Facades of Democracy–With or Without The Graffiti

     The November election feels close now.  Lawn signs for Republican candidates are proliferating like dandelions all over the west end.  I even saw two bright green Audrey Pheffer campaign signs in the window of Elegante Pizza in Rockaway Beach.  Still looking for those Anthony Weiner signs!
     The campaign ads on television are becoming more and more annoying.  Even if you flip from channel to channel you cannot escape.  I caught Guardian Angels’ founder (now radio personality) Curtis Sliwa appearing on a news program via Skype, wearing a Carl Paladino mask.  Actually, I thought the bit was pretty funny.  We’ll have to ask Sliwa to bring the mask for his appearance this Wednesday evening (October 13) starting at 7 p.m., at the Belle Harbor Yacht Club.  The “meet and greet” fundraiser sponsored by the Rockaway Republicans will feature the party’s candidates for U.S. Congress (Bob Turner) and New York State Assembly, Dr. Harold Paez.  Donation of $55 is being requested.  With Sliwa present, the event could turn into a lively fun-fest, but I wouldn’t expect too much—it is after all, a Republican event!  Democrats always seem to sponsor more lively parties and fundraisers, in my opinion. 
     If you really feel like being civically involved on Wednesday evening, but can’t afford the Meet and Greet, you could head over to the wildlife refuge visitor center in Broad Channel for the 6:30 p.m. Jamaica Bay Task Force meeting, which is free of charge and open to the public.

Geese Cross the Path at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge-Copyright 2008 Vivian R. Carter

If you live on the peninsula and want to attend a meeting this week without paying an admission or bridge toll, head for the regular session of Community Board 14 on Tuesday, October 12, 7:30 p.m.,  Knights of Columbus, 333 Beach 90 Street.  No charge for two hours of democracy in action.       

Home-cooked, family-style meal at First Congregational, Rockaway Beach--Copyright 2008 Robert F. Carter

But before heading into this week of dry political meetings, you might consider steeling yourself by first partaking of a home-cooked meal with your neighbors.  The late novelist J.D. Salinger was a fan of the Congregational Church dinners in his New England hometown.   They say he used to arrive early with his writer’s journal to do some jotting and “people watching.”  We are fortunate that we can experience this “retro cool” type of event here on the Rock.  Bring some friends and check out the Harvest Festival at First Congregational Church of Rockaway Beach, 320 Beach 94 Street, on Sunday afternoon (Oct. 10) at 1 p.m.  For a donation of $12, enjoy home-cooked sauerbraten, red cabbage, boiled potatoes, green beans, rye bread, apple cider and all the home-baked cake you can eat.  It’s so—well, wholesome!  You can buy tickets for the Chinese auction of chachkas donated by local merchants, as well.  It’s all light-hearted fun to benefit the great community cause of maintaining the buildings and grounds of one of the few elegant pre-war structures in Rockaway Beach.  Oh, wait–it’s just about the ONLY elegant pre-war structure in Rock Beach, besides St. Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church. The courthouse doesn’t count, since it’s mainly occupied by birds and is swathed in scaffolding at present.     

If that suggestion is too “churchy” for you, and the bridge toll doesn’t put you off, another great pick for weekend lunch is the NEW, all-you-can eat, tapas-style buffet at Saffron Restaurant on Cross Bay Boulevard in Howard Beach, for $14.95 per person, on Saturdays and Sundays.  There’s seafood paella and other great authentic choices on the table, plus nachos, which are sure to please the younger set. Chef Herbert is putting out a great spread for a reasonable price.
  

Chubby Camarones at Saffron Restaurant

Now, on to some talk about the elections.  On Thursday, October 14, My Rock Park (formerly the Rockaway Park Homeowners and Residents), is hosting a candidate forum (again, at the Belle Harbor Yacht Club), starting at 7:30 p.m.  This looks to be THE event of the campaign season, so far.  It’s definitely the pick of the week for political types–like me!  Candidates for U.S. Congress (Weiner and Turner) and New York State Assembly (Pheffer and Paez) will be appearing.  I am always impressed by how comfortable Weiner is when he’s working a crowd, but am looking forward to hearing his responses to Turner’s Republican campaign pitch. And here’s an impertinent (though somewhat oblique) question–how did a yacht club named “Belle Harbor” end up in Rockaway Park?  Just wondering… 

Learn to Swim--10 months ago!

The question I may decide to ask is: why does Pheffer still have TWO flyers hanging in the window of her Beach 91st Street office, announcing a January 2010 launch of swimming classes in the Far Rockaway High School pool?   What a testament to the effectiveness (or lack thereof) of Pheffer and her communications and housekeeping staff.      

Facade of Assemblywoman Pheffer's Office

More importantly, we all know that Pheffer makes sure to look directly into the camera at all times, and probably never gazes up any higher than that.  Someone should tell Pheffer and Vince Castellano, the owner of the Rockaway Beach office building where she rents space, that the Mayor’s Community Affairs Unit sponsors the Graffiti-Free NYC Program.  Just head on down to CB 14’s office on Mott Avenue and pick up a brochure about the program.  Castellano should know where that is, since he’s the former chair of CB 14!  Oh, I’ll help them out and list the email address:  www.nycedc.com/graffiti.  So tax dollars are already allocated to take care of that ugly black spray paint tag on the second story of your building.  The neighbors in the area think it looks kinda’ untidy, Audrey and Vince.

Graffiti removal is also in order on the only public structures in Belle Harbor besides the two schools—the U.S. postal mailboxes.   My children and a friend of theirs adopted the mailboxes and re-painted them to cover magic marker scrawlings about 6 years ago.  Time for another neighbor to step up.  We still have the can of official U.S. Post Office, dark blue mailbox paint for anyone who wants to volunteer.  Just place a comment on my blog, and I’ll get back to you.  It’s a whole lot easier than getting the paint from the U.S. Postal Service–trust me.

Posted in Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel, New York State Government, U.S. Government | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Tolled Ya!

 

Toll Protest--Copyright 2010 Don Riepe

The sky looked ominous–with that deep gray harbinger of possible thunderstorms–as the sun set on Tuesday, October 5.  Hundreds of fed-up residents of Rockaway and Broad Channel were undaunted.  By 6:30 p.m., a revved-up crowd had gathered along Beach Channel Drive at the foot of the Cross Bay Veterans Memorial Bridge in Rockaway Beach.

The drive-through at McDonald’s Restaurant was all but shut down as the assemblage pressed forward toward the ramps.  The bullhorn was alternately “manned” by two of the best practitioners on the peninsula–Democratic District Leader Lew Simon and Congressman Anthony Weiner.  Reporters and camera crews from New York 1 and WPIX Channel 11 made the trek to cover the event, as did both Rockaway newspapers.

An unofficial cheering contest had a clear outcome–Rockaway Beach and Broad Channel had sent the largest (or at least the loudest) contingents. Informative and inventive signs and banners caught the breeze.  The message I wrote on my placard (which WPIX featured for a moment on the 11 o’clock news broadcast) was this: “Far Rockaway’s median income is $27,800. Does MTA Care?”

All photos copyright 2010, Don Riepe

The rain held off, and the spirited group chanted “No More Tolls” in unison, ascending up the ramp.  Greeted by supportive waves and horn blasts from numerous passing cars and buses, the marchers seemed to enjoy the short jaunt over the span.

Arriving at the toll booths on the other side, the crowd assembled again for another bullhorn rally and a long stretch of chanting and cheering.  Rally organizers advised all to return via the footpath on the east side of the bridge.   A few rabble-rousers lobbied to return in the car lanes (against the terms of the assembly permit); the effort was quickly squelched, so nobody had to be arrested.

Landing back on the Rockaway side, marchers were handed complimentary 16 ounce cans of Monster Mixxd Energy Juice donated by a sponsor.  If you can decipher the list of ingredients on the side of that can of stuff, you stand a chance of figuring out how the MTA manages to stay in business.  Their “success” in running the buses and railroads is as artificial as the ingredients in the “juice.”

Posted in Business and Economics, New York State Government | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Give Your Children Roots and Wings! Floyd Bennett Planning Moves Ahead

The Outback of Brooklyn--Floyd Bennett Field--Copyright 2005 Vivian R. Carter

Aerial map of Floyd Bennett
Have you experienced an epiphany at Floyd Bennett Field?  “Experiential epiphany”—a term coined by Central Park’s designer, Frederick Law Olmsted—is said to be the optimum effect of a visit to a park.  

Was it a sunrise launch into Jamaica Bay at the Casting for Recovery Charity Kayak Fishing Tournament, a peek into a seine net that had captured a tiny sea horse, or the sight of a wild rabbit scampering out of the bushes?  Did you ever experience a moment that brought you face to face with the “eternal”? 

Don McLean Sings at Aviator--September 2010

Perhaps you executed a perfect spin on ice skates, or re-lived the 1970’s with the other, more musical, “Spinners.” I know a group of young ladies from Rockaway who spent four years mastering the sport of lacrosse, coached by a dedicated young teacher.  They became the citywide champions in their sport, besting the perennially dominant team from Staten Island.  Maybe you have had the pleasure of such a moment at Floyd Bennett Field. 

Many of us cherish the open space at the historic air field.  What a great place for star-gazing!  Even if we do have to pay a bridge toll to attend a composting workshop conducted by the Floyd Bennett Gardens Association.  

Birders want to restore more of Floyd Bennett’s grassland habitat because it provides resting cover for birds migrating along the Atlantic Flyway.   The Aviator sports facility ball fields, hard on the border of the “North Forty” natural area, set up a potential conflict between the birders and the soccer fans. 

A blue-ribbon task force has been selected by Senator Charles Schumer and Congressman Anthony Weiner, composed of the heads of city and federal agencies responsible for Jamaica Bay.  The residents of Brooklyn and Queens have been asked to weigh in on how they use Floyd Bennett, and to describe what they see as the challenges for the park in the future.  Two sets of public listening sessions were held in September, 2010—one at Floyd Bennett, and one at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge.

Fly fishing enthusiast speaks at Aviator meeting

At the listening sessions, even those of us who visit Floyd Bennett Field fairly regularly were surprised to learn of user groups we did not previously know about.  As an example, I had no idea that a not-for-profit group in existence since 1898, The Century Road Club Association, has been regularly using the runways for bicycle racing on the weekends.

Bike Racing Club Members Share Ideas at Wildlife Refuge Session

More than a few community participants at the sessions, myself included, strongly advocated that the groups now using Floyd Bennett should be given support and assistance, with both publicity and funding, in order to advance their present stewardship of the park and make the public aware of all that these groups are contributing.  

Will the feds follow these suggestions?  Or will they locate a 95-seat school for emotionally troubled high school dropouts in the old Job Corps building at Floyd Bennett, as has been suggested?

The blue ribbon panel is expected to make its report in January 2011.  Long-time users of the site have been through this waiting game before…and before…and before.  We’ll see.

Posted in Business and Economics, Creatures of the Planet (Non-Human), The Built World, The Land We Share, U.S. Government, Water and waterways | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Rockaway’s a Food Desert, Reclaiming the Waterfront and Other Misleading Notions

“Please look closely at real cities.  While you are looking, you might as well also listen, linger and think about what you see.”  Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities. 

Tomato Plant--Beach Channel Drive Across from Waldbaum's

I was idling at the traffic light near the Waldbaums’ plaza in Rockaway Park last week.  I casually gazed out my car window toward the Wendy’s Restaurant.  There, growing on the median strip, were two tomato bushes (with several good-sized green fruits hanging on them).  I did a double take, then grabbed my camera and snapped a photo.  I came back the following day, figuring I might have been hallucinating.  There they were, amid the weeds, almost covered by a rolled-up piece of wooden fence. 

Apples--Home on Beach Channel Drive Just East of McDonald's Restaurant

Two summers ago, I noticed a small tree lush with ripe red apples, sprouting out of a driveway tree pit no more than 2 feet in diameter, at a home on Beach Channel Drive just east of the McDonald’s Restaurant in Rockaway Beach.

Far Rockaway Grapes--Seagirt Community Garden Near Beach 30 Street

Last summer, I was amazed to see gorgeous vines of purple grapes twining along the fence of the Seagirt Community Garden in Far Rockaway. Nearby, the tall building at Beach 31 Street and Seagirt towers over apple and fig trees.

Building Towers Over Apple Tree--Beach 30 and Seagirt--Far Rockaway

Fruit trees are all over the peninsula–in front yards, back yards, and community garden plots from east to west, if you just linger and look closely.  If you don’t look closely, you’re far more likely to notice the McDonald’s or the Wendy’s.   

The presence of these edible curiosities conflicted with what I had recently been reading in a new publication about Queens, styled as a “local” food guide.  The magazine, just in its inaugural year, has joined a long list of big city organizations and publications that consistently misrepresent or ignore the peninsula.  Our farmers’ markets and community-supported agriculture project were left out of directory listings in that guide on more than one occasion over the past year.  But don’t get me wrong.  It’s fine reading if you are planning to dine out in Long Island City or Astoria.  

But a feature article did notice the peninsula when there was a negative statement to be made:  “Rockaway’s a food desert,” declared a popular new seasonal restaurateur. (Should we call him a “shack-arateur” instead?)   A food desert is defined by Wikipedia as “a district with little or no access to foods needed to maintain a healthy diet, but often served by plenty of fast food restaurants.”  Thank goodness we have Wiki to explain it all.

I don’t like the term “food desert” or the way it is defined.  I have counted about 10 local supermarkets, averaging out to about 12,000 shoppers per market, based on recent census figures.  To be completely honest, the peninsula is woefully underserved by greenmarkets, grocery stores, AND fast food chain restaurants.  More than one person has said—wouldn’t it be nice to have an IHOP, a Burger King, and a Boston Market?  How about a classic, low-brow eatery like Chock Full O’ Nuts on Beach 116 Street?  Seems like there are less then 10 fast-food chain places, if you count McDonald’s, Wendy’s, KFC, White Castle, and Popeye’s.  Am I missing any?

Belle Harbor Peaches--Home on Rockaway Beach Blvd.

Everyone is looking forward to the Super Stop & Shop opening soon, and will, no doubt, regularly patronize any other quality fast food stores to arrive.  But is Rockaway truly a food desert?  What about the density of backyard vegetable gardens and front-yard fruit trees?  Is anybody measuring those? 

There is a reason that thousands of local Rockaway farmers are blessed by success—the great Atlantic Ocean.  The ocean holds the heat of summer far into the fall, and all of Long Island (including our piece here in Rockaway) is categorized as Zone 7 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The average night-time temperatures on the Rock (and hence, the growing conditions) are identical to North Carolina’s. 

Blackberries--Belle Harbor backyard

If that plant growing across from Wendy’s remains intact, and the fall does not become unseasonably cold, someone could be picking those cherry tomatoes and putting them in a salad on Halloween.  If they were in a protected backyard plot, they might make it to Thanksgiving.   

We really must look, listen, linger and think about what we see in our neighborhood–what we have and do not have.  Our tomato bushes and fruit trees are not the only local features that seem to be invisible to casual weekend or daytime visitors.  Some are claiming that we have no parks for the children, no marinas, no waterfront amenities.  That is also not true.  The entire strip of sand and water from the Nassau County line to Riis Park, 150 blocks of it, is maintained for the public by the New York City Parks and Recreation Department, complete with playgrounds, handball courts, roller hockey rink, basketball courts and a tricked-out skate park.  From Beach 149th to Beach 73rd Street, no home is more than 4 blocks from that oceanfront park. How many people do you know in other parts of the city (or anywhere in the U.S., for that matter), lucky enough to live in a neighborhood where almost all of the homes are no more than 4 blocks from a public park?

In my opinion, the shoreline of the bay should be made more inviting to the public, and we should have additional areas along the bay and ocean that can be enjoyed by human-powered boaters.  Jill Weber of the Parks Department is working hard at the task, and beginning to succeed, with the full backing of Dorothy Lewandowski, Queens Parks Commissioner, who is an avid sailor and kayaker, and personally spearheaded the establishment of the NYC Water Trail.  It is completely false to say that we don’t have boating clubs, marinas, and motorized boat launches in this area.    

Launching from Beach 88 Street Water Trail Site--August 2010

All you have to do is look closely around you.  The rim of Jamaica Bay is lined with boating clubs, marinas, and launches.  In Rockaway Park, start with the wildly popular weekend hangout for jet-skiers, near Beach Channel High School.  Locals know that Beach Channel had the pioneer citywide high school rowing team, dating back to the 1970’s, but it wasn’t even mentioned in a recent “WaterWire” web newsletter on rowing generated by the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance.  You would think that high school rowing was invented in the Bronx!

The Rockaway Point Yacht Club has been a mecca for sailors, on the bay just outside the gate to the Breezy Point Co-op, since 1909.  In Canarsie, there are four private boating clubs and two public launching sites, including Sebago Canoe Club and Canarsie Pier.

In Broad Channel, there is a public launch for hand-powered boats on the north end of Cross Bay Boulevard, and a private boating club on the east side of Cross Bay Boulevard.

Charity Kayak Fishing Launch at Floyd Bennett Field--Mother's Day 2010

Across Flatbush Avenue from Floyd Bennett Field, the private marina operated by a concessionaire brings income to Gateway from slip rentals, and is also used by Gateway rangers to conduct canoeing and sailing programs, with the assistance of the Rockaway Point Yacht Club.  There are two public launches for human-powered boats on the east end of Floyd Bennett.  For six or seven years, a hugely successful charity kayak fishing tournament has been held annually on Mother’s Day at that site, and paddlers attending Sebago’s All-Club Invitational event in July 2010 also used these launches.

There are two commercial marinas on the south side of Jamaica Bay–one in Rockaway Beach and one at Beach 59 Street in Edgemere.  Another private boating club is tucked away near the city’s border with Nassau County in Far Rockaway.

There are other marinas and boating clubs on the Brooklyn shores of Jamaica Bay, in Bergen and Gerritsen Beach, and a public launch at the Salt Marsh Nature Center on Avenue U. 

Everyone with a car who is interested in boating ought to drive around the rim of the bay and see what is there.  Many of the clubs are interested in attracting new users to their facilities.  If you have a bike, get on the Greenway with a good map.  You have to follow all the dead-end roads, but you will see that waterfront access is already a reality for many. 

The fashionable rhetoric about reclaiming the waterfront doesn’t mention who we are reclaiming it from, and who is going to pay for the substantial cost of opening water sports up to the public.  Maintaining a fleet of kayaks, canoes, sailboats and rowboats is an expensive proposition.  The training and expertise to safely guide beginners requires devotion by volunteers. Otherwise, such expertise must be hired.  Insurance costs for such operations are high, as well.

The Rockaway Artists Alliance, Rockaway Theatre Company, Rockaway Little League, Sebago Canoe Club and Floyd Bennett Gardens Association have shown us the way.  Cadres of volunteers in these organizations have become active stewards of underutilized or abandoned lots and buildings; what they have created is a gift to the public and to future generations.  This doesn’t happen overnight, and it doesn’t happen on the first try by waving a magic grant application.  Gateway Bike & Boathouse is trying to follow Sebago’s model and organize volunteers and establish storage facilities for boats here on the Rock, and having a hard time of it, so far.       

Public officials need to pay attention to what is already working in the neighborhood, and support groups trying to do more of it.  The surfing beaches have been a huge success.  It makes sense that a dedicated kayak launching spot on the ocean ought to be tried, as well.  But brainstorming grand new plans and “visioning” in the current economic climate is like investing in windmills and solar panels to reduce your electric bill, when a couple of rolls of insulation would do the trick.         

Belle Harbor Apples--Home on Rockaway Beach Blvd.

Stop complaining about food deserts.  Plant a tomato bush or an apple tree.  You’ll be enjoying tomatoes a few months later.  The apple trees take a bit longer.  And they only bear fruit every other year.

Posted in Business and Economics, Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel, The Land We Share, Water and waterways | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Is it a Place for Birds, or for Planes? It’s Floyd Bennett Field!

Sustainable Gardening at FBF--Manure from Rodeo Horses

Citywide Champs, Channel View-Beach Channel Girls Lacrosse at FBF

Glass Pond at FBF--copyright Robert F. Carter 2009

An awe-inspiring blue-ribbon panel has been named by Congressman Anthony Weiner and Senator Charles Schumer to address the future of Floyd Bennett Field, that huge Gateway National Recreation Area property on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn.  This is an unprecedented effort to generate broad support, enthusiasm, and expertise for further revitalization strategies at the historic air field.  Whether the panel will succeed with this task is unclear.

The panel is co-chaired by Marian Heiskell (formerly, Board of Directors of the N.Y. Times)  and Deborah Shanley, Dean of the School of Education at Brooklyn College, and includes the usual types from Gateway and the Army Corps, plus luminaries like Jay Walder of the MTA; Pete Grannis, head of the State Dept. of Environmental Conservation; Cas Holloway, head of the NYC Dept. of Environmental Protection; Christopher Ward, Exec. Director of the Port Authority of NY & NJ; and both Borough Presidents under one roof.   How rare to see them together–maybe Marty is giving Helen “borough president training lessons” to prepare for these sessions.  Shanley can bring the chart paper and easel.  In all seriousness, it looks like some arm-twisting was done to be sure that ALL the important federal, state and city decision-makers will be at the table for this effort.  If this doesn’t work, nothing will…

The panel has to consider whether FBF should morph into a venue for all or only some of these activities:  bird refuge, athletic fields, outdoor concerts, teacher training, aquaculture and other gardening uses, or none of the above?  If so, where is the money going to come from?  And what good is it if people can’t get there in reasonable fashion on public transit? 

Floyd Bennett already performs many of these functions, and provides facilities for public agencies needing beaucoup space for things like training.  With a panel this impressive, let’s hope the results are, too.

Two meetings are scheduled at which the public can add their 2 cents–Tuesday, September 21, from 6-8 p.m. (at FBF, Hanger 5), and on Monday, September 27, from 6-8 p.m. (at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center).   Are you getting tired of public “listening sessions” on important subjects where you only get two minutes to speak?  I get more air-time when I argue with my “ex”! 

Listening Sessions of the Floyd Bennett Field Blue Ribbon Panel (choose your date and location):

Tues. Sept. 21, 6-8 p.m., Hanger 5, Floyd Bennett Field

Mon. Sept. 27, 6-8 p.m., JBay Wildlife Refuge Visitor Ctr.

 

Posted in Creatures of the Planet (Non-Human), Meet Your Fellow Man, The Built World, The Land We Share, U.S. Government, Water and waterways | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Holland Seaside Group Chalks One Up for Light and Air

Winners' Homes Tower Over Developer's Foundation

Street View--Beach 94 and Shorefront Parkway

Time is Running Out for Developer

Drawing Shows Nearby Low-Rise Models, Not Planned Tower

Money makes people (and organizations) do irrational things.  Take a perfectly sensible developer like The Frameworks Group, which built the lovely and successful, low-rise, Belle Shores Condominiums on Shorefront Parkway in Rockaway Park, near St. Camillus and The Irish Circle. Fabulous homes.  With their own private parking spots! Neighborhood loves them. Why mess it all up by proposing a 6-story tower less than 10 blocks away in Rockaway Beach that will draw the ire of homeowners adjacent to the site?  Maybe because the “other guys” got to build their big, air and light-gobbling towers nearby, before the zoning was changed to prevent it?

At the monthly meeting of Community Board 14 on Tuesday, September 14, a large group of Rockaway Beach homeowners showed up with a petition signed by at least 100 residents who oppose the building, as presently planned.  The petition drive was organized by a relatively new civic group called the Holland Seaside Community Association.  About 30 of the Community Board’s 50 members voted narrowly against recommending an extension of time for the developer to build under the old zoning rules.  The new zoning rules don’t permit 6 stories, and require that one parking spot be built for each unit.  The New York City Board of Standards and Appeals now has to decide, and they are not bound by the CB 14 vote.     

Under city rules, community boards must tally all of their votes by name, and the public is entitled to know how each member voted.  Boards in other neighborhoods eventually post such information online.  I have been advocating for CB 14 to get a website established since earlier in the year.  They are working on it.  But not fast enough, in my view.  More community activists need to step forward. Otherwise, effective citizen participation will remain missing in action on the peninsula.    The phone number for CB 14 is 471-7300.  The email address is cbrock14@nyc.rr.com.  Call or e-mail them to say hello!

Posted in Business and Economics, Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel, The Built World | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Who’s Your Daily? Who’s Your Party?

     Surprising statistical news out this week–newspaper readership is stable over the past ten years, according to a recent study.  People are better informed too, the study showed, because they supplement paper reading with television, radio and electronic news sources–like blogs.  Here’s to the continued existence of newspapers, and to new independent voices, as well!
     Today is primary day.  I got to my polling place at PS 114 at 7 a.m. to see if my name was on the list as a Democrat, though I sent in a card to switch to a third party in July.  The change was never processed; I’m still shown as a Democrat. So I voted.  For Dems, two offices are on the ballot–Attorney General and Senator.
     If I had voted for an AG candidate, it probably would have been Kathleen Rice, for both logical and emotional reasons. 1) She’s the only woman running.  2) She never had much to do with Albany, which is a good thing.  3) We share a favorite television program, The Office.

Belle Harbor homeowners sport their colors--red (The Post), white (Daily News) and blue (N.Y. Times)

     For Senator, I voted for myself as a write-in candidate, as I didn’t have the money to run, and wouldn’t look nearly so good on television as Kirsten Gillibrand.  If you write in, be sure you print clearly, so the scanners can read it, I was told.  If elected, I am willing to serve, and by the way, I support Mayor Koch’s New York Uprising pledge.  So does Audrey Pheffer, but not Malcolm Smith or Michele Titus.  Spread the word.  The new scannable paper ballots are fun to use, by the way…
     In the “interesting” category, be sure to check out the photo of a flooded Broad Channel street (W. 12),  in the Queens section of today’s Daily News.   The city’s trying to fix the problem, but not fast enough.  So come to the meeting of Community Board 14 tonight, at the K of C Hall, 330 Beach 90 St. in Rockaway Beach, 7:30 p.m.) to find out why.
Primary elections today, Sept. 14, 2010–citywide, until 9 p.m.
 
Community Board 14 monthly meeting, Tues. Sept. 14, 7:30 p.m., Knights of Columbus, 333 Beach 90 St., Rockaway Beach.
Posted in New York City Government, New York State Government | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

C-Span Should Have Been There!

Copyright Vivian R. Carter 2009

I have to say I was impressed with the 60 or so Rockawayites who came out for the “town hall” last evening.  This was not your usual Rockaway gathering!  Eric Ulrich and James Sanders of the City Council jointly ran a tight, effective 2-hour meeting and displayed extraordinary professionalism, in my opinion.   I’m not kidding when I say that it was such an outstanding example of how all of our American communities can establish bi-partisan, multi-racial cooperation among people of many economic classes, that it’s a shame the major media missed it.  The Wave was there–look for Miriam Rosenberg’s article this Friday.  

The big news, in the “good” category: Deputy Mayor Wolfson’s stand-in at the meeting committed that the Mayor will grant a waiver so construction of the Arverne Y can go forward, even without LEED certification.  Hold them to it! Gerard Romski of ABTS added that they’d like to have the Y foundation laid by this winter.  Hurrah!

In the best supporting community activist category, rockviv played a behind-the-scenes role, corresponding with David Phelps of the YMCA in April 2000 to encourage the building of a Y in the west end of the peninsula, when my two children were ages 5 and 8. They’re in high school now.  We’re a persistent lot in Rockaway.

The big news in the “bad” category:  the existing Arverne East plans are deader than a doornail.  Someone noticed that there’s kind of a weak market in the outer boroughs for homes priced at $300k+ in “pioneering” neighborhoods.  Jon Gaska said the community board wants a “big box” store, recreation and lower density housing. Build that Target and they will come… 

As to recreation, all I can say is that we are blessed to have Jill Weber and her NYC Parks crew (“shout out” to Jack Rohan and Roy Tellason), who work well with local not-for-profit groups to put on many great free entertainment and recreation programs for all.  In this time of limited resources, I think it behooves us to look at what is already being done that works, and try to fix what doesn’t with more resources and well-informed ideas.  If anyone needs suggestions of groups that excel at marshaling volunteers to build effective programs in Rockaway, browse my “Rock Solid” columns. The links are archived on a separate page in this blog. 

Let me conclude by nominating my heroes of the Town Hall, all of whom spoke about what I view as THE most important topic–transit equity for the Rockaways.  Seems that ferries are dead, for now.  Can you say–MORE EXPRESS BUS SERVICE?

Hero #1–Dolores Orr, chair of CB 14, noticed that the evening express buses now serving Howard Beach come to Rockaway to sleep at night.  Empty.  My daughter rides them every day, and noticed this, too.  Let them bring Rockaway passengers home from the theatre and the opera! It won’t cost more! It’s so simple, someone will figure out why it can’t work.

Hero #2–Len Kohn, proprietor of Rockaway Graphics and great champion of community causes, knows from a lifetime spent on the peninsula that the transportation downslide began when we lost LIRR service (40 minutes to midtown) in the 1950’s.  Sadly, we’ve all learned that only a billionaire could restore such service to Rockaway.  Are you listening, Mayor Mike?      

Hero #3–Brian O’Connell, Principal of Scholars’ Academy, spoke about street safety and school bus issues near the school.  All of us could learn a lesson from Brian.  It seems that he and the parents of his students, coordinated by knowledgeable community activist Janet Brady, have become the biggest “PIAs” the Department of Transportation has ever known.  They know how to use e-mail to nudge.  They got a stoplight.  The dangerous and illegal housing next to the school has been torn down.  They do not let up, passionately advocating for greater safety around the Rockaway Freeway.   They are getting their study from DOT.  Whatever they are doing, it works.  So does the school.  It’s practically the only entity on The Rock that is single-handedly importing “year round” visitors from off the peninsula.  Can’t count the taco stand, since it’s not open year-round. 

Watch for more meetings in early October and early November.  I think this effort really deserves our support.

Posted in Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel, Meet Your Fellow Man, The Built World | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

You can’t fight City Hall…if you can’t get to City Hall.

Transportation, Rockaway-Style

I fondly recall the days (circa 1986) when I could travel to Lower Manhattan from my outer borough co-op apartment in Brooklyn’s Kensington section via express bus, and start sharpening pencils at my desk at 25 Broadway in less than ten minutes.  About a decade later, I even remember driving from Rockaway, grabbing a spot in the old Queens Center Municipal Lot, and hopping on the E or F train to Midtown.  Made it to my NBC desk in Rockefeller Center, in less than 40 minutes.  OK, so you could drive pretty fast on Woodhaven Boulevard going in the rush hour direction back in those days. 

Anyway, that municipal lot is much smaller and harder to get into, and the E & F trains just don’t run like they used to, either.  The volume of traffic on Woodhaven seems to be much higher, to boot.  Rockaway is so far from “the city” that these days, you feel privileged if you get there in less than an hour and a half.  If you go outside of rush hour, it can take closer to two hours.  And that’s not fair.  Traveling to Midtown from Newark, New Jersey, by train, takes only twenty minutes.   Trains run all day long on that schedule. 

Transit justice for New York’s orphaned sixth borough (you know, the neighborhoods “way below the Belt”) is long overdue.   And as long and grueling as the commute can be, the proverbial “insult added to injury” is that every resident of Rockaway who has business or social ties off the peninsula has had to budget about an extra $60 a month just for bridge tolls since the end of July.  Ditto for Broad Channelites driving to the peninsula.  Can you say “fed up?”   

A good way to get involved in the fight for transit justice is to show up at the first public meeting of the “Rockaway Task Force” appointed by the Mayor and Rockaway’s City Council members–Eric Ulrich and James Sanders.  The meeting is set for Tuesday, September 7 (you know, the night before the first day of school) at the Knights of Columbus on Beach 90 Street in Rockaway Beach, starting at 7 p.m.

The first public announcement of this meeting appeared in the Friday, September 3 issue of The Wave, just before a holiday weekend, so only a cockeyed optimist would expect a huge turnout.  It may be short notice, but get those backpacks and lunches ready for your little ones, tuck them into bed, and head out to the meeting on Tuesday evening…At least it’s easier than getting to city hall.

Public Meeting of Rockaway Task Force–Tues. Sept. 7– 7-9 p.m.–Knights of Columbus–333 Beach 90 Street– Rockaway Beach NY  11693

 

Posted in Local Government-Rockaway Peninsula & Broad Channel | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Well, here goes!

There are many things you can’t learn to do by watching–so I have entered the blogosphere!

Posted in The Arts and Entertainment | Tagged , | 3 Comments