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PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
19, No. 7 |
April 6 - 19, 2006 |



Editorial
Stadium
Project a Raw Deal for Bronxites

The Yankee Stadium project, which we
oppose, has been poisoned by a total subversion of the democratic
process. Though the proposal is headed for approval in the City Council
as we write this, we believe it’s critical to document how public debate
was consistently quashed and how poorly our elected officials have
served their constituents.
The die was cast last June when the Yankees and their many political
accomplices acted in virtual secrecy to award 22 acres of public
parkland to the Yankees. The state legislature voted on a weekend
without any public discussion, and community residents didn’t know what
had happened until months later.
We are not opposed to development. But development by fiat is a bad
thing. It produces bad decisions and this project is replete with them.
First and foremost, this project will take precious parkland for the
stadium and parking garages. The city claims the parkland will be
replaced, but most of the new parkland won’t be available for at least
three years. Some of it will be in far more remote locations than the
current continuous oasis of greenery that is the center of a vibrant
community. And some of it will be on top of those parking garages.
Asking people in one of the most asthma-prone zip codes in the country
to exercise on top of a parking lot is obscene. It is also unclear
whether these parks will even be available to the public on the 81 days
the Yanks play at home.
The Yankees are building an additional 3,000 parking spaces, but their
new stadium will have 4,000 fewer seats. Regardless of what they say,
they are begging their fans to drive to the stadium and clog up
neighborhood streets. This should be filed under “Urban Planning
Nightmares.” It’s exactly the opposite of what should be happening.
We were staunchly opposed to the alienation of Van Cortlandt Park for
the filtration plant, but at least that was a federally mandated public
project. Giving away the parks (not to mention revenue from millions in
tax free bonds) to the richest sports franchise on the planet is just
lunacy.
For all the talk of the power of the Bronx Democratic organization, it
does not know how to exact significant concessions that would benefit
Bronxites.
If the organization was any good at dealing, why would Council Members
Maria del Carmen Arroyo and Maria Baez, who will undoubtedly fall in
line and vote for the plan, have to badger Yankee executive Randy Levine
and city officials from 30 feet away in a City Council hearing room
about unfulfilled requests for information about parking issues, traffic
patterns, and more money to restore the unaffected portion of Mullaly
Park? Why didn’t they demand those things a year ago, when they could
have used their vote on the resolution that enabled the state
legislature to give away Mullaly and Macombs Dam parks to get something
substantial? Like keeping parking out of their constituents’ parks.
In all his public comments, Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrión talks
like his dreams of a hotel/convention center, a skating rink and a high
school will be poured from the same concrete truck that backs up to the
stadium site. But these amenities are not a part of the plan he has
shepherded through the land use process. When we asked him about this,
Carrión pointed to various plots of land that could accommodate these
things, both south and north of the project site. “But is that a plan?”
we asked. “There’s plans for it because we say there’s a plan for it,”
Carrión said. “That’s how everything starts … These are all things you
work to make come together. And I hope that we can make that happen.”
Unfortunately, the Land Use Committee isn’t voting on these hopes.
The sad thing is we’ll probably never know how things could have turned
out if our elected officials knew how to bargain. They could have
insisted that the Yankees build the new stadium on the site of the old
one. Yes, the team would have had to play at Shea for three years, but
they survived Flushing just fine in the 1970s. And why is it OK for the
neighborhood to be without its parks for that long but such a hardship
for millionaires to play baseball 15 miles away?
The Yankees trotted out all-star Reggie Jackson to help make their case
at the Council hearing last week. Mr. October admitted the Yankees had a
poor record in the community, but absurdly claimed that they could now
be trusted.
Council Member Helen Foster, who represents Highbridge and other
neighborhoods adjacent to the stadium site, was not impressed. She
predicted that as soon as Randy and Reggie left the building, that the
bank of television cameras would leave with them. And so they did,
leaving community residents, who had waited patiently through three and
a half hours of testimony from the city and the team, to listen to
themselves talk while Council members flitted in and out of the hearing
room.
That’s just one example of how the community has been literally and
figuratively airbrushed out of this entire debate.
In a Yankee ad that appears in this newspaper, there is no sign of a
community other than Yankee Land. The neighborhood of Highbridge has
actually been erased from the picture.
It’s not just the Yankees, though. By his actions and in his words,
Carrión has pushed his own constituents to the margins. He had nothing
to say when most community residents were locked out of a hearing he
held in his own office building. Union members who were bused in early
took up most of the seats.
Even more disappointing are Carrión’s comments about the plant’s
opponents. He called them “outside liberal agitators” on BronxTalk last
month and repeated it on Brian Lehrer’s WNYC radio show this week.
Was he talking about people like Joyce Hogi, a leader of Save Our Parks,
who has lived on the Grand Concourse for 30 years? Or what about the
6,000 residents who have signed the group’s petitions, or the dozens of
people in the beautiful art deco apartment buildings across the street
from the parks who have put “Save Macombs and Mullaly” signs in their
windows?
Meanwhile, a March 27 press release faxed from Carrión’s senior policy
adviser David Golovner’s fax machine on the letterhead of the New Bronx
Chamber of Commerce stated, “The Bronx based community organizations
will testify in support of the stadium plan that will bring jobs,
business opportunities and much needed new parkland to the neighborhood.
This group of organizations TRULY represents the Yankee Stadium
neighborhood and the entire Bronx. The real community will stand in
solidarity for a new stadium and against outside organizers with agendas
that are not beneficial to the Bronx community.”
We called Lenny Caro, the spokesman named on the press release, at his
914 number, and asked him what community groups were supporting the
project. “Community Board 4,” he said. But, as everyone except Mr. Caro
knows, CB4 voted against the project.
It may be too late to derail this ill-conceived stadium project. (The
City Council will have already voted by the time you read this, though
another committee still has to sign off on the financing.) But the
federal government may slow it down considerably, giving residents more
time to sue over issues such as the lack of public notice on park
alienation. The two parks were renovated some years ago with federal
funding, and the National Park Service will not allow them to be used
for something else without a thorough review. That could take months.
Maybe that delay will be enough for the Yankees and the city to take
residents’ concerns seriously and begin negotiating in good faith. We’re
not holding our breath, but, like the borough president, we can hope.
One last thing. The fact that Oliver Koppell, the Council member who
represents Norwood and Bedford Park, supports this project confounds us.
All his arguments against the taking of public parkland in the case of
the filtration plant ring hollow now. It seems that it’s OK for the city
to take public parkland and ignore reasonable alternatives as long as
the project is not in his district. Helen Foster was one of the very few
lawmakers to vote with Koppell on the filtration plant. You’d think he’d
want to return the favor.
We hope that by the time this comes up for a vote in the full Council,
he will realize how hypocritical his position is and change his mind.
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