Brooklyn Heights Association Annual Meeting Monday, March 4

The annual meeting of the Brooklyn Heights Association will be on Monday, March 4, starting at 6:30 PM. It will be held at the First Unitarian Congregational Society, 119 Pierrepont Street (corner of Monroe Place). There will be a livestream link provided for anyone unable to attend in person. All are invited, whether BHA members or not. If you wish to attend in person, RSVP here. We will provide the livestream link when it is available.

As we reported earlier, the meeting will feature an address by U.S. Senator Kirstin Gillibrand. If you have a question you would like to ask Senator Gillibrand, you may submit it here.

Also on the agenda is the presentation of Community Service Awards to The Service Collective (also recognized by us as one of the BHB Ten for 2023) and to The Brooklyn Public Library. There will also be a raffle for gift cards to local businesses. Following the meeting there will be “a casual reception with drinks and snacks in the beautiful Chapel and historical Frances White Room at First Unitarian. This is a great opportunity to meet your Brooklyn Heights neighbors as well as talk with BHA staff and board of governors.”

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  • BHA Watch

    Not sure what Gillibrand has done lately.

    More concerned about whether the BHA is tracking and trying to influence the Bossert Hotel auction? Seems like something they should be watching closely as it could impact the area significantly whether it’s housing, hotel or the city buys it. Is this on their radar? This is potentially a generational issue in the Heights.

  • Banet

    When the Bossert was originally sold there were a number of agreements made between the Brooklyn Heights Association and the Developer. Things like what time the restaurant would close and the fact that there would be no amplified music used in the outdoor seating on the rooftop restaurant, etc.

    I would very much like to know whether those agreements transferred with the property or whether they are null and void. Because if this becomes some sort of “hot“ hotel with rooftop events three or four nights a week it could destroy our quality of life.

  • john

    “Destroy our quality of life” is a little dramatic.

    Montague is literally dead – we could use the traffic.

    Sounds like a NIMBY

  • Banet

    I don’t think it’s dramatic at all. Amplified music from their rooftop would be heard by hundreds of homes, possibly thousands of people. Imagine that 3 or 4 nights a week until 1am?