
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
20, No. 4 |
Feb. 22 - Mar. 7, 2007 |



Fordham Hill Roiled by Security
Controversy
By ALEX KRATZ
Shareholders, property managers and a minority of the board of
directors at the Fordham Hill Owners Corporation are outraged because they
say a united majority (six out of nine) of board members are making sweeping
changes to the co-operative housing complex without approval or even input
from anyone but themselves. Some shareholders have even dubbed the majority
group the “Fordham Hill Mafia.”
Lena Townsend, Fordham Hill’s former board president, grew so frustrated
with the group’s unilateral and secretive decision-making process that she
resigned in December. A month later, the assistant property manager resigned
because of the deteriorating relationship between the board group and
management.
Most disconcerting to shareholders is a board plan to drastically revamp the
security system, which residents say is Fordham Hill’s defining feature and
major selling point. The plan, as presented to shareholders during meetings
in December and at the end of January (without time for discussion), calls
for a switch to a system based on electronic entry cards and turnstiles, as
opposed to a rotation of 24 live security guards.
Safest Place to Live
Built in University Heights more than half a century ago, Fordham Hill has
1,100 units of middle to upper middle-class housing, homes for close to
3,000 people.
Fordham Hill, with its gated entrance and security team, is widely
considered the safest place to live in University Heights and is home to
prominent Bronx politicians, including Assemblyman Jose Rivera, State
Senator Efrain Gonzalez and former State Senator Israel Ruiz.
The new electronic system, which calls for a cut in security forces by more
than half, has many shareholders and residents saying they would leave the
complex because of safety fears. Longtime board member Elizabeth Errico, who
is also a member of Community Board 7, said the new security plan is a
“nightmare scenario.”
Just last month, a female Fordham Hill resident was saved from a would-be
attacker by a security guard who was on duty. No one at the housing complex
can remember the last time there was an incident in or directly outside of
Fordham Hill.
When Fordham Hill residents elected a board of directors last June, Townsend
and five other board members – Charles Williams, Lanier Hollie, Griselle
Diaz, Pereta Rodriguez and Franklyn Duporte – ran as a “progressive slate”
and won, Townsend said.
Over the next six months, Townsend, who was chosen as president of the
board, made an extra effort to reach out to all the board members, including
holdovers Errico, Linda Brown and Nancy Alvarez.
“Lena Townsend made a valiant effort to include everyone in the process,”
Errico said. “She ran a good board.”
Out of the Loop
But Townsend said she increasingly felt like she and other board members
were being left out of the loop. In her resignation letter, Townsend wrote
that despite her insistence on inter-board communication, she was
stonewalled by the slate after requesting simple information like meeting
dates, agendas, committee correspondence, and committee minutes or notes.
“You could just tell,” Townsend said. “You would show up to a meeting and
you just knew everything had already been decided [by the slate]
beforehand.”
Townsend said she took her responsibility as a board member seriously and
couldn’t understand the rationale behind all the secrecy.
“You are there to represent the best interests of the corporation,” Townsend
said. “They were more interested in being slate members.”
The Norwood News made several attempts to contact the slate of board members
– through a series of phone messages, faxes and e-mails – as a whole and
individually, without success. Errico even approached Williams to ask if he
would respond to our questions. She said Williams told her he “absolutely
would not respond.”
Williams, a former District 10 school board president, once held political
aspirations, but has stayed largely out of the public eye since losing a
City Council race in 2001.
The beginning of the end for Townsend came in October when the board
approved a motion, five to four, to approve the security restructuring plan,
without any discussion among the entire board or without consulting any
shareholders.
Finally fed up with the slate’s tactics and to show her disagreement with
the new security restructuring plan, Townsend submitted her resignation
letter at a Dec. 11 shareholders meeting. The slate then consolidated its
power. Hollie became president and John Ursini, a slate supporter, replaced
Townsend.
At that same meeting, the board introduced the security restructuring plan
to shareholders. Though the board said it was still only an idea, they had
already spent $2,000 for designs, which, in addition to cutting staff, would
require renovations of building and complex entrances. Without offering
details or cost estimates, the board said they would need to take out a line
of credit for $15 million to $23 million to complete the renovations and
other capital improvements and repairs. Shareholders say the numbers just
don’t add up.
The owner’s corporation is still repaying a $19 million loan for repairs and
capital improvements from 1999, according to board members, shareholders and
property managers.
‘We’re Gone’
The general reaction among shareholders was: “If these security guards
leave, we’re gone,” said resident and shareholder Desiree Pilgrim-Hunter
whose comments were echoed by everyone interviewed for this article.
Pilgrim-Hunter added that security guards don’t just provide safety; they
help the elderly and disabled and look out for the kids. It’s their presence
that makes residents feel comfortable, she said.
“[The board group has] taken the posture that they don’t care about the
other shareholders,” Pilgrim-Hunter said. “They’ve effectively hijacked the
board.”
In response to the board’s plan, Pilgrim-Hunter, a feisty bulldog of an
activist who owns three apartments at the complex, started a group called
Concerned Shareholders of Fordham Hill. She wrote the board a letter on Jan.
8 to express shareholder displeasure with the plan and to request a meeting.
The board did not to respond to the letter.
The Concerned Shareholders held a meeting on Saturday, Jan. 27 to discuss a
plan of action.
Moving quickly, Pilgrim-Hunter collected 480 signatures of residents and
shareholders who opposed the new security plan and submitted it along with a
letter to the Buildings Department and other city agencies. The board still
needs approval from Buildings to implement any structural changes to the
housing complex.
In an effort to placate the riled shareholders, the board conducted a
hastily arranged shareholders meeting on Jan. 29. The board, lead by
Treasurer Charles Williams (Hollie deferred to Williams at the beginning of
the meeting), presented the security plan in a power-point presentation.
Shareholders were not given anything to read or take home with them to
evaluate.
At the meeting, board members hinted, even mentioning Enron, that the
property managers and past board members had stolen, or at least grossly
mismanaged, $4.3 million. Property Manager Everton Moore and former board
president Elizabeth Tillman dismissed the charges as ridiculous and have
since hired lawyers.
The charges prompted the resignation of one of Fordham Hill’s assistant
managers, Eddie Ramos, later that week.
“[Ramos] resigned because we feel attacked right now,” Moore said. “They’re
cutting staff and overworking us. We’ve seen terrible things here that have
taken place.”
Despite the siege, Moore plans to “see the process through.” He also said
that despite shareholder sentiment, the board has wide-ranging powers to
institute building and security changes. The only action that would require
approval by a shareholder vote would be the sale of a building.
Skepticism
When pressed, Williams advised the rest of the board that the security
restructuring plan would be put to another board vote, Errico said. But she
and others are skeptical this will happen.
“There are over a 1,000 people living in this community and if they aren’t
behind this, then it shouldn’t be done,” Errico said. “If it’s such a great
idea, it should be sold on its own merit.”
Rumors are flying through the Fordham Hill hallways about why the board is
pushing the restructuring plan so hard, but nothing can be confirmed because
none of the six slate members have offered explanation. Townsend, Errico and
the Concerned Shareholders are calling for a new board, but elections aren’t
until May.
Already, Piligrim-Hunter says one of her neighbors, an elderly woman who had
lived at Fordham Hill for years, has packed her bags and moved to Florida
after hearing about the security plan. If the plan goes through, residents
predict many of her neighbors will follow.
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