Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Mayor Defends On tavern On The Green Awarding Of Concession




All In The Family. City Comptroller John Liu is investigating the connection between ex-deputy mayor - and current Bloomberg LP. emplyee Kevin Sheekey (above) who is a brother-in-law of Jim Caiola, a partner in the Philadelphia-based Emerald Green Group, who won a 20-year licence to run the new Tavern on the Green restaurant in Central Park, a Parks Department consession. Kevin Sheekey is also the older brother of former Parks Department spokeswoman Megan Sheekey who was appointed by Bloomberg as the president of the Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City.

The Mayor yesterday defended not disclosing the relashionship between Jim Caiola and his brother-in-law.

The Mayor and the Parks Department revenue division have cost the city millions of dollars in lost revenue due to thier handling of the concession. 

Manhattan 


The winning bidder on the Tavern on the Green franchise did “exactly the right thing” by not disclosing his relationship to one of Mayor Bloomberg’s top confidants, Hizzoner said yesterday, according to the New York Post. 
“If they had proactively disclosed it, you would be asking me why they tried to get special treatment by name-dropping,” Bloomberg said. “This restaurant group did not disclose it, which is exactly the right thing to do.”
The Post reported on Saturday that one of the partners in the company picked by the Parks Department to run the famed Central Park restaurant is the brother-in-law of Kevin Sheekey (pictured), a former deputy mayor who was Bloomberg’s top political adviser and is now an executive at Bloomberg LP.

Officials said the winners — Jim Caiola and David Salama of the Philadelphia-based Emerald Green Group — got the 20-year franchise strictly on the merits.
Bloomberg said it’s not possible that the Parks Department showed any favoritism since no one at the agency was aware there was a Sheekey tie.
“But even if they did, there’s no problem with that. Kevin Sheekey doesn’t work for the city. Hasn’t for a long time,” he said.
Comptroller John Liu, who gets to vote on whether to approve the deal as a member of the city’s Franchise & Concession Review Committee, has promised an investigation.

Read More:

New York Post - August 21, 2012 -  By David Seifman 



A Walk In The Park - August 18, 2012 


A Walk In The Park -  March 30, 2012 

 Glass Tube & Takeout Food Coming To Tavern On The Green
A Walk In the Park - February 24, 2012


A Walk In The Park - December 30, 2011

A Walk In The Park - December 6, 2011

A Walk In The Park - November 4, 2011

A Walk In The Park - January 27, 2011


A Walk In The Park - October 15, 2010 - By Geoffrey Croft

A Walk In The Park - June 14, 2010

Sunday, August 19, 2012

John Liu Investigating Connection Between Kevin Sheekey And Tavern On The Green Winning Bidder


MEAL DEAL: Hizzoner pal Kevin Sheekey (left) denies nepotism is at play at Tavern on the Green.

All In The Family. City Comptroller John Liu is investigating the connection between ex-deputy mayor - and current Bloomberg LP. emplyee Kevin Sheekey (above) who is a brother-in-law of Jim Caiola, a partner in the Philadelphia-based Emerald Green Group, who beat three rivals for a 20-year licence to run the historic Central Park restaurant, a Parks Department consession.  Kevin Sheekey is also the older brother of former Parks Department spokeswoman Megan Sheekey who was appointed by Bloomberg as the president of the Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City.


Manhattan
City Comptroller John Liu is investigating the connection between a former deputy mayor and the winning Tavern on the Green bidder.
“The process by which [this] privilege . . . was awarded . . . is something the Comptroller’s Office will be looking into,” Liu spokesman Matt Sweeney announced yesterday, according to the New York Post. 
Ex-Deputy Mayor Kevin Sheekey is a brother-in-law of Jim Caiola, a partner in the Philadelphia-based Emerald Green Group, which bested three rivals for a 20-year lease to run the historic Central Park restaurant.
Caiola claims he had no contact with Sheekey on the matter, and Phil Abramson, a spokesman for the Parks Department, which selected the winner, insisted, “We looked at the proposals based on the merits.”
But former Parks Commissioner Henry Stern said, “This isn’t some hot-dog stand on Delancey Street that the guy is getting a deal on,” he said. Any relationship — blood, marriage, family — between the concessionaire and the city should be disclosed.”
Read More:
New York Post - August 19,  2012 - By Michael Gartland   


A Walk In The Park - August 18, 2012 

A Walk In The Park -  March 30, 2012 

 Glass Tube & Takeout Food Coming To Tavern On The Green
A Walk In the Park - February 24, 2012

A Walk In The Park - December 30, 2011

A Walk In The Park - December 6, 2011

A Walk In The Park - November 4, 2011

A Walk In The Park - January 27, 2011

A Walk In The Park - October 15, 2010 - By Geoffrey Croft

A Walk In The Park - June 14, 2010

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Brother-In-Law Of former Deputy Mayor-Kevin Sheekey Wins 20-Year Licence To Run New Taven On The Green

MEAL DEAL: Hizzoner pal Kevin Sheekey (left) denies nepotism is at play at Tavern on the Green.
All In The Family. The brother-in-law of former Deputy Mayor-and current Bloomberg LP employee- Kevin Sheekey won a 20-year licence to run the new Taven On The Green restaurant in Central Park, a Parks Department Consession. Kevin Sheekey is also the older brother of former Parks Department spokeswoman Megan Sheekey who was appointed by Bloomberg as the president of the Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City.

The Mayor and the Parks Department revenue division's handling of the concession has cost the city millions of dollars in lost revenue.

Manhattan


The winning out-of-town bidders who nabbed the right to run Tavern on the Green have never operated in New York — but they have family ties to one of Mayor Bloomberg’s top confidants, The Post has learned.
One of the owners is the brother-in-law of former Deputy Mayor Kevin Sheekey.
Officials confirmed yesterday that Jim Caiola, who runs the Philadelphia-based Emerald Green Group with partner David Salama, is the brother of Sheekey’s wife, Robin.
The relationship was not disclosed when the Parks Department announced Thursday that Emerald Green had beaten out three other groups competing for the 20-year lease on one of the nation’s most storied eateries, located in Central Park.
“Off the record, I’m speechless,” said a source who works for a rival bidder.
City officials insisted everything was conducted on the up-and-up and without favoritism.
“They won on the merits, and the entire process was handled by the book,” said mayoral spokesman Marc LaVorgna.
Sheekey left city government two years ago, but continues to have close ties to the mayor and the administration as an executive at Bloomberg LP, the mayor’s information-services company.
As top political adviser, Sheekey led two of Hizzoner’s election campaigns and was the driving force behind Bloomberg’s presidential flirtation in 2007.
Sheekey told The Post via e-mail that he was aware Caiola was competing for the Tavern deal — but added that he played no role in his in-law getting it.
“My wife told me he was submitting a bid, but I never spoke to him about it, nor did I communicate with anyone at City Hall,” Sheekey wrote in the e-mail.
“But I have seen his work, and he and his partner are exceptional restaurateurs.”
Steven Hall, a spokesman for Emerald Green, also insisted, “Jim and David did this entirely on their own, and they and Kevin never discussed Tavern.”
City officials said Caiola had no reason to divulge his family ties to Sheekey.
“Their attorneys went through everything,” said one official. “There’s no circumstance under which disclosure is required.”
The Parks Department provided The Post with scoring sheets showing that Emerald Green beat out two rivals, Upsilon Ventures and the combination of City Winery restaurant/Great Performances caterers.
Out of 100 possible total points in five categories, Emerald emerged with 81.96; City Winery/Great Performances 72.26 and Upsilon 70.75.
Read More:
Winning Tavern on the Green bidders have family connections to
one of Bloomberg's top confidants
New York Post - August 18, 2012 - By David Seifman 


A Walk In The Park -  March 30, 2012 


 Glass Tube & Takeout Food Coming To Tavern On The Green
A Walk In the Park - February 24, 2012

A Walk In The Park - December 30, 2011

A Walk In The Park - December 6, 2011

A Walk In The Park - November 4, 2011

A Walk In The Park - January 27, 2011

A Walk In The Park - October 15, 2010 - By Geoffrey Croft

A Walk In The Park - June 14, 2010

Friday, August 17, 2012

15-Year-Old Arrested In Fish Playground Shooting of Four Teens


A 15-year-old was arrested for a Monday shooting that injured four people at Fish Park in Brooklyn, police said.


A 15-year-old was arrested for the Monday shooting that injured four people at Fish Playground in Brooklyn, police said. (Photo: Jon Hyde)

Brooklyn


Cops busted a teenage thug for shooting four other teens at a Brooklyn playground earlier this week, authorities said, according to the New York Post.


Darren Wint, 15, was nabbed Thursday for attempted murder after witnesses linked him to the attack, police said.


Wint rode a BMX bicycle into a crowded Fish Playground on Fulton Street in Brownsville where teens were playing basketball around 6:30 p.m., Monday.


Cops said he fired several shots.


Two 16-year-old boys were struck in the arm. A 13-year-old girl and an 18-year-old man suffered graze wounds to the back.


Wint was charged with four counts of criminal possession of a weapon and four counts of assault, in addition to the attempted murder charges.


Monday’s bloodshed was the latest in a series of shootings that have killed or wounded innocent bystanders at city playgrounds, basketball courts or streets this summer.


Four-year-old Lloyd Morgan was fatally shot by a stray bullet while near a basketball court at the Forest Houses in the Bronx on July 22.


Police believe 14-year-old honor student Kemar Bryan Brooks was also killed by a stray bullet July 26 while playing tennis in Haffen Park in the Bronx.


Three-year-old Isaiah Gonzalez was shot in the leg while playing in the sprinklers at the Roosevelt Houses in Bedford Stuyvesant and two-year-old Ariyanna Prince was shot in a drive-by shooting in Brownsville.


Thirteen-year-old Kentrell Simpson was also wounded in the shooting that injured Ariyanna, her father and three others.


One teen and two young adults were wounded by stray bullets from a shooting at the St. Nicholas Houses in Harlem June 3. That shooting killed 25-year-old Akeem Green.


And Five people were wounded at Harlem’s fame d Rucker Park on July 25. Ricardo Laing, 24, from Westchester, was charged with attempted murder.


Read More:


Teen 'thug' busted for shooting four at B'klyn playground: police
New York Post - August 17, 2012 - By Kirstan Conley

A Walk In The Park - August 15, 2012


Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Bronx Residents Still Waiting For Ferry Point Park Golf Course




Plans to build the city's first tournament quality golf course have puttered for more than a decade.  The controversial project was originally supposed to be built with private dollars. 

Bronx
Gregory and Nadine Passalacqua wake up to a scene that's not quite what they had hoped for when they bought a house in a pocket of Throgs Neck. Plans to turn a nearby site into a golf course lured them to the area in 2001.
"I'm disgusted," Nadine says. "I've been waiting and waiting and waiting. I've been cleaning dust out of my home over and over," according to NY 1.
For decades, there were talks of turning the east side of Ferry Point Park, a former city landfill beneath the Bronx-Whitestone bridge, into a golf course. In 1998, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani announced plans for a private design and development team led by golf legend Jack Nicklaus to fund, build and run a $22 million championship-style public golf course.
As the project moved forward, some community groups expressed environmental concerns.
In 2007, after the original developer abandoned the project, the city picked up construction costs. This past January, the city’s Franchise and Concession Review Committee approved the Trump organization's proposal to operate the golf course. Under the 20-year deal, Trump will also build a $10 million club house. Licensing fees to the city would start after four years of operation.
"It is outrageous that in this day and age that the public is paying to build a golf course, a luxury course, for a billionaire," says Geoffrey Croft, the president of NYC Park Advocates.
The Comptroller's office voted against the deal but it's not without its supporters.
"Lord knows that I disagree with him politically but that name and that brand is something that the whole world recognizes," says Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. "People are going to be interested now in coming into our borough and playing there and doing business."
Two parks, including the development of a waterfront park, are also part of the project that now has a combined price tag of $184 million. The Trump Golf Links at Ferry Point Park is slated to open in the spring of 2014.
Read More:

NY1 - August 14, 2012 - By Shazia Khan


A Walk In The Park - February 4, 2012 


A Walk In The Park - January 9, 2012  By Geoffrey Croft

A Walk In The Park - December 24, 2011 - By Geoffrey Croft



Four Teens Shot In Fish Playground

The scene of the shooting Monday at the Fish Playground on Fulton St. in Brownsville.  >
More Violence In City Parks. The scene of the shooting Monday at Fish Playground on Fulton St. in Brownsville where a 13-year-old girl, two 16-year-old boys and an 18-year-old man were struck at around 6:30 p.m.

Brooklyn

Four teens were wounded in a shooting last night at a Brooklyn basketball court, according to the New York Post.


A 13-year-old girl, two 16-year-old boys and an 18-year-old man were struck at around 6:30 p.m. at Fish Playground in Brownsville, cops said. All of the injuries were minor.


“There was a basketball game going on and there were a lot of people in the park,” said witness Tony Herbert, who identified himself as an advocate for the neighborhood.


“Two young guys came in . . . and began firing,” he said.


Another witness, who works on Fulton Street, said, “I heard about six shots and when I came out of the store I saw kids running out of the park,” he said.


“At first, everyone was running with the two shooters, but when one turned around and flashed the gun, they all ran the opposite way.”


One of the 16-year-old victims was shot in the arm and rushed to Brookdale Hospital.


The other 16-year-old was grazed in the arm. The other two victims suffered graze wounds to the back.


Last month, five people were wounded at Harlem’s famed Rucker Park courts, and three people were shot — including Lloyd Morgan, 4, who died — at a charity basketball game at a Bronx housing project.


It wasn’t immediately clear if any of the victims were the intended targets.

Cops said at least one gunman fled the scene on a bicycle.


The bloodshed is the latest in a string of shootings at parks and basketball courts this summer.


Five people were wounded at Harlem’s famed Rucker Park on July 25. Ricardo Laing, 24, from Westchester, was charged with attempted murder.


Four-year-old Lloyd Morgan was killed on July 22 at the Forest Houses project in The Bronx after a dispute broke out at a charity basketball game.


Two others were struck by bullets that evening.


Ronald Jeffrey, 19, and Rondell Pinkerton, 17, were charged with Lloyd’s murder.


Ackeem Green, 25, was killed by a stray bullet and three others wounded June 3 outside the Saint Nicholas Houses on West 129th Street in Harlem.


No one has been arrested in that case.


Read/View More:


New York Post - August 14, 2012 - Natasha Velez

WNBC News - Aug 14, 2012 - By Lori Bordonaro

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Questions Linger On Estelle Cooper



Estelle Cooper (Photo: Jared Wickerham/Getty Images) 

Queens

A red light shines at the apex of a weathered pavilion in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, a relic from the 1964 World’s Fair, warning aircraft to steer clear of the decrepit monument. The task of repairing the light when it burns out has fallen to a nonprofit group that has, over the years, raised about a million dollars toward improving the park, according to the New York Times.


Today, a month after the group’s 82-year-old president and founder was indicted on charges she stole money from the group, the red light still works — and appears to be one of the only physical improvements to the park the group ever financed.
Estelle Cooper, the group’s president and founder, had long been the park’s most visible booster both as the city administrator for the park for 17 years, a position she left in January, and as the founder of Unisphere Inc., the nonprofit group she ran with the stated goal of raising private money to help support the park.
Even as she earned praise from top city officials for her work sprucing up a property that for many is something of an afterthought, accusations of mismanagement of the park’s monuments and of the nonprofit group’s money dogged her career.
“She was effective for a while, and then something changed,” said Adrian Benepe, the New York City parks commissioner. “At a certain point it seemed like something went wrong.”
Though Unisphere threw yearly fund-raising parties attended by prominent Queens residents and political figures, its official tax filings show that it frequently spent only a small fraction of its donations on things like fixing water main leaks at playgrounds and park cleanup work. In 2004, for example, it raised more than $205,000 and spent just $8,711, the bulk on sponsoring one walk-a-thon.
“She was sitting on quite a bit of money,” said Phil Ragusa, a certified public accountant who has filed the nonprofit group’s tax returns since it was created. “I always told her,” he said. “You have a lot of money here, you should be spending it on your mission.”
Ms. Cooper, who faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted of the Unisphere thefts, could not be reached for comment.
Spanning 1,255 acres, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park is home to Citi Field ballpark, the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, and the Queens Museum of Art. It was the site of two world’s fairs, in 1939 and 1964; and more than eight million visitors come each year to see the surviving remnants, like the Astro-View observation towers and the huge steel globe of the landmarked Unisphere.
There are few outward signs of mismanagement. Newly functioning fountains, defunct for many years, dance around the Unisphere, freshly planted flower gardens blossom, and pockets once haunted by vagrants now host family picnics. New facilities opened in the park under Ms. Cooper’s tenure, like a $66.3 million pool and ice skating center.
But she faced criticism for the state of other structures, including the New York State Pavilion, once glass-topped and colorful, now a skeletal hulk of concrete. Those concerns led an advocacy group, the Flushing Meadows-Corona Park World’s Fair Association, to call for Ms. Cooper’s resignation five years ago.
“We wanted them to spend good money on the monuments in the park,” said Greg Godfrey, the association’s president, who now lives in Chicago. “That was part of her job.”
When the red aviation light at the top of the pavilion went out in 2006, the nonprofit organization spent about $78,000 to fix it, but other improvements were hard to see. In recent years financial documents showed larger amounts of money being spent, but Mr. Ragusa said that the expenditures now appeared to be questionable and that the tax filings were being revised.
Mr. Ragusa, who is also the president of the Queens Republican Party and has known Ms. Cooper since she ran as a Republican in a failed bid for the State Senate in 1978, was the person to discover that more than $50,000 was missing from Unisphere’s coffers last fall. The discovery was eventually reported to the Queens district attorney.
At the time of the discovery, Ms. Cooper was already being pressured by the parks department to resign, according to a department official. She had had a stroke and appeared to have difficulty getting around. Even her biggest supporters, who admired her ability to enlist backers across party lines and for her good humor and wit, were concerned about her effectiveness.
Among the concerns were that Ms. Cooper’s daughter, Ilene Balsamo, had been permitted to run a summer camp in the park without paying the proper fees, according to an inquiry by the city’s Department of Investigation.
Ms. Cooper resigned her city post last January and, shortly after, left her position at Unisphere.
What, if anything, the missing Unisphere funds may have been spent on remains unclear. Ms. Cooper lives in Whitestone, Queens, in a modest colonial-style house. Court records show that she was sued by several credit card companies, beginning in 2009; some of those cases are unresolved.
Those who sat on Unisphere’s board of directors, which was stocked with prominent figures in Queens, have only now begun to question how Ms. Cooper spent the money they raised. “Exactly what they did for the park I’m not sure,” said a former member of the board who asked not to be identified because the investigation was continuing.
“We were used,” the former board member said. “You raise funds and you expect that good things are happening. She was such a well-respected person in the community, I don’t think anyone questioned that anything was wrong.”

Read More:

Questions Linger on Parks Advocate
New York Times -  August 13, 2012- By Sarah Maslin Nir 

Former Queens Park Official, Estelle Cooper, Is Charged With Stealing
A Walk In The Park - July 18, 2012 

Estelle Cooper Under Investigation For Stealing From Non-Profit Parks Group
A Walk In The Park - June 16, 2012 



A Walk In the Park - January 12, 2012 


Estelle Cooper's Daughter In Park Camp Pay Dust Up
A Walk In The Park -  September 8, 2011