

The New Jersey governor’s race is getting so down and dirty that nothing is off limits. Not even Chris Christie’s driving the wrong way on a one-way street, crashing into a motorcyclist, sending the motorcyclist to the hospital, flashing his US Attorney ID to get out of a ticket, apparently settling a lawsuit with a non-disclosed settlement and then lying about ever being sued in the first place.

Buildings Graft Shocker

[Investigators] captured crooked city workers taking mere $50 and $100 payoffs to ignore violations that had the potential to halt construction at several sites, most of them in The Bronx.

The Tangled 33rd Council District

Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn has a rundown of the candidates in the 33rd district, along with links to her Breakfast of Candidates series (in-depth discussions with 6 of the 7 candidates – I guess Issac Abraham wasn’t hungry).

OtBKB’s take on the 39th district is here.

Behold the Power of the Interwebs

The saga of the Post’s policy for ripping off blogs continues. The mainstream media mining blogs for leads is an old story, but this time around, Ms. Heather has gotten noticed. Or more to the point, the Post’s inane policy for attribution has gotten noticed.

I can independently verify Einstein’s theory of relativity. That doesn’t mean I should call it my own. The Post has no more right to its “exclusive” based on its own verification of a blog post.

Williamsburg Businesses Fear Eminent Domain

I’ve said it before, but regardless of whose vision of Broadway Triangle comes to fruition, manufacturing will be displaced. The City’s plan replaces manufacturing with residential, as does the BTCC plan. The important thing is to make sure that businesses in the Triangle can relocate (and relocate nearby). For that to happen, someone has to pony up some serious money (and that should happen before the Council signs off on anything). CB1 made funding for industrial relocation a condition of their approval, and since then David Yassky and Vito Lopez have signed on, as has Marty Markowitz (who went a step further). If it can happen in Willets Point, it should happen here.