Good for him.
In six months New Yorkers will be complaining because the City is ticketing them exactly five minutes after the meter expires. What is the Council going to do then? Tack another five minutes on?
What a stupid bill.
Good for him.
In six months New Yorkers will be complaining because the City is ticketing them exactly five minutes after the meter expires. What is the Council going to do then? Tack another five minutes on?
What a stupid bill.
The charges are relatively minor, and the two “self-hating Jewish hipsters” were released with desk appearance tickets.
“That unauthorized painting on New York City property is unlawful, but that is overlooked because it’s committed against the terrible Hasidim,” [neighborhood resident] Moshe Goldberger said.
Uh, no Moshe, it’s called civil disobedience, one tenet of which is taking responsibility for your acts of civil disobedience. By turning themselves in, Hechtropf and Piccochi seem to get that. Good for them.
Are businesses on Manhattan Avenue refusing to pay for Christmas decorations?!?
So says the Brooklyn Paper.
A quick reminder that this Thursday (10 December) from 7 to 10 pm there is a benefit for NAG (Neighbors Allied for Good Growth – the second G is silent) at the Woods on South 4th Street. No cover, but donations are welcome. There will be plenty of booze, and a silent auction featuring goodies from local institutions (a lot of new additions since my last post on this), such as:
and even some Polish and ESL lessons!
Apparently things got pretty heated at the Borough President’s hearing for Rose Plaza.
Marty, to his credit, pushed the applicant to go beyond the bare minimum of 20% affordable housing. Their response was:
‘There is no other waterfront project developed on private land that is required to provide more than 20 percent affordable housing,’ said [Rose attorney Howard] Weiss.
Fair point (though I think Schaeffer Landing would meet Weiss’s test). But on the other hand, the community has consistently advocated for more than 20%. Twice as much as 20%, in fact.
Andy Campbell eats out at the new South 4th Street tapas bar.
l to r: Assembly Member Joe Lentol; Marty Markowitz; Mike Bloomberg; Brooklyn Parks Commissioner Jules Spiegel; NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe; David Yassky; and OSA’s Stephanie Thayer.
Photo: BP Markowitz’s office
Progress at McCarren yesterday – Mayor Bloomberg and others “broke ground” on the renovation of the McCarren Park Pool (work has been underway for a while, but it’s nice to recognize that).
Bike advocates repainted the Bedford Avenue bike lane the other night.
By a 12-6 vote, the Council’s Land Use Committee approves the Broadway Triangle. The Council’s vote modifies the plan (by adding about 10,000 square feet of new open space), so the whole thing goes back to City Planning for a new sign off, and then returns to the full Council for a final vote. The additional open space was one of the modifications requested by CB1. The other important modification – funding for industrial relocation – was not acted on.