....July 17, 4:31 PM
 
 
 
New York Politics As Usual & Not So Usual

Mike Schenkler & Mike Gianaris

By MICHAEL SCHENKLER

Change We Can Believe In: While the young, Democrats, liberals, and New Yorkers of all sizes and shapes are counting on a Barack Obama victory to restore to our nation the pride, self respect and good feelings that have been lacking for the last eight years, there is a lot more that is appealing about the change Obama can bring.

An Obama victory will immediately change the world’s perception of our country which has suffered greatly under the present administration. Not to discount the economic woes of the United States, but the lack of confidence in our country has significantly contributed to our weakened currency.

A new Obama administration is likely to restore confidence in America and provide world cooperation that will strengthen the dollar and the standing of the United States in world markets.

This Republican-sounding mantra may just be the incentive which will help supplement the record-setting Obama fundraising and elect Obama and with it, change we all can believe in.

The State We’re In: The Governor knows. Everyone in Albany knows. It’s about the worst kept secret in the state. New York State is in deep financial trouble. Analysts predict a record shattering deficit that our children and grandchildren could be burdened with because of the fiscal shenanigans in our time.

While the governor has quietly ordered staff cuts – leaving all vacancies unfilled except those protecting health and safety, and a 3.35% spending cut, it’s another case of too little too late in the Empire State. While he has vowed to chop major waste, claiming 5% to 10% could be cut without affecting the average New Yorker, the budget is a testimony to the same ol’ Albany games.

The less than courageous action by the governor and State Legislature in passing an almost $122 billion dollar budget, which increased spending by almost 5% from last year, continued a long series of building budgets with fanciful structure and support. Throw in the debt of quasi-public state agencies which are hidden from the public and the house of cards becomes ever-so-more-likely to topple.

And it will topple on us and our kids in huge taxes needed to repay the deficit. It will cause many to flee the state leaving those who remain obligated to an even larger share of the debt we leave them.

Yup, your legislators vote for it and will do so again next year.

Primary Election Watch: Petitioning is done, the campaign is in full swing.

Meng v. Young: the 22nd Assembly district challenger Grace Meng filed several thousand more signatures than incumbent Ellen Young. In a prelude of the most competitive primary of this election season, Meng has made it clear that she is in it to stay and in spite of the efforts of powerful councilman John Liu, some insiders are buzzing that Meng may be the stronger and better candidate.

Meeks v. Wills: While popular congressman Greg Meeks is clearly unbeatable at the ballot box, Ruben Wills has been the buzz of the Southeast Queens petition season. The young organizer out of Shirley Huntley’s operation – she’s not supporting him, we’re told – has put together a petition operation that would make any old pro proud. While Meeks will likely overpower him, Wills has established himself as a future Southeast Queens player.

Ford v. Young: Teamed with Wills, is Democratic District Leader candidate Erica Ford, an established community organizer rooted in southeast Queens’ powerful hip-hop culture. Ford is taking on party mainstay Dora Young of the powerful Guy Brewer Democratic Club. What we may be seeing here with Wills and Ford and others is the beginning of the changing of the guard as old timers from the area who dutifully backed Hillary, are facing challenges which appear to come from a newly energized group of the party emboldened by the victory of Barack Obama.

Addabbo v. Baldeo: Finally, we note that it appears that all the negotiating and posturing to give Democratic Councilman Addabbo, Jr., a clear shot at Republican State Senator Serf Maltese may have been for naught. Joe will likely have to spend his time and money battling Albert Baldeo for the right to battle Maltese. It was Baldeo, who two years ago, demonstrated that Maltese was vulnerable when the surprise little-known candidate came within a couple of hundred votes of unseating the old timer.

This seat has been the number one target on the list of the Democratic Senate campaign effort — lead by Southeast Queens’ Malcolm Smith – in their attempt to take control of the Senate.



Story time: Mike Gianaris stopped by for coffee and delivered a box of donuts to the newsroom and a quick story to this writer. Our informal chat naturally got around to Barack Obama and the Astoria Assemblyman, who is expected to announce for City Council shortly after winning reelection to the Assembly, told us of his encounter with the next President.

“When we met last year,” Gianaris said, “I told Obama that he and I were at Harvard Law School at the same time.” During Gianaris’ first year there, Obama was editor of the Harvard Law review.

The quick-witted rising Presidential candidate shot back that it was good they didn’t know each other because “We didn’t speak to lower classmen back then.”

Not to be outdone, Gianaris reassured the shining Dem star, “That’s okay; I just endorsed Hillary for President.”

Although Obama is likely to get the last laugh, Gianaris need not worry; we hear the crimson in Harvard Law is much thicker than water.

Michael Schenkler can be reached via this contact form.

Main Street Speaks Out On Wall Street

Council Members Mixed On Term Limits

Hometown Hero Dies In Afghanistan

Civilian Honored

Miracle Dog Needs Home

Rec Hall Named For WWI Heroes

Redfern Community Center Saved Again

Restaurant At Odds With Parks Department

Park Renaming Does Weinstein Justice

Trobiano’s No Longer A Kitchen Nightmare

Young Voters Show Big Numbers In Queens

Queens G.O.P. Gaga Over McCain

Hospital Lives On, Continues to Fight

Maltese Loses Key Ally In Seminerio

Stadium Memorabilia Selling Fast

Fugitive Convicted In 2001 Murder

Rally Howls For Affordable Housing

Sikhs and Arab Still Suffer Since 9/11

Queens’ Latin Jazz Coalition Finds Rhythm

Going From Here to There — Got Ideas?

Protest To Keep School Bus Routes

Rival Term Limits Bills Approach Council Floor

Stolen Torahs Returned

 
 
Costs Rising, Clock Running

By Henry Stern

Previously, we discussed the difficulties at the former World Trade Center, where, six years and seven months after 9/11, the only new structure is an office tower, 7 WTC, built by Larry Silverstein. The rest of the ruin, under the jurisdiction of the public sector, has not yet reached ground level. There will be endless remonstrances between all the parties involved as to who is to blame. No one has yet confessed to anything; no one expects any expressions of contrition.

The June 30 report to the governor by the new Port Authority executive director, Chris Ward, was a splendid idea. He has rightly absolved himself, and Governor Paterson, who appointed him, from responsibility for anything that preceded their advent. That is fair and reasonable, but the clock is now running on the new team. Ward has command responsibility for the debacle at the huge water filtration plant being built in the southeastern corner of Van Cortlandt Park.

That is not to say that Ward did anything wrong with regard to the plant, or failed to do anything he should have done. He was NYC Commissioner of Environmental Protection in the Bloomberg administration from 2002 to 2005 while the giant hole in the ground (to store and filter water) got underway. The cost of the project has risen from one to three billion dollars (estimates, all) and the enormous excavation is the closest thing to the Grand Canyon on the eastern seaboard.

Ward left the Bloomberg administration under somewhat unusual circumstances. He quit in 2005 to take a private sector job as chief executive officer of a firm which operated two container facilities at the Port, one in Red Hook and one in Port Newark. On his departure, the mayor’s statement called him an “outstanding steward of our precious water supply.” American Stevedoring, Inc. had experienced problems with city government. The Bloomberg administration wanted to get the company out of the Brooklyn waterfront so it could redevelop the area. The company believed that a former Bloomberg commissioner would be a prize asset in dealing with the administration he left. Ward lasted there about a year.

In 2006 Ward had the good fortune to become managing director of the General Contractors Association of New York. He was essentially a lobbyist for a powerful trade group, which had problems of its own. It has been my experience in government that people who skip through jobs often do better than the plodders who stay in one agency. When the jumpers have a problem in one agency, they often end up with a better job elsewhere to decorate their resume.

The New York Post took off on the WTC story with an editorial “Scrap The Plan,” which claims that Ward’s plans are “unworkable, unmanageable, unaffordable,” largely due to increasingly exorbitant costs. They suggest that he stick to Silverstein’s basic five office towers.

The Times featured an article which profiled Ward and his attitude in dealing with the financial problems of the Memorial. He said that what happened was an understandable response to the overwhelming disaster which had occurred.

The Trade Center was attacked in 1993 and destroyed in 2001. At today’s rate of progress, nothing much will have been built by 2009. Rome wasn’t built in a day, or a decade, but it was a fairly large city for its time. It didn’t fall in a day, either, see Edward Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. The World Trade Center did.
StatQuest@NYCivic.org

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Michael Schenkler can be reached via this contact form.