Brooklyn Heights Blog » park slope http://brooklynheightsblog.com Dispatches from America's first suburb Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:57:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.2 Denis Hamill on LICH: SUNY “is going to kill people.”http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/55412 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/55412#comments Sun, 17 Feb 2013 20:33:29 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=55412

In a Daily News piece, “Long Island College Hospital merged to death”, Denis Hamill retells an ambulance driver’s account, told to Hamill at Thursday evening’s community forum, about picking up a man in cardiac arrest on Hamilton Avenue, administering first aid, taking an EKG that was forwarded to LICH electronically, and getting the patient to LICH where the doctors were able to open an artery to save him, all in an elapsed time of seven minutes. Had the ambulance had to fight traffic to get to Methodist Hospital in Park Slope or Lutheran in Sunset Park, the driver said, “My opinion, add another 12-15 minutes, he wouldn’t have made it.”

In Hamill’s words: “Make no mistake: Close LICH, and people of Red Hook, Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn Heights will die.”

Photo: denishamill.com.

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There She Is… Miss America 2013 From Brooklyn!http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/53902 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/53902#comments Sun, 13 Jan 2013 12:54:56 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=53902

Mallory Hagan, a 23-year-old Brooklyn resident by way of Alabama, was crowned Miss America 2013 on Saturday, January 12. Miss New York, who resides in nearby Park Slope, attended the Fashion Institute of Technology, and her platform issue is child sexual abuse prevention. Read more on the Cobble Hill Blog.

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Brooklyn Heights Sets Pace for City in Rent Increaseshttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/38663 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/38663#comments Thu, 12 Apr 2012 04:30:20 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=38663

Average asking rents in Brooklyn Heights increased by 23% from 4Q 2011 to 1Q 2012, the highest percentage increase among the more desirable New York City neighborhoods included in a survey by RentJuice.

The Real Deal reports that “Brooklyn was responsible for much of the asking rent gains, as popular neighborhoods including Brooklyn Heights (23%), Park Slope (18%), Williamsburg (10%) and Greenpoint (10%) showed double-digit rent increases. Brooklyn Heights’ average first quarter asking rent was $4,974, an increase of more than $900 over the fourth quarter of 2011, making it the most expensive neighborhood in the borough. By comparison asking rents reached $3,547 in Park Slope, $2,847 in Williamsburg and $3,424 in Greenpoint.”

Unfortunately, the article does not describe how “average asking rent” is determined. A reasonable surmise is that it is the average of the asking rent for all residential properties on the market during the quarter. In that case, the high figure for the Heights probably reflects the fact that this neighborhood includes more large rental apartments than places like Williamsburg that have substantial amounts of new construction and rehabs with lots of studios and one-bedrooms. It may also reflect the arrival on the market of pricey rental apartments at 75 Clinton Street (photo). Nevertheless, a 23% increase is impressive.

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BHB’s Heather Quinlan on the Brooklyn Accenthttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/26351 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/26351#comments Fri, 04 Feb 2011 18:04:00 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=26351 Heather gives her spiel on the local lingo, with videos, at Union Hall in Park slope last Tuesday night. Video after the jump.

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L Magazine Names Three Brooklyn Heights Blocks Among Borough’s 50 Besthttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/23698 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/23698#comments Wed, 27 Oct 2010 16:28:33 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=23698

BHB photo by C. Scales


L Magazine has surveyed Brooklyn’s multitude of blocks, and named its fifty best in various categories. Two blocks completely, and one partially, in the Heights made the cut. The winner in the “Best Block for Historical Significance” class is Montague Terrace (see photo above).

It was here, way back in 1776 at the “Battle” of Brooklyn, that George Washington staged the evacuation of his army to Manhattan, allowing it to survive for another day, insuring that we’d one day drive on the right side of the road.

(Despite the snarky quotation marks, there really was a Battle of Brooklyn; indeed, it was the largest battle of the Revolutionary War. What happened in the Heights was its aftermath.) If there had been a category for literary significance, Montague Terrace could have won there, too, having been home to both W.H. Auden, who wrote New Year Letter at One Montague Terrace, and Thomas Wolfe, whose novel, Of Time and the River took shape two doors away at Number Five. Also, of course, Montague Terrace has featured as the gateway to hell, a distinction L bestows on Central Avenue between Moffat and Knollwood Cemetery, in Bushwick.

The winner in the category “Best Block for Groceries” is Atlantic Avenue between Clinton and Court, which straddles the Heights/Cobble Hill border.

All-world market Sahadi and wonderful bakery Damascus (nearly side by side) would already count for the win, but this block also has a Trader Joe’s, a Key Food, and the Green Pea Grocery.

I’m glad Green Pea gets a mention, but Key Food??!!

Finally, the nod for one of the “Five Best Brooklyn Blocks to Live On” goes to Columbia Heights between Clark and Pierrepont.

Hard to argue with the views from the western side of this heightiest of Brooklyn Heights streets. Seriously, how do these people get anything done?

It could also have been named best block anywhere for helicopter spotters.

I would have made Garden Place best block for Halloween decorations, as well as for trick-or-treating, but L awards both these to Humboldt Street between Nassau and Driggs Avenues, Greenpoint, which, I confess, I’ve never seen.

Neighboring nabes also made out well. Cobble Hill, as already noted, shares the “Best Block for Groceries”. Charming Verandah Place, between Clinton and Henry (which boasts another Thomas Wolfe residence, where he penned the classic exercise in local dialect, Only the Dead Know Brooklyn), gets another of the five best to live on awards.

Whenever we pass by the tiny Ted and Honey and see the happy people outside enjoying a drink or relaxing in the park or meandering down the lane-like Verandah Place, we wonder, “Who are they, and how did they get here?” And then we are jealous.

Smith Street between Bergen and Dean, on the border of Cobble and Boerum Hills, is named “Best Block For Street Festivals”.

This might piss off borough traditionalists of the Italian persuasion, but the annual Bastille Day party (brought to you largely by Bar Tabac, at the corner of Dean) is the most fun had by French people anywhere, ever.

Reflecting its status as a happening place, DUMBO scores four times. “Best Block For Date Night ” is bestowed on Water Street between Main and Old Dock Streets.

Highbrow culture at St. Ann’s Warehouse or Galapagos Art Space; drinks before dinner or after at Water Street Restaurant; and fancy-ass dessert at Jacques Torres (closes at 9pm on weekends). Top off the night with a stroll through Brooklyn Bridge Park for that Woody Allen moment…

Front Street between Jay Street and the Manhattan Bridge is honored as “Best Block For Celebrity Sightings”.

Jason Schwartzman, Cynthia Nixon, Jay Z, Beyonce, Spike Lee, Alexis Bledel (of the Gilmore Girls!), the entire cast of Gossip Girl, Paul Dano, Michael Pitt… These are just a few people we’ve recently seen near our office.

Washington Street between Water and Plymouth Streets is called the “Best Block For Gallery Hopping”.

See large-scale projects by established artists and new works by emerging locals skipping between Smack Mellon’s massive refurbished boiler house space, the Dumbo Arts Center’s expansive loft and Rabbithole Studio’s raw basement gallery.

Finally, Main Street between Water and Front Streets gets dubbed “Best Block For New Media”.

Realtors recently re-dubbed Dumbo “Silicon Beach.” Seriously. A sampling of new social networking locative buzzword emergent media companies operating in this block’s behemoth office building: Digital Gravel, Fusia Communications, Red Herring Design, Lost Boys International, FreeAssociation, Domani Studios, Freeserver, Big Spaceship, The Joey Company, and so on. Also, The L, keeping it real for old media!

Hmmm…not exactly a disinterested choice, but probably valid.

In the schadenfreude department, we note that Park Slope gets only two mentions, “Best Block For Iconic Brownstones” (Garfield Place between Seventh and Eighth Avenues) and “Best Block For Ugly Condos” (Fourth Avenue between 4th and 5th Streets: “It looks like a service road south of Cancun.”)

The most inexplicable entry is this:

45. Best Block for Urban Detrital Discoveries (by day), Lynchian Encounters with the Unheimlich (by evening), and Profound Malaise Bordering on Fear (by night)
Meserole between Bushwick Ave and Morgan Ave
This one wrote itself.

What kind of archaic hipster BS is that?

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Biviano Retakes Lead in BHB Poll on Herd for the 33rdhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12129 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12129#comments Wed, 12 Aug 2009 03:10:58 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=12129 As of 11:00 A.M. Wednesday, our BHB poll on the Herd for the 33rd City Council District continues to be a closely-fought battle between Brooklyn Heights resident Doug “Biv Against the Machine” Biviano and “machine” candidate Steve Levin, with Biviano holding the narrow lead he retook after last night’s debate. Update: As of 1:00 P.M. Sunday, Biv’s lead has widened to 25 votes (146-121) over Levin, with 436 votes cast so far.
If you haven’t cast a vote yet, do so now!

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Citizens Union debate Tuesday nighthttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12133 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12133#comments Sun, 09 Aug 2009 18:17:24 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12133 The Citizens Union will host a debate for candidates for the 33rd district City Council seat on Tuesday night from 6:30 to 8 pm. The event is held at St. Francis College, in its Founders Hall (180 Remsen St., between Court and Clinton streets). The seven candidates — Isaac Abraham, Ken Baer, Doug Biviano, Ken Diamondstone, Steve Levin, JoAnne Simon, and Evan Thies — are invited, and the debate is open to the public. To RSVP, email events@citizensunion.org.

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Full Video: Chuck Backs Steve at Borough Hall in the Herd for the 33rdhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12097 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12097#comments Fri, 07 Aug 2009 17:44:11 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=12097
U.S. Senator and Brooklynite Charles Schumer announced his support for Vito Lopez staffer Steve Levin in the race for the NYC Council’s 33rd District in a press conference at Brooklyn Borough Hall this morning.

No local television stations were on hand, so BHB is the only place you’ll be able to see the full press conference and Sen. Schumer and Levin’s remarks on health care, the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Sotamayor and more.

In a statement to the press today, challenger and Brooklyn Heights resident Doug Biviano accuses Schumer of “popping Albany pills”, adding:

The reason Levin continues to pile up these farce endorsements is because he is politically connected through his name (his father is the cousin of Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich) and his position as Vito Lopez’s chief henchman. Because of who he knows, and the smoke-filled backrooms he has access to, he’s been able to skate along as a presumed frontrunner in this race despite a complete lack of accountability in the media. The people of the 33rd District deserve better. They deserve a City Councilor that will openly and honestly stand up for their interests – someone who doesn’t see the City Council as fodder for his resume, but will instead fight tooth and nail to protect our communities and our families.

We caught up with Levin after the press conference.  He addresses some of these issues in this exclusive video:

Brooklyn Bugle Media’s the New Homer Fink Show will be broadcasting live tomorrow at 11am from Biviano HQ at 89 Montague Street.  The public (that’s you!) is welcome to attend and to ask questions. Detail here.

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Brooklyn Independent TV’s Herd for the 33rd Primerhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11965 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11965#comments Fri, 07 Aug 2009 05:07:21 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=11965

You won’t see “frontrunner” Steve Levin in the BIT piece on the race for the Democratic nomination in the 33rd City Council District.  You will, however, see Brooklyn Heights’ Doug Biviano.

Tomorrow, the New Homer Fink Show will broadcast live from Biviano HQ on Montague Street.  He’ll be taking our questions but more importantly yours as the event is open to the public.  Show starts at 11AM.  Full details here.

We hope that Mr. Levin overcomes his bashfulness soon, as we intend to have all the candidates stop by the show in the coming weeks.

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Chuck Joins the Machine and Backs Levin in Council Racehttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12077 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/12077#comments Thu, 06 Aug 2009 19:27:58 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=12077

The Brooklyn Paper reports that Senator Chuck Schumer will be announcing his support for 33rd City Council district candidate Steve “the Machine” Levin this Friday at Borough Hall.

“This is a very big deal,” said Assemblyman Vito Lopez (D-Bushwick), who is not only the Brooklyn Democratic Party chairman, but also employs Levin has his chief of staff.

That relationship has encouraged Levin’s rivals to paint him as the “machine candidate,” but Lopez called The Brooklyn Paper on Thursday to challenge that.

“He’s his own man, which, I know, coming from me, on a call like this, doesn’t sound, you know…,” Lopez said. “But if you look at his endorsements, there are a lot of groups and people on his list that don’t like me.”

Brooklyn Heights resident and long-shot candidate Doug Biviano  has characterized  opponents including Levin and former Yassky staffer Evan Thies as members of the “Democratic machine”.

Join us this Saturday at 11am at Biviano campaign HQ for a live podcast of the New Homer Fink Show.   The public is invited to watch and to ask questions.  Details here.

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The New Homer Fink Show – LIVE and In Person Saturdayhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11961 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11961#comments Tue, 04 Aug 2009 16:22:13 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=11961

doug_266The New Homer Fink Show hits the road this Saturday (8/8) as we podcast live from 33rd District City Council candidate Doug Biviano’s campaign HQ on Montague Street.

The Brooklyn Heights resident is one of the “Herd for the 33rd” and recently made headlines when he accused his opponents of being part of the “Democratic machine.”

Is this guy nuts? Does this hometown boy stand a chance? What’s his deal? Find out Saturday.

You’re invited to attend – the show starts at 11am at Biviano Headquarters 89 Montague Street.   “Biv” is digging deep and providing free bagels and coffee.

The New Homer Fink Show with Doug Biviano, candidate for City Council, 33rd District.

Saturday August 8 at 11am.

89 Montague Street [GMAP]

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Biv Against the Machinehttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11824 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11824#comments Wed, 29 Jul 2009 15:34:10 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=11824

The Herd for the 33rd City Council District met last night, minus a couple of sheep, for a debate in Williamsburg.  The Brooklyn Paper’s Ben “The Other Guy” Muessig was on the scene and reports that our homegrown candidate, Doug Biviano was quite animated to say the least:

Brooklyn Paper: The vociferous upstart and Brooklyn Heights resident Doug Biviano attacked front-running candidates Jo Anne Simon, Evan Thies, and Steve Levin — who was not even at the debate, his fourth such absence during the campaign — for being “machine politicians” who were complicit in the controversial 2005 rezoning of Williamsburg and Greenpoint that has not resulted in long-promised parkland and affordable housing.

“They were there at the table with the city — they were cutting deals,” said Biviano, who went straight at his rivals in response to the first question. “They are part of the Democratic machine. They never stood up.

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Brooklyn Heights Doc and Patients Featured on WABC-TVhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11761 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11761#comments Tue, 28 Jul 2009 19:05:44 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=11761 Brooklyn Heights resident and City Council candidate in the 33rd District Doug Biviano let us know about this clip of his wife Lee, son Quinn and Brooklyn Heights pediatrician Dr. Stephen Turner discussing probiotics on last night’s WABC-TV newscast. Watch the video.

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City Council Candidate Starts Drive for P.S. 8 Playgroundhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11243 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/11243#comments Thu, 09 Jul 2009 00:32:10 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=11243

herdDemocratic NYC Council candidate (D33)/ Brooklyn Heights resident Doug Biviano  announced today that he is starting a petition to provide a temporary playground for P.S 8 kids.  They’ll be losing their current school yard due to an expansion project announced earlier this year.
And as election year attention getting ploys go, this one doesn’t seem like such a bad idea.  In an email sent out today, Biviano writes:

The children at PS 8 in Brooklyn Heights are set to lose their school yard to construction this coming fall for two years, while nearby Squibb Park remains unused. As a PS 8 parent, I know this is unacceptable, so I drafted a petition asking the city to make Squibb Park safe and available for PS 8 students to use as an interim school yard for outdoor recess and phys. ed. space.

Biviano has posted a petition on his website and is asking anyone supporting his idea to sign it.

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City Council Candidate Biviano Sets Up Shop at Montague and Hickshttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/10510 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/10510#comments Thu, 11 Jun 2009 19:26:31 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=10510

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Council candidate and Heights resident Doug Biviano, along with a bevy of helpers, spent yesterday afternoon in front of his soon-to-beherdcampaign headquarters in the former Red Blue Rose space at Montague and Hicks streets, collecting signatures for his petition to be put on the ballot for the 33rd Council District. The colorful, hand-painted seashells on the table, bearing the message “Biv for Brooklyn”, were given to supporters.

There’s more about Biviano here.

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New Kings on the Blockhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9769 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9769#comments Wed, 20 May 2009 13:05:44 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=9769

(BHB/Sarah Portlock)

(BHB/Sarah Portlock)

The seven candidates for City Councilman David Yassky’s 33rd district council seat went head to head on Tuesday night, and the winner? Democracy. There were also a few good laughs, though solely at candidates’ expense.

herd“Let’s do this every Tuesday night,” said candidate Evan Thies, with only a slight glimmer of sarcasm.

The New Kings Democrats hosted the event in Williamsburg, and taped the event to post on its Web site.

Moderators Aaron Short, a reporter and blogger, and Sabrina Gates, a Kings County Democratic County committee member, kept the 90-minute debate snappy and quick and cut the candidates off politely, but forcefully, at their time limit. Whew!

First up, here are highlights from their closing statements, and how they answered the first question, Why are you running?:

Isaac Abraham, the Hasidic businessman from Williamsburg: “What I’ve seen in the last 35 years is that our city council has neglected the important issues, and I can see some there still outstanding.” In closing, he said, “I’ve had my ears to the ground and my hand in my heart for 35 years. I have been there, and all I ask is that you give me the title, ‘City Councilman.’”

Ken Baer, an accountant and environmental advocate: “I think I can do an exceptional job. I have the unique perspective of being an accountant and lifelong environmentalist.” In closing, “Brooklyn needs a fighter. I’m not beholden to anyone, and I don’t owe anyone anything. I have no hesitation of taking on power when I know I am fighting for a worthy cause.”

Newcomer Doug Biviano, an engineer and nine-year Heights resident, had the best line of the night in his closing statement: “I believe in the power of politics, and we don’t use our government as much as we can. Now is the time, and we need a leader who is going to stand up and fight for us. We need a leader who is fearless. I’ve sailed across the ocean on a 27-foot boat. Support me.” (He said the boat line with such conviction, and without missing a beat!)

Ken Diamondstone, a longtime LGBT activist and community organizer: “I’ve been working on social issues my whole life, and I want to be in a position to set the agenda. I’m a good listener, and I think outside the box.” In closing, “The city will never be the same after the last six months, and in order to survive we must diversify its base. We don’t need more housing, and we need to support what we have.”

Steve Levin is currently chief of staff for Vito Lopez, the chairman of the Kings County Democratic Party, and appeared in his first debate tonight: “From my community organizing experience, I’ve learned that city government has the ability and responsibility to serve the people in this city who need it.” And, “We’re facing a very challenging time in this city, and we need a city councilman that stands up for the rights of New Yorkers right now. It’s a very diverse district, but we all want a safe and affordable district to live and raise our kids.”

Jo Anne Simon, a civil rights attorney and community leader: “I care about the issues that you care about — I want a seat at the table for your concerns and issues.” And, “I bring passion, experience, and skills to the city council.”

Evan Thies, a community organizer and former five-year Yassky staffer: “Obama may have brought change to Washington, but change has not made it to Brooklyn. There are still powerful forces and inertia that need to be restrained, and we need to work against them to change. I’ve worked in City Hall for five years, and I’m going to take that energy and continue to work on what I’ve done.” And, “It’s a historic opportunity to have the progressives running the city, not the status quo.”

The next question was about the city’s alleged failures to build much-promised affordable housing and open spaces as part of rezoning Downtown Brooklyn and in Williamsburg/Greenpoint, and how the candidates would hold the city accountable for those promises. Thies pointed to his “360 Planning” idea, which revamps the public review process and holds more parties accountable. Simon said she wants to incorporate transportation-related issues into the rezoning process. Levin said he “doesn’t have such a pessimistic view” and will work to keep in check “overzealous rezoning without concern for infrastructure taxation.” Biviano pointed to his urban engineering background and repeated his message to give community boards more veto power early in the process. The others railed against the city’s inefficiencies.

And what do you plan to do with your much-ballyhooed discretionary funds? Baer said, “large cultural organizations [will be] cut back,” and to “disperse the money to people who are struggling.” Biviano said “we need baseball diamonds for kids,” and he’d put the spending records online for transparency. Diamondstone, Levin, Abraham, and Simon said to send money to senior citizens, and some children’s organizations. Thies wants to have a full shake-up: “I know it’s not sexy, but reforming the budget is the most powerful thing we can do. [These funds] are how you get your constituents the help it needs as quickly as possible.”

When Levin, Simon, and Thies were asked how they differentiate themselves from the elected officials (Lopez, Assemblywoman Joan Millman, City Councilman Yassky, respectively) with whom they have been associated, each noted that they have at times had differing opinions from their bosses. Diamondstone, Baer, Abraham, and Biviano were then asked how voters could trust their lack of experience, to which each mentioned his extensive community organizing experience.

How will you keep small businesses afloat? Each candidate resoundingly said rent stabilization, provide low-interest loans, shop locally, and waxed poetic on the importance of Main Streets.

And then it was time for the lightning round, which was entertaining to the audience and maddening for reporters trying to quickly write down each candidates’ one-word answers. But, here goes:

What are you reading right now?
Abraham: “After tonight, my biography”
Baer: New York Times, local papers, newsletters
Biviano: local papers, DemocracyNow!
Diamondstone: “The Nation”
Levin: “A People’s History of the United States,” by Howard Zinn
Simon: “The Great Bridge,” by David McCullough
Thies: Essays by Kurt Vonnegut

What’s your favorite restaurant?
Abraham: “Peter Luger’s”
Baer: “Vegetarian Palate”
Biviano: “Pacifico, for its key lime pie”
Diamondstone: “any diner food”
Levin: “Grimaldi’s”
Simon: “Downtown Atlantic”
Thies: “Five Leaves”

What’s currently playing on your mp3 player? (Or, what is your favorite song?)
Abraham: “For tonight, it’s, ‘Anything you can do, I can do better’”
Baer: “Springsteen, ‘Born in the USA’”
Biviano: “I’m a U2 guy, too, but if I’m singing karaoke it’s Frank Sinatra, ‘New York, New York’”
Diamondstone: “I’ve been listening to Pete Seeger, after his 90th birthday”
Levin: “Bruce Springsteen, Brahms”
Simon: “What’s an mp3 player?” and, then, “Oh, Patsy Cline”
Thies: “I have 30,000 songs on my iPod. But, I’m listening to the new U2 album and it’s a huge disappointment”

Do you support East River tolls?
Abraham: “no”
Baer: “most definitely”
Biviano: “not yet”
Diamondstone: “definitely”
Levin: “only if the price is correlated to the cost of the subway”
Simon: “yes”
Thies: “yes”

Do you support putting condoms in public high schools? All yes, but for Abraham who said, “Let the parents decide.”

Do you support including ROTC in schools?
Abraham, Thies: yes
Baer, Diamondstone, Levin, Simon: no
Biviano: “condoms”

Do you support allowing cellphones in public schools?
Abraham: “condoms”
Baer: “yes”
Biviano: “not sure”
Diamondstone: “not sure”
Levin: “for emergencies”
Simon: “yes”
Thies: “in school, not class”

And, to end on a warm-fuzzy note, each candidate was asked to describe the candidate to his/her left with one nice adjective:
Abraham to Baer: “Entertaining.”
Baer to Biviano: “Nice, a good person, handsome.”
Biviano to Diamondstone: “A lot of heart.”
Diamondstone to Levin: “Perhaps he’s veto-proof.” (“Vito proof.” Ha!)
Levin to Simon: “Very intelligent, exceptionally intelligent.”
Simon to Thies: “Careful.”
Thies to Abraham: “Determined.”

Aaand, scene.

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This week’s community meetingshttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9739 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9739#comments Tue, 19 May 2009 19:08:39 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=9739

(BHB/Sarah Portlock)

(BHB/Sarah Portlock)

It’s a big week for local government!

First and foremost, the New Kings Democrats will host its debate for the 33rd district city council race in Williamsburg tonight at 7 pm, at Harry Van Arsdale High School Auditorium (257 North 6th St. at Havemeyer Street). All seven candidates have promised to show up, and North Brooklyn reporter/blogger Aaron Short is asking the tough questions to keep things lively.

On Thursday, the City Council will hold its public hearing for Dock Street at 10 am at City Hall. Here’s a link to the full agenda.

But back to tonight: it’s also Community Board 2’s transportation meeting, at 6 pm at St. Francis College (180 Remsen St., between Clinton and Court streets).

And the 84th precinct is hosting its monthly community council meeting, at 7 pm tonight at the Baptist Temple in Boerum Hill (360 Schermerhorn St., at Third Avenue) Commanding officer Mark DiPaolo will present the precinct’s crime report and action results.

Tomorrow (Wednesday) morning, city officials will celebrate the landmarking of the BellTel Lofts in Downtown, at 9 am in the building’s lobby (365 Bridge St., at Willoughby Street). The building is now condos, but was landmarked in 2004 and a plaque was recently installed to its façade. The full Landmarks Preservation Council report is here [pdf]. To RSVP, email belltellofts AT austerevents.com.

Also tomorrow night is the CB2 land use committee, at 6 pm at Polytech’s Dibner Library (5 Metrotech Center, Room LC400).

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B’Paper: Levin Promises to Attend His First 33rd District Debatehttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9597 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9597#comments Fri, 15 May 2009 13:01:13 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=9597

herdSteve Levin, candidate for David Yassky’s 33rd District City Council seat, vows that he’ll attend next week’s debate sponsored by the New Kings Democrats.  Levin works for Democratic jefe Vito Lopez;  pundits ponder if that connection is a negative or a positive for the candidate.

Brooklyn Paper: So far in the race to succeed Councilman David Yassky and represent the 33rd District — which stretches through Greenpoint, Williamsburg, DUMBO, Brooklyn Heights, Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill and Park Slope — candidate Steve Levin has missed three such campaign forums in the Brownstone Brooklyn portion of the district, sparking concerns that the 27-year-old candidate doesn’t think he needs to campaign in those neighborhoods to win.

Levin, after all, is chief of staff to the county Democratic Party chairman, Assembly Vito Lopez, a fact that contributed to his recent endorsement by the labor union 32BJ and a campaign war chest that puts him at the top of the seven-person race.

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The Herd for the 33rd: The Magnificent Sumthin’ Sevenhttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9413 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/9413#comments Tue, 12 May 2009 20:17:37 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=9413

herd
Oy vey!  We have such a headache from trying to remember all the candidates for David Yassky’s New York City Council seat representing the 33rd District.  Perhaps we should give them nicknames?  Nah, too early and just too easy to go the “Snow White” route.  Anywho,  the Herd for the 33rd meet for another debate next week sponsored by the New Kings Democrats.  Based on some reports, the last one can be best described as an Ambien-alternative.

All things considered, who says it’s too early for a poll?  Vote after the jump.

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City Council candidate debate round-uphttp://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/8771 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/8771#comments Tue, 21 Apr 2009 15:20:36 +0000 http://brooklynheightsblog.com/?p=8771

(BHB/Sarah Portlock)

(BHB/Sarah Portlock)

Monday night’s debate between six (of the seven) candidates running for City Councilman David Yassky’s seat (which may or may not be vacated) was, to be blunt, long and routine. To their credit, moderators Kenn Lowy and Lucy Koteen kept things rapid-fire, pushing the candidates to answer questions in two minutes, then one, and then 30 seconds.

The Brooklyn Paper‘s Politicrasher has a snarky take on the night, and news blogger Aaron Short, who focuses on the northern stretches of the district, has his own breezy version.

The Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats and the Independent Neighborhood Democrats hosted the evening at St. Francis College. On Thursday night, CBID will hold its endorsement meeting for the 33rd District seat.

But since there were actual topics discussed here and only about 100 people came out in the pouring rain, BHB will dissect how the night played out:

The candidates:
First things first, Steve Levin didn’t show up, owing to two important “coffee klatches” in the neighborhood.

The candidates spent much of their allotted time admitting vocally that they all agreed with each other to lessen out-of-scale development, allow same-sex marriage (except Isaac Abraham), and create more affordable housing. They also share an affinity for newcomer State Senator Daniel Squadron.

Isaac Abraham, the Hasidic businessman from Williamsburg, explained that his “entire life” has been devoted to helping communities, and, “If I had to put in one word why I was running, it’s because I’ve been here, done that.” (Um?) But, “If you don’t know me, just give me a little time and you will get to know me,” he appealed to voters.

Ken Baer, an accountant and environmental advocate, outlined three of his four goals, including having more community control over developers, improving public schools, and protecting the city’s water supply. (The fourth was lost when the timer ran out.) “Brooklyn needs a fighter, not a yes man,” he said, practically quaking. “I don’t owe anyone anything, and what matters to me is the health of our communities.”

Newcomer Doug Biviano — a Heights resident since 2000 — talked about how pro-“livable communities” he is, going so far as to say community boards should have “binding veto power” for the decisions it makes. And, he is running to protect our institutions and local businesses.

Ken Diamondstone, a longtime LGBT activist, outlined his vision for changing the city: “If there’s anything we’ve learned from the economic collapse, it’s that the city must diversify its base and economy.” To that end, Diamondstone wants to see an end to out-of-scale developers and more green developers and biotech industries.

Jo Anne Simon, a civil rights attorney and community leader, emphatically said, “I’m running for city council not because I need the job — but because there’s a job to do.” That job involves fixing up education, working together, and creating sustainable neighborhoods.

And Evan Thies, a former Yassky staffer, rhapsodized about the “personal rewards” of the hard work of a councilman, and pointed to the wonky policy changes he hopes to see in the Council to spend money “smarter.” “Now is the time for effective government, for the people who know how to solve these problems,” he said.

Q&A
During the question-and-answer section, it was a sweet series of nice fights. Each candidate thanked the other for his/her answers, agreed with what he or she said, and tried desperately to add something new. Some highlights:

On the topic of same-sex marriage, each candidate — barring Abraham — said it was a civil right and discrimination to not allow it. Abraham conceded that he’s all for allowing equal rights to gay couples.

Thies, on the topic of over-development, said the city has had a “ready, aim, fire” approach and it hasn’t sufficiently taken into account its effects in the community. Everyone agreed.

Rent-stabilized housing? Bring control back to the city level! Repeal the Urstadt Law! Bring in real affordable housing, not systems where earning $80,000 per year is the threshold, they said.

Mayoral control? The mayor already has too much control! Give parents more accountability. Simon suggested scaling down the Education Department’s accountability office and returning the workforce to teaching. And there aren’t any well-rounded curricula anymore, Diamondstone said. Everything is taught to the test.

Housing in Brooklyn Bridge Park? No, no, no, no, no and no. There’s no precedent for housing in a park, and let’s not start here. Also, Squadron’s plan is a big hit.

Dock Street project, to include a public middle school in the 18-story residential tower near the Brooklyn Bridge? Absolutely against it, et al. Don’t put your building in my view corridor. Diamondstone did get a bit saucy, saying, “It’s disturbing to see developers dividing a community by providing something we need, and using power to play by a different set of rules.”

So that was the night. Stay tuned for how CBID and IND vote.

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