Friday, June 25, 2010

Man Stomps Puppy To Death In Tompkins Square Park

Manhattan


A Brooklyn man viciously stomped a puppy to death in Tompkins Square Park, authorities said yesterday, according to the New York Post.


John Lendino, 53, confronted a 30-year-old man walking his 4-week old puppy and began kicking the dog in the head at about 6:15 p.m. last Friday, according to a Criminal Court complaint. Shocked witnesses called police, who busted Lendino.



Read More:

New York Post - NYPD Daily Blotter  - June 24, 2010 - By KIRSTEN FLEMING, JOHN DOYLE, JAMIE SCHRAM, LORENA MONGELLI and JESSICA SIMEONE 

Markowitz In End-Run Around Sound Permit Law In Asser Levy Park Concert Fight - Enlists Powerful "Friends"



Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz has enlisted the help of Mayor Bloomberg, City Council Member Peter Vallone and other Council  members to alter an existing law to allow his Asser Levy/Seaside Park Seaside Summer Concert series to continue.  A lawsuit was filed last week charging that Mr. Markowitz's concerts violate a city law which prohibits amplified sound within 500 feet of  of “a school, courthouse or church, during the hours of school,  court or worship."  Sea Breeze Jewish Center and Congregation Temple Beth Abraham are approximately 300 feet away.  Plaintiffs charge the concerts have been illegally held in Asser Levy/Seaside Park since its inception in 1991. (Asser Levy/Seaside Park Seaside Summer Concert Series -File Photo, July 16, 2009 © By Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click photo to enlarge. 



Brooklyn


At the request of Mayor Bloomberg, the City Council is fast-tracking a bill that will ultimately allow Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz’s longtime Coney Island concert series to go on this summer after all, according to the New York Post.


The bill, sponsored by Councilman Peter Vallone (D-Astoria), would temporarily revise city law so that open-air bandshells, amphitheaters and stadiums could get permits to host concerts within 500 feet of houses of worship and schools.


This comes after two Brooklyn synagogues and their worshipers last week sued Markowitz and the city to stop his summer concerts that have been held at Asser Levy Park since 1991, saying they violates a city law prohibiting amplified sound within 500 feet of religious institutions when services are taking place.


It was part of their plan to halt Markowitz’s planned $64 million amphitheater at the park. Sea Breeze Jewish Center and Temple Beth Abraham are across the street from the existing bandshell at Asser Levy Park, and both say they host services daily.


The new regulations would be in effect for 90 days – so that Markowitz’s concerts aren’t disrupted this summer – with a permanent solution to be ironed out later, officials said.


"The new legislation is clearly designed to avoid complying with the existing law," said Geoffrey Croft of New York City Park Advocates, who has helped fight to save parkland to be lost through the amphitheater project.

 "It's a clear end run around the existing law," said Norman Siegel, the plaintiffs' lawyer, told the New York Daily News.  "It's disappointing that rather than comply, the city is trying to change the law," 

Al Turk, vice president of Temple Beth Abraham, urged the Council to reject the bill, which is scheduled for a hearing Friday and could be voted on as soon as next week.

"What city Councilman could vote for this in good consciense?" said Turk. "It's wrong. How could you have loud music interrupting synagogue services?...This not only affects synagogues, it will affect mosques, churches, libraries, and schools."

Read More:


New York Post - June 24,  2010 - By Rich Calder  

New York Daily News - June 24th 2010 - By Erin Durkin

The Brooklyn Paper - June 25,  2010  - By Joe Maniscalso

Bay Currents - June 25, 2010 -  By David J. Glenn

Bay Currents - June 25, 2010 -  By David J. Glenn

Bay Currents - June 25, 2010 -  By David J. Glenn


A Walk In the Park - June 17, 2010 - By Geoffrey Croft 



Wednesday, June 23, 2010

53-year-old Robbed At Knifepoint In Central Park

NEW YORK (WABC) -- Police are investigating a mugging in Central Park in which the victim was robbed of his iPod at knifepoint.

The incident happened just before midnight Tuesday inside the park on 75th Street near Central Park West.

Investigators say a mugger approached a man, pulled out a knife and took off with the iPod.

Read More:

Man robbed at knifepoint in Central Park
Eyewitness News - June 23, 2010

Police In Brooklyn Step Up Patrols At Owls Head & Leif Ericson Park

BROOKLYN

In the wake of a shooting in Owl’s Head Park and a series of robberies committed by teens in Leif Ericson Park near 67th Street, the 68th Precinct says it’s stepping up patrols at both, according to Courier-Life.


“We look for groups of kids who may be wearing gang colors, and we break them up and investigate,” said Deputy Inspector Eric Rodriguez, the commanding officer of the precinct.


The cops who patrol the parks also watch for graffiti (which Rodriguez said may contain gang insignias), alcohol use and marijuana use, as well as keep an eye open for the occasional dispute between groups playing a pick-up ball game on a field and the organizations that actually have the permit for the field.


But those crimes aren’t the only problem in the parks. Lesser offenses include illegal barbecuing.

Read More:

Cops have close eye on area parks
Courier-Life - June 22, 2010 - By Helen Klein

A Walk In The Park - June 3, 2010

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Union Square Dome Opens But Problem Not Entirely Solved

Parents Welcome Dome Back to Union Square After Safety Hazards had it Closed
The six-foot high steel climbing dome designed by Michael Van Valkenburgh in Union Square playground reopened on Tuesday with a massive green awning above it. The awning however does not cover the entire structure leaving part of the metal exposed to the sun. The City was finally forced to close the play feature on May 21 after it became dangerously hot as NYC Park Advocates first reported. Just last week in Brooklyn Bridge Park, another Van Valkenburgh designed steel play orb had to be closed after a thirteen-month-old girl suffered second degree burns while touching it. (Photos: DNAinfo/Nicole Breskin) 

Manhattan


UNION SQUARE — A steel climbing dome in the Union Square playground that had to be shut down after it became dangerously hot in the sun reopened on Tuesday with a massive awning shading it from above, according to DNAinfo.


But some parents worry that the Parks Department's massive, 40-foot-long tarp won't be enough to protect kids, since the awning leaves a section on the east side of the dome exposed to the sun.
 
Domes designed by the same architect, Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, had to be removed at Brooklyn Bridge Park's new Pier 1 playground park because of overheating problems.
 
“This seems ill-conceived,” said Brooklyn mom Diana Decubellis, who took her two children to play in Union Square on Tuesday. “It’s definitely hot and fully in the sun on this side. Parents should be very vigilant.”
 
Her daughter, Sophia, 9, opted to play by the sprinklers because she found the dome too hot.


Parents Welcome Dome Back to Union Square After Safety Hazards had it Closed
Sophia and Diana Decubellis said the dome was still hot to the touch.



Read More:

Union Square Play Dome Reopens After Safety Repair, but Sliver of Metal Still Exposed 
DNAinfo - June 22, 2010 - By Nicole Breskin

Fun to Climb, Until the Temperature Does, Too


A Walk In The Park - May 24, 2010 - By Geoffrey Croft

The Villager - May 19, 2010 -  By Albert Amateau


Brooklyn Domes:

Park Domes Fenced Off to Protect Children
New York Times - June 18, 2010 - By Isolde Raftery

New York Daily News - June 18, 2010 -  By Elizabeth Hays

New York Post - June 18, 2010 - By Rich Calder

The Brooklyn Paper - April 29, 2010

New York Daily News - April 16th 2010  - By Jeff Wilkins and Elilizabeth Hays

A Walk In The Park - April 8, 2010

New York Daily News - April 8, 2010 - By Jeff Wilkins & Elizabeth Hays

Brooklyn playground takes heat for equipment temps 
WABC Eyewitness News - April 07, 2010 - By Sandra Bookman

WNBC News - April 7, 2010 - By Tim Minton

CBS News - April 7, 2010 -  Cindy Hsu 


New York Post - The Brooklyn Blog - April 7, 1010 -  By Rich Calder


New York Daily News - April 7, 2010 - By Elizabeth Hays  

CB 5 Committee Approves Union Sq. Pedestrian Plaza Amid Protests

The plan to refashion Broadway north of Union Square has met with resistance from local residents.

Union Square Pedestrian Plazas Part of Larger Refashioning of Broadway
A rendering of the proposed redesign of E. 17th Street between Broadway and Park Avenue on the north side of Union Square. (NYC Department of Transportation) Community Board 5’s transportation committee approved  the Department of Transportation’s plan on Monday night.


MANHATTAN


A plan to rejigger the roadways north of Union Square to create more pedestrian-friendly streets is moving forward despite cries from a group of residents claiming the conversion will cause a traffic nightmare in their neighborhood, according to DNAinfo.


Dozens of residents turned up at meeting of Community Board 5’s transportation committee Monday night to discuss the Department of Transportation’s pilot project, which will restrict traffic to one-way westbound on 17th Street and modify Broadway north of the square to add more pedestrian space.


The conversion also includes a handful of changes to the surrounding side streets, including rerouting eastbound traffic to the residential 18th Street as part of the larger goal of discouraging drivers from using Broadway as a major thoroughfare.


The plan had been tweaked since its April unveiling based on input from local residents — including keeping Broadway open to through traffic between 17th and 18th streets. Still, some stakeholders claim the proposal is being rushed through.


“I don’t think there’s a person in this room who doesn’t think this plan is being rammed down people’s throats,” said Mitchell Falber, a lawyer for the owners of ABC Carpet & Home on Broadway between 18th and 19th streets.


Union Square the Next Place to Go Car-Free in Pedestrian Plaza Proposal
Looking west along 17th Street near Union Square's north end, which the city will convert to a pedestrian mall with restricted car traffic. (Getty Images)

Throughout the contentious, two-hour-long meeting, residents from the area claimed the DOT didn’t do enough to consult with them and failed to publicize data public forums about the project.


A major sticking point for neighbors is the expected surge in traffic that will end up on East 18th Street instead of Union Square. Southbound drivers will be forced to turn left on East 18th Street from Broadway.


The DOT acknowledged that the stretch would see a 10 to 20 percent increase in vehicles due to the road changes, and has proposed eliminating a lane of parking nightly on the north curb to create an extra lane for through traffic.


Read More:

DNAinfo - June 22, 2010 - By Patrick Hedlund

Hostility over Union Square pedestrian plaza plans
Examiner.com - April 29, 2010 -  By Molly Zelvonberg

New York Post -  April 27, 2010  -  By Candace Amos

NY1 News - April 24, 2010

New York Times - April 23, 2010 - By Michael M. Grynbaum 


Police Hunt Teens In Central Park Robbery

A surveillance camera photo of four teens accused of robbing an 68-year-old man in 
Central Park on Saturday night just before 8 p.m according to the police.

Police are searching for a group of teenagers accused of robbing a senior citizen in Central Park.

A surveillance camera took a picture of the group of boys.

According to police, two were armed, one with a gun and the other with a knife.

Read More:

Hunt on for group of teens in Central Park robbery

Eyewitness News - June 22, 2010


Central Park Serious Crime Up 52% This Year

A Walk in the Park - June 13, 2010