Monday, May 30, 2011
Hudson River Park Pier 25 Basketball Court Assault
Sunday, May 29, 2011
Artists Race To Get Spots in Central Park Again
Then the waiting began again. The park goers and tourists who are these artists' dedicated fans and customers don't really begin arriving in any substantial numbers for about 5 hours. A long day gets longer with the new park rules.
Morningside Park Camera Removed
Yesterday I noticed the camera was gone. I could have been gone for a while as I don't take these stairs nearly as often as I once did. One reason why is coming up in a future post, but if you are familiar with the 116th St. stairs you might know why.
Musician Crackdown At Central Park's Bethesda Fountain
Mr. Boyd holding seven of his summonses. (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge.
Manhattan
City officials began blitzing street musicians with nuisance summonses and posted a "Quiet Zone" sign last week at the beloved Bethesda Fountain in Central Park, where virtuoso performers have been making beautiful music together for over a century, according to the New York Post.
On weekends, baritone John Boyd, 48, would belt out spirituals backed by a choir including six of his nine children and fellow classical buskers. But two months ago, Parks police descended on the Bethesda Terrace arcade with a message: Muzzle the music.
Last week, they posted a Quiet Zone sign banning Boyd and other serious musicians from playing in the arcade where world-class performers offer their talents for free to ordinary New Yorkers.
Bethesda Terrace Arcade. For more than a century, the area around Bethesda Terrace has been one of the cultural centers of Central Park. It has been home to thousands of talented musicians and street performers who contribute to the cultural fabric of New York City and complement the area's inspiring views.
The silky baritone's clash with officials started two months earlier.
"The Parks Department cops came and said the rules will be revamped," Boyd told The Post. "A month ago they started issuing me summonses because I would not stop singing."
After being hit with five summonses totaling $2,300, the former choir director from Detroit was arrested by Parks cops Wednesday and hauled in handcuffs to the Central Park police station.
"I have a right to free speech," said Boyd. "When I sing, it is expressing what I believe in. I told them, 'You are not chasing me away.' "
Classical harpist Meta Epstein, 59, of Mill Basin, Brooklyn, won first prize at the Paris Conservatory of Music in the 1970s. But she's afraid to play in the park.
"It was very intimidating. It was a patch of dirt. They told me I was destroying the ground, but there were picnickers right there. Now I'm afraid to play, especially in the fountain terrace," she said.
Double-bass player Vasyl Fomytskyi, formerly of the Cairo Symphony Orchestra, has been playing his beloved Bach near the fountain for two years.
"If I play softly by myself, [cops] still have threatened to arrest me and confiscate my instrument," he said.
Newcomer Shigemasa Nakano, 31, a classical guitarist and opera singer, says he's disappointed because acoustics in the arcade are superb.
"But . . . I don't want to get a ticket," he said.
On Friday, passer-by Rhonda Liss, 63, of Yonkers, asked Boyd if she could join him in an impromptu duet.
"You have such a beautiful voice," said Liss, a onetime Met opera singer and "Phantom of the Opera" cast member in Toronto. The pair tossed off a jazzy rendition of "My Favorite Things."
"Is this what they want to arrest people for -- singing joy to the people?" she asked incredulously.
When asked about the music crackdown, a spokesman for the Central Park Conservancy, the cash-flush nonprofit that runs the park for the city, said: "The fountain is a place for quiet reflection."
As Expected New Smoking Law Ignored In Coney Island Boardwalk And Beach
Fuming over the new parks smoking ban, a cigarette-puffing crowd protested Saturday by lighting up along the Coney Island Boardwalk, according to the New York Daily News.
No Park Police came into sight during the hour-and-a-half exercise in civil disobedience led by Citizens Lobbying Against Smoker Harassment, or CLASH.
Along the section of beach near Brighton Sixth St., Howard Yourow called the ban illegal and unconstitutional, as he carefully cut the tip of a Dominican "Punch" cigar.
"Here we are, the great outdoors, the beach and the huge sky," he said, barefoot and wearing a pin that read "I smoke and I vote."
"For them to ban smoking in the great outdoors is an overreach of power," Yourow said.
He then stuffed a pipe, a cigar and a cigarette into his mouth - all at once.
The City Council voted in February to prohibit smoking in pedestrian plazas, 1,700 city parks and playgrounds, along with 14 miles of public beaches. The newest ban went into effect this week.
Violators face $50 fines. Parks Department enforcement officers, not the NYPD, are in charge of issuing the tickets.
A Daily News staffer got the first ticket on Friday, but only after six hours of wandering the High Line and the Coney Island beach with cigarettes.
"Park Enforcement officers ... do have the ability to issue summonses to those who do not comply with the parks rules, and when possible will educate and advise before taking further action when overseeing compliance," a Parks spokesperson said.
CLASH founder Audrey Silk has been huffing and puffing about smoking bans since then-Gov. George Pataki's 1999 cigarette tax hike.
"[Politicians] have preferred to rescind our civil liberties rather than advise the public to walk away," she said. "What a tyranny we're living under that they make these decisions on a whim? We smoked before the ban, we're going to smoke after the ban."
Jack Kovalev, 21, agreed that people should be able to smoke: "Everyone's stressed out in this city," he said. "Cigarettes take that stress off."
But Galina Turalina, 21, was appalled.
"I'm shocked!" the visitor from Philadelphia said. "It's embarrassing. I've never seen a group of people gathering in favor of smoking. Is this what we're teaching our children?"
Ten-year-old Gabriela Centeno of Brighton Beach, echoed that sentiment. The Public School 253 student thinks the ban is healthy for the future of New York.
"I think it's a good choice because there can be secondhand smoke and people can get asthma, lung cancer and get sick," she said, while walking along the beach with her grandmother and baby brother."
Saturday, May 28, 2011
First Smoker Finally Ticketed In Ban - City Lies About Number Of Officers
The Daily News landed the city's first smoking ban ticket Friday - and it took all day to do it.
The News sent one staffer to the beach at Coney Island and another to the High Line, spending a total of six hours doing everything they could to get a ticket. They got a first-hand look at the lax enforcement.
Photographer Pearl Gabel, after flagrantly puffing in the presence of a Parks Department officer for a couple hours, finally scored about 6 p.m.
"I warned you before," said Officer Carlton Conheim, a smoldering enforcement agent with a menthol green uniform.
Then he wrote out a $50 summons for ignoring the ban, which began on Monday, that prohibits smoking in parks, pedestrian plazas and beaches.
"Have a nice day," Conheim said.
Then he turned on his heels and headed back down the High Line.
Getting the ticket wasn't easy.
Gabel had to walk a mile with her Camel Lights before she even saw a Parks officer. Standing 4 feet away, the officer refused to even look at the shutterbug, who was smoking like a chimney as he passed.
Newser Joe Jackson headed to Coney Island, lighting up his first American Spirits cigarette just after 2 p.m. An NYPD officer assigned to the 60th Precinct gave Jackson an immediate heads-up.
"Be careful," he said. "Parks Department will give you a ticket."
The NYPD will not enforce the smoking ban after several City Council members feared the new law would be an excuse to question and frisk people. But at the beach yesterday, it didn't appear Parks police were enforcing it either.
Two Parks police officers patrolling the Boardwalk in an SUV didn't give Jackson a second look as he took a drag on a cigarette. Other Parks officers made eye contact, but then zoomed by on four-wheelers.
Nearly four hours bled off the clock. Parks police officers rolled back and forth. Jackson burned through seven cigarettes. And nothing. Not even a warning from the Parks police.
The Parks Department has said that with 400 officers patrolling 1,700 parks and 14 miles of beaches, it doesn't have the manpower to enforce the law. City officials said they were depending on the public to enforce the ban.
Good luck with that.
Michael Mooney, 28, a soul singer from Queens, was enjoying the weather on the High Line yesterday. No one hassled him about his habit.
"I was smoking over by the bench and no one gave me a problem," he said.