
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
18, No. 21 |
Nov. 3 - 16, 2005 |



Board Discusses Strategic Planning
By HEATHER HADDON
Community
Board 7 (CB7) took the first step in the long, arduous journey of creating a
local strategic plan. The Board’s Long Term Planning and Land Use committees
met with officials from the Department of City Planning last week to discuss
the various options in guiding future area development.
Board members became interested last summer in exploring how to create a
197a plan. The document provides guidelines for future actions of city
agencies in a designated area, and can touch on topics like housing density
and style, waterfront development, and open space preservation. Boards are
authorized to sponsor the plan, but they must go through a lengthy
community-wide discussion process before they enter the multi-step approval
phase.
Since 1992, nine 197a plans have been ratified, including plans in Riverdale
and Morrisania. Riverdale’s proposal took roughly eight years to complete.
“We met every two weeks to work out the policy conflicts,” said Barbara
Mackintosh, who oversees planning coordination for the city. “A 197a takes a
long time.”
They also require money. Most boards hire a consultant to generate maps and
acquire the data necessary to justify the plan’s goals.
But 197a plans usually lead to tangible results. Riverdale’s plan spurred
the city to rezone some of its neighborhoods. The waterfront near Stuyvesant
Town is now being revitalized, thanks to their board’s plan.
“You get a lot of exposure and clout,” Mackintosh said. “It’s a very big
political chip.”
Other planning options are quicker and cheaper, and can
also yield results. Those include working on a localized rezoning with City
Planning, writing a report about a specific area, or developing an
agency-wide “action strategy” for a particular problem.
Before picking among those planning paths, CB7 still needs to decide on what
issues and areas it’s concerned about. Topics raised during the meeting
included the Kingsbridge Armory, the Harlem River waterfront, parkland
conservation, rapid housing development and school construction.
Members are interested in creating a survey to gather community input. “That
would be a very good thing,” said Rita Kessler, the Board’s district
manager. Paul Foster, chair of Long Term Planning, said he would raise the
issue during CB7’s next Executive Committee meeting.
Board members seemed a bit overwhelmed by all the options and the work they
require, but left on an optimistic note. “We’re beginning to move forward,”
said Greg Faulkner, the board’s chair. “This is a big step.”
***
The Board selected new committee heads
during its public meeting last month. The chairs and co-chairs are as
follows: Sanitation, Rafeek Khan; Public Safety, Lowell Green and Ricardo
Parker; Budget, David Laguer; Land Use, Sandra Erickson; Housing, Judith
Freeman; Parks, Barbara Stronczer; Health, Elizabeth Errico and Ozzie Brown;
Youth, Don Bluestone; and Long Term Planning, Paul Foster.
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