Chelsea Now, Week of October 18, 2012

Page 1

Halloween Booyah! p. 14

VOLUME 5, NUMBER 04

THE WEST SIDE’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER

OCTOBER 17 - 30, 2012

Will Spectra pipeline pack radon? BY EILEEN STUKANE There are many issues to debate concerning the natural gas that is planned for arrival through the Spectra Energy Pipeline — currently under construction on the Gansevoort Peninsula at the edge of the Meatpacking District. A frightening one is whether the gas will be bringing cancer-causing radon to our kitchen stoves and heating systems. A scientific firestorm of sorts was set off by a January 2012 report from Marvin Resnikoff Ph.D., a highly credentialed physicist and senior associate of Radioactive Waste Management

Photo by Daniel “Dred” Marques, courtesy of Hotmop Films & POP International Galleries.

Street graffiti done right: UR New York’s Mike Baca (left) and Fernando Romero unveil a mural they created in collaboration with children from the summer program at Hudson Guild and resident artists at POP International Galleries. On September 21, a ribbon cutting ceremony was held to officially introduce the work — which can be seen on the community center’s outdoor wall (441 West 26th Street). For more info, visit hudsonguild.org.

Speedy but meaty: CB4 tackles multiple topics in record time BY BONNIE ROSENSTOCK This month’s installment of the Community Board 4 (CB4) full board meeting was a speedy — but meaty — affair. Held at 6:30pm on Wednesday, October 3 (at Fulton Center Auditorium, 119 Ninth Avenue), CB4 managed to listen, discuss and vote on a wide range of matters in just under two hours. “Be mindful of our cut-off time tonight,” stressed chair Corey Johnson, who promised that the

meeting would end in time for people to get home for the presidential debate. Christine Berthet, first vice chair, who conducted the Public Session, asked that people who signed up to speak (for twominute slots) exercise discretion. “If someone else speaks on the same subject,” she said, “don’t repeat, just say ‘I agree,’ unless you feel it’s really important.” Johnson closed the public hearing on the Crunch Fitness applica-

tion to the Board of Standard and Appeals (BSA) for a special permit for a physical culture establishment at 220 West 19th Street — after asking if anyone in attendance wanted to speak about it. Later, as Item 10, the board voted in favor of the plans for the threefloor, 15,500-square-foot facility. The Chelsea Preservation and Planning Committee’s letter to the

Associates. He was concerned that in the Department of Environmental Conservation’s early report on issues concerning natural gas hydraulically fractured, aka “hydrofracked,” from the Marcellus Shale, radon was only addressed, as he said, “in one sentence out of 1,400 pages.” He therefore undertook his own independent studies. A tasteless, odorless, colorless gas, radon is created naturally during the radioactive decay of uranium, thorium and radium, minerals that are highly present in Marcellus Shale. Radon inha-

Continued on page 3

Community Meeting honorees work the bully pulpit BY SCOTT STIFFLER It was a case of last things first on the tenth day of October — when the 300 West Block Association hosted the Annual Chelsea Community Meeting. “If you see any flyers for the meeting on your way home,” implored emcee Andra Gabrielle, “rip them down…

because we like to be tidy.” The fact that Gabrielle’s bid for aesthetic vigilance came as she stood in front of a “Changing Chelsea” slideshow depicting flyers for community events and beautification projects dating back to 1959 wasn’t

Continued on page 7

EDITORIAL, LETTERS PAGE 8

TIME TO GET ILL PAGE 27

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


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.
Chelsea Now, Week of October 18, 2012 by Schneps Media - Issuu