Staten Island
Stat of The Day: Which Outerbridge?
Two days ago I mentioned that the Outerbridge Crossing connecting Staten Island and New Jersey was named after Island native Mary Ewing Outerbridge. But a reader commented that the bridge was actually named for Eugenius H. Outerbridge. He was, according to the Port Authority's Web site (PDF):
... the Port Authority’s first Chairman and one of the signers of the compact between New York and New Jersey that created the Port Authority. read more »
Stat of The Day: Match Point, Ms. Outerbridge
Since I got a copy a month ago of the essay collection New York Calling: From Blackout to Bloomberg, I've found about one piece of New York trivia per hour of reading. Here's one that sounds unbelievable but a Google search proved its truth: The Outerbridge Crossing connecting Staten Island to New Jersey was not named thusly because, well, it's an outer-bridge crossing. It was named for Mary Ewing Outerbridge. The Staten Island native brought lawn tennis to the city after a winter trip to Bermuda. read more »
The Local: A Staten Island Roller Rink as Metaphor for How We Live Now
For two months in 2007, the city that has everything did not have a roller rink. Beginning in 2006, the trio of iconic rinks that had managed to survive as nostalgic throwbacks to an era when roller-skating was cool finally succumbed to the national trend and folded.
Weekday roller rink-cum-gay weekend playground the Roxy closed last March to make room for luxury condominiums. The birthplace of roller disco, the Empire Roller Skating Center, in Crown Heights, hosted its final skate last April after 73 years in business. Despite demonstrations to preserve it, the building is now a storage facility. A year earlier Skate Key in the Bronx shut its doors.
Just as roller rink enthusiasts began packing up their grungy, old-school quad skates, Roller Jam USA opened in July on Staten Island at 236 Richmond Valley Road. Perhaps it’s fitting that one of the first new rinks in New York City since the roller disco craze peaked in the early 1980’s would be in Staten Island, the most unabashedly untrendy, family-centric of the five boroughs.Even more fitting that the DJ of Roller Jam’s weekly adult night on Saturday is a Roxy veteran. read more »
STAT OF THE DAY: Take Me Home, Staten Island Roads...
Wow. Staten Island is farther south than parts of West Virginia.
I read that nifty little nugget in the new essay collection from Reaktion Books entitled New York Calling: From Blackout to Bloomberg.
Oh Thank God! Staten Island Councilman Introduces Bill Fighting Big For-Sale Signs
The subprime mortgage crisis continues to send shockwaves through New York City and now the consequences have spread beyond the economy. The rising tide of foreclosures is making the city uglier (gasp!). Councilman Michael McMahon believes “the proliferation of extra-large for sale signs is having a negative aesthetic impact on residential neighborhoods in New York City.” read more »
Foreclosure Picture Bleak in Outer-Boroughs
In some areas of South Jamaica and Bedford-Stuyvesant, as many as 10 homes per block faced foreclosure last year... Mortgage lenders have filed 3,116 new motions to foreclose against delinquent homeowners since Jan. 1... Our city is now on track to surpass 15,000 filings this year, more than double the total two years ago, according to the study, which examines one- to four-family homes.The News, like many, blames the predatory practices of some subprime-mortgage lenders, those who feasted on the aspirations of people craving homeownership during the housing boom, people who probably shouldn't have had large sums of money loaned to them.
The dearth of such mortgages in Manhattan, however, ensures that at least one borough will likely escape the wave washing ashore from Staten Island through the Bronx.
- Tom AcitelliBruno Flacks Up in the City
Bruno Flacks Up in the City
McMahon Rebuffs Bias Charge: It's About Winning
That was the implication yesterday from the campaign manager of an African-American Assembly candidate, Kelvin Alexander, who lost the Democratic nomination and is now running against the party-backed candidate, Matthew Titone.
"I am one of those who firmly believes that when the time is at hand, a person of color be nominated and endorsed by the Democratic Party of Staten Island," McMahon said. "The issue then becomes working with the community and finding elections that they can be successful in. Because whatever the election, whether it's the Assembly, state Senate or City Council a person of color has to be able to get votes from all the people in the district just like I, not being a person of color, have to get votes from people of color as well.
"My point is, the issue is not whether there should be a candidate of color but how best to accomplish that."
He went on to say, "They'll point to the fact that the Republicans Party has supported candidates of color, but it's in races when they have no chances of winning."
-- Azi PaybarahCode, or Just a Name?
According to one Democratic Assembly candidate on Staten Island, it is.
From the Staten Island Advance:
Democrat Matthew Titone, who is gay, has said that the name of opponent Kelvin Alexander's newly formed political party, Family First, is offensive because the word "family" is used as "anti-gay code."
The "X First" wording certainly wouldn't be the first time an anti- group has used this formulation to express a negative message.
Is Titone right?
-- Azi PaybarahBloomberg for President, Staten Island Chapter
In a few minutes, Mike Bloomberg will testify to Congress, from City Hall, about financial issues.
On marginally related note -- Bloomberg as national figure? -- here's a guy who was yelling about "Bloomberg for President" at this weekend's St. Patrick's Day parade on Staten Island, and who was kind enough to elaborate on the theme when I asked.
His name is Jim Davis and he's an NYPD detective.
-- Azi PaybarahEugene, Ignizio
Which proves Republicans can still win on Staten Island, and 1199 (which backed Eugene) can still get things done in Brooklyn.
Here are the unofficial results.
Staten Island With 100 percent of the precincts reporting Vincent Ignizio 72.09 percent 3,902 votesEmanuele Innamorato 27.9 percent 1,511 votes
368 paper ballots to count.
BrooklynWith 96.77 reporting
Matthieu Eugene 34.21 percent 1,935 votes
Jennifer James 15.15 percent 857 votes
Wellington Sharpe 11.74 percent 664 votes
Harry Schiffman 7.78 percent 440 ballots
Moe Razvi 7.32 percent 414 votes
Jesse Hamilton 7.25 percent 410 votes
Zenobia McNally 6.22 percent 352 votes
Richie Tulloch 4.93 percent 279 votes
Joel Toney 4.30 percent 243 votes
Karlene Gordon 1.11 percent 63 votes
-- Azi PaybarahEvents for February 20, 2007
11 a.m. Community Service Society releases a report on the school "drop out epidemic" on the steps of City Hall.
11:30 a.m. Brooklyn advocates protests plans to omit International Studies High School from a Bensonhurst campus at the Tweed Courthouse.
1 p.m. Corporate leaders discuss a plan to fight climate change at Columbia University.
2:30 p.m. Cab Watch donates 3,500 "911 only" cell phones to Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes at the DA's office on Jay Street.
6 p.m. Jersey City Mayor Jerramiah Healy delivers his State of the City speech at P.S. 4 on Bright Street.
8 p.m. "Questioning the White House Press Corps" forum, with Bob Schieffer of CBS and White House Spokesman Tony Snow, airs on C-SPAN.
9 p.m. Polls close in today's elections.
And Steven Spielberg, David Geffen and Jeffrey Katzenberg host a fund-raiser for Barack Obama in Los Angeles.
-- Azi PaybarahFollowing Lavelle and Grannis
The two vacancies were created by the passing of Staten Island Assemblyman John Lavelle last night, and this morning's nomination of Manhattan Assemblyman Pete Grannis as commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation. (Grannis interviewed for the comptroller position, so, in theory, that vacancy had also been possible for a couple of days.)
Dates for those elections haven't been announced yet.
Grannis' committee is the only one registered in his district with the state Board of Elections [link fixed]. There are two old committees, along with Lavelle's, registered in his district.
Anyone know anything about who's going to be running?
-- Azi PaybarahSpecial Election Numbers
Staten Island (51)
Vincent Ignizio -- $58,327 Emanuele Innamorato -- $17,360
Brooklyn (40)
Mathieu Eugene -- $38,445 Joel Toney -- $29,094 Jennifer James -- $27,528
More campaign figures for both races are here.
-- Azi PaybarahSurprise! Bloomberg Tips His Hat to Development in State of the City
Bravo, real estate, said the Mayor on Wednesday during his State of the City address:
And all across New York from the Freedom Tower rising in Lower Manhattan to the new Yankees and Mets stadiums in the Bronx and Queens, to the new rail link at Howland Hook on Staten Island to right here in Brooklyn, where from East New York to the East River, new homes are going up and new businesses are opening. The evidence is all around us. This is a great time for New York an encouraging, optimistic time.
The full text of the address can be found here.
- Tom AcitelliEvents for Thursday, January 11, 2007
At 10 a.m., the Lower Manhattan Redevelopment Committee discusses the EPA's cleanup at Ground Zero.
At 11 a.m., the Queens West Development Corporation meets at 633 Third Ave.
At noon, Hiram Monserrate and veterans groups call for the mayor to spend $5 million to create Veterans Resource Centers.
Also at noon, anti-war and human rights groups protest Iraq troop escalation and Guantanamo Bay detentions at both Thomas Paine Park and Lafayette and Centre streets.
At 12:30 p.m.Gloria Steinem, John Liu and others ask the state to pass anti-human trafficking laws, at state Supreme Court.
At 4 p.m., there will be a demonstration of proposed voting systems, at Fordham University.
At 5:30 p.m., the City Council hosts a Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King celebration in the Council Chambers
At 6 p.m., the December 12th Movement and Black Men's Movement discuss police brutality at the Calvary Baptist Church in Queens.
Also at 6 p.m. the Staten Island peace marks the fifth anniversary of people held at at Guantanamo Bay with a protest at the Staten Island Borough Hall
And at 6 p.m., there will be a reception for the exhibition of Eliot Spizter's campaign photos, called "Making of a Governor," at Grand Central Terminal.
-- Azi PaybarahThe Round-Up: Thursday
- Permits for fresh building plunge in Staten Island. [NY Times]
- Gaze ahead toward New York real estate in '07. [NY Post]
- Jay-Z moving out of Time Warner Center? [NY Post]
- Workers find more human bones at Ground Zero. [Daily News]
- Fed frets national housing slump. [Daily News]
- Residents oppose Park Avenue median plan. [NY Sun]
- Amsterdam Billiard finds new home in Union Square. [NY Sun]
- 2nd Avenue Deli may reopen farther uptown. [NY Sun]
- Office rents rise nationally in 2006. [Journal]
Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.
Elsewhere: Republicans, City Hall

No Republicans met with Eliot Spitzer in DC today.
No Republicans have been asked to help Andrew Cuomo.
Joe Bruno gave $500,000 to a firm under investigation for giving him free air travel.
There's an easy-to-search spreadsheet of Assembly pork. (A couple of small, fun examples: $3,000 to publish a newsletter from the Department of Criminal Justice [line 603] and $55,000 to publish The Bushwick Observer [line 465].)
Al Gore has a well-timed book coming out. Hillary tops a Gallup poll of Democratic and Republican presidential candidates. (Note the absence of George Pataki and Mike Bloomberg from the list). Karol wonders why some people seem doubtful about the propect of the 2008 front-runners actually winning. Daily Gotham wonders if the Atlantic Yards Project raises terrorism concerns.There may be an interesting City Council race in Staten Island.
And above is a picture of City Hall in bloom.
-- Azi PaybarahThe Round-Up: Tuesday
- Businesses sweat Second Avenue subway work. [amNY]
- State property tax breaks favor affluent areas. [NY Times]
- City shifts aims in battle against rats. [NY Times]
- Firm scraps plans for Staten Island NASCAR stadium. [NY Times]
- Workers sue Manhattan restaurant Daniel. [NY Times]
- Reckson rebuffs Icahn's bid - again. [NY Times]
- Mayor gives tepid support to congestion pricing. [NY Post]
- Aby Rosen calls in favors on 980 Madison. [NY Post]
- Court tosses out GM Building suit against Macklowe. [lower] [NY Post]
- West 57th timeshare a boon to Metropolitan Tower. [NY Post]
- Italians mull buying control of Cushman & Wakefield. [NY Post]
- Council members: Make 421-a all about affordability. [Daily News]
- City property tax system favors homeowners over landlords. [NY Sun]
Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.
Events for December 5, 2006
Council Member Mike McMahon announces funding for City Harvest to provide produce to residents at the Stapleton Houses in Staten Island.
The New York City Board of Health meets to discuss the trans fat ban proposal and dog leash rules in parks.
Eliot Spitzer meets with Andrew Cuomo to discuss transitioning at the Attorney General's Office.
Colin Powell and the CEO of New York Life discuss contributing towards the expansion of the Colin Powell Center for Policy Studies at City College at the City College of New York.
A coalition of business, government, transportation, labor and community groups oppose congestion pricing schemes at a press conference on the steps of City Hall.
Global Witness and Amnesty International hold a press briefing on blood diamonds at the Open Society Institute.
—Nicole BrydsonStrong Lobbyist, Weak Result
The Berger Commission has just recommended that nine New york hospitals be closed.
At least one of the named hospitals, Victory Memorial in Brooklyn, had tried rather strenuously to avoid making the list. Here's a contract the hospital signed with the Staten Island-based lobbying firm, the Molinari Group, home of the former borough president.
Altogether, the hospital paid about $100,000 to the firm to lobby the state Department of Health, and specifically to raise the subject of a "possible hospital merger."
So much for that.
It's now up to Albany lawmakers to accept or reject the commission's recommendations.
-- Azi PaybarahFriends Like These
Citing an audit by Hevesi which uncovered Medicaid payments made on behalf of dead patients, the editors wrote:
-- Azi Paybarah"It's just another example of the excellent job Mr. Hevesi has been doing on behalf of state taxpayers for the last four years as the state's top financial watchdog. His administration has been the most proactive and aggressive of any comptroller's in recent memory and it has gotten positive results time after time.
"This kind of superb work makes it all the more unfortunate that Mr. Hevesi will ultimately have to leave office, even though he was re-elected handily last week."
Skip
"Gov.-elect Spitzer says he wants to allow the process to proceed, but that sets the stage for Mr. Hevesi to begin a new term and then face messy impeachment proceedings. Mr. Spitzer and the state, focused on reform, don't need that. Neither, at this point, does Mr. Hevesi. He should resign and clear the decks for a new comptroller to be appointed by the legislature. And he should do that soon."
Some Notable Returns
Democrat Janele Heyer-Spencer won the Brooklyn/Staten Island seat of retiring Republican Assemblyman Matthew Mirones 51% to 48%.
As for Rep. Vito Fossella, the worst may be over.
His challenger, Steve Harrison, got 43.29% of the vote, better than any Democrat has ever done against Fossella, the only Republican in the city's congressional delegation. But Fossella's next election is in a presidential year. In the last presidential election, the district went for George Bush by about 10%, and Fossella's Democratic opponent only ran percent ahead of the Democratic ticket there.
And in Queens, the Republican County chairman, Serph Maltese, won re-election by about 800 votes against Democrat Albert Baldeo, who earned some notoriety when he got arrested for allegedly waving a gun at his opponent's wife when he ran for the City Council.
-- Azi PaybarahPolite, Mildly Partisan
"I'm proud to be supporting Steve Harrison, a long-time community activist and leader. New York needs congressmen like Steve to take on the challenges we face in health care and education and to ensure that New York gets its fair share from Washington."
She's doing her part for Harrison, certainly, although she doesn't sound particularly anxious to attack a Republican incumbent she obviously gets along with .
-- Azi PaybarahAsians for Fossella, Mostly
Here's a video of Vito Fossella's speech from his fund-raiser from this Sunday on Staten Island [courtesy of Urban Elephants]. Fossella's focus is on Sept. 11, and more specifically, the changes that need to happen because of that day.
Some people, he said, want to "jump through hoops" to give suspected terrorists "more rights. I say send them back to where ever they came from." (Around 2:50 into the video.)
During that speech, I was sitting in the back of the room surrounded by tables full of Indian, Patakistani and other Asian supporters. While the mostly white crowd at the front of the room seemed to like the tough talk about terrorism suspects well enough, none of the people around me were applauding.
-- Azi PaybarahSplit-Screen Supporters
Here's Vito Fossella's latest television ad, making neat use of split-screen technology. In portion, there's an African-American man wearing an easy-to-read NYPD hat, looking straight into the camera. In another, there's a shot of Fossella walking with Mike Bloomberg.
On Saturday, remember, Congressional Quarterly had mixed news for Fossella.
"Conservative-leaning Staten Island and the lack of financial resources for Democratic lawyer Steve Harrison makes Fossella a solid favorite for a fifth term. But Fossella's own strategy, including a heavily negative campaign, suggests that New York City's only House Republican doesn't feel totally safe."
In contrast with the happy split-screen, this ad may or may not be part of that "heavily negative campaign," but my guess is that anybody who speaks Russian will think so.
-- Azi PaybarahEvents for October 26, 2006
The New School hosts a panel on the shortage of affordable English language classes while New York's immigrant population grows.
Opponents of the Atlantic Yards proposal in Brooklyn will file a lawsuit against the abuse of eminent domain.
The Vice President of the New York State United Teachers testifies at an Assembly Committee on Education public hearing at 250 Broadway.
Postal workers and community leaders protest plans to shut down a Bronx postal facility at East 149th Street and Grand Concourse.
Steve Harrison discusses the 'inappropriate development' of Staten Island's neighborhoods at the intersection of Van Duzer and Broad streets.
The Stay Strong Foundation and David Paterson sponsors a real estate seminar featuring motivational speaker Kenny Rushing at the Adam Clayton Powell State Office Building.
Tom Vilsack speaks on U.S.-Asia relations at the Asia Society.
Steve Israel announces $112,000 in back payments for service-connected injures to Bay Shore WWII veteran at his offices in Hauppauge.
Bill Clinton will attend a campaign rally for Kirsten Gillibrand and GOTV rallies in Syracuse and Farmingdale.
The Sierra Club endorses John Hall for congress at Croton Point Park.
Andrea Stewart-Cousins receives the endorsement of the People for the American Way and Citizen Action at the Hastings-on-Hudson Municipal Building.
The New York Young Republican Club hosts a "Back to the 80's Capitalist Ball" at the Culture Club to "Harken back to one of the greatest eras in American culture, otherwise known as the 'Reagan Years' or the 'Decade of Greed' by those who just didn't get it."
Joel Rivera hosts a birthday fundraiser at the Sea Shore restaurant on City Island.
Andrew Cuomo hosts a fundraiser at Villa Pazzo on Bleecker Street.
—Nicole BrydsonFossella Interview On Its Way
Starting Monday, Fossella will be debating his Democratic opponent, Stephen Harrison five times before the Nov. 7 elections. A complete list of debates is here.
So, this is your last chance to tell me what should I ask Fossella.
-- Azi PaybarahIndependence Party and Term Limits
They might be hard to take seriously at all -- if it weren't for term limits. It's an issue where their procedure-orientated agenda dovetails neatly with voter pessimism, giving them a weird relevance even as their other issues - internal fights, alleged anti-Semitism -- turn people away.
Yesterday, the IP chairman of Staten Island, Frank Morano, sent Christine Quinn a lengthy letter asking her not to yield to the growing pressure from her constituents on the city council by changing term limits.
"It's been such a disappointment to scores of New Yorkers all over the city that you seem to be entertaining the idea of tinkering with our city's Term Limits law. I'd like to urge you not to do so."
It's only an early shot across the bow, and nothing compared to what billionaire term-limits advocate Ron Lauder (or Mike Bloomberg, for that matter) may do if and when Quinn tries to pass new legislation on the matter or put it on the ballot. But still, it's worth marking an occasion where the Independence Party may be more in tune with average voters than the elected council.
-- Azi PaybarahA Final Wal-Mart Solution: Nix Public Input

Futterman says Wal-Mart "makes sense" in New York.
"If they keep going in front of [the City Planning Commission] and community boards, they're gonna have a problem," Futterman said in an interview with The Real Deal, available via podcast. "The ideal situation would be a location, whether it be New York or any of the other boroughs, where they can go in and operate without having to go get, you know, any approvals outside of the zoning." read more »
Events for September 8, 2006
Pace University holds a conference titled "Aftershock: Rethinking the Future Since September 11, 2001" at Pace University's Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts.
Jonathan Tasini goes on a five borough "cost of war" tour beginning at Manhattan's VA Hospital and visiting a Post Office on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx, the Queensbridge Housing Project, Brooklyn College, and Bayley Seton Hospital in Staten Island.
Eliot Spitzer visits the Shinnecock Fishing Village in Hampton Bays and later speaks at a NYC Meet-up at Luna Park in Union Square.
A town hall meeting with the Democratic candidates for the 11th congressional district will take place at the Christian Cultural Center in Brooklyn at 7pm.
—Nicole BrydsonThe Mayor and Traffic
59 percent of respondents said that the mayor is doing a "fair" or "poor" job in cutting down on traffic. (On Staten Island, where residents tend to be more reliant on their cars, "fair" and "poor" scored a combined 82 percent.)
In the same poll, the mayor did considerably better with assessments of the job he's done keeping parks clean, reducing crime and increasing access to public transportation.
-- Josh BensonBlackout Update
Manhattan - 406 customers Brooklyn - 272 customers Queens - 963 customers Staten Island - 6 customers Westchester - 1431 customers Bronx - 425 customers
Again, "customer" can mean family home or big building -- it doesn't refer to individual people affected.
Mayor Bloomberg has addressed the situation, so far, by making an appeal at a pre-scheduled press conference in the Office of Emergency Management headquarters for people to conserve energy.
And about those subway rumors , here's what Quiroz said:
"The rumors are not based on fact. I plan on riding the subways home to Queens tonight."
No word on when the power's going to come back on.
--Jason HorowitzGianaris: It's Not Over
But just as we were preparing to start talking about this week's blackouts in the past tense, Mike Gianaris tells us that there are still "isolated pockets" of powerlessness in the western reaches of Queens.
This morning he is set to visit blacked-out butcher shops and fishmongers on 30th avenue who are still struggling to refrigerate their stores.
"A lot of the businesses are literally in danger of going out of business," said Gianaris, who added that all the areas exposed wires and shredded concrete gave it the look of a "war zone."
Next week Gianaris, and Councilmembers Eric Gioia and Peter Vallone Jr will announce a proposal calling on Con Ed to refund more than the $350 they have promised to affected residents. In addition, the lawmakers want three months of free electricity for everyone in the affected area.
Meanwhile, there is concern throughout the borough that the mini-heat wave expected in the coming days might wreak havoc on Con Ed's jury-rigged wiring.
The mayor's aides, we're guessing, are glued to the weather channel.
- Jason HorowitzRetooled For A.G., Pirro Runs Hard; She Never Sweats
Jeanine, the Campaign et Al
It's Tough All Around
"If a two-bedroom is over $2,000, I don't see why this is even better than what we have now?" one audience member asked. "My second point is, Why is all of this in Brooklyn? What about the rest of the boroughs? I'm from Staten Island. I'm not a police officer. I don't see myself getting on the list." read more »
She got a lot of applause, and the moderators, Bertha Lewis of ACORN and Jim Stuckey of Forest City Ratner, the developer, were a little hard pressed to respond. After all, what do you say when someone complains that housing in New York, even subsidized housing, is expensive? If you don't like it, there are plenty of people in line behind you.
The Morning Read: July 6, 2006
Republicans on Staten Island battle out two primaries, Republican and Independence, before they compete with the Democratic candidate.
Mike Bloomberg endorsed Joe Lieberman without prompting yesterday, the Post reports.
The Sun reports Mr. Bloomberg testified during a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting on immigration, saying: "It's as if we expect border control agents to do what a century of communism could not: defeat the natural forces of supply and demand and defeat the natural desire for freedom and opportunity."
—Nicole BrydsonNew L.P.C. Designation, and a History Lesson

Craftsman homes were popular in the U.S. from 1900 to the 1930's, arising out of the Arts and Crafts movement in Europe, which was a reaction against the industrial revolution and mass production that, critics said, devalued workers and stripped creativity and the human touch. U.S. furniture designer Gustav Stickley was a proponent of the Arts and Crafts movement, and published his Craftsman magazine from 1900 to 1916, which featured plans for homes influenced by the Arts and Crafts movement.
Craftsman homes are low-slung bungalows which make extensive use of local wood and stone, have street-facing gables with composition or shingled roofs, wide overhanging eaves, dark wood paneling, an arched opening that separates the living and dining rooms, and built-in cabinetry. Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie School is closely identified with the Arts and Crafts movement and Craftsman-style homes. read more »
Events for June 14, 2006
U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez keynotes a Flag Day naturalization ceremony at the Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum.
Staten Island Beep James Molinaro hosts a ceremony celebrating Flag Day and the 231st birthday of the U.S. Army.
Adolfo Carrion Jr. launches Bronx Week 2006 on the steps of the Bronx County Building.
The City Council Transportation Committee will hold a hearing on legislation designed to increase the number of taxicabs and livery vehicles using alternative-fuel and wheelchair-accessible technology.
Outside of their headquarters, the Council on Foreign Relations will unveil "Doc in a Box," a mobile health clinic for the developing world.
Generation Engage hosts an event with Spike Lee at PS1.
Housing Here and Now hosts a Town Hall on fair rent law with Christine Quinn.
Manhattan Young Dems host a music festival.
Roger Green and Freddie Hamilton will be fundraising at Night of the Cookers in Brooklyn.
And when you are done with all of that, you can Drink Liberally in Park Slope.
—Nicole BrydsonMeet Your New Tourism Czar
He said he hopes he will bring the entire organization "up another notch" thanks to his "background and skill set." (He was founder of the ad agency Margeotes Fertitta Powell, which among its clients counted ... Colonial Williamsburg!)
He entered negotiations with the Bloomberg administration several months ago, he said, before the Snapple debacle.
"I don't really look at this as a Snapple problem, it is a situation of unfulfilled over-expectation. There is no correlation between any of the staff changes and the Snapple situation."
The new guy's credo:
"This is not a city dedicated to tourism, but to its citizens, and tourism is an engine to make the lives of the city's citizens better."
Where to start?
"Staten Island!," he said. "There are big plans for Staten Island."
- Jason HorowitzThe World's Best City

Note waterfront Gehry-cluster.
Soon, a newly-minted New York-Dusseldorf marketing partnership will mean ads on bus shelters and on the Staten Island Ferry. We're doing some shit over there, too. It'll be easy since all of the major ad firms in Europe have hubs there.
"Dusseldorf is continuously getting more popular. More and more, US citizens are recognizing the attractiveness of Dusseldorf. I'm sure that with this cooperation, we will tempt even more New Yorkers to Dusseldorf", was the quote from Dusseldorf's Lord Mayor Joachim Erwin at a meeting with Mayor Bloomberg in City Hall.
Wikipedia says:
Dusseldorf is not only widely known as a stronghold of the German advertising and fashion industry. In the last few years the city on the Rhine has become a top telecommunications center in Germany. It is commonly referred to as the world's best city.
(Umm, Lord Mayor Erwin: Did you write that?) read more »
- Tom McGeveranEditorials
Editorials
Events for April 22-24, 2006
On Monday, the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce General Membership Breakfast features Chuck Schumer at Li Greci's Staaten.
And in the evening, City Year's Ripples of Hope Dinner honors Dan Doctoroff at Chelsea Piers; and Laura Bush is scheduled to deliver remarks at a reception for Nancy Johnson and Christopher Shays in Stamford.
—Nicole BrydsonThe Mighty Quinn vs. Wal-Mart

Christine Quinn.
Here's what the city council speaker had to say about the "bad corporate citizen."
"I don't want Wal-Mart here unless they change their corporate behavior. I may not succeed, but I feel comfortable in opposition."
Apparently, Ms. Quinn was not impressed by the great pitch the company made to Staten Island residents. read more »
- Michael Calderone








