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The Power of Community: Battery Park Rallies for Their Parks

“This is a Political Unicorn”

Residents of Battery Park City and their community were not having it: Governor Cuomo was not going to take away their green space. Cuomo wants the Essential Workers Monument up by Labor Day 2021, and we’re all for a memorial celebrating those who put their lives on the line during the pandemic. But there must be a process that includes the community — is this too much to ask for?

All they were asking for was to be included in the decision, planning, and process.

Many of those who spent the night outside and braved the hot sun fighting for their rights to be heard are actually the doctors, nurses, police, and essential workers among business leaders who live and work right here in our beloved downtown.

Within hours of hearing about the bulldozers, opponents started a Change.org online petition that was signed by 5,000 individuals and counting. Busy parents and people of the area camped out in the park for days on end, and like The Lorax, “we speak for the trees” was just one phrase plastered on posters hugging the trees. In just four days, their pleas were answered- to a degree.

Many people were surprised this neighborhood came together on this issue so quickly.

“But the moms in the community were not surprised at all.  Our community is extremely unified and tight-nit— almost like a small village.  We all truly care about one another.  We already had multiple WhatsApp groups, connecting hundreds of neighbors.  We also had almost 1000 members in our BPC Parents Association Facebook group (I founded it with some friends 5 years ago.)
These platforms have been mostly used to exchange advice, give away hand-me-downs, or report a lost shoe.  So when the news got out about Rockefeller Park being at risk, we were able to mobilize very quickly by using the existing platforms we had already been using for years.
The Parents Association has now morphed into the more formalized BPCNA (BPC Neighborhood Association) and will now have a seat at the table with the BPCA (BPC Authority). The DNA of the group was formed by bonds between neighbors who respect each other and interact in a considerate, caring way. We plan to keep that style, even if the new direction moves towards political causes. “Laurie Sheindlin

Park plans were shifted away from Battery Park but applied to other locations that remain less than favorable. Plans moved to other high-traffic beloved community locations, like the site of the volleyball court near the marina in Battery Park City and next to the Irish Hunger Memorial. The fight is not over. Spearheading the protest were the likes of Korin Cohen, Laurie Sheindlin, Greg Sheindlin, Jenny Rich, Anthony Basilio, Eric Gyasi, Amy Van Buskirk, Pamit S., Lee V. Pham, Jenn Coughlin, Britni Erez, to name a few. These are not just parents, and neighbors, but business leaders in their respective fields.

“This is a Political Unicorn,” exclaimed Greg Sheindlin on the green grass under the trees at Rockefeller Park. Just days before, bulldozers showed up unannounced at that very park, ready to upheave the grass and replace it with a concrete monument honoring NYC’s essential workers.

The green space is well-loved by the people of the community, occupied by playing children, book readers, bike riders, birds, pets, and everything in between.

In protest, the people spoke out — and to think, it all started over social media. What started as a group of parents over WhatsApp turned into a herd of people that caught wind of the project. In under 24 hours, an alliance was formed against Governor Cuomo’s plan to pour concrete over grass and overturn trees.

Those whose children were raised in this area are today grown-ups themselves that still came out to fight, like Mary and Kelly McGowan, 30-year residents. They know the fight down here all too well, as they too had to fight for important issues when their children were small. “The great thing about this protest is that everyone was calm and no voices were raised: it was done with facts and from the hearts of the families and children who live and love this area. We had a mission and we were not going to give up.”

Social media gets a bad wrap, but when it’s used properly, there’s nothing like it. “Today, it’s different: at the click of a finger you can send one message to an entire community, and for that matter, around the world. When my daughter was growing up we had to rely on telephones and in-person meetings, but not today,” described Grace A. Capobianco

One politician stood out as he chanted and rallied with the parents and children. Christopher Marte was there from day one, and just happen to win his seat for District 1 Council. Other leaders still showed up after the fight was over. “We’re elected by the people and we should serve the people. If people knew how valuable this space was to parents, kids, to the little league, soccer, baseball leagues out here, this wouldn’t have even been thought of as a space that was going to be turned from green to concrete,” emphasized Christopher Marte

Tammy Meltzer, Chair Community Board 1, was at the protest and rally and fighting every step of the way at the meetings. “To lose any of the quality of space that is part of this green space is really unfair to people,” she noted.

Meltzer’s teen daughter added, “we grew up in Battery Park City: this is our home and going to other places, it’s not like this — this is one of the only places that has so much green open space. Everywhere you go it’s used extensively by all kinds of people, which is something really beautiful that you don’t get everywhere.”

It was unanimous to all parents, grandparents, and those without children that while the community of New York City and Rockefeller Park would love to honor the heroes of the COVID-19 pandemic, they would like to honor it without losing the city’s already limited greenspace.

As of today July 12, 2021, the fight continues, and all residents want is a seat at the table to have their voices heard.

There is a rally today at 4 PM Irish Hunger Memorial.

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Living NYC

Downtown News – COVID 19

Downtown Alliance Opens Pearl Street As Part of City-Wide Open Streets 

Beginning on Saturday, May 23, the Alliance for Downtown New York, the nonprofit business improvement district for Lower Manhattan, is partnering with the Department of Transportation to bring the Open Streets Program to an eight-block stretch of Pearl Street, between Cedar and State Streets from 11a-3p ET.

“As the city moves forward with the recovery, we need to ensure that people feel more comfortable in public places,” said Jessica Lappin, President of the Alliance for Downtown New York. “We hope these first measures will help our neighbors make good use of this reclaimed roadway.”

Per the organization’s proposal to participate in this citywide program, the Alliance Operations team will place and remove temporary barricades along the stretch of road to designate the protected area as restricted to traffic. DOT will also provide signage that explains social distancing requirements and requests slower vehicular travel speeds. This effort is part of a City-wide program to make a total of 100 miles of roadway available for public use in the warmer weather. Pedestrians and bicyclists using the roadbed along Pearl Street must maintain social distancing of at least six feet and wear a face-covering in public.

No through traffic will be permitted while Open Streets are in effect. Vehicle traffic will be limited to local deliveries, pick-ups/drop-offs, necessary city service vehicles, utility vehicles, and emergency vehicles only. When Alternate Side Parking regulations are in effect, drivers must move their vehicles from the street and may return when ASP is over. These drivers and cyclists are advised to be extremely cautious and to drive 5 MPH or slower.

NOW OPEN- MORE DOWNTOWN DELICIOUSNESS MADE TO ORDER

Downtown News - COVID 19
La Parisienne

Diversify your home dining experiences by supporting the following Lower Manhattan restaurants recently reopened for takeout and delivery:

Jeremy’s Ale House (228 Front Street)

La Parisienne (9 Maiden Lane)

No. 1 Chinese (10 South William Street)

Route 66 Smokehouse (46 Stone Street)

Tacombi (74 Broad Street)—Ulysses (95 Pearl Street)

As always, bookmark and keep an eye on our list of restaurants offering takeout and delivery, which we’re constantly updating.

 

Downtown News - COVID 19
DOWNTOWN ALLIANCE EXPANDS CRITERIA FOR SMALL BUSINESS RENTAL ASSISTANCE GRANT

 

DOWNTOWN ALLIANCE EXPANDS CRITERIA FOR SMALL BUSINESS RENTAL ASSISTANCE GRANT

The Alliance for Downtown New York is expanding criteria for the Small Business Rental Assistance Grant to offer immediate help to more storefront businesses currently providing vital services to residents and workers in Lower Manhattan during the COVID-19 pandemic. The program, which launched earlier this month, is funded by the Alliance with support from Brookfield Properties, Silverstein Properties and The Howard Hughes Corporation to award a total of $800,000 in grants.

More businesses can apply to start on, Thursday, May 21 at 9a ET at downtownny.com/RentAssistGrant.

The expanded criteria include eligible businesses with gross annual revenues of up to $3 million and who employ up to 30 employees, and to storefronts within expanded geography that covers everything south of Chambers Street.

The individual grants will offer $10,000 each to small businesses as a single direct payment to be applied to April or May rent. Businesses must provide appropriate documentation and meet all the following requirements:

—Currently be open and providing an “essential” service as defined by Governor Cuomo in the PAUSE order of March 22, 2020

—Be located on the ground floor in Lower Manhattan below Chambers Street—Be an independent business with five or fewer locations in New York City

—Have fewer than 30 employees as of March 1, 2020

—Gross annual revenue below $3 million—Have a lease at their current location through December 31, 2020

—Provide proof of rent payment for April or May 2020 or potentially for later months if the landlord has given approval for rent deferral

Applications are available starting Thursday, May 21 at 9a ET on a first-come, first-served basis through June 4 at 11:59p ET or until funding has been exhausted. Required documentation includes 2019 4th Quarter 941, relevant lease agreement pages, and the main pages from the business’s most recently filed IRS business tax return, showing its annual gross revenues.

RESTAURANTS CATCH A BREAK FROM DELIVERY APP FEES, THANKS TO CITY COUNCIL MEASURE

Food-delivery apps will no longer be able to charge high fees to restaurants in the five boroughs, thanks to local legislation. On Wednesday the New York City Council passed Int.1908-b, a bill that caps third-party delivery fees at 15%.

The vote tally was 46-4 with zero abstentions.

Int.1908 was introduced last month in the Committee on Small Business by Queens council member Francisco Moya and co-signed by District 1’s Margaret Chin of Lower Manhattan, among others.

At a City Council hearing in April, Downtown Alliance President Jessica Lappin spoke in support of the bill.

“Our local restaurants, which already operate on razor-thin margins, are facing a once-in-a-generation crisis,” Lappin said. “They may be serving takeout and delivery, but are likely doing so at a loss just to keep their doors open and staff on payroll. These outsized fees are massively eating into what little profit restaurants are able to realize today. Charging a 30% fee, especially during an unprecedented crisis, is unconscionable.”

The new measure goes into effect seven days after being signed into law by the mayor.

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News

Waterfront Alliance Rallies for Clean Water and Open Harbors

New Yorkers and coast-dwellers are rallying for safer, cleaner and more open waterfront and harbors.

Yesterday, June 1, the first day of hurricane season, at 11 a.m. the Waterfront Alliance hosted a rally and press conference in conjunction with the release of the Harbor Scorecard. The “Rally for Our Waterfronts” took place on the steps of City Hall in Downtown Manhattan.

The Harbor Scorecard is a new tool designed to set a standard for a healthier waterfront. The scorecard uses a neighborhood-by-neighborhood evaluation to provide a wide array of data. The information is clear and user-friendly, so anyone from individuals to businesses to community organizations can assess waterfronts based on cleanliness, quality and access.

“This scorecard is a blueprint and brings accountability,” said New York City Council member Donovan Richards. “More importantly, it says to our city, and state, and federal partner that there is more we have to do, that we must do – to ensure that our harbor is clean, has access and is actually serving as a costal defense.”

Richards fears the repercussions of another storm like 2012’s Hurricane Sandy could be detrimental.

“We are scared that if another storm comes, that we are going to be right back where we were just in 2011, 2012,” he added. “But not only are we scared of that, we’re scared we won’t be able to pick the pieces up to rebuild our lives right after and as we still rebuild.”

It’s been almost five years since Hurricane Sandy devastated parts of New York and New Jersey with floods, and the Waterfront Alliance is seeking for stronger preparations in the event of another storm. More than 400,000 New York residents are faced with a 50 percent chance of major flooding before the year 2060, according the the Harbor Scorecard. Of those, 40 percent are at social or economic risk as well.

“As climate change continues to be a reality the threat of another superstorm hitting our city remains,” Council member Ben Kallos has said. “The Waterfront Alliance Harbor Scorecard will serve as a useful tool for New Yorkers to stay informed of the conditions our coastal communities are in so we are ready when the next Sandy arrives.”

For more information about the Waterfront Alliance and its partners, visit their website, Twitter page or Facebook

Photos courtesy of Waterfront Alliance 

Categories
LA News

Jessica Lappin To Replace Elizabeth Berger as President of the Downtown Alliance

20121009Jessica+Lappin+Conference_BenC_6525

Former City Councilwoman Jessica Lappin has been selected to replace the late Elizabeth Berger as president of the Alliance for Downtown New York.

Lappin, who represented the East Side in the Council for six years until 2013, ran for Manhattan borough president last year and is now turning her focus to the Downtown Alliance’s business improvement district.

“I am thrilled to be joining the Downtown Alliance and eager to lead such an accomplished team,” Lappin said in a statement. “It is particularly exciting to be taking the helm at the Alliance at this point in the district’s history.”

Ms. Berger passed away in August from pancreatic cancer.

Lappin replaces Elizabeth Berger, the former Downtown Alliance president and longtime advocate of Lower Manhattan, who died of pancreatic cancer in August.

“The transformation unfolding in Lower Manhattan is inspiring,” Lappin said in the statement. “Few places anywhere can boast of the constellation of game-changing projects underway and nearing fruition. Lower Manhattan is an extraordinary place. Working on behalf of the area’s businesses, residents, workers and visitors will be an honor and a privilege. ”

Prior to holding office, Ms. Lappin served as a senior advisor to Council Speaker Gifford Miller, who also represented the fifth district on the New York City Council. In 2011, she was selected to be a Rodel Fellow by the Aspen Institute, a renowned international think tank. The program is focused on transcending political partisanship to address overarching questions of leadership and governance. Alumni include Congresswomen Gabby Giffords and Debbie Wasserman Schultz.

Ms. Lappin is a native New Yorker who graduated from Georgetown University with high honors and Stuyvesant High School where she was in the first class to graduate from its Lower Manhattan location.