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Deal reached on Manhattan trash transfer plan

Deal reached on Manhattan trash transfer plan

New York City and state lawmakers have agreed to revive a trash transfer station in a riverfront Manhattan park, a cornerstone of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s plan to reinvent how his city handles its garbage.

The deal was announced Wednesday. It is sweetened by the promise of future improvements to Hudson River Park.

The facility is in Manhattan’s trendy meatpacking district. It will allow recyclables to be shipped for processing, rather than trucked.

City officials say the change will eliminate 30,000 miles’ worth of truck traffic per year and spare some Bronx, Queens and Brooklyn neighborhoods the infusion of fumes that comes with it.

State Assemblywoman Deborah Glick and some local groups have urged the city to put the transfer site instead on a midtown Manhattan pier near the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. AP-ES-06-25-08 1922EDT

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Bronx Residents To Receive Free Financial Advice

Bronx Residents To Receive Free Financial Advice

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The city launched a pilot program Thursday aiming to provide free financial advice to low income Bronx residents as part of the mayor’s fight against poverty.

The Financial Empowerment Center in Melrose, Bronx offers free one-on-one financial counseling and coaching to low-income residents.

The move comes as a new city-conducted study finds low- and even middle-income residents are using cash checking centers instead of banks because the fees are lower.

“Generally speaking, you’re probably better with one of the larger full-service organizations, and I think the cash checking centers are providing competition to the banks, and that’s good if you believe in capitalism,” said Mayor Michael Bloomberg. “That’s what will keep the fees lower and perhaps out of this some of the banks will lower their fees.”

City officials are also putting together an online directory of low-cost and free financial counseling services available across the city.

For more information, call 311 or visit www.nyc.gov.

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Fare Hike Likely To Pull MTA From Shambles

Fare Hike Likely To Pull MTA From Shambles

Mayor Bloomberg warned Friday that straphangers could face another fare hike next year - and said the city is broke and can’t help.

The mayor also said the MTA’s construction plan is in “shambles,” and he slammed state lawmakers for sinking his congestion pricing plan - which would have raised transit money.

“I think there is a very good likelihood that we are going to have to face the issue of a fare increase or something else,” Bloomberg said on his weekly radio show. “The city doesn’t have any money to give. We are out of money.”

The Daily News reported Friday that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s projected 2009 operating budget deficit has ballooned.

Part of the problem is the tanking economy resulting in dramatically declining revenues the authority gets from fees on certain real estate transactions.

The state Legislature and Gov. Paterson also slashed funds the MTA was anticipating from one account.

Although fares went up in March, the mayor said there are bargains for riders. Senior citizens pay half fare and unlimited-ride passes reduce the per-trip cost. One acquaintance, the mayor said, pays about 46 cents a trip.

Gene Russianoff of the Straphangers Campaign, who has criticized the state and city for what he sees as inadequate financial support, said the mayor “should be proposing ways to prevent a fare hike for the second year in a row, rather than falsely lecturing riders that they are already getting a bargain.”

Assemblyman Richard Brodsky, who helped defeat the pricing plan and voted against fully funding the MTA’s 2008 operating budget, said the Assembly took a “courageous” stand.

It passed a slight tax increase on millionaires to raise transit funds. Gov. Paterson and Senate Republicans opposed the plan and it died.

Brodsky said he will preside over an emergency Assembly committee hearing next week on the MTA’s fiscal crises.

SOURCE: NYDailyNews.com

 

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CHANGING NYC: Bronx is changing, with artists leading way

CHANGING NYC: Bronx is changing, with artists leading way 

For decades, the Bronx had a bad reputation.

Howard Cosell intoned, “Ladies and gentleman, the Bronx is burning,” in 1977. Ten years later, Tom Wolfe picked the borough as the site of the hit-and-run accident that led to the downfall of rich, white bond trader Sherman McCoy in “The Bonfire of the Vanities.”

Over the years redevelopment has proceeded in fits and starts, with the Bronx often hailed as the next hot area.

It hasn’t quite happened yet _ the Bronx still has too many vacant lots and auto-body shops to be a yuppie paradise _ but many Bronx neighborhoods are undergoing a significant transformation.

Chains like Starbucks and the New York Sports Club are setting up shop, and underused industrial buildings are being redeveloped as shopping malls.

As in other places that have gone from gritty to trendy _ like Manhattan’s SoHo or the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn _ artists are in the vanguard.

Sculptor Linda Cunningham moved to the Bronx in 2000 and bought a five-story industrial building with two partners. She has redeveloped it into condos, part of a trend toward market-rate housing in areas where there had been nothing but government-subsidized rental units.

“I got in here because I was urgent to find a studio,” said Cunningham. “I was driven out by escalating rents everywhere.”

Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion said more than $925 million in public and private money was invested in housing in the borough in 2007 _ up from about $237 million in 2002.

And while the nationwide economic downturn has slowed housing growth in 2008, U.S. Census figures show that the Bronx is less affected than the city as a whole.

The number of building permits filed in the city for individual apartments and for entire buildings in the first quarter of 2008 was about half of what it was in the same period last year.

In the Bronx, the figure was down just 17 percent from the prior year, from 1,037 to 862. By comparison, the number in Manhattan was down 69 percent.

And Bronx growth is not restricted to housing. The New York Yankees, who once threatened to leave for greener pastures, are instead building a new $1.3 billion stadium next to their old one, and they have pledged $800,000 a year to Bronx community groups.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced last month that the city has chosen a developer for the Kingsbridge Armory, a nine-story red-brick castle in the West Bronx that will become a mall called the Shops at the Armory.

Then there’s the fortress-like brick complex called the American Bank Note Building in the Hunt’s Point section, a landmark 1909 structure where bank notes were once printed.

Developers bought it for $32 million and plan to renovate it into offices for arts organizations, design firms and nonprofit groups, along with a retail food market.

Eight years after Cunningham and her partners bought their building in Mott Haven _ just 20 minutes by subway from midtown Manhattan _ the condo conversion has been completed and all but one of the 13 units have been sold.

Prices range from $395,000 to $795,000 _ still a bargain compared to Manhattan, where the average sale price for a co-op or condo was $1.6 million for the first quarter of 2008.

One lingering question is whether gritty Bronx neighborhoods can be fixed up without existing residents, businesses and nonprofit groups being forced out.

Of New York’s 8 million people, 1.3 million live in the Bronx. The borough’s population is largely black and Hispanic, and the poverty rate remains high.

According to Census figures, 28.9 of Bronx households were below the poverty line in 2005. The median household income was $29,331.

“We are experiencing a certain amount of gentrification,” said Carol Zakaluk, a lifelong Bronx resident who is a grant writer for a gallery. But Zakaluk said there are 11 housing projects in the area where she lives “and they’re not going anywhere.”

She envisions a future where people of all classes live side by side. “It’s got to be a little bit of each,” she said. “That’s my hope anyway.”

Whether that can happen remains to be seen.

The developers of the American Bank Note Building, henceforth to be called the BankNote, have said they expect the renovated project to rent for at least $20 per square foot. In Manhattan the average is $65 per square foot.

“We believe that if we create the right product and bring the right people there, it will help transform the area,” said Charles Bendit, co-chief executive of Taconic Investment Partners, which is developing the property with Denham Wolf Real Estate Services.

But the building’s current tenants will see their rents double, and some have left. A homeless drop-in center called the Living Room will soon be homeless itself.

“They’re saying they want us to leave in August,” said Carolyn McLaughlin, whose organization runs the Living Room.

A choreographer who goes by the single name Pepper is also shopping for a new home.

Pepper said her $450 monthly rent at the BankNote was slated to go up to $2,000 within 18 months. She is using temporary office space elsewhere and has put her costumes in storage.

Pepper is not happy about being displaced after she helped to build the Bronx arts scene that the BankNote developers are investing in.

“Who created that buzz?” she said. “The artists did it, not the landlords.”

SOURCE: NewsDay.com

 

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Mayor Switches On Cleaner Bronx Power Plant

Mayor Switches On Cleaner Bronx Power Plant

Mayor Michael Bloomberg flipped the switch on a Bronx power plant located in Co-Op City Thursday, which is expected to cut its emissions by 40 percent.

The formerly inefficient power plant underwent a $65 million renovation, and will save residents up to $25 million a year.

“The kind of reduction will make a real difference here in the Bronx, where some children are hospitalized for asthma at four times the national rate. And this will go a long way towards giving New York City the cleanest air of any major city, another important goal of [long-term environmental project] PlaNYC,” said Bloomberg.

The new plant will also generate extra power that can be sold to utility companies.

SOURCE: NY1.com

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