Saturday, June 27, 2015

Board Wants to Trim Building Heights in Hudson Square Rezoning Plan

SOHO In an official recommendation to the City Planning Commission Thursday night, Community Board 2 voted to deny Trinity Real Estate's application for the rezoning of Hudson Square unless the company significantly reduces its proposed maximum building heights and creates a recreation center.

In a resolution passed at CB2's full board meeting, the advisory group described "broad support" for Trinity's goal to create a "diverse and vibrant mixed-use community," but asked for concessions to maintain the quality of life of current residents.

"A significant rezoning of this densely built environment with very few opportunities for open space and community facilities will cause negative effects on both the proposed area and the adjacent neighborhood," the resolution reads. "These effects must be mitigated in order for the proposal to be acceptable."

Trinity is seeking to transform an 18-block area within Hudson Square, which is still overwhelmingly zoned for commercial and manufacturing use, into a mixed-use neighborhood. The area subject to rezoning is roughly bound by West Houston Street, Sixth Avenue, Canal Street and Greenwich Street.

Arguing that overly tall buildings would "overwhelm the buildings that now create the character" of Hudson Square, CB2 urged the city to reduce the proposed building heights of 320 feet on wide streets and 185 feet on narrow streets.

CB2 also recommended incentives for developers to create affordable housing. On wide streets, the board requested a maximum height of 250 feet for buildings with affordable housing provisions and 210 for those without them. On narrow streets, CB2 asked for a maximum of 185 feet if affordable housing is present and 165 feet if it is not.

Silvia Beam, the head of the Vandam Street Block Association, said she wanted even lower heights in her neighborhood.

"The height limits on the buildings are still way too high," she said.

A recreation center with a gym, pool, community rooms and a small theater is also on CB2's wish list. The board proposed that Trinity build the center near the 444-seat public school it is planning on the northwest corner of Sixth Avenue and Canal Street.

Trinity Real Estate president Jason Pizer said in a statement that the company would continue to work with residents and elected officials.

"We are pleased that CB2 agrees with the goals of this proposed rezoning and supports the creation of a diverse and vibrant mixed-use community that preserves neighborhood character," he said.

CB2 also recommended that the city grant landmark status to the proposed South Village Historic District championed by the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. The district is bordered by West Fourth Street, LaGuardia Place, Watts Street and Sixth Avenue.

Additionally, CB2 recommended that Trinity eliminate a planned zoning subdistrict that would have a dramatically lower maximum building height.

Under Trinity's plan, an area roughly bound by Dominick Street to the north, Varick Street and Sixth Avenue to the east, Watts Street to the south, and the entrance to the Holland Tunnel to the west could have buildings of up to 120 feet tall.

After multiple residents said the height restriction would unfairly cut into the sale values of their properties, CB2 voted against the creation of the zone, called Sub-District B.

Lifelong Broome Street resident Linda Sousa, 55, said Trinity's requested zoning for the sub-district would represent a huge blow to the value of her property.

"If this is approved, over half of the value of our properties will be appropriated for someone else's gain," she said.

In the next steps of the city's land-use review procedure, Trinity's proposal will be subject to an advisory vote by Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, followed by votes by the City Planning Commission and City Council.

New Startup Delivers Late-Night Mini Cakes Via Bikers in Spacesuits

MANHATTAN The founder of a new West Village-based business says it's high time for a gourmet solution to the munchies.

Greenwich Village and West Village residents can now have chocolatey treats delivered to their doorsteps as late as 2:30 a.m. by a bike-riding deliveryman wearing a spacesuit.

In mid-April, sweets purveyor Lazy Looz launched delivery in "the NYU area" of its bite-sized "no-bake chocolate biscuit cakes," founder and current deliveryman Rakan Ammouri said Tuesday.

With order-in service Thursday through Sunday from 7:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., Lazy Looz serves a crowd that skews young.

"Our market is anyone who needs a late-night sugar fix," Ammouri said. "Late-night munchies, that's actually a plus."

About the company's unconventional delivery method, the 27-year-old former banker said only, "I just wanted to be a little different." 

Growing up in Amman, Jordan, Ammouri and his brother Ramzi, 31, learned the recipe for the treat sometimes known as "lazy cake" from their mother. When Ammouri's girlfriend made him the treat last year for his birthday, the idea for the business hit him.

"I wake up at night for a bite of Looz," he said. "And I realized no one knew what it was."

The name for the sweets is a spin on his late mother's name, Leila, Ammouri said.

The mini-cakes made from tea biscuits or cookies, dark chocolate, condensed milk, cocoa powder and butter have the "slight crunch of a biscuit" and the gooeyness of melted chocolate, Ammouri said. They come in flavors including peanut butter, orange and mocha and are sold six to a box for $5.

For now, Lazy Looz delivers between roughly West 15th Street, Broadway, West Houston Street and Hudson Street. But Ammouri wants to bring sweets to more Manhattanites.

"The more demand we see, the bigger we'll get," he said. 

Friday, June 26, 2015

Electric Chair Window Display Puts Buzz in Bleecker St. Horror Show

WEST VILLAGE With Halloween fast approaching, high-end stores have turned Bleecker Street into an haute horror show complete with taxidermied animals, a metallic monster and an alarmingly realistic electric chair.

The Marc by Marc Jacobs Men's store at 382 Bleecker St. leads the pack of the tony retail strip's best seasonal window displays, with a wooden chair that hosts a heap of empty menswear using belts by the brand.

Store assistant manager Dan Donigan said the chair, which is guarded by a skeleton and a mannequin with a rat's head, has drawn loads of attention since it was set up recently.

"A lot of people have asked if it's real," he said, "and have said it's kind of creepy and sadistic."

The chair was bought from a Halloween store, and the skeleton with transparent arms full of blue and red wires was made by Brooklyn-based design group The Guild, Donigan said.

Across the street, a wrapped-up dressmaker's dummy in the window of the Ralph Lauren RRL store at 381 Bleecker St. rivals the creepiness of the Marc Jacobs window by crawling with furry mice.

A store manager said the display, filled with anchors and chains, draws on one of the company's clothing trends.

"It was inspired by our Royal Navy line, so [the window] has an old, creepy ship theme," said the manager, who declined to give her name.

Farther south on the block, the Alexis Bittar jewelry store at 353 Bleecker St. showcases the brand's baubles on taxidermied animals.

A chunky gold bracelet is looped around the ears of a white rabbit, and another jewel is clutched by a stuffed squirrel.

At the Cynthia Rowley store at 376 Bleecker St., mannequins with dark-eyed "Day of the Dead"-inspired masks model white and black dresses.

Jacobs also offers up a display of Halloween ghouls at another of his Village stores, at 403 Bleecker St.

The window of the Marc by Marc Jacobs Women's store features a fierce metal monster with a branded tote bag in its teeth, penned inside a lush, imitation jungle.

Cab-Jacker Sentenced to 11 Years in Prison After High-Speed Chase

 Michael Findley crashed a stolen cab into a light poleĀ on Feb. 27, 2011 after speeding 80 mph through downtown Manhattan.
Michael Findley crashed a stolen cab into a light pole on Feb. 27, 2011 after speeding 80 mph through downtown Manhattan.
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Phoebe Kingsak/Twitter

MANHATTAN The man who commandeered a terrified cab driver's vehicle on the Lower East Side and raced through the streets of Greenwich Village and SoHo at 80 mph more than two years ago was sentenced to 11 years in prison Wednesday.

California native Michael Findley, 33, was convicted of robbery, reckless endangerment, grand larceny and criminal possession of stolen property for hijacking a cab and taking a 25-minute joyride early Feb. 27, 2011.

According to police and the Manhattan District Attorney's office, Findley's crime spree began when he flagged down a taxi at the Bowery and Delancey Street after 3 a.m. When the driver tried to throw Findley out of the cab at East Houston and Lafayette streets, Findley punched the cabbie, climbed into the driver's seat and sped off, leading police on a high-speed chase through red lights and into oncoming traffic.

The nearly half-hour-long chase ended when Findley wrapped the cab around a light pole at Union Square West and East 15th Street.

Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance Jr. said Findley deserves the 11-year sentence followed by five years on probation.

This defendant stole a taxi cab and recklessly sped for more than 30 blocks through the streets of New York, endangering the lives of everyone who had the misfortune to cross his path, Vance said in a statement. It is a miracle that no bystanders were seriously hurt that night.

Findley, who defended himself after discharging his court-appointed attorney, claimed to have an IQ of 165 and told a Manhattan jury he was drunk and under the influence of cocaine at the time of the chase.

I was drunk! I didnt have any intentions! I didnt even want the car," he said, according to the New York Post.

Findley is being held on Rikers Island and is set to be transferred to state prison. 

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Buy A Trump SoHo Condo For $1.9M in Bitcoin Only

 The owner of a one-bedroom home in the Trump SoHo "condo-hotel" listed the unit on May 2, 2013 with the provision that it be bought exclusively in the money-substitute known as Bitcoin.
The owner of a one-bedroom home in the Trump SoHo "condo-hotel" listed the unit on May 2, 2013 with the provision that it be bought exclusively in the money-substitute known as Bitcoin.
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(Masck/Flickr)

MANHATTAN A whole lot of virtual currency can now buy a luxury apartment in the real world.

The owner of a one-bedroom home in the Trump SoHo "condo-hotel" listed the unit on Thursday with the provision that it be bought exclusively in the money-substitute known as Bitcoin.

Listed on the "Bitcoin luxury marketplace" BitPremier, the 741-square-foot suite with one-and-a-half bathrooms was on the market for 18,547.617 bitcoin, the equivalent of $1,947,500, on Thursday afternoon. The value of the currency created in 2008 by an anonymous group of tech experts fluctuates.

BitPremier founder Alan Silbert told Business Insider, which was first to report on the listing, that he thinks demand for the unit in the 48-story glass building at 246 Spring St. will be high.

"There are plenty of Bitcoin millionaires out there, and it's burning a hole in their pocket," Silbert told the website. "I think buyers will be easy to come by."

The equivalent of $1.3 billion worth of bitcoins are in circulation now, according to its creators. 

Family of Woman Killed by Truck in Union Square Sues City for $30 Million

MANHATTAN The mother of a 21-year-old actress who was struck and killed by a garbage truck in a Union Square hit-and-run this spring has sued the city in the fatal crash for $30 million claiming that poor roadway conditions and the design of the vehicle contributed to the young woman's death.

In a lawsuit filed Friday in New York State Supreme Court, Roxana Sorina Buta's mother, Cristina Oprea, charges the city, the Department of Transportation, the Department of Design and Construction, an unnamed driver and the truck manufacturer with negligence she claims caused the deadly May 24 crash.

It also claims the unidentified driver who has not been charged in the incident must have known he or she struck Buta due to the force of the impact. 

"Upon information and belief, the driver fled the scene and is free to continue driving New York City dump trucks recklessly, while Roxana is dead and her mother, Ms. Oprea, is simply devastated and suffers extreme emotional distress from the loss of her only child," the lawsuit states.

In addition to accusing the driver of being "careless and reckless," the suit blames the city for creating poor traffic and road conditions at the high-volume intersection.

Buta, who friends described as talented and lighthearted at a June vigil, was struck by a dump truck shortly after 1 a.m. on Thursday, May 24 as she crossed Broadway, south of 14th Street, heading from her Greenwich Village waitressing job to her East Harlem apartment.

According to the lawsuit, Buta had been crossing Broadway eastbound, with the walk signal, when she was struck.

The suit charges the city, DOT and DDC with improperly designing and maintaining the roadway, and with failing to control traffic or warn drivers to watch for pedestrians.

A flaw in the pavement may have contributed to the crash, the suit states. In the spot where Buta was struck, there is a dip in the asphalt that causes pedestrians to step off the sidewalk "into a lower stance and out of the view of drivers," according to the suit.

Additionally, the lawsuit claims that the driver must have known he had hit someone, "because the force of the impact would have obviously alerted him to this fact."

The driver was not charged in the crash and there is no criminality suspected, police said.

The District Attorney's office rejected multiple requests by Oprea and her lawyer, Joe Tacopina, to identify and prosecute the driver, according to the suit.

The DA's office did not immediately respond to an inquiry.

Transportation advocates have called the incident part of a larger trend of drivers involved in fatal pedestrian crashes not being held accountable for their actions.

The suit also accuses the truck manufacturer, Mack Trucks, Inc., of recklessly selling a product with large blind spots.

"Defendants were negligent, careless and reckless in the driving, ownership, operation, management, maintenance, supervision, use and control of and manufacturing of the Mack Truck," the suit says.

A spokeswoman for the city's Law Department said the office had not yet seen the suit.

"We recognize that this case involves tragic circumstances," the spokeswoman said. "We will review the legal papers when we receive them."

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

'Nerd-Cappella' Choir Seeking Geeky Songbirds

MANHATTAN Calling all geeks who can carry a tune.

A club called Choirfly, which touts itself as having New York's "premiere nerd-themed a cappella group," is holding open auditions in NoHo Wednesday night for people who love both music and nerd culture. 

"Choirfly's members share a love of singing, in addition to their affections [for] comic books, video games, sci-fi, RPGs [role-playing games] and fantasy," the group explained on Facebook. 

The choir is seeking singers for all voice parts, with no experience necessary, according to audition information.

Would-be nerd crooners should come prepared to sing "Professional Pirate" from the 1996 movie "Muppet Treasure Island" and the "Weird Al" Yankovic song "Hardware Store," which is about someone who loses sleep because he's so excited about a new hardware store opening in his town.

More than 20 people have indicated on Facebook that they would take their shot at joining the choir. Others from across the country said they wished they could chime in.

"I want to move to NYC just to join a nerd-themed a cappella group [called] Choirfly," @robot wrote. 

"Love the concept, ADORE the name, and totally wishing you were in L.A.," another Twitter user, @RebelBelleWed wrote. 

Others lamented the fact that they couldn't attend because of other nerdy commitments. 

"Will there be additional auditions? My life is owned by Gothic Renaissance until November 1st, and I'm definitely interested," Facebook user Melissa Koval wrote, referring to the Fourth Avenue Goth clothing and costume shop.

The Choirfly auditions will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 24 at 440 Studios at 440 Lafayette St., Room 3B.

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Bike Share War Rages at Village Forum

GREENWICH VILLAGE Bike share foes griped that newly installed docks blocked building entrances and destroyed the aesthetics of Greenwich Village and SoHo at a packed meeting Thursday night.

Crowding the auditorium of P.S. 41, many locals said they worry the Citi Bike docks the city's hottest talking point since installation recently began will degrade the historic character of the area and block building access for emergency vehicles, seniors and people with special needs.

"How is a fire truck supposed to pull up in front of my building?" Village resident Deborah Stone, 55, asked.

"We have people in wheelchairs and people who use walkers. How are they supposed to get to the curb to get a cab, to get Access-A-Ride?"

 The 31-bike docking station was installed on Bank Street near Hudson Street April 24, 2013.
The 31-bike docking station was installed on Bank Street near Hudson Street April 24, 2013.
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DNAinfo/Andrea Swalec

Responding to some neighbors touting what a success bike-share programs have been in European cities, Stone snapped.

"I don't care what they do in Paris, I live in New York City," she said to cheers and applause.

Ian Dutton, a former CB2 member and ardent bike-share supporter, dismissed the worry that Citi Bike docks will block emergency access to homes.

"Firefighters can pull a hose through the bikes just like they pull them between two parked cars," the airline pilot said.

Docks placed in the street take away sorely needed parking spots for cars, said Westbeth Artists' Housing resident Jane Klein, 42, who estimated she spends five hours a week looking for parking or moving her car because of alternate-side rules.

A group of SoHo residents griped about the location of a Citi Bike dock placed in the middle of one end of Petrosino Square.

"The northern half of that triangle was created and dedicated for the display of public art," resident Pete Davies said, noting the city initially planned with Friends of Petrosino Square for the space to have that use.

A businesswoman based at 99 Bank St., where residents sued the city and DOT to have a 31-bike dock removed from the front of their building, said the dock tainted the feel of her block.

"They shouldn't be on these little, quaint residential streets," store owner Carol Kaas said.

Community Board 2 initially planned to host an informational film on bike-share programs Thursday night, but opted to give locals the opportunity to voice their opinions about the controversial transportation plan instead.

Representatives of the Department of Transportation declined to attend, CB2 chair David Gruber said to booing from the audience.

Longtime Village resident Stu Waldman, 71, one of many Citi Bike supporters in attendance Thursday, said he would rather see bikes than cars and large trucks on his block.

"Our streets aren't pristine now. Having bikes instead of cars will be a lot better," said Waldman, who runs a publishing company.

Dutton said he thinks bike-share foes will get used to seeing the docks.

"I think if we had this meeting in a month, everything would be fine," he said.

Thank you for reading article Bike Share War Rages at Village Forum

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Proposed Anti-Bias Law Would Protect Transgender New Yorkers, Advocates Say

LOWER MANHATTAN Two state lawmakers from Manhattan opened their doors to transgender people and LGBT advocates Wednesday at a public forum they held to push for proposed legislation they say would extend the rights of transgender and gender non-conforming New York City residents.

The Gender Expression Non-Discrimination Act (GENDA), which State Assembly Member Richard Gottfried and State Sen. Daniel Squadron sponsored, would give statewide legal protections to people who are denied employment, housing, access to health care, or access to stores or restaurants because of their gender.

"It is simply unacceptable that a New Yorker can lose their job or be evicted from their home because of their gender identity or expression," said Squadron, who represents lower Manhattan and the East Village, as well as parts of Brooklyn. "It's time for New York to stand up for what's right and ensure that all people, no matter how they identify, are treated with the fairness and dignity they deserve."

GENDA has passed in the state Assembly five times, but it remains stalled in the Republican-controlled Senate.

For transgender New York City residents, who are protected by a city law banning gender-based bias, a new state law would offer additional legal recourse.

"GENDA would allow New York City residents to file a claim with the State Division of Human Rights based on a report of discrimination," said Katharine Bodde, policy counsel for the New York Civil Liberties Union.

The law would also protect transgender city residents when they leave the five boroughs.

"No resident of New York state should fear that they're on the wrong side of the county lines when it comes to providing for their family," said Christopher Argyros, a transgender-rights organizer for Empire State Pride Agenda.

Melissa Sklarz, a transgender woman who is director of the New York Trans Rights Organization, said GENDA could have given her legal recourse when she was fired after her employer learned she would begin to identify as a woman, not a man.

"GENDA would have created the same level field of opportunity for me," she said.

Noah Lewis, of the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund, said it's heartbreaking to have to tell transgender people calling to report discrimination in counties without anti-discrimination laws that he has no legal leg to stand on to help them. For those people, the passage of GENDA is a life-or-death issue, he said.

"On a weekly basis, I have [transgender] people tell me they're at the end of their rope," he said.

Gottfried, whose district covers the West Side and parts of Midtown, asked forum participants including the police chiefs of Albany and Rochester to address the oft-stated concern from opponents of the bill that people who are not transgender would use the law to invade women's restrooms and locker rooms.

"I truly believe that passing this legislation will not lead to those types of incidents," said James Sheppard, Rochester's chief of police.

Causten Wollerman, an organizer for the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, said he had never heard of such an incident anywhere in the country.

"I don't know of any circumstance under which one of these laws has been used to protect or shield someone [regarding] criminal behavior or indecent behavior," he said.

GENDA could be on the agenda at a special session of the state Senate this December. Or, if Democrats take control of the Senate in the upcoming election, the bill could go to the floor early next year, insiders said.

Sixteen states, Washington, D.C., New York City and New York state counties including Albany, Buffalo and Rochester already have laws banning discrimination against transgender people, according to Empire State Pride Agenda.

Sheppard, a 34-year police veteran who is black, described transgender rights as a civil-rights issue.

"You take gender expression out of it," he said, "and it sounds like we're talking about African-Americans or Latinos."

City Promises Clearer Rules for Park Performers After Busker Crackdown

GREENWICH VILLAGE The city is fine-tuning its rules for where musicians can jam out in public parks.

Amid rampant complaints from musicians who say public-performer regulations are unclear and inconsistently enforced, the head Parks Department administrator for Manhattan said at a recent meeting that buskers can expect to see clearer rules soon on where they're permitted to play.

Parks Department Manhattan Borough Commissioner Bill Castro told dozens of concerned performers at a community meeting Wednesday that that Parks Enforcement Patrol officers who oversee the park will be given new guidance on what musicians and other street performers are allowed to do.

"We are going to make it clear within a matter of a few days," he said. "You will not have a problem."

Castro assured Washington Square Park performers that they will not be ticketed for performing within 50 feet of the park's arch or fountain, as they were in 2011.

"You don't have to be X feet away from this or any of that jazz," he said. "You can be next to the [arch and fountain], as you've always been. It's not going to change."

He also introduced a rule that will go into effect May 8 requiring anyone selling CDs to place them on a table 2 to 8 feet long.

"You can sell those without a permit, but you have to get a stand so people don't trip over them," he said.

But musicians and Community Board 2 members said they want the Parks Department to put all the policies clearly in writing, rather than enforcing only a portion of the laws that appear in print.

"What Commissioner Castro told you is so opposite to the actual text of the park rules," said artists' advocate Robert Lederman, who has battled the city in court for 20 years over rules for "expressive matter" vendors.

Pianist Colin Huggins, who has received dozens of tickets for playing in the park, agreed.

"We want to make sure there's something in the rules to clarify so that it doesn't happen again," he said, referring to the 2011 crackdown.

Longtime local Gil Horowitz, founder of the Coalition for a Better Washington Square Park, urged Castro not to strip the character of the park by restricting artists.

"Washington Square Park is magical, and we want to keep it magical," he said. 

Monday, June 22, 2015

Rare Andy Warhol Polaroid of Diana Ross to Hit Auction Block

 The rare Andy Warhol Polaroid 'Diana Ross' will be up for auction at the Children's Museum of the Arts' annual Art Auction Oct. 23, 2012.
The rare Andy Warhol Polaroid 'Diana Ross' will be up for auction at the Children's Museum of the Arts' annual Art Auction Oct. 23, 2012.
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© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

MANHATTAN One of legendary New York artist Andy Warhol's iconic Polaroids of celebrities will go up for auction Tuesday night to benefit a Hudson Square museum.

Warhol's 1981 portrait of soul siren Diana Ross will hit the auction block at the Children's Museum of the Arts' annual Art Auction in Chelsea, museum staff said Tuesday.

The shot of a young Ross looking over her shoulder was offered by an anonymous donor, who had its value appraised at $16,000, according to CMA acting director Lucy Ofiesh.

She said the Polaroid offers a "raw, authentic image of a celebrity" and a glimpse at part of New York history.

"[The Polaroids] represent something that's so iconic about New York," Ofiesh said. "It feels like a very authentic, Downtown New York moment."

Bidding for the photo, which is embossed with Warhol's name, will open at $8,000.

In previous years, the CMA has auctioned Warhol Polaroids of Farrah Fawcett, Yves Saint Laurent, Debbie Harry and Dennis Hopper, Ofiesh said.

According to the website of the Danziger Gallery on West 23rd Street, which exhibited some of the Warhol Polaroids this spring, the artist used the shots both as a precursor to screenprinted portraits and as works of art in themselves.

The Diana Ross Polaroid is one of 80 pieces of art up for auction at the event, which will be co-chaired by the actor Ethan Hawke. Works by Yoko Ono, Cecily Brown and Robert Longo are among the offerings.

Proceeds from the gala, which raised $330,000 last year, will benefit the CMA's art outreach programs that visit schools, hospitals and temporary housing facilities in all five boroughs.

The Children's Museum of the Arts' Art Auction begins at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 23, at the Dream Downtown at 355 W. 16th St. Tickets, which start at $150 each, are available online until 3 p.m. Tuesday and at the door after then. Staff members can administer absentee bids if someone wishes to bid but cannot attend the event, Ofiesh said.

Drunk Woman's Death Prompts Vigilance at Bars, But They Can't Save All

GREENWICH VILLAGE A stumbling girl in her 20s looked lost inside the busy Bleecker Street bar Wicked Willy's one chilly night last spring.

When head bartender Michelle Erland approached the young woman, she said her friends had left her and she didn't know where she was. Erland pulled two $20 bills from the cash register, hailed a cab with a coworker and accompanied the drunk girl to her Midtown hotel.

Wicked Willy's owner Andy Ramgoolie said knowing a customer got home safely was worth losing $40 and two staff members for an hour.

"Everyone who goes here, we're responsible for them," he said. "You really have to make sure people get the right care."

Shana Dowdeswell, 23, likely didn't have bartenders who noticed she needed help as she downed whiskey shots on the nightlife-heavy blocks of central Greenwich Village early the morning of Dec. 7.

The actress died of acute and chronic alcoholism on Dec. 12 after she was found collapsed on the stoop of her family's Minetta Street home. Still grieving her daughter's death, her mother, Laurie Smith,  said at a community meeting late last month she wants local bars to help prevent dangerous binge drinking and stop obviously intoxicated people from leaving bars alone.

In the wake of Dowdeswell's death, Village bar owners and staffers have said they spend thousands of dollars on security measures to try to keep bargoers safe, but that they cannot prevent every tragedy.

Speaking over live music in the Bleecker Street bar The Red Lion, general manager Ann Gibson recently ticked off the pub's long list of safety precautions. The bar and restaurant employs four security guards, has 16 video cameras trained on all parts of the establishment, pays for all staff to participate in an alcohol-awareness training and only hires experienced bartenders who can spot signs of trouble early.

Still, Gibson a pregnant mother of two daughters who said news of Dowdeswell's death "touched my heart" said bar industry workers know they cannot thwart people hellbent on binge drinking.

"I don't think [bars] can totally prevent something like this from happening," she said, referring to Dowdeswell's death.

Nonetheless, she pushed her staff to try.

"Maybe if [Dowdeswell] had relationships with bartenders, they could have pulled her aside and said something," she said.

On streets full of festive bars advertising $2 beers and $3 test tube shots, some young women said they feel pressure to drink more from bartenders and men who offer free drinks.

"I think a lot of bartenders go overboard, especially if they think a girl is cute. They'll just keep serving," said Jessica, a 22-year-old Hoboken resident who declined to provide her last name in order to pass under the radar of her sales job bosses.

She and two female friends recently downed drinks at three Village bars. As they prepared to leave the MacDougal Street pub Off the Wagon, a bartender asked what else he could bring them.

"You're not just gonna sit there if you don't drink anything," he said flirtatiously, Jessica said.

Instead of heading home for the night, she and her friends drank another round of vodka cocktails.

Down the Hatch management was not available Friday to comment on its policy regarding serving free drinks.

Lamia Funti, co-owner of the LaGuardia Place lounge Le Souk, said she viewed preventing binge drinking as a joint responsibility between bars and patrons.

"People are responsible for what they do, but at the same time [bars] cannot serve someone who is obviously intoxicated," she said, noting the 4,500-square-foot bar and restaurant has six security guards each night and uses a top-of-the-line identification scanner that records images.

Wicked Willy's found itself in the middle of the debate on personal responsibility versus bars' responsibility for the hazards of drinking in 2011, when the bar was was sued by a 22-year-old customer.

Plaintiff Alan Berger, 22, said Wicked Willie's should have protected him from getting so drunk playing beer pong that he walked across a New Jersey highway and got hit by a car. A judge dismissed the suit, ruling that Berger played the drinking game voluntarily and that Wicked Willy's had no legal obligation to warn patrons about the risks of the game.

Ramgoolie declined to discuss the lawsuit but said he believes bars can make nightlife safer.

"We can't curb everything, but we try," he said, noting that like The Red Lion, he pays for all staff members to participate in an alcohol-awareness training.

The New York State Liquor Authority sets requirements for such programs offered by private entities, but it does not require that bar staff members participate in them.

State law prohibits bars from serving "any visibly intoxicated person" and advises staff to recognize signs of drunkenness like bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, the smell of alcohol and staggering. Though these criteria are subjective, bars can be held legally accountable for an injury or death caused by a visibly intoxicated person who a bartender served, such as in the case of a death caused by a drunk driver.

The SLA did not respond to inquiries by DNAinfo New York about any violations received by the bars mentioned here.

Dowdeswell drank at the basement bar of BBQ on West Eighth Street before she collapsed, manager Ronnie Mejia confirmed. She seemed "normal," he said, and appeared at the bar for only 45 minutes. Dowdeswell's mother believes BBQ was only one of the establishments where her daughter drank alone on her final night out.

Meija said staff at the bar confiscate IDs they believe are fake and throw out people who are visibly intoxicated. However, they likely don't catch everything.

"I'm upstairs, downstairs. I'm busy. Sometimes I can't see every single person," he said.

Smith, who said neither she nor her family had considered Dowdeswell an alcoholic, said she was heartened to hear about the extent of the security measures at many local bars.

But she said she wants New York state to require alcohol-awareness training for all bar staff.

"People should have personal responsibility, but people who are handing out what could be potentially fatal should be trained," she said. "It would have helped the bartenders that were serving my daughter that night."

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Foster Child Photos at Children's Museum Help Match Kids with Families

MANHATTAN About two years ago, a man considering adoption happened upon an image online of a boy looking for a home. The professionally shot photograph showed 11-year-old Nicholas, a youngster he thought had expressive, sad eyes.

A year later, after a first meeting playing cards together followed by months of administrative hurdles, the man and the boy in the photo are father and son.

Social service organizations and the city's Administration for Children's Services will try to make more adoptive parent-child matches in Hudson Square starting Wednesday, when a new exhibition of photographs of foster children goes on display at the Children's Museum of the Arts.

New York City kids living with foster families like a 9-year-old boy shown with his arms protectively wrapped around his 6-year-old sister got the red-carpet treatment when they had their portraits taken by photographers including Deborah Feingold and Len Irish, who usually shoot celebrities for magazine covers.

"Here's a photographer who was one day working for Angelina Jolie, and the next day they're photographing a kid for free to help him find a family," said Laurie Sherman Graff, the executive director of exhibition co-sponsor Heart Gallery NYC.

"They really work on bringing the individuality and spirit of the child into the photo, and that really does reach out to people," she added.

Heart Gallery NYC, part of a national project started in 2001, has displayed since 2006 photographs of children in search of "forever families," as the group phrases it.

About a third of the children photographed are placed in adoptive families after they are featured in photo exhibitions, Graff said. Heart Gallery NYC refers potential adoptive parents to agencies that work with the state to screen families and determine their compatibility with one of the 12,800 foster children in the city. 

Wallace Seay, a director for exhibition co-sponsor the Catholic Guardian Society and Home Bureau which helps match youth and new families said the photo shoots help raise kids' confidence.

"I've seen very shy children blossom during a photo shoot," he said. "It empowers the children and give them a sense of hope and well-being."

Through the end of May, which is National Foster Care Month, the photographs will be part of the "Face to Face" exhibit of youth portraits at the 103 Charlton St. museum.

CMA director of community programs Rachel Rapoport said the Heart Gallery NYC exhibit meshed well with the museum's existing programming for families using the foster system.

Art-making and creativity helps families "bond, interact and play together," she said in a statement.

More than a dozen youth photographed plus several families considering adoption are scheduled to attend a private exhibition debut event Tuesday.

"Some of the people there might be good matches for the kids there," Graff added. "Fingers crossed."

The Children's Museum of the Arts at 103 Charlton St. near Hudson Street is open Monday and Wednesday noon to 5 p.m., Thursday and Friday noon to 6 p.m., Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and closed Tuesday. Admission costs $11 per person, with free entry for seniors and infants under a year old. Admission is pay what you wish on Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m.

High Line and Standard Hotel Dotted with Pill-Shaped Art

MEATPACKING DISTRICT Pill-shaped public art is popping up all around the High Line.

More than a dozen works by the modern artist Richard Artschwager are being installed on the High Line, Standard Hotel and the Whitney Museum of American Art's future location in the Meatpacking District.

Ranging in size from 1 to 5-feet-tall, the simple black or white capsules the artist calls "blps" are going up in conjunction with a retrospective of Artschwager's work that opens Thursday at the Whitney.

According to a statement from the museum, the spots placed in surprise locations are intended to "inspire focused looking, and draw attention to architecture, structures and surfaces that usually go unnoticed."

The artist first introduced blps, pronounced "blips," in the 1960s, installing them in New York, California and Europe. In 1968, Artschwager pasted 100 of the capsules around the Whitney. Photographs of that project appear in the new exhibition, which is exuberantly named "Richard Artschwager!"

Cecilia Alemani, the director of High Line Art, said putting "a three-dimensional painting" on the High Line was a natural choice.

The High Line is a natural theater for art, with its lush landscape, innovative design and breathtaking views of New York City," she said in a statement.

The curator of the modern art gallery at Yale University, Jennifer Gross, said the spots call attention to the beauty around them.

"Artschwagers blps are a natural extension of the High Lines embrace of its community and will only make even more visible the aesthetic richness of New York," she said in a statement.

Blps are also installed around the Whitney's current location at 945 Madison Ave. at 75th Street, a museum spokeswoman said.

People strolling on the High Line Tuesday afternoon said the art was so subtle they had not noticed it.

"If it's meant to be unobtrusive, it's unobtrusive," said Alice Olive, an Upper East Side resident who works in investor relations.

Her sister, who was visiting from Sydney, Australia, recommended a tweak to the project.

"I think a cluster of them would be more striking. Just one gets lost," said Kathleen Olive, a cultural tour leader.

Deborah Nasalga, a Lower East Side native who now lives in Cairo, N.Y., said she thought  the blps, which will be brought to the High Line by the Whitney and Friends of the High Line, blended in too well with their surroundings.

"I barely see how anyone would notice them," she said.

The blps will be on view through Feb. 3.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Rich, Drunk Bar-Goers Are Easy Prey for Village Thieves, Cops Say

 Rich, drunk bar-goers are leaving pricey goods and wallets unattended for thieves to snatch, police said.
Rich, drunk bar-goers are leaving pricey goods and wallets unattended for thieves to snatch, police said.
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GREENWICH VILLAGE Thefts are up in the Village and Meatpacking District due to rich, drunk bar-goers leaving pricey goods and wallets unattended for thieves to snatch, police said.

An alarming number of grand larcenies reported in the nightlife-rich neighborhoods this year have occurred after people left their bags at bars and laptops on tables while they socialize, smoke or visit the restroom, said 6th Precinct Deputy Inspector Brandon del Pozo.

"It's intoxicated, affluent people leaving their stuff around," del Pozo said at a community meeting this week.

The grand larceny rate, which covers the theft of goods worth at least $1,000, has risen more than 12 percent in the precinct this year through Oct. 14 with 870 reported incidents compared to 774 last year within the same period, NYPD statistics show.

Despite their careless behavior, victims are often stunned to find their valuables vanish, del Pozo said.

"All I did was leave my purse for 15 minutes while I used the ladies room," one woman said, according to the commanding officer.

To catch and deter thieves, 6th Precinct officers, including those in plainclothes, are patrolling bars and clubs, del Pozo said.  

Police reminded community members to always keep a close eye on their belongings.

SoHo Bike Dock to Remain in Former Art Spot Despite Outcry

SOHO Some SoHo residents say a Citi Bike dock recently bolted into a Spring Street park should be moved because its location was designed for public art.

SoHo residents' groups and others said Wednesday the 33-bike dock installed at the apex of triangular Petrosino Square does not belong in the spot that was last home to an art installation in November.

"We're livid. That area was supposed to be reserved for art exhibitions, not bikes," local advocate John Fratta said, adding he's looking into what legal action residents could take to have the dock moved.

Friends of Petrosino Square member Pete Davies called the location of the bike share dock near the intersection of Spring and Lafayette streets "inappropriate."

"That is an area dedicated to the presentation of public art," he said in an email. "The installation of the Citi Bike racks does not meet the requirements for Citi Bike siting as described by NYC DOT in the DOT Bike-Share Siting Guidelines."

But the DOT says locals already had ample time to help choose the Citi Bike dock locations.

"Bike share station locations are the result of more than 65,000 suggestions from the public and were discussed at 400 meetings with the public, elected officials, property owners and many others the most extensive of any transportation project in city history," spokesman Seth Solomonow said in a statement Wednesday.

The Petrosino Square location "resulted from the community-planning process last year," he added.

City Councilwoman Margaret Chin said locals have her support in finding an alternate location for the Petrosino Square bike share dock.

I think that it always comes down to details with plans like these," she said in a statement. "We are working with DOT and the community to find the best location for the dock."

Passing by the bike share parking spots Wednesday afternoon, some who live and work in the area said they liked the dock location.

"It's gonna be great," said SoHo resident Brendan Fallis, a 33-year-old entrepreneur and DJ. "Art can be anywhere. If you're creative you should be able to make art anywhere. You've gotta just move with the times or you're just gonna be a hater your whole life."

Others said they would support moving the dock to someplace slightly less centrally located.

"It should be on the east side or the west side of the park, not in the space where there should be art," said Zoe Langer, a 26-year-old web designer who works in SoHo.

Friends of Petrosino Square is suggesting the dock be moved to the east side of Lafayette Street north of Spring Street, where the street is wider and the bikes would not crowd the small park.

Community Board 2 passed a resolution in May 2012 urging the DOT to keep Citi Bike docks out of parks because they would take up space and encourage people to ride bikes in the park.

The Parks Department wasn't immediately available to comment on whether another portion of the park will be designated for art use. The northern end of Petrosino Square was used for "Survival of Serena," an ultra-lifelike sculpture of a tranquil woman wearing a pink bathing cap, May to September 2012, and a jail cell replica called "The Glass Sea" in October and November 2012.

Village and SoHo bike share foes said at a CB2 meeting May 2 that the docks will degrade the historic character of the area and block building access for emergency vehicles, seniors and people with special needs. Residents of 99 Bank St. have sued the city, DOT and Citibank to have the dock removed from the front of their building.

Friday, June 19, 2015

Service Dog Helps Children Learn to Read at Mulberry Street Library

NOLITA Benson Lam read an "Encyclopedia Brown" book aloud in a lower-level nook of the Mulberry Street Library Wednesday with the help of an assistant a Border Collie-greyhound mix who rested his head in the 9-year-old boy's lap as he sounded out the words.

Lam's mom said she takes her son to the library for the unconventional story hour with licensed therapy dog Theo every month because it's making the third-grader at nearby P.S. 130 a stronger reader.

"It gives him confidence and encourages him to correct his own mistakes," said Mei Chen, a 35-year-old teacher's assistant whose family lives in Brooklyn.

For the past five years, the New York Public Library branch on narrow Jersey Street has hosted reading time with Theo and his trainer Kimberly M. Wang, a West Village resident. The story time is part of the NYPL's citywide Reading Education Assistance Dogs program, which launched about 10 years ago, a library spokeswoman said.

Children who become anxious about reading aloud can learn to do so with more ease with the help of therapy dogs, said Wang, a photographer and television production veteran.

"When kids are first learning to read, they can be so self-conscious. When they're reading with a dog they know the dog doesn't judge them," she said.

When young readers who stroked Theo's ears on Wednesday struggled to pronounce certain words, Wang told them to try to sound the words out for the benefit of the dog.

"Theo doesn't know that word. Let's teach it to him," Wang said.

She explained later that having the opportunity to teach "another being" empowers children to be in control of learning.

P.S. 130 first-grader Angelina who sat down with Theo Wednesday to read "Pantaloon," the story of a pastry-loving poodle said reading with the dog every month helped expand her vocabulary.

"I like to read with dogs. It helps me know more words," she said.

Angelina's mom, Bella Zhao, said she noticed her daughter seemed more focused on reading when the dog was in her lap.

"When she reads with the dog, she will pay attention," Zhao said.

The mellow 9-year-old rescue dog who has calmed patients in pediatric hospitals and AIDS hospice facilities has become part of the Mulberry Street Library community since he began visiting in January 2008, senior librarian Susie Heimbach said.

"It's so nice for kids to be in a warm, non-judgmental setting when they're learning to read," Heimbach said, noting children bring the dog presents and bound up to him on the street as if they're greeting a long-lost friend.

When Wang adopted Theo from a New Jersey shelter in 2004, he was untrained, hyper and tugged on his leash. Wang had her doubts about the dog, but she saw he made sustained eye contact, a sign he could be trained, she said.

Naming him after Vincent van Gogh's brother, who supported the artist's career, she took Theo home to the Gramercy Park studio apartment where she lived at the time and began to teach him hand signals and take him on regular runs. She knew she wanted to put him to work.

"Most dogs do best when they have a job," Wang said. "Sitting around in city apartments all day long with nothing to do makes for some anxious, bark-y and even aggressive animals."

She said many dogs can be trained to become therapy dogs.

"All they need is love, a stable home and enough exercise and structure," she said, adding that she is currently fostering a 6-month-old coonhound-Plott hound mix she thinks has similar potential to become a therapy dog.

"The great thing about dogs is that they're not judgmental," Wang said. "Their mere presence is so calming."

Families can check the Mulberry Street Library's website or Facebook page to find out when Theo will visit next.

6 Train Service Stalled at Spring Street After Person Struck on Tracks

SOHO Downtown 6 train service was stalled during the Friday morning rush after a person was struck on the subway tracks at the Spring Street station, authorities said.

The MTA has rerouted service along the downtown 6 line after the person was found alive under a train at the station, officials said.

Regular service along the line was restored around just before 10 a.m., an MTA spokesperson said. 

Emergency crews responded to a call of a person under a train at the subway station, near Lafayette Street, just before 8 a.m., an FDNY spokesman said.

The unidentified person was found alive and talking and hadnt been taken to the hospital as of about 8:45 a.m., the spokesman added. It wasn't immediately clear how the person ended up on the tracks.

The MTA has routed 6 train service along the express route from Grand Central-42 Street Station to the Brooklyn Bridge-City Hall Station, a transit official said.

Commuters can also expect delays along the 4 and 5 lines, according to the MTAs website.

How the person ended up on the tracks is unclear and police are on scene investigating the incident, officials said. 

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Hairstylist to the Stars Opens Shop Selling $5K 'Crown' Wigs

WEST VILLAGE Hairstylist Hadiiya Barbel has shaped locks for celebrities including Star Jones, Iman, Wendy Williams and hip-hop star Sandy "Pepa" Denton.

As she racks up clients with bold-faced names, the Bronx-born powerhouse has one request don't call her creations wigs.

Barbel opened her first retail location last week in the West Village selling what she refers to as "crowns." Sporting a snakeskin-print dress, sky-high heels, a wide belt with an Yves Saint Laurent logo and long, wavy locks, she explained her terminology.

"The word 'wig' has a big stigma with it. You're kind of looking down on someone when you use it," Barbel said Thursday afternoon as she and her staff buzzed around the small storefront at 225 W. 10th St. trimming and curling pieces for a V.I.P. grand opening event.

"When a woman says she's wearing a crown, though, her posture changes."

Hadiiya Barbel Collections sells crowns made from synthetic hair and human hair from Brazil, China and India. With names like the Butterfly (with "beachy and loose" waves) and the Executive ("a nice power cut"), the pieces start at $300 each and climb to $5,000 for custom-made selections that can take up to three months to make.

"Those are for women who want the best of the best of the best," said Barbel, 34.

Her main clients are women who need to create various looks for work in film and television, and women dealing with hair loss. Helping a woman find the perfect crown is empowering, she said.

"I make a woman feel really good," said Barbel, who won a Daytime Emmy Award in 2011 for her hairstyling work on "The Wendy Williams Show."

To create the right piece, Barbel looks at a woman's face shape, facial features, personal style and lifestyle. Before she thinks about what color a piece should be, she considers its most important feature.

"It's all the cut and the shape," she said. "Every hairstyle starts with a great cut."

Bleecker Street Drug Dealing On the Rise, Police Say

 Police said at a community meeting Oct. 24, 2012 that drug dealing is up on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village.
Police said at a community meeting Oct. 24, 2012 that drug dealing is up on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village.
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DNAinfo/Andrea Swalec

GREENWICH VILLAGE Police are trying to make drug dealing in the Village go up in smoke.

Sixth Precinct cops have seen an uptick in drug sales on Bleecker Street since the summer and are putting more uniformed and plainclothes officers on the street to confront the problem, they said at a recent community meeting.

"It's something we're conducting enforcement on," said the precinct's commanding officer, Deputy Inspector Brandon del Pozo.

The precinct has arrested about five people, both dealers and buyers, in the area each weekend for the past month for sales and attempted sales of marijuana and cocaine, police said, declining to provide additional arrest statistics.

The crackdown which focuses on the three blocks of Bleecker Street between MacDougal Street and LaGuardia Place may also be preventing unwitting tourists from buying phony drugs, del Pozo said.

"To see an Australian tourist put baking soda up his nose is something someone should see at least once in their life," he said.

Many of the dealers on the strip have been jailed multiple times and return once they are sprung from jail, the deputy inspector added.

"That's built into their business model."

Police said the Bleecker Street situation is unusual, because the majority of drug deals in Manhattan occur via home deliveries south of 59th Street.

"What's different about Bleecker is they have at 2, 3, 4 in the morning drug deals going on," del Pozo said.

The precinct is also dealing with an uptick in grand larcenies related to thefts of cash and electronics from unattended property in the nightlife-rich neighborhood. 

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Breezy Point Faces Long Road to Recovery After Sandy

QUEENS When Hurricane Sandy was still churning far off the coast Sunday night, Breezy Point resident Linda Strong left home with nothing but an overnight bag.

"I thought I was going for a night," said Strong, 59, a school secretary.

On Wednesday, she returned home to find a pile of charred wreckage where her two-story home stood in the tight-knit community on the western edge of the Rockaways, in a scene officials have described as looking like a war-zone.

Surveying the smoking remains of her beachfront neighborhood, Strong couldn't believe the landscape was the place she called home for four decades.

"You look out and you say, 'It's just not real," she said.

With blue skies overhead and the ocean still churning, Breezy Point was in pieces Wednesday, with homes torn open like dollhouses and residents wading through streets blocked by knee-high water.

At least 80 homes burned to the ground after the storm in a wind-whipped fire, and a strip of 20 businesses on Rockaway Beach Boulevard in Rockaway Park continued to smolder through the day Wednesday.

Ankle-high black water sat inside the foundations of what were once homes to dozens.

Stunned residents pored over the wreckage of their homes Wednesday, with little idea of when they might be able to restore electricity, gas and water to the neighborhood. The area's septic systems will have to be repaired as well.

Officials did not immediately respond to inquiries about when residents can expect the services to return.

"It's a tremendously tough road here," said volunteer firefighter John Nies, 55, who said he didn't expect life in the neighborhood to return to normal for years.

Mike Bracci, a 72-year-old retired construction worker who has lived in the neighborhood for 20 years, said he was still shocked by how much damage the storm did.

"[Tuesday] morning I got up and walked through the fire area for two hours and was just crying," he said.

Bracci said he rode out the storm in his house even though his wife urged him to join her in an evacuation.

"It is not even in my mind to leave. This is my home," he said, adding that though he has no water, no electricity and three feet of water in his basement, he  has no regrets about staying.

Resident Jennifer Pappas, a 47-year-old nurse who grew up in Breezy Point, spent Sunday night in the home of a friend in Bay Ridge. She drove back to Breezy Point Wednesday for the first time.

She began to sob as she stepped onto the buckled concrete boardwalk that overlooked the ruined seaside home she had lived in since age 4.

"I really didn't think I wasn't coming back to a house," Pappas said.

Despite the devastation, Pappas and many other hurricane victims say their close community will band together to rebuild.

"I hope to demolish and rebuild here," Pappas said.

And Strong said that "there are too many pluses about this place to leave."

Volunteer firefighter Ricky Savage, who struggled to control the seaside blaze, said he would stay in Breezy Point despite the water damage to the home he has lived in since childhood.

"I would never leave here," said Savage, 55, citing the main draw of Breezy Point as its "brotherly love."

"We're going to rebuild and be back again," he said.

Lucille Dwyer, whose two-story home burned to the ground, said seeing the debris where her house once stood gave her the impetus to build stronger.

"I'm heartbroken," said Dwyer, who lived in the house with her husband and son for 23 years. "But I feel better since I came and saw it. I can move on and rebuild."

Dwyer's son poked through the wreckage of the family's home with a metal rod he found on the ground, recovering little more a few bottles of liquor and an untouched rack of DVDs.

As Strong dug through the wreckage of her home Wednesday in search of the number plate that marked her address, she found a survivor like herself, a sturdy vine that she said would take root again and bear blue flowers.

She carried the vine close to her side in a white plastic shopping bag.

"I'm going to keep this and plant it in front of my new house," she said.

McNally Jackson Owner Sells Hip Staplers at New Nolita Office Supply Store

NOLITA People who keep farm-fresh produce in the kitchen and high-thread-count sheets in the bedroom have a new spot to shop for something better than the standard Swingline stapler in the office.

The team behind the popular McNally Jackson Books on Prince Street now also runs the nearby McNally Jackson Store: Goods for the Study, a boutique the sells up-market office goods like a wooden stapler ($35) and matching wooden tape dispenser ($41.50).

Owner Sarah McNally said all the items in the 234 Mulberry St. shop, which offers stationery, desk goods, furniture and art, are there to stimulate the mind.

"Everything in the shop is related to sitting and thinking and working," she said. "Everything is useful."

McNally, a 37-year-old Prospect Heights resident, said the home goods store that quietly opened last Wednesday seemed like a natural counterpart to the bookshop, which serves people who value a "tactile lifestyle" and want physical books.

"[The store] is trying to seize the workspace back from working on a smartphone," she said. "Now, when everything is so digitized, it has robbed our lives of their texture and their beauty."

The decor of the shop itself matches its merchandise, with a warm hardwood floor, white painted brick walls and exposed wooden beams in the ceiling.

Standing amid brass pencil cases ($68) and spiral-bound agendas with pale peach graph paper ($25), customer Shana Faust said she admired how the McNally Jackson Store curated simple, useful items.

"It's not just about beautiful things," said Faust, a 36-year-old Downtown Brooklyn resident who works as a photo stylist. "It's about beautiful things that work."

McNally Jackson Store: Goods for the Study, located at 234 Mulberry St. between Prince and Spring streets, is open Monday through Saturday 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Beloved Harbor Light Pub, the 'Rockaway Cheers,' Destroyed by Sandy

QUEENS For more than a decade, the restaurant at the corner of Beach 130th Street and Newport Avenue served as a refuge from the hardships that hit the close-knit community. 

After the owners of the Harbor Light Pub lost their son in the 9/11 attacks, the eatery became a neighborhood memorial to the dead. 

When American Airlines Flight 587 slammed into Beach 131st Street Nov. 12, 2001, the Harbor Light opened its doors for use as a command station for emergency workers. 

But on Monday, the fires that raged through the Rockaways burned the neighborhood fixture to the ground, taking with it a beloved neighborhood landmark, longtime customers and one of its founders said Thursday. 

"It's heartbreaking. Everything [here] is heartbreaking, but that was the middle," said Paul Wade, a Belle Harbor resident, who  visited the Harbor Light several times a month for burgers and beer since the eatery first opened more than 30 years ago.

Little more than the Harbor Light's blue awning and an unscathed American flag remained after the fire at the restaurant, which was located at 12918 Newport Ave. 

Barbara Heeran, who opened the bar in 1980 with her husband Bernie, said she and her family prided themselves on serving reasonably priced meals and providing a meeting place for the community.

After her 23-year-old son Charles, who worked on Wall Street, was killed on 9/11, her family covered the walls with photographs of him and other people lost in the attack. 

Members of the family, who took turns working as waiters, bartenders and busboys, looked to Charles as a protector, said Barbara Heeran, who is 62.

When Flight 587 missed hitting their house and the restaurant by mere blocks, the Heerans said their late son had watched over them. 

"My husband said [Charles] gave the plane a little kick so it didn't hit our house," she said Thursday in her home, which was still without electricity or water service. 

Their son's friend Christopher Lawler, who was also 23, and his mother Kathy were killed when the plane exploded on top of their house.

Right after the crash, the Harbor Light served as an impromptu disaster center, Heeran said. 

"It was the Ground Zero," she said.

Before this latest disaster, Heeran and her family taped a photograph of Charles onto a mirror in their living room. 

"We said, 'Let's put him up. He'll help us with the storm,'" Heeran said. 

While many homes in the Rockaways burned, Hurricane Sandy mostly spared the Heerans' home, though the basement filled with 6 feet of water. 

Heeran learned of the fire at the Harbor Light from a text message her nephew Brian received. 

"I said, 'Oh my God. I hope everyone is OK,'" she said. 

Heeran, who has lived in the area since age 10, walked to the restaurant Wednesday and was stunned. 

"I couldn't believe it," she said. 

Regulars said they would miss the neighborhood standby for fish, steaks and hamburgers. On its second floor, a party room hosted countless locals' baptism and engagement parties. 

"Everyone went there. Everyone had good times there," said Wade, 53. 

"It was the Rockaway 'Cheers,'" said resident Vinny Furlong, who has lived in the neighborhood for nearly 30 years. "You walk in and you're going to know 15 people." 

Heeran said her husband and their four surviving children will rebuild the bar and in the meantime will be sustained by their friends and Catholic faith. 

"I feel there's a reason for things," she said.

Public Plaza to Open Alongside Holland Tunnel Traffic

HUDSON SQUARE The newest park in lower Manhattan will offer the shade of leafy old trees, tables and chairs with matching lime green umbrellas and a whiff of car exhaust.

Located next to some of the worst traffic in New York, a public plaza is set to open Thursday at Hudson and Broome streets, just west of the entrance to the Holland Tunnel.

The Hudson Square Connection, the business improvement district for the recently rezoned neighborhood, created the $200,000 park because it saw an opportunity to transform "dead space" owned by the Port Authority, the group's president, Ellen Baer said.

"Open space in Manhattan, especially in this area, is so rare. When you find an opportunity, you want to really take advantage of it," Baer said. "This is a piece of a puzzle that will transform the whole neighborhood."

The 15,000-square-foot area known as Freeman Plaza West will have two entrances on Hudson Street, near Broome Street and Watts Street.

The Port Authority donated 17 small trees and plants for the plaza. Four of the trees will memorialize four Port Authority officers who were killed on 9/11. A fifth tree will be dedicated to other victims of the terrorist attack.

The plaza is the first of four green spaces the BID plans to create around the Holland Tunnel entrance, roughly bound by Broome, Varick, Watts and Hudson streets. These areas are part of the $27 million streetscape project the BID presented in October that would build outdoor "living rooms" on medians along Hudson Street and redesign SoHo Square, the narrow park west of Sixth Avenue from Spring Street to Broome Street.

Baer said she thought workers in Hudson Square, which is home to MTV and WNYC, would have an open mind about eating lunch alongside tunnel traffic.

"We have a very creative and imaginative tenancy here," she said.

"We think they'll use their imaginations. People made fun of the High Line too. You never know until you try it."

The Connection will celebrate the opening of Freeman Plaza West on Thursday from 12 to 2 p.m. with free food from the local caterer Eet, free beverages from the tea company King Kava and music by the "novelty ragtime" group The Xylopholk. The plaza will be open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to dusk.

Monday, June 15, 2015

SoHo Bike Share Dock Needs to Move 'Immediately,' Pols Say

SOHO With thousands of Citi Bikes set to speed into town on Memorial Day, local elected officials are asking the Department of Transportation to move an unpopular docking station in SoHo right away.

In a letter released Tuesday afternoon, SoHo's elected officials said the DOT needs to move the 33-bike dock installed at the apex of triangular Petrosino Square, located at Spring and Lafayette streets, which was originally designed as installation space for public art.

"[The bike dock] should not, under any circumstances, be placed inside Petrosino Square Park," read the letter, signed by City Councilwoman Margaret Chin, State Assemblywoman Deborah Glick and State Sen. Daniel Squadron.

"The placement of bike stations in small, pocket parks, in park-starved communities, is
inappropriate, including Petrosino Square Park," the letter continued.

The DOT said it would take up the issue with local politicians. "We look forward to speaking with elected officials about this bike share location," an agency spokesman said.

Spokesman Seth Solomonow previously said locals already had ample time to help choose the Citi Bike dock locations, as part of the most extensive public outreach effort of any transportation project in city history.

The group Friends of Petrosino Square has suggested the dock be moved to the east side of Lafayette Street north of Spring Street, where the street is wider and the bikes would not be in front of any businesses.

Chin, Glick and Squadron said they want the dock relocated "immediately," potentially to this alternate location.

Devastated Residents Find Comfort at Breezy Point Mass

QUEENS Nearly a week after seawater surged into Breezy Point and fires raged from house to house, hundreds of local Catholics packed the pews of an area church to try to make sense of the disaster. 

Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio instructed parishioners and visitors at St. Thomas More Church, which was still without heat or lights, to lean on their faith as they grapple with putting the waterlogged pieces of their lives together. 

"God is never closer to us than when we suffer and struggle to find out why this happened to us," DiMarzio said to his audience, filled with many dressed in rubber boots and dirty jeans.

The bishop, who was interrupted by the sound of demolition equipment rumbling outside, recalled the spirit of unity in Breezy Point which is home to many police officers and firefighters after the 9/11 attacks. 

"You came together then and you came together now because you are a community of faith," he said. 

Though DiMarzio asked parishioners to maintain "an immense amount of patience and understanding," as utilities are restored, he criticized LIPA, which powers the Rockaways.

Residents have asked DiMarzio "why it seems the whole peninsula has been abandoned by LIPA," the bishop said. "I question it with everyone else." 

Church usher Steve Romano, a Rockaway Park resident who spent the week helping his ex-wife and girlfriend clear storm wreckage from their nearby homes, said the Sunday mass had special meaning for him.

"It makes you feel whole. If I didn't go, I'd feel like I was missing something," he said. "It's nourishment."

Parishioner and fourth-generation Breezy Point resident Kathleen Beissel, who has stayed in a Long Island house with 28 other relatives since fleeing the storm, said the mass, and seeing neighbors she had only spoken with via text message, was a great comfort. 

"It reassured us, being here and seeing everyone," she said. 

Claire Ryan, a parishioner whose house flooded, agreed: "It felt like a big family was brought together."

Sen. Charles Schumer, Rep. Bob Turner, Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes and Councilman Allan Jennings attended the mass and spoke afterward with residents. 

Schumer said close-knit Breezy Point residents will rebuild the neighborhood.

"This is a community that comes together," he said. "The best resource we have here is the people." 

At least 80 homes burned to the ground after the storm, and hundreds of others suffered damage in the neighborhood, which is still without power, natural gas or safe drinking water. 

Father Sean Suckiel, a 27-year-old newcomer to the church, evoked the death and resurrection of Jesus to explain the rejuvenation he predicted would occur.

"After Good Friday, there's Easter Sunday," he said. "After destruction, there is new life."

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Man Who Confessed to Killing Etan Patz Will Face Trial

MANHATTAN SUPREME COURT A judge ruled Wednesday that there is sufficient evidence against the man who confessed to kidnapping and killing 6-year-old Etan Patz in SoHo 33 years ago for the case against him to go to trial.

With Hernandez, 52, in court Wednesday afternoon appearing gaunt, Hon. Maxwell Wiley turned down a bid for the case to be dismissed and ruled that prosecutors may be able to prove that Pedro Hernandez killed Etan.

Hernandez's defense attorney, Harvey Fishbein, said he plans to prove in court that Hernandez made a false confession in May 2012.

"We're prepared to go to trial and show the people of New York that Pedro Hernandez had nothing to do with what happened to Etan Patz in 1979," Fishbein said.

He added that he feared the attention on Hernandez who Fishbein has previously said has hallucinations and an IQ in the "borderline-to-mild mental retardation range" distracted from the investigation into previously suspected Jose Ramos, who was questioned and released last year.

"That's where we believe the focus should be," Fishbein said.

In March, Wiley turned down Fishbein's request to grant the attorney early access to grand jury minutes, which Fishbein hoped would prove prosecutors lacked sufficient evidence to indict Hernandez.

Etan, whose family still lives on Prince Street, disappeared on May 25, 1979, the first day he was allowed to walk to the school bus by himself. A lengthy police investigation proved inconclusive.

In 2001, the child was declared dead, even though his body was never found.

In May 2012, Hernandez, a husband and father of two with no criminal record, became the centerpiece of the reopened investigation when authorities received a tip from his family member.

Hernandez, who was 19 at the time of Etan's disappearance, told investigators he lured Etan into the basement of the West Broadway bodega where he worked with the promise of a soda, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said last year.

Hernandez said he choked the child and put his body in a plastic bag, which he left on the street, police said.

Hernandez is due back in court July 31.

Sandy Victims Struggle to Keep Warm as New Storm Nears

NEW YORK CITY With temperatures plummeting, New Yorkers ravaged by Hurricane Sandy were trying desperately to stay warm as a massive new winter storm took aim at the city.

From Far Rockaway to Chelsea, people have struggled to survive without power, heat or hot water since the storm with no relief in sight as crews race to repair the city's severely damaged electrical and steam systems that still affect more than 80,000 residents.

In the meantime, desperate residents have been resorting to innovative and in some cases dangerous ways to stay warm, including using their ovens for heat.

Tow truck driver Eddie Pizarro, 44, who lives in Rockaway Beach, said his family uses the stove to keep the apartment warm.

We boil water on the stove to heat the room up, he said. But the heat couldnt reach the bedrooms so we all slept on quilts and blankets in the living room near the kitchen. 

What can I say? I just thank God that we are okay."

Their building has not had power since the monster storm tore through New York City last Monday night, killing 40 and leaving hundreds of thousands in the dark.

Power has been restored to nearly all of the more than 200,000 Manhattan customers who lost electricity, but tens of thousands in Queens, Brooklyn, Staten Island and the Bronx remain in the dark. Hundreds of customers who got power back still have no heat because they rely on steam heat, which can't be turned back on until the pipes are checked for water, officials said.

Restoring steam is slow because water has to be cleared from within and around the pipes in order to prevent explosions a painstaking process that could take another week to complete, officials said.

"We're working steam-main by steam-main," said John Miksad, Con Edisons Senior Vice President of Electric Operations. "We've got a lot of water to remove from our system just as folks are removing them from basements and subway tunnels and everything else."

He said the brunt of the steam outages were located in Manhattan south of 14th Street, and added that he hoped to restore steam heat to all outage customers by Sunday. 

Carmen Nunoz, who lives in a public housing development on Beach 84th Street, has been piling on extra layers to fight off the chill.

Its just so cold in my house. No heat," said the 58-year-old retiree, who was sifting through a pile of clothes Friday that volunteers left at Rockaway Boulevard and Beach 94th Street. "The power was back yesterday but still no heat.

Nunoz has been putting on extra sweaters, gloves and wore five light jackets and a white puffy coat to keep warm.

I had to put on two pairs of socks and three pants to be warm, she said. I am trying to find some pajamas now as I just cant sleep in jeans all the time.

The lack of heat has also been tough on the younger members of her family, including her 18-year-old son, who suffers from asthma, and her 2-year-old and 4-year-old grandchildren.

Its very hard for my two grandchildren ... to deal with the cold. My son is 18 and he had asthma also, she added. The heat should have been back. The whole building just had nothing to survive on. No food, no nothing.

Tyron Gamble, 39,  the cold has hit his infant son at the Ocean Bay Apartment complex on Beach 54th Street particularly hard.

Its been rough. My son got too cold and he cried all the time, he said. I wrapped him in blankets but it didnt help.

The frigid temperatures have also been tough on his ailing mother.

It took the toll on my mother. She had arthritis so she ached, said Gamble, who lives on seventh floor. Its too hard for her to go up and down. She stepped one step at a time and stopped. It took her 10 minutes going down and 25 minutes to go up.

Desite wearing two sweatpants, two coats, two blankets and two socks, Gamble wasn't able to fend off the chill.

I didnt have any gas or water to boil," he said. "I came out here for the sun."

Those left reeling by the storm have more bad news coming their way a Nor'easter is developing off the Atlantic coast and taking aim on our area amid plunging temperatrues.

The tempest could bring wing gusts as high as 40 to 50 mph and up to 2 inches of rain when it arrives during the day on Wednesday.

"If we didnt just have Sandy, I dont know that we'd be making a big deal about this storm," said AccuWeather.com meteorologist Tom Kines.

"The fact that its following in the heels with Sandyit is going to be a big deal."

The biggest risk, he said, would be from falling trees and flying debris although storm surge could be an issue as well, depending on the wind direction.

"If the winds are northeasterly, it could push some water in," Kines said.

The MTA, which experienced severe flooding during Sandy, said that it is "monitoring" the storm.

Cold temperatures will be another factor for New Yorkers struggling without power.

The mercury was set to drop into the 30s Monday night and lows for the week will hover around 40 degrees. And highs will only reach into the 40s for the rest of the week, according to AccuWeather.com.

To heat his apartment at the Grand Street Guild on the Lower East Side, Armin Madera, 56, has been pushing a ceramic heater from room to room and boiling water on the stove to bathe, a technique employed by many in the building and around the city without heat.

"It's the only one I have," he said. "The heater warms about half of the room."

And while he has no water, he filled a bathtub before the blackout so he could flush the toilet and bathe.

"Luckily, we did have gas so I could warm the water to sponge-bathe myself," he said.

Ohters in the building decided to stay in their homes, no matter how cold they got.

Rafaela Diaz-Lopez, 94, a former shoe factory worker, tried to keep warm by tucking herself under blankets alongside a space heater.

During Sandy, she had stayed with a nearby relative who along with a caregiver, dropped in to check on her every day but hurried home after a few days.

"I wanted to be back," she said.

At the Fulton Hosues on Ninth Avenue between 16th and 19th streets, where some residents didn't even have gas, housing staff have been going door-to-door to check on residents and the National Guard has been handing out food water and blankets.

But the building is facing the prospect of not having heat until the weekend.

"We have cold water. We have power. We need the heat," said Emilio Feliciano, 82.

"Suffering," he added. "That's the name of the game."

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Broadway Beauty Pageant Showcases Hottest Male Stars

MANHATTAN The fairest man on Broadway will soon be crowned in a contest complete with a swimsuit competition.

Six of the most-admired guys to grace Broadway stages will compete in the seventh annual Broadway Beauty Pageant Monday night at NYU's Skirball Center for the Performing Arts, raising funds for homeless LGBTQ youth services organization the Ali Forney Center.

The contestants who will perform in the talent portion of the show, strut in swimwear and be interviewed are Callan Bergmann of "Silence! The Musical," Julius C. Carter of "Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark,"  Yurel Echezarreta of "Matilda," Matthew Goodrich of "The Nance," Orion Griffiths of "Pippin" and Paul HeeSang Miller of "Mamma Mia!"

Theater-world stars Andrea Martin of "Pippin," Michael Urie of "Buyer and Cellar" and Billy Porter of "Kinky Boots" will judge the show, but the big winner will be determined by the audience.

Past judges have included Rachel Dratch, Ana Gasteyer and Michael Musto.

With headquarters in Midtown, the Ali Forney Center provides housing and social services to youth in New York and beyond.

Tickets for the Broadway Beauty Pageant at 566 LaGuardia Place cost between $25 and $150 each and are available online. VIP tickets include premier seating, pre- and post-show cocktails and a gift bag.

Rockaway Residents Divided on Whether to Spend Energy on Voting

QUEENS As Election Day hit the Rockaways, some residents still busy securing food, heat and water said they said they had little idea where to cast their votes, and others reported they were too busy meeting their basic needs to track down ballot boxes.

Retired city employee Brad Stevens, 59, said he was too preoccupied by storm recovery to care about the national and local races.

We have no heat, no electric, no cars, no transport to get anywhere. Voting is the last thing on my mind for now, said Stevens, who lives in public housing on Beach 91st Street.

Shore Front Parkway resident Eddie Pizarro, 44, echoed the sentiment.

"Ive got to take care of my family for now, he said.

Others said they wanted to vote but didn't know where to do so.

"There nobody out here telling us where to go," said Syeeta Dickerson, a 38-year-old home health aid who lives on Beach 40th Street.

Beach 84th Street resident Gerald Scott said he feared voices in his neighborhood would not be heard.

We dont want to be cancelled out on this," said Scott, 44.

Unlike some of her neighbors, Shawnette Wilson, a Guyana native, said government response to the storm, including the presence of the National Guard, made her more eager to vote.

"I think Obama is doing well and has been taking care of us," said Wilson, 39, whose Beach 66th Street home suffered extensive water damage. "This makes people want to vote even more."

The city Board of Elections has combined and relocated polling sites because of flooding and damage. The Rockaways have four polling sites, located at P.S. 180 at 320 Beach 104th St.; Far Rockaway High School at 821 Bay 25th St.; M.S. 53 at 10-45 Nameoke St. and P.S. 104 at 2601 Mott Ave.

In an attempt to ease confusion, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced late Monday that he had taken the "extraordinary step" of signing an emergency executive order that will allow New Yorkers to vote at any polling site in the state.

Compared to the last week, he said, going out and voting "will be a walk in the park."

Board of Elections workers will be visiting closed polling sites Tuesday to tell voters where they can go, according to a poll worker who declined to provide his name because he was not authorized to speak with the media.

Voters can find poll sites on the board's website, via the board's smartphone applications or by calling 311.

Voters without Internet service or with spotty cell phone service can text NYCVOTES to 877-877, using a newly-launched system courtesy of NYC Votes! and Mobile Commons.

To help transport voters whose cars have been damaged, shuttle bus service will be running to help get voters to their poll sites.

Attorney Michael McDermott, 42, said he would head to the polls with gusto Tuesday after cleaning his home from sunrise to sunset for a week.

"It's a five-minute fantasy diversion," he said.