Brooklyn Artists Propose Local Currency

Planet Money reports on a North Brooklyn group that plans on issuing its own local currency. The plan follows similar initiatives in Ithaca and Madison, Wisconsin. Details are a bit sketchy at this point, but you can learn more about the Brooklyn Torch here.

Kent Repaving Starts

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Kent Avenue, stripped.


In comments, reader JJ has a front-line report on the Kent Avenue repaving, which (as promised) started yesterday evening:

The transformation of Kent Ave. started last night. And kept me up most of the night as DOT crews tore up the asphalt between Broadway and S. 7th. Thank God!

Based on the condition of the street this morning, I can see why JJ didn’t get much sleep. This is more than just repainting the bike lanes – DOT is doing a full-on repaving.

JJ goes on to echo some of my own previous thoughts on the whole Kent Avenue tempest:

I’m glad to see some change, but the coming change is not the answer either. The bike lanes and no parking was a big mistake. It turned Kent Ave. already dangerous because of how people speed down it, into an open freeway… Kent Ave is not the West Side Highway, it’s not going to be the west side highway and the Brooklyn Greenway plan to make it into one was a mistake…

Indeed – the removal of parking on Kent Avenue has made the speeding (and passing) much worse. If you aren’t going at least 40, you have a good chance of being passed (either on the right or the left). DOT’s 2008 bike lane project did turn Kent into the West Side Highway (actually, it was already like that – the bike lane project just made it worse by eliminating all parking). The addition of parking and elimination of one lane of traffic should slow things down considerably.

What about pedestrians? how can the city have rezoned the whole waterfront for housing, on the other side of a truck route and not imagined that thousands of people a day might need to cross that street? The North side is still mostly without traffice lights to allow pedestrian crossing to the high rises and a state park — I mean come on get real.

Spot on – this is something I have been talking about since the bike lanes went in last year. The repaving of Kent Avenue that is going on right now is more than just painting new lines on the street – DOT is ripping up the street (a pretty new one, at that) to lay down new asphalt. They should be using this opportunity to put in an actual greenway, but they are not. But if DOT is not using this opportunity to put in traffic lights at at least three or four intersections between Grand and North 14th, they just don’t get it.



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34th Council District Forum Cancelled

Town Square Inc. had scheduled a forum for the candidates of the 34th council district fior tomorrow evening. Unfortunately, two of the three candidates refused to appear, so the event was cancelled. So who was the one candidate willing to appear at the only public candidates’ event in the 34th??

UPDATE: As noted in the comments, the answer is Diana Reyna. Maritza Davila and Gerry Esposito could not or would not make it. (I should’ve checked Short before posting that question.)

889 Broadway

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889 Broadway
Photo: PropertyShark

NY1 reported earlier in the week that DOB had issued a vacate order for an illegal conversion on Broadway in Bushwick, but since they didn’t include an address, it was hard to follow up. Today, BushwickBK reported that the building was 889 Broadway, which led me to this more detailed report on CBS TV.

Its still hard to piece everything together, but it looks as though FDNY filed the complaints that led to the vacate order. According to the DOB records, the owner was in the process of converting the building (its actually at least three interconnected buildings) to 15 apartments. NY 1 and CBS both say there were 20 units in the buildings. BushwickBK claims that the building, like its neighbors, was residential already – that this was not a traditional loft conversion. However, the legal use of the building is not clear – the existing CO [pdf] is for three stories of light manufacturing above a ground-floor store. On the other hand, the Department of Finance classifies the building as a walk-up apartment. If the CO is correct, and the building was being cut up into apartments, that is a pretty big deal for the FDNY, particularly since two firemen died fighting a fire in an illegal apartment in the Bronx in 2005.

The buildings also have a host of violations, including two unsafe building notices (in 1988 and 1992) and 77 DOB violations since 1972. CBS reports

In a statement to CBS 2, the landlord said: “Neither the ownership nor the management had any prior knowledge” of the violations, and pointed out there have been no violations in the past 11 years.

Actually, there have been 28 DOB violations issued in the past 11 years, and 27 of them are still active (and that doesn’t include the four violations issued on Thursday). These recent violations include 2 for work without a permit (in 2003). In that period, there has not been a single application for work – the most recent DOB permit dates to 1997, and tellingly, was to correct prior work that had been done without permits. (The first part of the landlord’s statement is probably technically true, in a weaselly way – the “violations” in this case were issued on the same day as the vacate order. But that should not in any way be construed as a statement of innocence on the owner’s part.)

Of course as usual the real tragedy here is that “dozens” of residents are out on the street with three hours notice. The real kick in the teeth is this closing statement in the CBS report: “Tenants say they believed the apartments were being rented legally”. In this case, that is entirely believable.



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Biviano Podcast

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There is a little over a month until the Democratic primary, so expect a flurry of appearances, mailers, phone calls and every other type of outreach from your candidates.

The latest is a live podcast (can a podcast be live?) by Doug Biviano. If I understand the press release, you can watch live at Biviano’s campaign headquarters (the BivPod?), or listen live on Brooklyn Heights Blog via blogtalkradio.com. There is also a call in number (718-506-1475) for questions.

What: A live podcast of BHB’s The New Homer Fink Show as part of Biviano’s The Open Door Series.
When: SATURDAY, August 8th, 11:00am
Where: Doug Biviano’s Campaign Office – 89 Montague Street (at the corner of Hicks St.)



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Schumer to Endorse Levin

Being endorsed by Schumer has become something of rite of passage for Brooklyn office-seekers.

Indeed. Nice pick up for Steve.

Liquor License Delay Adds to Restaurants’ Pain

Mercat Negre, a 74-seat restaurant that has been unable to open on Grand Street in Williamsburg because of a seven-month licensing logjam, employs a skeleton crew.

Skeleton crew of construction workers, that is – the place is still majorly under construction. Their DOB application was only approved at the end of May. They also don’t have a CO to operate a restaurant at that, which, according to the Times article, is a requirement to get a liquor license.