Deborah Glick

Somehow, Park Development Becomes Blood Sport

The pavilion at Union Square Park.
Gabriela Barnuevo
The pavilion at Union Square Park.

Expanding parks is not supposed to be this difficult.

“This is the worst situation I’ve ever encountered in terms of [dealings with] the community,” said Carol Greitzer, a former councilwoman from the West Village who helped start a group called 250+ Friends of New York Parks. It opposes many of the Bloomberg administration’s park plans. “They come up with a plan. Maybe—maybe—if you’re lucky, you can tweak it slightly, but that’s about all you can do.”  read more »

On the Waterfront: Pier 40 and the Limits of Commercial Development

Pier 40 today.
geedebee via flickr.com
Pier 40 today.

We may be seeing the limits to public-private partnerships in park development.

The plan to use funds from the development of the West Side waterfront to finance new park construction and maintenance seems to be collapsing. While this doesn’t mean an end to these partnerships, it is a signal that public amenities still require public investment. There really is no such thing as a free lunch.

The latest episode in the Pier 40 saga took place on March 28, when Hudson River Park officials rejected a plan by Related Companies to build a $625 million performing arts complex on Pier 40, located at West Houston Street.  read more »

Savino on the Plight of the New York Legislator

So, the latest Siena poll not only shows Eliot Spitzer’s approval plummeting further, but shows voters overwhelmingly opposed to raising taxes.

Here's what that combination of data says to Democratic state Senator Diane Savino: “The public is finally starting to realize, they’re paying and paying and paying and they’re not getting the results that they want,” she explained.
“On one hand, you may have the governor who is trying to stand up for the overtaxed and over-burdened New Yorkers and saying no to the legislature, and the legislature--it may put them [all] in a position they don’t know how to get out of," she said. "They can’t advocate for increased taxes, right?”

(Note: Some legislators, like Assemblywoman Deborah Glick of Manhattan, have spoken favorably about raising taxes, at least on the state’s top wage-earners.)  read more »

Deborah Glick on (Hypothetical) Progressive Tax Increases

I just got off the phone with Manhattan-based Assemblywoman Deborah Glick, a members of the Ways and Means Committee, about the possible need to raise taxes in the next budget. (Eliot Spitzer already backed off one such revenue-generating idea.)

Glick said she’s unsure if the state budget is in that much trouble, but indicated that if it's determined that there is a need, raising taxes on the wealthier taxpayers would be her preferred option.

“I can’t envision, in this incoming budget, a significant raise in any taxes, although there is probably enough money in the top tier.

More after the jump.  read more »

Spitzer and Gay Marriage: Help Wanted


Now that Eliot Spitzer has made his initial push for same-sex marriage, the next logical step would seem to be for him to begin lobbying Democrats in the legislature to get on board. Interestingly, there is little expectation among even the most fervent supporters of a gay marriage bill that he's going to do so anytime soon.

“This is not something he’s primarily focused on, and he’s made that clear,” Assemblywoman Deborah Glick told me for a piece in this week's Observer.

Not that the governor's help isn't wanted. The bill’s prime sponsor in the Assembly, Danny O’Donnell, thinks a kinder, softer Spitzer can actually help the bill pass the house.

“I would say that he is much more effective when he asks people to do things than when he tries to tell them to do things,” he said. “And when he asks, he can be very effective."

More from the story here.

On Same-Sex Marriage Vote-Count, Take the Under

Not that anyone really expected Eliot Spitzer's same-sex marriage proposal to succeed anytime soon, but just days after its introduction, both sides of the legislature are talking about passage in purely academic terms.

As I noted earlier, the plan to legalize same-sex marriage is premised on the notion that it can pass the Assembly, thereby compelling the Senate take action one way or the other.

For now, the Republican-led Senate seems perfectly happy to wait.

"We can’t speculate until they do that," said Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno's spokeswoman, Lisa Black, referring to passing gay marriage in the Assembly. "And it’s never been done before. They say they have 60 and they still need 20 more. They’re not going to shame upstate Republicans. It’s not going to help their constituency."

Pro-gay marriage Democrats in the Assembly don't necessarily disagree.

On the prospect of getting enough votes to pass the bill through the 150-member Assembly, Deborah Glick predicted that it would be tricky to get enough Democrats to line up for it if there were any chance that it would actually pass.

"Nobody wants to be the 76 or 77th vote," she said.

Also, unrelatedly, tonight is a mock session for Assembly interns. Maybe they'll think of a way to break the deadlock.

BFF! Curbed Is the HDC's 'Friend in the Media'

curbed.JPG Curbed, the smartest and funniest real estate blog in New York (besides the one called The Real Estate, natch), will be honored next month at the Historic Districts Council's Preservation Party.

The Web site's honored peers include State Assemblywoman Deborah Glick ("Friend in High Places Award") and the illustrious Broadway-Flushing Homeowners Assocation.

From the release:

Since its launch in May 2004, the website Curbed.com has established itself as the center of the virtual conservation about real estate in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and beyond. Constantly updated with the latest breaking news, Curbed has shown a great interest in covering preservation issues. Numerous stories about landmarks and potential landmarks have graced the pages of Curbed and helped to expose a huge new audience to the preservation efforts of organization sand individuals across New York City.

Mazel tov, gents!

- Max Abelson and Chris Shott

Debby Don't Do Development

Assemblywoman Deborah Glick spoke to Community Board 2 last night, and offered some advice on variances that might be coming down the pike in the future: "We have to draw the line .... Why does the city want to kill the goose that lays the golden egg," referring to onslaught of variances recently going before the Board of Standards and Appeals that result in larger high-rises, which in turn damage the historic and aesthetic character of the neighborhood--especially Greenwich Village. "We have to draw the line .... We have to protect [the neighborhood] from getting chipped and chipped away," Ms. Glick said, urging the board to start turning down variance requests.

Ms. Glick also spoke about changing the 421A developer tax-abatement scheme so that instead of the current 20% affordable housing requirement, it'll require 30% affordable housing on site.
And she had words for Mayor Bloomberg's disinterest in the sale of Stuy Town: "It's not in my opinion that Stuy Town was a private matter--it's public policy," adding that the Mayor's hands-off approach to the sale of the famous working-class enclave was disappointing.

-Matthew Grace

Events for June 10-12, 2006

On Saturday, the 27th annual Mississippi in the Park picnic will be held in Central Park's East Meadow, featuring Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, for native Mississippians now living in the New York area.

Deborah Glick hosts a breakfast before petitioning at the Village Independent Democrats' clubhouse.

On Monday, Manhattan Libertarians meet to nominate local Libertarian candidates.

—Nicole Brydson

Union Square Redesign

UnionSqPark1.jpg
The new design.
Last night, Community Board 5 overwhelmingly approved the Parks Department's redesign for the northern end of Union Square Park. The redesign will triple the size of the current playground--adding a "Tot Lot" for the wee buggers, a "Toy Box" for ambulatory children and "the Mountain" for older kids (and Observer staffers hiding from editors).

The area where the greenmarket currently is will be even greener: Trees will be planted around the northern gateway plaza, and it will be resurfaced and an electrical and plumbing infrastruture will be constructed to provide services to the greenmarket venders.  read more »

60 Hudson Street

Various electeds and other assorted downtown activist types are getting together Sunday to protest the continued storage of diesel fuel at 60 Hudson Street.

The 24-story building, between Worth and Thomas streets, straddles the Tribeca-WTC border and houses equipment for telecommunications companies. But also--more than 80,000 gallons of diesel fuel.

They're worried that an accident at the building could cause the fuel to ignite. The storage of diesel fuel in the base of 7 World Trade Center, they argue, was the reason for that building's collapse late in the day on Sept. 11.

They're allowed to do that because of a variance issued by the Department of Buildings--which Jerry Nadler, Marty Connor, Deborah Glick, Alan Gerson, and Sally Regenhard of the Skyscraper Safety Campaign want the city to rescind.  read more »

- Tom McGeveran