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Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. plans for the Bronx

Ruben Diaz Jr. will present his achievements and goals for the Bronx in his first State of the Borough speech.

Ruben Diaz Jr. will present his achievements and goals for the Bronx in his first State of the Borough speech.

Key among his goals, says his office, will be a new plan to develop the Kingsbridge Armory, after he and others led the fight to kill a plan for a mall there.

A thousand invited guests at the Evander Childs High School campus are expected to hear Diaz announce a task force to develop new ideas for the cavernous, white-elephant armory’s future, such as manufacturing and recreation.

Diaz was pilloried by Mayor Bloomberg and construction unions for pushing the City Council to kill the plan for the heavily subsidized mall, over his insistence retailers there pay “a living wage” to workers - $10 an hour with benefits, or $11.50 without benefits.

He is expected today to again raise the issue of living wages for projects receiving heavy city subsidies and tax breaks, and announce he has partnered with Bronx City Council members Anabel Palma and Oliver Koppell on legislation requiring that developers who receive taxpayer help make their project pay workers a living wage.

The borough president also is expected to announce a long-held dream of former borough presidents and business leaders - to bring a quality hotel to the Bronx, working with developers and the New York Hotel Trade Council to identify sites, and generate interest from hotel operators.

Former Borough President Fernando Ferrer had a master plan calling for a hotel as part of a Yankee Village near Yankee Stadium. The new Gateway Center Mall near there has been viewed as a possible site. Some have suggested a hotel near Fordham University, with the Bronx Zoo, New York Botanical Garden and Arthur Avenue as nearby draws. Read more..

 

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News Of The Day

Gov. David Paterson insisted the $750 million in scheduled payments to schools and local governments that will be withheld tomorrow are not a “cut” or an “impoundment.”

“The state has run out of money,” Paterson declared. “…We think we are well within the bounds of legal authority.”

NYSUT is reviewing its legal options.

Paterson defended his actions in a Plattsburgh Press-Republican OpEd.

One in five legislators have staffers who do double-duty as their campaign treasurers - an arrangement good government advocates warn could present a conflict of interest.

“Albany’s entrenched pay-to-play culture doesn’t get much more naked than this,” the DN says.

The relationship between the governor and the Legislature is so bad that Senate Democratic Leader John Sampson is refusing to attend formal events with Paterson.

Tired of living on the 32-30 knife’s edge, Senate Democrats are negotiating to make Republicans committee chairs in hopes of improving relations with the minority.

The MTA unveils its new austerity budget this morning, and drastic service cuts are expected.

Paterson said his “hands are tied” when it comes to the MTA because the state has no money.

Andrea Peyser thinks Eliot Spitzer, “whose cast-iron ego will outlast the cockroaches in a nuclear war,” has a good shot at success if he tried for a 2010 comeback.

Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum was once so close to ex-state Comptroller Alan Hevesi that she hired three people close to him, including one of his sons.

Chris Smith marvels at the “indomitability” of New York’s elected officials, writing: “They refuse to go away, even when the law, the voters, or sanity says they should.

The state’s system of juvenile prisons is so riddled with problems the agency overseeing them wants all but the most dangerous of youthful offenders to stay out of them.

The Post likes the idea of letting AG Andrew Cuomo have subpoena power to go after corrupt state lawmakers.

Cindy Adams is standing by her story about Paterson saying he wanted to piss “on” the Legislature.

It’s D-Day for the Kingsbridge Armory project, and so far things are not looking good.

Jordan Moss says Bronx officials can “proudly cross the finish line or meekly toss the keys back to Mayor Bloomberg.” Read more..

 

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Taking the reigns as Bronx Borough President

 Ruben Diaz Jr. swears in as Bronx borough president today at Lehman College

In an inaugural speech at Lehman College, Diaz, 36, pledged to “work tirelessly and without compromise … for our seniors, our children and our hardworking families.”

Gov. Paterson, Mayor Bloomberg and other elected state and city officials were on hand to extend their well-wishes.

Addressing a 10.5% local unemployment rate - the highest in the city - Diaz told the audience the most important goal on his agenda would be economic development - “and we will tackle the issue head-on.”

In particular, he cited developing training programs for “green” jobs - “building green roofs, retrofitting boilers and making our existing building stock more energy-efficient.”

He also cited the continuing need for improving local schools, including partnering “with community and faith-based organizations to develop after-school and arts programs in every neighborhood.”

With health care the borough’s single largest employer, Diaz said he would encourage the growth of new medical fields, such as bio-pharmaceuticals.

Proclaiming a theme of “One Bronx,” the new borough president said he also will charge local business improvement groups with developing a strategic plan to “ensure the strength of all our business districts.”

Diaz said that he will reach out to citywide leaders on issues “from business and labor to education and the environment.” Read more..

 

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Bronx Voters Elect Díaz as New Borough President

                                 Rubén Díaz Jr., a Democrat, succeeds Adolfo Carrión Jr.

 

Assemblyman Rubén Díaz Jr. easily captured a special election for Bronx borough president on Tuesday, and will succeed Adolfo Carrión Jr., who is now director of the White House Office of Urban Affairs.

Mr. Díaz, 35, a Democrat, defeated his lone opponent in the race, Anthony J. Ribustello, a Republican district leader best known as the actor who played Tony Soprano’s driver on “The Sopranos.”

“You don’t run to lose, so of course I’m disappointed,” Mr. Ribustello said in a phone interview. “But I’ll be back to fight another day.”

With all the precincts in, Mr. Díaz had 28,301 votes, or 87 percent, to Mr. Ribustello’s 4,081 votes, according to the City Board of Elections.

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Probers looking at whether Adolfo Carrión got a steep discount on home renovations

                        Adolfo Carrión Jr. speaks outside the Bronx County Building

 

  The probe of White House urban czar Adolfo Carrión has widened to explore whether he received a significant discount on the renovation of his home, the Daily News has learned.

The former Bronx borough president, who started last month as President Obama’s director of urban policy, has acknowledged that he has not paid the architect, even though the work was done two years ago.

Now a law enforcement agency has obtained documents from the contractor who built a new porch and installed a balcony on Carrión’s Victorian home on City Island, sources familiar with the investigation told The News.

620 City Island Avenue, on City Island, the home of Adolfo Carrion.

                    620 City Island Avenue, on City Island, the home of Adolfo Carrion

The documents show the project’s estimated cost was $50,000. Carrión wound up paying less than half the estimate - $24,000.

The Bronx district attorney has said he’s looking into The News’ report that Carrión had yet to pay his architect. The office declined to comment about the latest inquiry.

Read more..

 

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