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A Sickness on Wall St., Played Out in the Bronx

A Sickness on Wall St., Played Out in the Bronx 

With the $700 billion bailout package signed, sealed and delivered on Friday, the perils of a reckless financial era have come to an end — for some people.

Heading for school, Franco Mora stopped outside his building at 1530 Sheridan Avenue in the Bronx. From December until June, Mr. Mora and his neighbors had to cook on hot plates. The gas line needed to be fixed, and was, eventually.

Mr. Mora’s building was bought in February 2007 by a group of investors who spent $400 million to acquire 75 buildings in the Bronx. For 1530 Sheridan Avenue, which has 84 apartments, the new owners took out a mortgage of $5.4 million.

When the building had changed hands 30 years ago, the owner carried a mortgage of $338,000. When it was sold in 2001, the mortgage was $3 million. So with the 2007 sale, the debt on 1530 Sheridan Avenue was 16 times what it had been three decades earlier.

The Bronx — once the symbol for urban redlining — has gone from being starved of private investment to being engorged.

“In the 1970s, we were fighting to get money into the neighborhoods, to invest in housing,” said Jim Buckley, who has worked as a community organizer and housing advocate in the Bronx since the early 1970s. “But just throwing money at neighborhoods does not mean the neighborhoods are benefiting.”

For good and ill, more than half the apartments in the Bronx are rent-stabilized. That means the income for the owners is limited unless there is a big turnover of residents, since the law permits rents to increase faster after an apartment is vacated.

“We’ve been very concerned for several years about the standards the banks were applying,” said Mr. Buckley, the executive director of the University Neighborhood Housing Program. “It’s a strange position for us to be in, after all these years of arguing that the banks ought to look for investments in these neighborhoods.”

Mr. Buckley said that the big loans could endanger affordable rental properties. But Stephen Siegel, a partner in SG2 Properties, which owns 1530 Sheridan, said the group’s business plan did not include driving out tenants. “We’re not looking to empty buildings,” Mr. Siegel said. “We’re looking to clean up buildings, improve security, get the graffiti off, make sure the doors lock. We’re not looking to turn them into condos. They work as rentals.”

The term “redlining” — excluding certain neighborhoods from private investment — grew out of the reforms of an era much like this one. In 1935, a federal agency was created to relieve failing banks by buying mortgages that were going into default. The same agency also helped struggling homeowners by offering them mortgages at lower rates than they were paying.

As part of its work, the agency developed a series of maps that rated neighborhoods by qualities that would make them suitable for mortgages. These maps were color-coded, and neighborhoods that were considered the least desirable were marked off with a red boundary line. The decision to cut off poorer neighborhoods from private capital was implicated as a factor in the slow collapse of inner cities during the 1950s and 1960s. Banks were accused of taking deposits from redlined areas, but not putting anything back.

In a drive against redlining, Congress passed the Community Reinvestment Act in 1977, which said that banks had to offer credit in every market they served. “In the 1970s, we used the C.R.A. to get the banks to start lending in the Bronx,” Mr. Buckley said. “By the 1980s, they had seen that it could be a profitable business, and were coming on their own.”

Today, in the post-mortems on the financial crisis, the Community Reinvestment Act is being blamed in some corners for forcing banks to make risky loans in poorer areas. Yet one study has found that nearly 75 percent of the subprime loans were made by mortgage companies, which, unlike commercial banks, are not subject to the reinvestment act. Mr. Buckley said that national housing organizers told officials at Fannie Mae that they did not want the agency to back loans that did not require down payments. And they tried to warn against piling too much debt on buildings that were just getting by.

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A Library With a Past Ponders Its Future

 A Library With a Past Ponders Its Future

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A home for strays or youth programs?

TWO years ago, a lanky teenager named Adolfo Abreu who lives in the Kingsbridge section of the Bronx got involved in a campaign to turn the shuttered Fordham Library Center into a youth center. Unhappy about the dearth of activities available to him and his friends, he spent months rallying support for the cause, only to learn in late May that the city was eyeing the former library for use as an animal shelter. 

“I felt like, wow, they care more about animals than us?” said Adolfo, a high school freshman who serves as the president of Sistas and Brothas United, the youth branch of the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition, a local organization. “We’ve been fighting for this for years. That part of the Bronx is like a wasteland, and having an animal shelter isn’t going to improve it.”

The former library, a handsome three-story red brick building with arched windows, sits on a downtrodden block of Bainbridge Avenue near Fordham Road’s bustling retail corridor. It has been locked since 2005, shortly before the new $50 million Bronx Library Center opened one block to the west.

Adolfo Abreu isn’t the only one with grand visions for the building. Members of local community groups have envisioned the nearly 30,000-square-foot former library as outfitted with a computer lab, a boxing ring and an art studio, and accommodating activities like after-school tutoring.

The city’s health department is working to open animal shelters in Queens and the Bronx, which currently have only pet receiving centers. The agency has a contract with New York City Animal Care and Control, a nonprofit group, to operate shelters.

Jessica Scaperotti, a department spokeswoman, confirmed that the agency was considering the former Fordham Library as a site for a shelter, but said there was no timetable for the plan. The issue was reported in The Norwood News, a local newspaper.

Despite potential obstacles, leaders of the effort to turn the old library into a youth center said they would soldier ahead. Among them is Fernando Cabrera, the pastor of New Life Outreach International in Kingsbridge Heights.

“There are plenty of other places an animal shelter would be suitable,” Mr. Cabrera said. “The community isn’t going to stand for that here.”

SOURCE

 

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Court Rejects Suit Against Tenant Organizers

Court Rejects Suit Against Tenant Organizers

The owners of five buildings in the Bronx have failed to raise a triable issue of fact that tenant organizers interfered with their ability to get mortgages, a state judge has ruled in granting summary judgment dismissing the owners’ case. In New Line Realty V Corp. v. United Committees of University Heights, 1021/04, Supreme Court Justice Sally Manzanet-Daniels of the Bronx found that the owners had failed to submit “any evidence in admissible form” to prove that tenant organizers from the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition had taken actions to frustrate their ability to get refinancing for their buildings.

The decision will be published Monday. The owners had claimed that as a result of picketing, circulating fliers and other activities aimed at Washington Mutual Bank, the bank had pulled a letter of intent to refinance a mortgage issued in 2000. The owners claimed damages of $1.8 million.

The organizers denied any intent to interfere with the owners’ prospects for refinancing, and contended that instead they were trying to enforce a provision in the existing mortgage that required the owners to keep the buildings in good repair. The owners’ claim for tortious interference with prospective economic advantage was the sole surviving claim of their lawsuit, filed in 2004, which also raised claims of trespass and libel against the Northwest Bronx group, a 30-year-old, clergy-based community organization.

The owners had withdrawn their trespass claim, and Justice Manzanet-Daniels had dismissed the libel claim in 2006. Under a law adopted in 1992 designed to protect tenants and others who are asserting a First Amendment right to petition government, Justice Manzanet-Daniels wrote, the owners were required to show that their claims against the Northwest Bronx group have “a substantial basis in law and fact.”

The 1992 law (Civil Rights Law §§70-a, 76-a) was designed to curb lawsuits aimed at deterring the exercise of free speech rights by both creating a higher standard to establish a claim’s viability and giving defendants the right to counterclaim for violations of their speech rights. Suits aimed at stifling efforts to petition the government for redress of grievances and to express views at public hearings have been dubbed “Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation,” or SLAPP, suits.

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NYSDEC To Meet with Community on Planned Actions Against Odor from Sewage Sludge Plant in the Bronx

NYSDEC To Meet with Community on Planned Actions Against Odor from Sewage Sludge Plant in the Bronx

On Thursday, July 24 at 6 p.m. the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) will inform residents in the South Bronx about new, aggressive measures it is taking to combat odors from the sewage sludge pelletization plant located in the Hunts Point area of the Bronx. The public information meeting, hosted by Congressman Jose Serrano, will be held at The Point Community Development Corporation at 940 Garrison Avenue in the Bronx.

The New York Organic Fertilizer Company’s plant began operations in 1993. Over the years, repeated complaints have been made about odors emanating from the facility. It has been the subject of two major DEC enforcement actions during that period. In recent months, DEC has developed a new strategy to address the odor issues associated with the plant, and it is inviting public comments on its plans. This evening’s meeting will focus on:

  • A proposed new solid waste permit with significantly tighter controls at key stages of facility operation to prevent odors before they start;
  • A proposed new air permit with new requirements for stack testing of odorous compounds and strict standards for maintaining pollution control equipment; and
  • A stepped-up monitoring plan for the summer months - when odor complaints tend to be more frequent; DEC will conduct three surprise odor inspections each week, one of which will be a weekly evening inspection.

The proposed permits will be available for public review and comment. Members of the public will have an opportunity to review them and make further suggestions to the DEC.

DATE: Thursday, July 24, 2008

TIME: 6 p.m.

PLACE: 940 Garrison Avenue (The Point Community Development Corporation), South Bronx

SPEAKERS: Congressman Jose Serrano (expected)

Suzanne Mattei, DEC Regional Director

Michelle Moore, DEC Environmental Analyst

 

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Bronx’ seaside: Affordability on the water in Throgs Neck

Bronx’ seaside: Affordability on the water in Throgs Neck

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The Bridgeview Estates in the Throgs Neck section of the Bronx.

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A view of the Whitestone Bridge from the pool.

Directly across the Long Island Sound from the multimillion-dollar Mediterranean villas in Whitestone Woods, the Throgs Neck neighborhood in the Bronx might offer the most affordable coastal living experience in the five boroughs.

At Bridgeview Estates, 21 two- and three- bedroom condominiums, some with direct waterfront access, are available starting at $475,000. Located at Schurz and Davis Aves. in a neighborhood known for families, water proximity and the shopping stretch of E. Tremont Ave., Bridgeview Estates is a newly built gated condominium complex with views of the Throgs Neck and Whitestone bridges.

“At night, these two bridges light up and make this area something magical,” says Robert Van Zandt, the longtime North Bronx real estate developer who built the property. “We tried to make this an alternative living option to what people are paying in and around Manhattan. They just have to come out here and their mind will be changed.”

With beach clubs and catering halls, bungalows, condominiums and small single-family brick and wood homes a block from the water, Throgs Neck bustles with entire families taking walks together while kids ride bikes and play sports on front lawns. Up the street, the community has asked the city for a long-planned public golf course on a former landfill cornering Ferry Point Park. Recent rumors suggest it might happen, making the neighborhood more attractive to homeowners.

“This side of the bridges is more laid-back than the Queens side, with lower price points and a less suburban feel,” says Maria Paleatsos, who owns MP Power Realty in nearby Pelham Bay. “I’m not sure you can find anything this price on the water where families can live so well.”

Completed and ready for move-in, Bridgeview Estates includes balconies for each apartment, two upscale homes for sale in the multimillion- dollar range with large decks and swimming pools and a development team that truly cares for the area. Van Zandt and colleague Richard Rodriguez funded and coach the baseball team for Villa Maria, a local Catholic grammar school. Their own children graduated, yet they still remain as coaches. Van Zandt also funds three scholarships for students from financially saddled families.

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