Showing posts with label Joshua Laird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joshua Laird. Show all posts

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Beloved Parks Worker From Queens Takes Her Life

"She will rest in the shade between a beautiful cherry tree and a maple tree, so she will always be close to different kinds of birds."

Jennifer Kao
Jennifer Kao, 41, Senior Project Manager with the Planning and Parklands Division committed suicide last Wednesday when she tragically jumped off the George Washington Bridge. She was described by a former colleague as a gentle soul.


Queens

By Geoffrey Croft 

A beloved parks worker from Forest Hills died last Wednesday after taking her own life.

Jennifer Kao, 41, project manager in the Parklands Division worked at the agency since October 15,  2002. 

"It is with deep sadness that we announce the passing of Jennifer Kao, Senior Project Manager with the Planning and Parklands Division,"   the Parks Department said in a broadcast email sent to employees yesterday.

"Our thoughts are with her family and friends during this difficult time,"

Former Assistant Parks Commissioner Jack T. Linn decribed her as not a typical aggressive or ambitious New Yorker.

"She was a quiet, competent presence at the Arsenal for years,"  said Mr. Linn.  

"She was a gentle soul. It's all overwhelming," he said.

She was laid to rest this morning at the Maple Grove Cemetery in Kew Gardens, NY Queens.  

"She will rest in the shade between a beautiful cherry tree and a maple tree, so she will always be close to different kinds of birds,"  the agency said in a message.

Jennifer’s family relayed that Jennifer loved flowers and they may be sent to the funeral home.  But in lieu of flowers, donations can be made to environmental groups, bird/avian welfare groups, and organizations that provide international development and relief.

According to a published report Ms. Kao jumped from the crossing, north of the New York tower on the George Washington Bridge around 11:20 a.m.  on Wednesday.

The NYPD Harbor Unit pulled her body from the Hudson River about 15 minutes later. 

Over the years Jennifer worked on dozens of parks projects including the Shore Parkway Greenway, the Silvercup Studios project, and Elmhurst Gas Tank site in Queens. 

Joshua Laird, former Assistant Commissioner of Planning hired Jennifer into the agency in 2002, he described the loss as a "terrible tragedy," and said he was still in shock. 

"It's so sad. She was a smart, sweet and unassuming person. It's hard to fathom," he said. 

In 2006 Laird nominated Jennifer for Management’s Employee of the Month award for her "steadfastness and dedication," as a Community Coordinator for the Planning Division.

Mr. Laird,  now at the National Park Service said her work at the agency was "essential" and cited many projects she had a hand in such as Hudson River Park,  Brooklyn Bridge Park and Hunter's Point South among others that she had an important role in helping to see them through fruition. 

"She was essential in helping to move along these complicated projects through the environmental review and land use process," Laird said.

Former staffers informed him of the tragedy earlier this week. 

Laird  said he has fond memories of her organizing birthday celebrations and outings for fellow employees.

"A lot of people are feeling the hurt in the agency. It's hard to lose a person like this," he said.

"It's way, way too young."


Read More:

Police identify woman who jumped from George Washington Bridge
NJ Advance Media  - May 08, 2015 - By Noah Cohen










Tuesday, March 5, 2013

CB 7 Votes To $ Make Deal In USTA Land Grab


Pay-To-Play Scheme Sought By Community Board  7 In exchange for Expansion Approval

Picture
The expansion would utilize an additional acre of public parkland - not .68 acres - remove more than 400 trees,  bring in an additional 80,000 people, and increase traffic in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park which is already severely impacted by the USTA.  The USTA has been allowed to double its park land holdings since 1993 when they were permitted to expand from 21 acres to 42.  

Last year the USTA generated $ 275 million dollars and gave the city back just $ 2.5 million and while sending millions in "profits" across America.

"Tonight we have an opportunity  to draw a line in the sand," said board member Warren Schreiber one of three who voted against the expansion. "Enough is enough."

Queens

By Geoffrey Croft

Last night Community Board 7's Park Committee overwhelmingly voted to approve the USTA's $ 500 million expansion. The approval was conditioned upon the tennis giant establishing a capital fund of $15 million and an annual maintenance fund of $ 300,000 to be used exclusively for Flushing Meadows-Corona Park. 

The board enacted the destroying parks in order to "Save Them" policy last night despite strong community opposition.  A flyer was circulated before the meeting reminding the board that is was the government responsibility to fund parks not private business.  Apparently they were not swayed. 

The Parks Committee voted 8 - 3 in favor of the USTA land grab becoming the first parks committee to give the green light for the controversial project.

For weeks CB 7 leadership have been pressing for the cash for public park land swap deal but this was the first time they put an actual price tag on it.   1st Vice Chairperson Chuck Apelian finally publically put a proposed number on the deal. 

Mr. Apelian and CB 7 Chair Eugene Kelty continued to push for extracting funds from the USTA for the park and formed much of the motion.  

The motion was approved with various conditions including discount access to USTA facilities for seniors and children.

The oversite of such a fund would include a member of each of the impacted community boards.

Minutes before the vote committee chair Kim O'Hanian said there's no point in voting "no", because Queens Borough President Helen Marshall and City Council Julissa Ferreras are going to vote "yes" anyway.


Queens Community Board 7's parks committee meeting last night. (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge


The prior CB7 parks committee meeting was adjourned without a vote, because the committee specifically wanted to know the dollar value that USTA places on the additional .68 acres of parkland that it is seeking to take and the amount they were will to commit. Once again the board did not receive those answers, 

The meeting started up where they left off. The USTA and the Parks Department again said that the value of the parkland would not be state because parkland is not easily valued; and because the compensation for the newly-alienated parkland is to be negotiated further downstream during ULURP by elected officials who vote on this application.

USTA would only say that some value would be established at a future time later saying last night was not the time to commit to any specific dollar amount.

Mr. Apelian proposed the $15 million as a condition that Julissa Ferreras and others can later use as leverage to extract a deal.
In a disturbing part of the evening the committee chair read a letter from committee member Phil Konigsberg,  a critic of the land grab and a board member who has attended all previous meetings on this topic.  He knew in advance that he would be unable to attend the meeting. In addition to expressing his opposition to the USTA application, Mr.   Konigsberg's letter also explained that he had sought permission from CB7 chair  Eugene Kelty to cast a vote tonight via telephone, which is explicitly permitted by the CB7 bylaws, provided that the board chairs consents. 

The letter stated that Mr. Kelty denied Phil's request to vote via telephone. After Phil's letter was read Mr.  Kelty commented for several minutes - including saying that if Phil found it so difficult to attend committee meetings, that he could dismiss him from this committee.  Critics point out that  a well-intentioned committee member had attempted to exercise his right to vote was denied that right by Kelty and was now  being threatened with removal from the committee by Kelty because he did not like the fact that a committee member  was publicly announcing that Kelty denied him the ability to vote.

Watching Dominoes Fall

District managers of other impacted community boards that have a say in the USTA matter were also in attendance. They heard the conditions that CB7 attached to its approval. 

Critics are also concerned that last night result will be a indication of things to come. Two enormous commercial proposals as also planned for the park, including a 1.4 million sq.ft  mall next to Citi-Field and 35,000 seat Major League Soccer stadium and concert hall.

The full CB7 board holds its public hearing and vote on March 11.



Parks Borough Commissioner Dorothy Lewandowski,  Janice Melnick - FMCP Administrator,  Joshua Laird,  and USTA's COO Daniel Zausner. 


Read More:

A Walk In The Park - February 18, 2013- By Geoffrey Croft 






Monday, February 18, 2013

CB 7 Postpones USTA Land Grab Vote - Citing Too Many Unanswered Questions


"I want a dollar value on 30,000 square feet of premium parkland and you didn't give me one." - CB 7 parks chair Kim Ohanian

"I understand you spend all your money across the country but you know something - across the country they don't have to go through what we do when you have your events,"  - CB 7's  Pablo Hernandez
Picture

The expansion would utilize an additional acre of public parkland,  remove more than 400 trees,  bring in an additional 80,000 people, and increase traffic in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park which is already severely impacted by the USTA.


Queens

By Geoffrey Croft

Queens Community Board 7's Parks Committee convened forty-eight hours after a lively full-board meeting where more than a dozen members of the public came out to testify in opposition to the USTA's controversial $ 500 million dollar plan to expand again into Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.

The Parks Committee expected the Parks Department and the USTA to come back with concrete financial numbers to be spent on "park improvements," in exchange for being allowed to build on almost an acre of parkland.


That did not happen.


Instead, officials spent a good portion of the night avoiding questions and answering in half-truths.

Queens Community Board 7's parks committee meeting. (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge.





























Board members brought up a host of issues -  the loss of parkland, destruction of trees, increased traffic and pollution, high prices of playing at the National Tennis Center, and the city's lack of commitment to take care of the park among others.  Despite repeated requests from the board the USTA has still refused to put its expansion presentation on-line for all to see.


For a second consecutive CB 7 Parks committee meeting, the USTA's Chief Operating Officer Daniel Zausner had problems accurately remembering prices the National Tennis Center charges the public to play.

The USTA once again failed to provide any evidence that would prohibit them from building the new stadiums on their existing footprint.


The issue of objectivity relating to the creation of the project's EIS was also raised.  The document was created by the government's favored environmental review company, AKRF, paid for by the USTA, and reviewed by the Parks Department - the lead agency charged with ushering this proposal through.


According to the USTA, one of the main rationales behind the proposed park land grab is that it is necessary to remain competitive.  The expansion would allow the tennis group to pay top players more money in order to prevent them from opting out of the US Open in favor of attending to up-and-coming foreign venues/tournaments like Dubai, the United Arab Emirates state located in the Persian Gulf. 

Over many months, the USTA has repeatedly told the public, including the media, that building two new stadiums would help ensure the U.S. Open would not lose  marquee players to other more lucrative foreign markets. 

On Wednesday, though, Mr. Zausner seemed to try and distance himself from these comments. 

"That is a reality for us, that is not the community board's problem," he said ignoring the position this proposal is putting the community in. 

"We will continue to do what's necessary to continue to attract the super stars of the world to play in this tennis tournament but I don't believe the community boards have to concern themselves. That is our problem, not yours."

As he has done in prior meetings, Mr. Zausner tried to minimize the impacts the entire proposed expansion would have by focusing solely on .68 acres - other land was alienated in 1993, but not used, bringing the total land to be built upon now to .98 acres.   

The so called "tear drop" park area, which is included in the total expansion, includes much of the land where the planned removal of more than 400 trees is to take place. 

He described the land they propose to take this time around as a "20-30 feet wide underutilized asphalt roadway" that they will turn into a "landscape buffer and a pathway" which will be "open to the public - six am to midnight eleven months of the year," he said.

"We can't physically replace these two stadium without taking this asphalt strip and turning it into a landscape buffer, "  Mr. Zausner said.

This was a description that at least one board member took exception with.

"You got to remember, their property isn't their property. There's a huge fence that goes around their property so the kids in there have to come from the Passerelle (building entrance) to get in there," said CB 7 board chair Eugene Kelty.  

"It's not like they just walk off the fields and just walk right in on their property. Where the kids have the main part of Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, this area is controlled...they have to come into the entrance by the Passerelle," he said.


 The expansion is a lot more than .68 acres.


Board member Dr. James M. Cervino, a marine biologist, asked numerous questions about the loss of trees and park acreage and potential environmental  issues. At one point he put that to the side and attempted to get an answer on a personal level.

"How do you feel about this? You work for the Parks Department. You're going to give up and lose what you've gone to school for, what you've learned about all your life,"  he asked Joshua Laird. "I would like to know from you, how do you feel about this loss?" 

"The Parks Department is endorsing this project," Mr. Laird replied. "The Parks Department supports this expansion."

"It's sad to hear that. It's sad to hear that," Mr. Cervino replied.

Running A Business On Parkland - Distributing Profits Across the Country

As they make their way through numerous community board meetings, details of the USTA's operation are being revealed. 

The USTA made $ 275 million last year, the vast majority from funds generated at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.  However, they gave just  $ 2.5 million back to the city as per their license agreement.


What ever money is left over "is redistributed to 17 sections" throughout the country, including places like California and Arizona, according to the USTA's Chief Operating Officer.

"After you take all the expenses of operating the US Open and all the community projects across the country - let's say there is sixty-million dollars - that sixty-million dollars gets spent across the country to grow the sports to make it affordable for kids to participate in programs everywhere in the country not just in the New York area," said Daniel Zausner. "There is no profit left over." 

USTA's Chief Operating Officer was asked if they had planned on increasing funding for programming in the New York area as a result of the additional $ 4-5 million dollars they expect in new revenue as a result of the expansion.  

"In addition to what we are already funding in the New York area - on an annual basis? No," Mr. Zausner responded.

"I understand you spend all your money across the country but you know something - across the country they don't have to go through what we do when you have your events," said CB7 member Pablo Hernandez. 

Destroying Parks to "Save Them" - Let's Make A Deal?

Starved for so long of the resources needed to maintain our public parks, Community Boards have increasingly resorted to the "Let's Make a Deal" mentality in order to vote yes on this types of projects.  

CB 7 Chair Eugene Kelty and 1st Vice Chairperson Chuck Apelian continue to push for extracting funds from the USTA for the park.

They suggested creating capital and maintenance funds specifically for Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, paid for by the USTA.  Mr. Apelian said that the USTA had "opportunity" to become "stewards" of the park.

Council Member Julissa Ferreras's representative also asked about the establishment of such a fund.  

"The point we are saying now is that they are going to finish up their nice hunk of property here…the cost of everything goes up, your fees go up I'm sure your dues go up and so does the cost of operating that park that what is what I think this board would be looking for.  'what are we getting back for the community'  "If we are going to put something over there we would like to see some capital fund for the park and we would also like to see some kind of maintenance fund in place in perpetuity with this lease." 

When asked to provide a specific dollar amount the USTA is committing to spend, they declined, saying the community board will have to wait. The tennis official said they were going to follow the same procedure as in the 90's when they went from 20 - 40 acres. They will come back before the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) is completed.

But by then, all of the community boards will already have voted on this proposal, without having any information regarding the dollar value that the Parks Department and USTA attributes to the affected parkland, or the dollar value of the park improvements that USTA would allegedly provide.

The Parks Department highlighted two potential park improvement projects as compensation:  Restoring the park's pathway system including the area around the Meadow Lake which is prone to flooding - doing ecological restoration and building a bathroom on the west end of the Lake. 

"There's no plans for a maintenance fund which I believe is what you are asking for,"  explained Flushing Meadows-Corona Park Administrator Janice Melnick.

"The plan is going to do capital improvements to the park but not a maintenance fund," she said.  

The question of whether or not they would be open to creating such an endowment was met with no response.

"We keep skating around this thing we've got to nail down and I think its important a this point a capital contribution and an expense contribution going forward on this project," said Chuck Apelian.  

"I think the money has to be set aside for both expense on an annual basis and a capital lump sum to fund projects in this park.       

There is an opportunity to put some seven figures or possibly eight figures into an endowment so that we have dollars that Parks wasn't going to get," he continued.   

"Show me the beef. You are going to have to come back with numbers and explain to us if you want any chance of an approval of what's going to be dollars and sense is going to be the benefit to this community.

"I think if any there is any fighting chance that there's going to be support, there has to be qualifications at this point," he said.

"And considering the fact that when we last met my last question to you was, I want a dollar value on 30,000 square feet of premium parkland, and you didn't give me one," said CB 7 parks chair Kim Ohanian.

"Our concern is that I heard what Dan (Zausner) said as far as the money they pay in rent and stuff that it goes into the general fund which that's why we're still upset because that means it doesn't make its way back here so that's why the necessity of the capital fund and maintenance thing is earmarked specifically and only for that park and can't be used in any other park,"  said Eugene Kelty.

"So I just wanted to make that statement to you. That while we think about it that is why we asked you to come back with a number."

Alienation Of Parkland/No Replacement   

Numerous board members were very interested to know why the land the USTA is seeking to add to its current lease was not being replaced. That question was never directly addressed and instead the board received a 'slight on hand' response.

Joshua Laird, Assistant Commissioner for Planning & Parklands admitted that the State legislation "always seek replacement parkland,"  when the city permanently deposes of parkland but he was less forthcoming about when it leases the land. 


He admitted that the project requires state alienation approval but avoided addressing why the land was not being replaced when asked.

He attempted to justify not replacing the land in this instance by making a distinction between the city leasing the land and not disposing of the land.  He tried to make the argument that because the land is being leased instead of being disposed of the land does not need to be replaced.



Janice Melnick - FMCP Administrator (l) Joshua Laird, (c) and USTA's COO Daniel Zausner. 

"There are no regulations or rules or laws on paper that govern how alienation happens," he stated. "It's really based on a legal principle."

"The standards for how compensation occurs, the terms under which it can happen are not governed by any sort of written set of rules," Laird said. 

"In theory the legislature could agree to alienate parkland with no compensation. There's nothing that requires them to seek it. They have in fact for a hundred years or more always required compensation  I can't think of any examples that I know of where that has happened. 

The tradition is that when we are actually selling off parkland we always seek replacement parkland but in instances like this one where the alienation is for a lease hold there have been exceptions, a number of exceptions.  

That sort of precedent is well established where we're not actually selling off parkland or accepting funding for improvements as the compensation," Laird said.  

He cited three examples where the Parks Department received compensation instead of requiring the replacement the parkland, none of which were particularly relevant to the current situation though.

Land under Battery Park was temporarily alienated in order to allow the MTA to expand the subway station for # 1 line in lower Manhattan. 

The only apples to apples lease-to-lease comparison that remotely approached relevancy he cited was the building of Brooklyn Cyclones stadium in Coney Island. Although technically a Parks Department-owned lot, it was not being used for parkland purposes.  Also important to note: that project was not legally challenged which can be a major factor in holding the government accountable in alienation disputes including compensation and replacement issues. 

The "biggest example of all," Mr. Laird said was the Croton Water treatment plant being built under Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx.

In that case the state alienated 14 acres of park land land in order to allow the building of a massive facility underground. The government, including the Parks Department, had first tried to get away without requiring the land be alienated.  They were sued and forced to acquire alienation approval in order to build it when they lost.  

"There the compensation was just funding for park improvements," he said.  The "just funding" came in the form of hundreds of millions dollars that went to Bronx parks throughout the borough for capital projects.

What he failed to specifically mention was that land is being used temporarily to build a "public benefit" water treatment plant under a court mandated order and not for a long-term lease for a private sports corporation.

Laird also failed to bring up the only recent applicable example where the city leased parkland for a sports organization, in all likelihood because in that case the land was required to be replaced. That example however did not escape the memory of a board member who raised the issue. 

In 2005 the city allowed the New York Yankees, the wealthiest sports team in America to seize 25.3 acres of historic parkland in the South Bronx so they could build a new $ 1 billion dollar stadium.  However, unlike the USTA, which has been allowed to take more than 40 acres of public parkland in Flushing Meadows Park which had also previously been used for both active and passive recreation, the elected officials in the Bronx case required the parkland be replaced.

"We would only agree to the (Bronx) deal…. we were only willing to do that if there were a replacement facility," Laird said on a in a 'what is good enough for the Bronx but not for Queens' moment.  

Picture
In 1951, the area the USTA currently occupies was parkland used for both active and passive recreation.

The answer why the parkland is not being replaced is pretty simple:  The Bloomberg administration, in concert with Queens city and state elected officials who represent the area, are not requiring the USTA to replace it.  

Parks and USTA officials said they have already lined up State Assembly Member Jeffrion L. Aubry and State Senator Jose Peralta to introduce the alienation bill, which does not require park replacement.  They did not identify the City Council member who will sponsor a Home Rule message that is also required. 

Deja Vu All Over Again

People have brought up the promises they remember the USTA  made in 1993 when they were allowed to double its parkland holdings. They said they would not seek any more incursions into the park.  

"I personally wasn't here (at the time) said Daniel Zausner said in response, "I'm not going to use that as an excuse."

Laird was asked how the Parks Department would guarantee it would not give more parkland to the USTA in the future. 

He was not reassuring.  He replied that nothing would prevent that in the future. The USTA official sitting next to him did not offer that guarantee either. 

Laird said, "the real reality is," that the elected officials and the parks department in the future "could come back to this community with a proposal sometime down the road. 

Laird then offered up a non-credible opinion on future land grabs.  

He said due to USTA's physical location in the park, any new expansion would not be possible from a practical stand point. 

"The USTA has really taken up all the land it can…. That's not going to happen," he said of any new expansion.

"I'm still not hearing some type of outrage that we are going to just  for a private developer to clear cut a forest... for a profit-making developer…. We are taking away an ecosystem. ..You did this already in 1993 when you promised not to take another inch," said Dr. Cervino.
 

He said giving up parkland "goes against what the parks department mission statement really is. I would just like some sort of a moral outrage from the New York City Parks Department."

When is it going to end?" he asked.


Tennis Prices

Board member Pablo Hernandez asked USTA's Chief Operating Officer Daniel Zausner about the hourly rates they charge the public for playing tennis in the park.

"If you or I just decided that we wanted to come out their tomorrow and play on a court during the day I think it's -  the indoor courts are $ 32 dollars the outdoor courts are $ 24 dollars,"  Zausner said.

A few minutes later when it was pointed out that the hourly rates actually go as high as $66 and $ 32 respectively as posted on USTA's website and on flyers available at the National Tennis Center, the USTA official flatly denied it. 

"Not factual,"  Mr. Zausner responded, "But we could certainly bring all the price sheets with us."

At the prior CB 7 parks committee meeting he blamed "the media" for spreading the same inaccurate rate information. 

"We're used to being lied to," a CB 7 board member said after Tuesday's meeting.

What he also didn't mention was that all other outdoor courts on Parks Department property are free for 5 months of the year including the courts nearby in the Flushing Meadows Park this time of the year. The City charges $ 200 for the remaining seven month outdoor season.  

The exorbitant rates they charge has been raised repeatedly. Prices that for some reason USTA's Chief Operating Officer has repeatedly had problems accurately remembering at recent public meetings.

Mr. Hernandez also asked if the budget for the National Tennis Center's was available online. That was not answered.

Permission Needed to Read Statement

Towards the end of the meeting Phil Konigsberg asked if the public would be allowed to address the board.  That request was denied by CB Parks Chair Kim Ohanian.   In a surreal moment he then asked if he could read a statement from a Flushing resident but he had to get permission first.

"I think you should read that first and make that decision madam chair," offered board Chair Eugene Kelty.  

Kim Ohanian skimmed the document. 

"That's not short," she said.

"Go ahead," she said passing the letter back to him, "read fast."

Konigsberg read the letter from a Flushing resident who has lived in the area for the past 47 years who was unable to attend Monday's meeting.

"As a Flushing resident for over 47 years I join my neighbors in their overwhelming oppostion of the proposed USTA expanstion,"  the letter said in part. "Park land by law is parkland forever. No business has a right to take away what belongs to the people.  Yes, park land belongs to the people. Park land is not owned by the Mayor, a city council member nor a state legislature. When elected officials sell their souls and do not work for the public interest it is up to us, the people, to stand up and be heard. The people are shouting, "Leave our parkland alone!"

I am confident that this community board made up of community leaders will reject the USTA expansion proposal. Enough is enough." 

Plantings Benefiting The US Open

Board members also expressed displeasure over the Parks Department using it's extremely limited horticultural resources to beautify the areas around the US Open instead of the USTA footing the bill.

"Yes, there are areas in the park that we beautify before that event (US. Open) and I would like to say before any large event we have in the park," said Janice Melnick, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park Administrator. 

However, when Ms. Melnick was asked to provide any other examples of where they specifically beautify areas before other major events, she was unable to. 

"We do plant before the US Open. We plant a tennis racquet with perennials.  So yes, we do some work in the park to beautify it before the event," she said.

"Maybe we should't have to pay for the flowers, maybe the USTA should pay for the flowers since you are putting the gardener to work… that's less cost that's coming out of the parks budget vs. theirs especially since the racquet represent them," said Eugene Kelty. "We'd like to keep the Parks Department figures down and the USTA figures up." 

As the night wound down the frustration was apparent. 

"And yes, the Parks Department really need to do a better job of paying attention to the largest green space in the largest borough instead of spending so much damn attention to Central Park and Prospect Park," said Parks Chair Kim Ohanian closing the meeting.  "And we are sick and tired of getting short changed.
You guys treat us like crap and we're tired of it. Ok?" she continued. 

"You spend very little money on this park. You have neglected it, you have treated it like garbage and it's not right.  

You don't spend enough money to take care of it. You don't have enough help, and don't spend enough money and you don't treat it right.  

There's no reason why the Fountain of the Planets looks the way that it does. You've neglected it, you've neglected a lot of that park and shame on you." 

"Please be prepared have answers to the questions that were presented to you tonight."

We ask questions we deserve answers. We don't get them they don't get theirs."  

The meeting was adjourned until the first week in March.

There are two other commercial projects currently proposed for Flushing Meadows-Corona Park including  a 1.4 million sq. ft mall and a new stadium for Major League Soccer.

Read More:

USTA Expansion Plan Comes To CB 9
A Walk In The Park - February 14, 2013 

Thursday, February 14, 2013

USTA Expansion Plan Comes To CB 9

Ben Haber addressing Community Board 9 on Tuesday night, Mr. Haber urged Parks Committee and full Board to reject the USTA’s expansion application.

The USTA's strategy for that night was to parade the union construction trades, business representatives and people affiliated with the USTA who filled the room. 

In a strange turn of events the communty board had the public speek before the USTA presentation. How the public is qualified to speak about a proposal that they have not yet heard was troublesome. 

"We are not talking about reducing the exorbitant fees the USTA charges residents to use their courts in our park," said Mr. Haber.  (full letter below) 

"Last year the USTA made $275 million and paid the city a paltry $2.5 million – an amount I suspect is less than the city’s annual budget for chalk. In short ladies and gentlemen, we are not talking about something that represents an insignificant intrusion in our park, but one that is major. "

Ed Westley, Jackson Heights Beautification Group president and CB 3 member spoke out against the project.

"If Henry Stern were here he would be blocking this with his body, " Mr. Westley said referring to the former parks commissioner. 

"I urge you not to approve this proposal by the USTA for the children and for the people of 
Queens." 

Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz came spoke in favor of the project. Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz came spoke in favor of the project. 

The board votes on March 9th.      - Geoffrey Croft



Queens
The expansion of the National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Corona Park dominated Tuesday’s meeting of Community Board 9 at the Kew Gardens Community Center, as board members unloaded a barrage of questions to the Parks Department and United States Tennis Association about the plan, according to the Queens Chronicle.
Though very little of the park sits in CB 9, which includes Woodhaven, Ozone Park, Kew Gardens and Richmond Hill, board members expressed concern about the potential effects of the project on the park itself, especially when considered alongside the proposed soccer stadium and and shopping mall plan near Citi Field. The USTA is seeking to expand its presence by taking less than an acre of parkland near the Unisphere.

“Somewhere along the line, they’re going to have to put a moratorium on building in Flushing Meadows,” said CB 9 member Maria Thomson. “Enough is enough.”
Discussion of the plan came after a lengthy public hearing in which a few local residents expressed their opposition to the idea, while others, including union workers and members of a local tennis program, pushed the importance of the plan to the economy and the sport.
Most notably, Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz (D-Forest Hills) threw her support behind the idea at the meeting, becoming the first Queens council member to speak openly in favor of it.
“I believe this project is good for our economy,” she said. “And our economy needs help.”
Jack Friedman, executive vice president of the Queens Chamber of Commerce, also endorsed the plan at the meeting.
“This project will bring good-paying union jobs to Queens,” Friedman said. He added that the USTA allowed the Chamber to put up a kiosk at last year’s US Open promoting Queens businesses.
But one local resident, Benjamin Haber, asked the board to oppose the expansion, arguing that the US Open often leads to more traffic in the community and said it offered little benefit. He also noted USTA moved its headquarters from Manhattan to Westchester County.
“So much for loyalty to New York City,” he said.
Geoffrey Croft of NYC Parks Advocates said the USTA had promised in the 1990s to not expand their campus onto more parkland, a concern shared by CB 9 member Alexander Blenkinsopp.
“How are we sure you won’t come back and ask for more land in the future?” Blenkinsopp asked.

USTA COO Dan Zausner (L)  and Joshua Laird.


Joshua Laird, assistant commissioner for planning and parkland at the Parks Department, said the plan would require 0.68 acre of what is currently mapped as parkland between the tennis center and the Unisphere. Laird said many of the trees that will be removed for the project may be replanted elsewhere in the park.
“There are ways for us to transplant the trees so we don’t lose them,” he said.
The board is expected to vote on the proposal at their March meeting.
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Queens Chronicle - February 14, 2013 -  By Domenick Rafter


My name is Ben Haber. I am here tonight to urge your Parks Committee and this Board to reject the USTA’s current application concerning Flushing Meadows Corona Park. Please keep in mind the application is not simply a request for 0.68 acre of parkland on top of the 42 acres it already has, but in addition it is to build a new stadium to replace the grand stand and to rebuild a much larger Louis Armstrong Stadium. We are talking about constructing two new garages including a 423 space 2 level garage and a 270 space 3 level garage. We are talking about removing hundreds of trees. We are talking about a major increase in vehicular traffic in the area. We are not talking about reducing the exorbitant fees the USTA charges residents to use their courts in our park. Last year the USTA made $275 million and paid the city a paltry $2.5 million – an amount I suspect is less than the city’s annual budget for chalk. In short ladies and gentlemen, we are not talking about something that represents an insignificant intrusion in our park, but one that is major. 

    When the USTA decided to leave Forest Hills, it did not do so to serve a public purpose. It did not do so out of any desire to help government. It did so to make money. It saw an opportunity to do so by taking free of charge, a huge portion of Flushing Meadows Corona Park (FMCP) that if we were talking about selling off park land, would be worth billions of dollars. The taking was an economic steal of taxpayer property. The USTA promised at the time it would not thereafter ask for more park property, a promise that turned out to be as worthless as a dead tennis ball, because it did in fact come back and extort more park land. After its initial taking, the USTA promptly moved its head office out of Manhattan to Harrison in Westchester County; so much for its loyalty to New York City.

     Comes now the USTA for a further intrusion in  the park. Enough is enough, the time has come to say NO. Do not be swayed by the NYC Parks Department. Its treatment of FMCP is a national disgrace, one that in my opinion should cause it to be indicted for malfeasance in office. And do not be influenced by unfounded claims of an economic windfall for the taxpayers of this city. Sports activities in this city do not account for more than 7/10th of one percent of the city’s gross economic product, an amount that can be equated with the tip one gives the youngster who delivers your groceries. It does not put more police or fire fighters on the streets, or more and better class rooms and  staff. Fans catch the game and when its over they catch the train home. They do not stop to shop in Queens. If you need any proof that sports activities in this city do not in any significant economic way affect the standard of living of New Yorkers, keep in mind that when the Jets, the Giants and the Dodgers left, New York City did not fall into bankruptcy. We flourished without them. There is no reason to be intimidated by the USTA.

     Do not be concerned that if you say no, the USTA will move out of the park. Greedy they are, but not stupid. They will not give up what for them, “as is”, is a great deal, and should be more than ample. They will stay put. If you do not believe parks are the lifeblood of an urban society, then give it away.  But if that is what you want to do, please do not settle for pennies. If you approve the continued abuse of Flushing Meadows Corona, you should press the City to de-list it as a park in our municipal system, The land can them be sold to the highest bidder which will involve hundreds of billions of dollars, an amount that will balance our city’s budget for decades. Of course the cost will also be the destruction of a much needed park that serves the poor and the middle class, but who cares about them? With due respect, your obligation is to protect the park for not just the current residents of Queens, but for generations as yet unborn.

      There is no justification for the USTA’s request, other than they want to make more money, the bulk of which goes into the pockets of the professional players and the USTA’s commitments throughout the United States, not Queens. Please do not buy into this nonsense that it is okay to keep dumping on FMCP because it is different. It is not different. There is nothing in the City Charter that designates it is different from any other park in the municipal system. This is a political ploy manufactured by Donald Manes, the late discredited Queens Boro President when he wanted to construct a Grand Prix race track in the park, and thereafter claimed by inept politicians who viewed their constituents as real estate and big business cronies and not the little people who need the park. Finally, in the depths of the Great Depression of the 1930s New York City did not sell or alienate park land for so-called economic reasons. and under no circumstances should responsible public officials equate public park land with private for-profit businesses. It would be akin to mixing oil and water. .

     Please do the right thing and reject the request. Thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak. I am leaving copies of my remarks and ask they be considered part of your record.