Monday, February 14, 2011
City Council Wants to Know When Bloomberg’s Away by Michael Barbaro - NYTimes.com
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
One Blizzard, Two Markedly Different Approaches in NJ and NYC By Bob Hennelly - WNYC
"I don’t know that you ever get everything plowed because there always are streets, there are streets not even on the map... but I think you can expect another 24 hours before we’ll get to everyone, and even then I'm not so sure," he said.
That was quite a contrast to the mayor's stoic detachment a day earlier, when he didn't seem to fully grasp just how dysfunctional things had become for most New Yorkers. "The world has not come to an end," he said. "The city is going fine. Broadway shows were full last night. There are lots of tourists here enjoying themselves."
Mayor Bloomberg kept the city open for business on Monday and held the NYPD's graduation ceremony for more than 1,100 police cadets and their families at Madison Square Garden.
Meanwhile, west of the Hudson in New Jersey, Acting New Jersey Governor Steve Sweeney had declared a statewide snow emergency the night before (New Jersey Governor Chris Christie was out of state.) That declaration marshalled all of the state's resources including the National Guard. He bought himself time by granting the state workforce a two-hour delayed opening.
"The State of Emergency gives us the ability to get a lot of vehicles off the road where we can get our roads cleaned up as fast as possible and this evening there are going to be some really high winds so we are going to have blizzard conditions this evening so it is best for people to get off the road," Sweeney told WNYC Sunday night.
The next moning, Sweeney closed state government except for the state's essential emergency personnel.
That Bloomberg decision to keep the city's massive workforce on the hook for the day really irked Councilman Peter Vallone, chairman of the Council's Public Safety Committee. He said the Bloomberg administration made a critical error when it decided not to close city agencies.
"It was absolutely a mistake," says Vallone. "There were people stranded on trains, people stranded on roads, people falling on the pavement. Nobody but essential personnel should have been coming in."
Vallone said he closed his office Monday, but he said his Facebook page blew up with hundreds of complaints from constituents about the lack of snow plows.
"There was just a storm last December which was almost as bad as this one and we saw snow plows all day and all night," Valone said on Tuesday. "For the last 24 hours, we have seen no snowplows. We are finally beginning to see snow plows on the side streets of Queens. But we have been left on our own and it has been a very dangerous situation."
City Council Speaker Christine Quinn says she is convening emergency oversight hearings because this response was such a degradation from similar snow emergencies. Quinn said she is not clear why the Bloomberg administration did not declare a snow emergency as was done in New Jersey. She says Mayor Bloomberg's response that it would have caused more chaos left her perplexed.
“Well, that makes me ask, why do we have snow emergency rules that don’t work in a snow emergency!" Quinn said. "Maybe we in fact need to look at the way we define snow emergency and the rules we put in place around snow emergencies and bring them up to date.”
Earlier in the week the city's Office of Emergency Management Commissioner Joe Bruno said only the governor could make such a declaration. But Dennis Michalski, with the state's Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, says any local mayor has that power.
Firefighters' union president Steve Cassidy says many companies could not reach fires due to snowed-in streets or because they were covering for ambulances stuck in the snow. "Response times were affected dramatically and at one point, half of the engine companies were unavailable to respond to fires or other emergencies because they were assigned to medical emergencies."
On Monday, the city's 311 phone line had 250,000 calls. One major problem was that out of the close to 50,000 911 calls the NYPD received, only 10,000, or one in five, were actual emergencies.
The Daily News Adam Lisberg and Lisa Colangelo reported in October that as a result, the busted supervisors got their pay cut $5,000 and the remaining supervisors got almost double the workload.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Help Save the LIC Millstones...!!
Thursday, July 1, 2010
New York Using Perfume Spray to Cover Stench in Astoria, Likely Caused by Wastewater Treatment Plant by Daniel Edward Rosen - NY Daily News
New York is no stranger to mysterious smells: in 2007, clouds hung over the Manhattan skyline the day a mysterious rotten egg stench wafted through parts of the city. Sabo/NewsThis gives new meaning to eau de toilette.
The city Department of Environmental Protection is using a perfume-like chemical spray to mask a fetid stench likely emanating from a waste treatment plant.
Officials hoped the citrus-scented spray would prevent a fireworks display in Astoria Park from turning into a putrid jubilee.
"I've never smelled it this bad," said city Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria), who first noticed the stench two months ago.
Vallone believes the persistent stink is wafting from the Wards Island wastewater treatment plant located just miles away from Astoria Park, where 10,000 people were expected to attend a fireworks display last night.
A DEP spokesman denied that the plant was the source of the funk. Still, the agency started using "odor-counteracting machines" to spray the chemical -- which neutralizes stinky hydrogen sulfide -- across the treatment plant yesterday.
The plant has a malfunctioning blower that normally pumps oxygen into wastewater as it's being treated, said spokesman Farrell Sklerov. The remaining five pumps are still working.
Vallone said he met with DEP officials, who detailed their spray strategy, as well as Joseph Scafidi, one of the investigators who helped sniff out the source of the mysterious maple syrup smell that plagued Manhattan in 2007 and 2009.
"He's their hound dog," said Vallone. Scafidi refused to answer questions Wednesday.
One Astoria neighbor hopes the spray will spare her from a stench that she likened to "getting hit with a wall of sewage."
"It's eye-watering," said KellyAnn Tobin, 31, a nurse who lives on Crescent St. "I don't need coffee in the morning to get up, it's that bad."
Friday, May 14, 2010
Recycling Laws Could Get Makeover by Daniel Bush - Queens Ledger
Lawmakers are pushing to bring the city's recycling laws up to date with a package of comprehensive reforms that would expand recycling efforts and increase fines for those that don't comply.The new legislation is now under review by the City Council, and builds on Local Law 19, the city's first recycling bill. When it was passed in 1989 it was widely seen as one of the world's most ambitious recycling programs.
But two decades later it is no longer enough, elected officials argue.
A group met in Astoria Park on May 10 to call for a 21st century upgrade to the city's recycling laws, citing a lack of recycling options in public open spaces in a day and age when residents are more in tune with a cleaner, greener city than ever before.
“I am excited to join my colleagues in promoting the public spaces recycling legislation,” said Councilwoman Letitia James, chair of the Sanitation and Solid Waste Committee. She said successful recycling efforts in Astoria Park and Fort Greene Park in Brooklyn have made it “easier for everyone” to recycle, and could be replicated throughout the city.
The legislation would expand plastic recycling considerably by requiring the Department of Sanitation to start recycling rigid plastic materials such as flower pots and takeout containers. The measure would take effect after a new recycling facility opens in Brooklyn in 2012, and would divert more than 8,000 tons of plastic from landfills and incinerators each year, according to city estimates.
The law would also create the position of recycling coordinator at every city school and agency; these recycling czars would be charged with increasing recycling options inside of cafeterias, classrooms and all city-run and city-owned buildings.
And in another move to update Local Law 19, the new bill would implement a tiered fine system for those who don't recycle properly. Currently, residential and commercial buildings are fined the same amount for recycling violations, regardless of their size.
The new law would create a first tier of fines for residential buildings with less than nine units, and a second tier for residential and commercial buildings alike that have nine units or more.
Councilman Peter Vallone, Jr. said the legislation would clean the city's parks and improve the environment. “We need to do everything we can to give people the opportunity to help the environment,” he said.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Astoria Scum River Bridge on Vimeo
Astoria Scum River Bridge from Jason Eppink on Vimeo.
For more than twenty years, a leaky pipe on 33rd Street beneath the Hell Gate Bridge viaduct approach submerged more than a hundred square feet of heavily-trafficked sidewalk under a festering cesspool of standing water. Astoria Scum River, as it was called, stretched the entire width of the sidewalk, and as winter approached, the river iced over and became particularly hazardous to cross.
Astoria Scum River Bridge was constructed to offer Astorians an opportunity to safely cross this hazard. The unauthorized bridge was a gift to the pedestrians of Astoria in the absence of successful municipal efforts to ameliorate the problem.
The bridge was made at zero cost entirely from recycled materials: an old work bench found on the curb, rescued screws from a disassembled desk, and a metal plate from an expired electrical component. It was installed and dedicated on December 30th, 2009.
On January 25th, 2010, Astoria Scum River Bridge was the subject of a commendation from the office of NYC Council Member Peter F. Vallone, Jr., accompanied by a pledge to work with Amtrak to re-route Astoria Scum River off the sidewalk.
Two days later, Amtrak workers began construction work. Astoria Scum River was quickly routed off the sidewalk, and within a couple months, custom-made grates were installed to complete the project. The bridge, no longer needed, was de-installed on March 20th, 2010 and returned to the curb whence it came.
jasoneppink.com/astoria-scum-river-bridge
bladediary.com/tag/astoria-scum-river-bridge
Ryan Good
Debra Keneally
Ben Speiser
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Central Labor Council Endorses Queens Incumbents Minus Ulrich by Stephen Stirling - Queens Campaigner
The Central Labor Council endorsed all but one of Queens’ nine City Council incumbents running for re-election, notably leaving off the only borough Republican member of the legislative body, Eric Ulrich (R-Rockaway Beach).
The CLC said it would endorse candidates in the Ulrich’s race and the other six disputed Council races in Queens after its candidate screening process, which will take place July 8. Jack Ahern, president of the 1.3 million member CLC, issued this statement regarding endorsements:
Today’s early endorsements recognize the strong support and positions taken for working people by these City Council Members. Each has shown a keen awareness and understanding of the issues, needs and concerns of working men and women, and have voting records that support the health, safety and well-being of workers in our city.
The candidates endorse by the CLC are listed below:
District 21 - Julissa Ferreras
District 22 - Peter Vallone Jr.
District 24 - James Gennaro
District 25 - Helen Sears
District 27 - Leroy Comrie
District 28 - Tom White
District 30 - Elizabeth Crowley
District 31 - James Sanders
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Triborough Bridge Now The RFK By Joseph Orovic - Queens Tribune
The Triborough Bridge was officially renamed the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge at a ceremony held in Astoria Park on Wednesday.Connecting Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx, the bridge (I-278), joined the New York landscape in 1936.
Former President Bill Clinton, Governor David Paterson, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and a gaggle of Kennedys faced the brunt of a bitter wind to honor the former U.S. Senator from New York and presidential candidate.
“New York wouldn’t be the City it is today without the Triborough. The United States wouldn’t be the country it is today without Robert F. Kennedy,” Bloomberg said. “It’s only fitting the naming of a bridge fit the grandeur of its scale.”
Kennedy’s daughter Kerry, a former Queens resident, recalled crossing the bridge with her father regularly, who would point to the neighboring Hell Gate Bridge and playfully tell his children, “Look at the upside-down bridge!”
Clinton argued the best memorial for Kennedy may be a pause to think of the man’s legacy every time one crosses the bridge.“He moved a generation by reminding us we can be the greatest bridge,” he said.
Still, not everyone felt the urge to eulogize that day. Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria) released a statement in light of the ceremony, saying the State and City have more important business to tend to.
“Robert Kennedy was a great man, but this isn’t the time,” Vallone said in a statement. “While one agency that gets money from the state is raising fares and cutting service to the neighborhood at the foot of the bridge, another has somehow found a way to spend millions of dollars on changing the signage of it.”
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Ballot Tally Planned To Name A Senator by Lisa Fogarty - Queens Tribune
At 9:40 p.m. on Election Night, a deafening roar could be heard filtering throughout the First Edition bar and restaurant on Bell Boulevard in Bayside, where Democratic Councilman James Gennaro (D-Fresh Meadows) was holding his election party.
The early results of the State Senate race had just been splayed across six TV monitors set up in the upstairs space and the results – Gennaro was leading State Sen. Frank Padavan (R-Bellerose) by a few votes – sent a shockwave of hope throughout the room.
But as the night wore on, Gennaro supporters realized their official victory party would have to be postponed for at least a few more days. As of Wednesday afternoon, the results showed Padavan had secured 50.4 percent of the vote and Gennaro had 49.6 percent of the vote. All absentee and paper ballots are counted a week after the election, said a spokesperson at the NYC Board of Elections. The final results of the District 11 State Senate race may not be announced until early next week.
On Wednesday, Padavan chose not to elaborate on his feelings about the race, saying he and his supporters would just have to wait to get closure.
“When all of the absentee ballots are counted next week, then we’ll have a definitive answer,” he said.
Gennaro issued the following statement on Wednesday afternoon: “I’m gratified by the tremendous support that I received in every corner of this district, and am confident that when all of the ballots are counted we will be victorious. There is serious work to be done: fixing New York’s economy, closing record budget deficits, and reforming state government. I look forward to working with the new Senate Majority Leader, Malcolm Smith, to help tackle these challenges. For the time being, the race remains extremely close and it’s critical that we respect the thousands of voters whose voices – and ballots – still must be counted.”
Dianne Smith, a family friend and volunteer for the Gennaro campaign, said she was thrilled to be there to show her support. She has been a longtime supporter of Gennaro’s policies, specifically those pertaining to his environmental record.
“This man comes to my home, takes water from my faucet, and drinks it,” Smith said. “When it comes to the environment, he really practices what he stands for.”
While most supporters kept an upbeat attitude, chitchatting about the fact that no other candidate had ever come so close to challenging Padavan’s 36-year Republican incumbency, others were clearly worried.
“I was sure Gennaro was going to take this by a landslide,” one man said.
And then, at 11:30 p.m., Gennaro made his entrance with wife Joanne and his two children. He flung off his suit jacket, rolled up his shirt sleeves, and assured the crowd that they were missing three percent of the vote and there were still paper and absentee ballots to count. With Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria) and State Senator Toby Ann Stavisky (D-Flushing) by his side, Gennaro reminded supporters of all the new voters they had registered for this election – voters who were excited about the change Gennaro’s seat would mean to the Senate.
“We’re going to pull through this,” he said. “The end of the contest is not written. At the end of the day, this kid is going to the Senate.”
After thanking his family, campaign team, and backers, whom he called “the greatest supporters in the world,” Gennaro invited Stavisky and Vallone to say a few words.
“Jim is going to be joining me in Albany in two months,” Stavisky said. “We have a good future ahead of us with a new president and we’re going to have a new state senate as well.”
Vallone, who has supported Gennaro and praised his environmental record since the Democrat’s initial bid for State Senate, was also adamant that the race was not over.
“I am so proud of everyone in this room for doing what no one thought they could do – make Jim a State Senator,” he said.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Mayor Bloomberg's Push for Third Term Affects Queens Politicians by John Lauinger and Lisa L. Colangelo - NY Daily News
Mayor Bloomberg's controversial push to extend term limits has caused a seismic shift in the borough's political landscape, forcing City Council members seeking higher office to make difficult decisions.
Many members of the Queens delegation must choose between voting to keep their current jobs or bucking the mayor while running for state or citywide office.
This scramble could also shatter the dreams of newcomers eying Council runs in 2009, a year in which 13 of 14 members of the delegation will be ousted by term limits - unless Bloomberg gets his way.
"I'm committed to running for a citywide office," said Councilman John Liu (D-Flushing). He refused to say whether he would run for controller or public advocate, claiming he saw the term-limit turmoil coming.
"I've always said this was a possibility," Liu said.
Council members Melinda Katz (D-Forest Hills) and David Weprin (D-Hollis), who plan to run for controller in 2009, could be in a quandary if Controller Bill Thompson opts for another term. So far, Thompson has said he plans to continue his mayoral bid.
Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside), who has been gearing up to run for public advocate, also expects to continue his campaign.
Liu and Gioia have said they will vote against repealing term limits. And maverick Councilman Tony Avella (D-Bayside), who has said he has no plans to step aside from his 2009 mayoral campaign, will also oppose the bill.
Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria), who had been planning to run for Queens borough president in 2009, said he is waiting to see the actual bill before deciding whether to support it.
"I've always been opposed to an eight-year limit but I also have never supported changing it through legislation," Vallone said.
Bloomberg's power play could provide a fall-back option for term-limited Councilmen Joseph Addabbo (D-Howard Beach) and James Gennaro (D-Fresh Meadows) should either fail in their bids for state Senate this fall.
Both said they would vote against extending term limits.
"That's the smart thing to say if you are running," said Democratic strategist George Arzt.
He noted that candidates must be careful not to cross the voters, given that they overwhelmingly backed term limits in two referendums during the 1990s.
Addabbo, who hopes to topple GOP veteran Serphin Maltese (R-Glendale) in a key race for state Senate supremacy, downplayed the matter.
"As far as I'm concerned, it's a nonissue, and I remain focused on winning in November," Addabbo said.
But should either Addabbo or Gennaro come up empty on Election Day, they would face a credibility issue if they decided to run for a third term next year.
"It would be seen as a bit hypocritical," said Republican Eric Ulrich, who is running for Addabbo's seat in 2009.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Vallone Family Tries to Come to Terms with Term Limits by Frank Lombardi - NY Daily News
Former Council Speaker Peter Vallone (l.) and his two sons, Peter (standing) and Paul.Photo: Pace for News
Read original...
If anyone is biting his nails over term limits, it's the Vallone clan of Queens.
There's the father, Peter Vallone Sr., who was City Council speaker until 2001, when municipal officeholders were first limited to two consecutive four-year terms.
And there are his two sons: Peter Vallone Jr., who took over his father's Astoria seat and faces term limits next year, and Paul Vallone, now running for a different Council seat in Queens.
"It makes for some very interesting family conversations," said Peter Vallone Jr., 47.
Mayor Bloomberg triggered the storm in June when he raised the specter of reversing his once-staunch opposition to changing term limits. He has yet to rule out supporting a Council-imposed third-term option.
The elder Vallone, 73, has been pushing behind the scenes for an extension - not to help his sons, he insisted, but because "it's what's good for the city."
"I've always said it's an abomination," he said of term limits. "It prevents long-term planning for the city."
Now an influential lawyer and lobbyist, the father said he has been recruiting "a group of people who care about the city" to support a third-term extension. He wouldn't name names.
He was in the Council for 27 years and was succeeded by his son in the 22nd District in Astoria.
For 15 of those years, he led the Council, starting in 1986 as majority leader and then as speaker after the title was changed in 1990.
The elder Vallone said he would prefer extending term limits by another referendum but that "there's not enough time."
Like several others, Peter Vallone Jr.'s political strategy is up in the air. He opposes term limits but won't say how he would vote on an extension bill.
"I will deal with whatever comes," he said. "But I'm looking forward to my next stage in public service."
Paul Vallone, 41, is less tossed. His first bid for elected office is being waged in the 19th District of Bayside/Whitestone, where incumbent Tony Avella has announced plans for a mayoral run.
Paul Vallone faces several rivals for Avella's seat, including civic leader Jerry Iannece of Bayside Hills, who considers the son an Astoria carpetbagger trading on his family name.
"You don't inherit a seat, you earn it," Iannece said.
Paul Vallone retorted that he's "very proud to be a Vallone" and is looking forward to the campaign.
A lawyer, like his father and two brothers - a third Vallone son, Perry, 45, lives out of the fray in New Jersey - Paul Vallone is also listed as a lobbyist at his father's lobbying firm of Constantinople & Vallone.
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Councilman Liu Leads Race to Raise Funds for Election War Chest by Lisa L. Colangelo and John Lauinger and
Queens City Councilman John Liu continues to be one of the city's most aggressive fund-raisers, stuffing his campaign coffers with more than $760,000 during the past six months, records show.
Liu, rumored to be eying a bid for city controller, raked in more than $3 million as of Tuesday's filing deadline with the city Campaign Finance Board.
But the term-limited Liu, who has yet to formally declare his candidacy in the 2009 race, downplayed his fund-raising prowess, insisting he is focusing more on the city's mounting transportation and utility woes.
"There is way too much going on right now to become obsessed with next year's elections," said Liu (D-Flushing), who has already spent $556,000 on his campaign.
Tuesday's fund-raising tallies showed other Queens City Council members also are packing their war chests for next year's elections. Thirteen of the 14 members of the Queens delegation are term-limited.
Council members Melinda Katz and David Weprin, who have announced runs for controller, raised $192,000 and $316,000 respectively since the last filing period in January.
Katz has raised $2.1 million in total, spending $775,000, compared to Weprin's $1.8 million, with $338,000 spent.
Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside), eying a run for public advocate, raised $309,750 in the most recent six-month cycle. He said most of the more than $2 million he has raised has come in $10 donations.
"At all my events, I am telling people to give what they want," Gioia said. "A lot of people don't participate in politics because they feel they can't afford to."
In a possible three-way battle for Queens borough president, Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. leads the way, with $799,758 raised, followed by Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer, with $338,167 and Councilman Leroy Comrie with $100,515. Pheffer is the only declared candidate so far.
As candidates jockeyed for position in the race for the 13 open Council seats, this week's filings revealed a packed and deep-pocketed field in the 19th District in northeastern Queens, where mayoral candidate Tony Avella is term-limited.
In that battle, Paul Vallone, Peter Vallone Jr.'s brother, filed $90,734 - among the top for 2009 Council hopefuls.
Paul Vallone, who already has doled out more than $25,000, is squaring off against Jerry Iannece, former chairman of Community Board 11, who raised $38,295, and Debra Markell-Kleinert, Community Board 2 district manager, who raised $25,571 and already has spent $16,647.
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Ballot Race Getting Crowded with Term-limited City Council Members by Lisa L. Colangelo - NY Daily News
The field is especially crowded in Queens, where well-known Democrats will also be jockeying for backing from the influential county party.
But even if they don't get that endorsement, many of them are vowing not to go away quietly.
It could be a new test for the Queens Democratic Party, viewed as the strongest and most cohesive of all the boroughs. The party still wields considerable power, but has a spotty endorsement record - especially when it comes to citywide races.
"County support is significant. They bring expertise and organization with them," said Councilman Peter Vallone Jr., who is eying a run for borough president. "I hope to have county support but should I decide to run, I'm prepared to run without it."
Vallone said 2009 will be unlike other election years.
"There will be well-known and qualified candidates for every open office who will also be able to band together," he said.
But Michael Reich, executive secretary of the Queens Democratic Party, said he isn't worried about insurgent candidates banding together in a primary.
An endorsement from the party can be a "significant advantage," Reich said. This is especially true for collecting signatures and fund-raising. But it's not "make or break," he conceded.
For example, Queens Democratic leaders backed two losing candidates in the last two mayoral primaries: Alan Hevesi in 2001 and Gifford Miller in 2005.
More recently, it backed Elizabeth Crowley in a special election for the 30th Council District. Crowley narrowly lost the nonpartisan race to Republican Anthony Como.
But state Sen. John Sabini, a longtime party loyalist who was facing his first primary without support from the Democratic party, decided not to chance it. Gov. Paterson has appointed him to head the state Racing and Wagering Board, saving him from a bruising primary against Councilman Hiram Monserrate.
"They are not omnipotent but they are still potent," said Doug Muzzio, a political science professor at Baruch College. "They have the troops and the wherewithal to make life miserable for a challenger."
The Queens party was key in selecting the past three Council speakers. Even though the last two - Gifford Miller and Christine Quinn - were from Manhattan, the party scored by getting key committee appointments for the Queens delegation.
And Muzzio said the party may be more interested in the most local races of all - the district leaders and judges.
"The key element is the selection of judges," Muzzio said. "That is the last great bastion of political patronage."
Monday, June 9, 2008
Here They Run Again - Term Limits Don’t Seem to Faze Council Members by Diane Cardwell - NYTimes.com
For New Yorkers who voted to impose term limits on the City Council, the promise was to sweep clean a moldering institution and fill it with “citizen legislators” who would bring energy and fresh ideas from the private sector, where they would return after their eight-year allotments.
But as the first class of councilors elected under the term limits law in 2001 prepares to leave office next year, the very opposite is becoming reality: With lawmakers seeking new elective offices and career politicians looking to join, or rejoin, the body, the Council may well become a political revolving door.
Already, 20 of the 35 Council members who are being forced from office have filed with the city’s Campaign Finance Board to run for another position. And at least a dozen of those planning to compete for open Council seats have budding or established political careers, including state officials, relatives of Council members and even a few former councilors who collectively have decades of service under their belts.
For instance, Karen Koslowitz, the Queens deputy borough president who once worked for Andrew J. Stein, a former council president, is contemplating a run for the seat she held for 10 years in Forest Hills, Queens. And Herman D. Farrell Jr., who has represented Upper Manhattan in the State Assembly since 1975, is planning to run for a City Council seat representing the same area.
Paul Vallone, whose father, Peter F. Vallone, represented a district in Astoria, Queens, for 27 years until his brother Peter F. Vallone Jr. took it over in 2002, is running to represent the Bayside area. Paul Washington, a former chief of staff for Councilman Charles Barron, is running for the councilor’s East New York, Brooklyn, slot, while Evan Thies, a former spokesman for Councilman David Yassky, is competing to represent Mr. Yassky’s Brooklyn district, which stretches from Park Slope to Williamsburg.
And then there is Thomas V. Ognibene, who represented Middle Village, Queens, for 10 years before leaving office in 2001 because of term limits. He recently lost a bid to replace Dennis P. Gallagher, his former chief of staff, who resigned from the Council this year after admitting to a sexual assault.
“The person who runs for the office is a relative, a chief of staff, a protégé of the person that was in there in the first place,” Mr. Ognibene said. “Insurgency is virtually impossible. You cannot generate the money or the support,” he said, adding, “So you don’t get the people in there that had been contemplated, the people with the fresh start, the new view.”
Ronald S. Lauder, a wealthy cosmetics heir who spent millions pushing for the change that limits officeholders to two terms, said in a 1993 statement that it would “take the power away from the politicians and return it to the people.” Officials would serve “long enough to make a contribution,” his statement said, “but not long enough to make a career.”
After Mr. Lauder’s costly campaign, New Yorkers approved the limits in 1993, despite the howls of protest from City Council members who predicted the coming of a bureaucratic apocalypse. The law withstood an effort in 1996 to add a third term, with voters reaffirming their wish to restrict service for council members, the mayor, the public advocate and the comptroller to eight years, and survived Council plans to overturn it.
But officials and analysts say that it was naïve to expect term limits to take the politics out of politics, especially since the Council lacks sufficient glamour — and power — to woo many people from their day jobs.
“A lot of people who are successful in the private sector aren’t going to be attracted to be in the City Council,” said Mr. Yassky, who has made unsuccessful bids for Brooklyn district attorney and Congress and is now running for city comptroller. “The reality is that voters will elect people in government.”
For those who are interested in a public sector career, the Council, which pays members $112,500 to $141,000, depending on the leadership positions, and gives them two parking placards and at least $277,366 in operating expenses, can be a steppingstone to higher office or a landing strip after years of trekking to the State Capitol. And what had been a steady flow between the Council and the State Legislature is threatening to become a torrent as officials in Albany who are frustrated by their relative lack of power look to win an office that keeps them closer to home.
Mr. Farrell at one point considered trying to become the next Council speaker but dropped that ambition while still eyeing a Council seat. And Assemblyman Michael N. Gianaris, with his sights on the speaker’s post, is considering a bid for the Astoria, Queens, district seat that Mr. Vallone Jr., a likely candidate for Queens borough president, will vacate.
With the Queens Democratic Party backing City Councilman Hiram Monserrate in his bid to snatch the seat of State Senator John D. Sabini, consultants are suggesting that Mr. Sabini reclaim the Council seat he gave up in 2001, which would be open again.
Moving in the other direction are several council members who are seeking state positions, including Simcha Felder of Brooklyn, who announced last week that he would not compete in the crowded field for city comptroller but would try to unseat State Senator Kevin S. Parker.
Evan Stavisky, a political consultant who is active in state and local elections, said term limits provide “expedited promotions for chiefs of staff and other people active in local politics” while increasing “ancillary competition, so there are more state legislators who have races.”
At the same time, officials and policy analysts say, term limits have strengthened the Council’s focus on politics at the expense of governance. As a result, consultants and lobbyists say, there is now a professional class of candidates whose members focus on making names for themselves and eyeing the next offices rather than returning to the private sector, as advocates of limiting public service have promoted.
“It’s not reasonable to expect somebody to interrupt their life for eight years and then go back to the farm — you’ve set on a career path,” said Lewis A. Fidler, a Brooklyn councilman who has not determined his next move. Speaking of his fellow council members, he said, “Their attention is being diverted as to what they’re going to do to feed their family and continue on their career path.”
Eric Lane, a law professor at Hofstra University, found in an analysis of the Council in 2004 that nearly all of those elected had political backgrounds and planned to stay in politics.
“If your interest is a future in the Council, then you worry about compromising and getting legislation passed,” he said. “But if your interest is the next office right away, then you’re interested in outshining someone else and you’re going to play to the crowds much more and you’re going to play to lobbyists much more.”
Supporters of term limits see it differently. “Term limits have always been about creating opportunities, not dictating outcomes, and undeniably term limits have opened doors for new people,” said Nelson Warfield, a spokesman for New Yorkers for Term Limits, an advocacy group that campaigned for the restriction.
“Term limits has clearly increased the diversity of government,” he said, pointing to the rise in black and Hispanic representation, as well as to the election of John C. Liu, the Council’s first Asian-American member.
For many council members, gaining office can instill a sense of self-importance and self-worth, making it difficult to see a future outside of government.
“You are the one who is in charge of what happens in your district,” said Ms. Koslowitz, the deputy borough president in Queens. “It was one of the best experiences of my life because I helped a lot of people. I still walk through the streets and people are thanking me and remembering what I did for them and for the community.”
With the election more than a year away, it is too early to say who will end up back in the Council and where the class of 35 forced departures will land. But with a finite number of offices to be won, many are bound for disappointment.
Judging from the fates of their predecessors, some will snare work in government while others will seek to become lobbyists or pursue jobs related to law.
Still, they can also rely on inevitability: Their old seats will eventually open up, perhaps even earlier than the typical eight-year cycle. Take the case of Thomas White, who had to leave office in 2001 after representing a district in South Jamaica, Queens, for a decade, and has already returned. His opportunity, like Mr. Ognibene’s, came in the form of a sex scandal.
After the City Council censured Allan W. Jennings Jr. for the sexual harassment of two female employees in 2005, Mr. White won back the seat that fall, becoming the first of his generation to return. Time will tell if he showed up early for the reunion.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Proposed Queens Police Station Is Criticized as 'Land Grab' by Benjamin Sarlin - The New York Sun
A proposed police station in Queens is facing opposition from a parks activist who says the plan would appropriate parkland illegally and requires the approval of the state Legislature to be built.
The founder of NYC Parks Advocates, Geoffrey Croft, is calling the 110th Police Precinct, which Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly proposed be built in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, a "land grab."
"It's not like they're putting in a designated precinct for the park like in Central Park. There are no guarantees that those cops would be patrolling the park," Mr. Croft said in an interview.
Mr. Kelly, who testified at a police budget hearing at City Hall yesterday, said the new building is needed to replace the current structure on 43rd Avenue. The Parks Department is reviewing the proposed precinct location, he said.
Council Member Peter Vallone Jr., who represents parts of Queens and is chairman of the City Council's Public Safety Committee, said the plan for a new precinct in the park is "welcome news."
"The crime rate there is higher than any park outside Central Park, so it makes sense," Mr. Vallone said. Last summer, 43 crimes were recorded in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, second only to Central Park's 90, according to a report by the police department.
While generally supportive of the precinct, Mr. Vallone described Mr. Croft's objections as "legitimate issues" that need to be addressed before the precinct's location is chosen. "It's a tricky task because you don't want to take away parkland," he said.
Mr. Croft is currently a plaintiff in a lawsuit against the city to prevent the construction of a proposed restaurant in Union Square Park.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Gianaris Raising For '09 by Elizabeth Benjamin - The Daily Politics - NY Daily News
Here's the invite for the first fundraiser Assemblyman Mike Gianaris is holding to fill the coffers of his city-level campaign committee as he eyes a possible run for Council - not to mention speaker - in 2009.
The event is scheduled for June 9 at the Beekman Pub near City Hall. Tickets start at $250 and run to $2,750 for sponsors (the limit for an individual contribution in a Council race).
(Interesting aside: Note that the invite includes directions regarding whether contributors do business with the city and a link to the CFB's database - a new move made necessary by the pay-to-play restrictions passed by the Council, signed into law by Mayor Bloomberg and now the subject of a federal lawsuit).
Gianaris is a prodigious fundraiser who tapped into a nationwide network of Greek donors in 2006 to bring in some $2 million for an AG run (he dropped out of the race well before the state Democratic convention, but his money-raising capabilities landed his a post as the party's finance chair).
Gianaris has confirmed he is "seriously considering" a run for the Council seat from which Peter Vallone Jr. will be forced by term limits at the end of 2009, but insists he is focused on running for re-election to his Assembly seat this fall.
He has been quietly working behind the scenes to build up support for both his Council campaign and a potential bid for the speaker's post.
There has been speculation that Gianaris would switch seats prior to 2009 with Vallone Jr., who is running for Queens borough president in 2009 but doesn't have support of the county Democratic party (it's expected to back Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer).
Both Vallone and Gianaris have rejected that idea.
Gianaris has more than $2 million on hand in two state-level committees; he can use some of that cash for a city race, although the rules governing the transfer of that money would make doing so very arduous.
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Et Tu, Bloomy? Mike Bares Own Slush Fund by David Seifman and Tom Topousis - New York Post

Five weeks into a federal probe of City Council slush funds, Mayor Bloomberg revealed yesterday that he kept his own secret taxpayer-funded cash stash - and used it to reward favored lawmakers.
The mayor's $4.5 million slush fund had never before been made public - and some council members said they weren't even aware of it.
After being doled out to selected lawmakers, the money was passed along to dozens of nonprofit groups supported by legislators - including at least one with a checkered history.
The largest chunk, $1.9 million, went to Councilman Simcha Felder (D-Brooklyn), one of the mayor's most ardent supporters.
Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, who has publicly praised Bloomberg as the greatest mayor in city history, received $900,000 to help fund two popular concert series.
Councilman Erik Dilan (D-Brooklyn) won $100,000, including $60,000 for the North Brooklyn Community Council, which has come under question because it is run by his wife.
That was on top of the $187,000 he delivered to the group through the council over the past three years.
"They recognized that the North Brooklyn Community Council has done great things over the year," said Dilan spokesman Woody Pascal.
"There was no quid pro quo," Pascal added.
One source said seven out of the eight council members who received funds endorsed Bloomberg for re-election in 2005. Only Helen Sears of Queens did not.
Bloomberg's slush funds were channeled through various city agencies to 45 groups and weren't listed on the document released each year by the council that delineates how some $50 million in discretionary spending is allocated.
The U.S. Attorney's Office and the city Department of Investigation are investigating the council's use of slush funds - first revealed by The Post to be hidden under the names of nonexistent sham organizations.
In a memo to Bloomberg, Deputy Mayor Ed Skyler conceded the process lacks transparency and "can create a mistaken impression that the Mayor's Office is funding its own 'member items.' This should be rectified."
In the future, Skyler said, the groups receiving the mayor's funds would be made public along with the council sponsors when the budget is adopted each June.
Bloomberg aides wouldn't reveal whether special grants had been made in prior years and said they are reviewing them.
The practice dates back at least to the Giuliani administration.
"I always believed it started as a way for the then-mayor to help the minority [Republican] delegation members," said Councilman James Oddo (R-Staten Island).
A spokesman for Markowitz said the borough president never requested the funds, but they had instead been sought by a nonprofit organization.
Friday, April 25, 2008
Vallone Says He'll Remain on Council: Astoria Rep Denies Plan to Leave Seat for Possible Boro Prez Run by Nathan Duke - Times Ledger
"It would make absolutely no sense for me to step down," Vallone said. "There are a lot of graffiti vandals who want me to resign, but it's not going to happen. I'm going to continue to be the [City Council's] Public Safety [Committee] chairman for the next year and a half."
Other candidates who have been mentioned as potential candidates for borough president include Council members Leroy Comrie (D-St. Albans) and Helen Sears (D-Jackson Heights) as well as state Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer (D-Rockaway Beach).
Both Vallone and Queens Borough President Helen Marshall will be term limited out of office in 2009.
But Scott Levenson, a Democratic consultant for Manhattan's Advance Group, said that some members of the Queens County Democratic Party support a plan in which Vallone would step down and Gianaris would run for his City Council seat in a special election.
Under the plan, Gianaris would serve out the remainder of Vallone's term, giving him a headstart to work toward becoming the next City Council speaker after current Speaker Christine Quinn (D-Manhattan) is term limited out of office in 2009, Levenson said.
But Levenson said the rumored plan could very likely not leave the speculative stage.
"It's a very rare occasion for an elected official to voluntarily resign from his post for some kind of political positioning and it is rare when giving up that post is a strategically beneficial solution," he said.
In early April, the Insider of Crain's New York Business reported that the Queens Democratic Party had floated a scenario under which it would support Gianaris for Council speaker, Pheffer for borough president, Comrie for deputy borough president and Vallone for Gianaris' Assembly seat to prevent party in-fighting.
"These are talented people who are up for a competitive, theoretically open seat," Levenson said. "So, if one could find a solution to these talented folks not running against each other, it would clearly be ideal from the county organization's point of view."
But Gianaris said he would focus on retaining his Assembly seat during this fall's election.
"I've said that the City Council would represent an interesting opportunity for me to make a difference for my neighborhood," he said. "But right now, I'm planning on running for re-election."
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Democrats Plan for Vallone's Exit by Brendan Brosh - NY Daily News
Queens Democrats have floated a plan that could usher Assemblyman Michael Gianaris into the City Council a year early and perhaps lead to his becoming speaker.
The plan envisions Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. resigning this year, forcing the mayor to call a special election.
Gianaris would then run for the seat and - if he wins - enter the Council a year ahead of his colleagues elected in 2009.
The plan would give Gianaris an extra year to forge relationships and seek the speaker's seat when Christine Quinn is term-limited out of office in 2009.
"We're declining to comment," a Gianaris staffer told the Daily News.
Vallone, a potential candidate for Queens borough president in 2009, insisted he's not resigning.
"I can't comment on a private conversation with Mike," said Vallone (D-Astoria). "I will be completing my term in the Council. I will not be stepping down."
Rumors of the plan have been swirling recently, with one version of the scenario appearing last week in Crain's Insider. It reported that Queens Democratic bosses wanted to prevent party infighting between Vallone, Councilman Leroy Comrie and Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer in the borough president's race.
Vallone would run for the Assembly, while Pheffer would be tapped for beep and Comrie as her deputy, according to Crain's.
But party insiders said that was inaccurate and the plan only involves Vallone and Gianaris.
Gianaris' political consultant Evan Stavisky declined to speculate on what he called "a random published report."
But another Democratic consultant, Scott Levenson, said the strategy would indeed give Gianaris a valuable head start, should he make it to the Council.
"For someone like Mike Gianaris, a potential speaker candidate, [it] would give him an opportunity to build relationships a year early," he said.
GOP rivals said the plan smacks of back-room politics.
"It's very anti-democratic," said Robert Hornak, a Republican running for Vallone's seat in 2009. "Mike is too much part of the status quo."
Doug Muzzio, a professor of political science at Baruch College, noted Gianaris is normally "extremely press friendly."
"But he's absent on this and not commenting," Muzzio said. "It doesn't make sense to me."
Parks See Upsurge in Crime...Reporting by Shane Miller - Queens Ledger
The NYPD will be releasing crime statistics in more city parks, with the number expected to grow over the next six months.
It was announced last week that the Police Department would add 10 other parks to the list of 20 that it already releases crime data for. They include Canarsie Park and Joseph T. McGuire Park in Brooklyn and Kissena Park and Rockaway Community/Edgemere Park in Queens, along with six others, two in each borough.
"We tell residents about the crime on the streets," said Councilman Peter Vallone, Jr., who co-sponsored legislation mandating that the NYPD release crime statistics for parks. "They also deserve to know about the crimes on the grass just the same."
In 2005, Vallone and Councilman Joseph Addabbo introduced a bill that would require the department to release crime information for all of the city's parks. But recognizing certain technological complications, the City Council and NYPD agreed to start with the four largest parks in each borough, and expand from there.
Last week, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly admitted that the additional reporting would be difficult to manage, but that the NYPD was committed to the program.
"While this expansion will place an added burden upon the department's resources," he said, "we do so in the interest of strengthening the collaborative relationship that currently exists between the NYPD, the City Council, and the community we serve."
An advocacy group called New Yorkers for Parks recently compiled the statistics for the last 18 months in the 20 pilot parks and found that 308 crimes were committed.
"Parks are a place for people to let their guard down and be alone, but that peace can sometimes put them at risk," said Vallone. "Now that we have statistics on more parks, people will have more tools to stay safe."



