East Villager

Page 1

A Meaty supplement, pp. 19 - 26

Volume 2, Number 49 FREE

East and West Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Noho, Little Italy and Chinatown

August 30 - September 12, 2012

Landmarks finds Bialystoker ‘eligible for consideration’ BY TERESE LOEB KREUZER There’s no need to ask directions to the Bialystoker Center & Home for the Aged at 228 East Broadway. The Art Deco building’s distinctive geometries, executed in warm orange brick, are visible from blocks away. But with the Lower East Side becoming gentrified and real estate increasingly expensive, the Bialystoker nursing home may not be there much longer unless the Landmarks Preservation Commission intervenes.

Photo by William Alatriste/NYC Council

Councilmember Rosie Mendez, chairperson of the Council’s Committee on Public Housing, asked John Rhea, commissioner of the New York City Housing Authority, a question at the Aug. 16 public hearing on NYCHA and security cameras. Following recent exposés by the Daily News about millions of dollars having been allocated for cameras several years ago still sitting unspent, the heat is on the authority to show better transparency — and to speed up the installation of safety and security improvements. In the end, after being pushed by City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, sitting to the right of Mendez above, Rhea agreed that NYCHA would provide the Council with quarterly reports on how it is spending its capital funding.

Unified Village, Asian-Latino districts hot topics at hearing BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Advocates turned out to testify about the shape of City Council districts covering Greenwich Village, Chinatown and the Lower East Side at the New York City Districting Commission’s first Manhattan public hearing. Greenwich Village political activists called for “unifying the Village district,” which is now shared by three Council districts — Districts 1, 2 and 3. Meanwhile, an ongoing, 20-year debate continued to flare over whether to merge Chinatown and the Lower East Side to create a “minority district,” or to keep the current district

lines basically intact. The Aug. 16 hearing was held at New York Law School, 185 West Broadway, in front of the 15 appointed members of the Districting Commission. The commission is starting the process, which happens every 10 years, to ensure that the city’s 51 Council districts contain equal numbers of voters — around 160,000 each — and that “protected minorities” are given the chance to elect candidates of their choice. Among those speaking in favor of a unified Village district was former City Councilmember Carol Greitzer, who represented the Village, Chelsea and part of Midtown from 1969 to ’91.

She was joined by Frieda Bradlow, a longtime political activist and a member of Village Independent Democrats club, who said she felt redistricting had been used to punish the Village for its organized resistance in the 1950s and ’60s to despised urban renewal projects. Noting she had lived in the CharltonKing-Vandam Historic District since 1958, Bradlow said, “What I can tell you is that in those days the Village was described as going from Canal St. to 14th St. from the Hudson River to the Bowery — that makes a logical district. “A decision was made that we were

Built during the Depression by poor, immigrant Jews from Bialystok, Poland, the 10-story structure sheltered the aged and infirm of the Lower East Side for 80 years. On opening day — June 21, 1931 — thousands of people gathered on East Broadway to celebrate, and there were congratulatory telegrams from New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt and other elected officials.

Continued on page 14

Silver under scrutiny in sex harass cover-up for top Brooklyn pol BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver is in hot water after it was revealed that the state Assembly paid a secret settlement of more than $100,000 to a female intern of Brooklyn Democratic Party boss Vito Lopez after she alleged that Lopez sexually harassed her.

Continued on page 4

5 1 5 C A N A L STREET • N YC 10013 • C OPYRIG H T © 2012 N YC COMMU NITY M ED IA , LLC

This week, Governor Cuomo asked his Joint Commission on Public Ethics (JCOPE) to launch a probe into the situation surrounding the payout. Subsequent to the date of the secret settlement, Lopez last week came under fire after he was publicly censured by the Assembly in connec-

Continued on page 10

EDITORIAL, LETTERS PAGE 12

JUST DO ART! PAGE 15


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.