Monthly Archives: December 2013

Less Art and More People: SoHo

SoHo-Cast Iron Historic District, as defined by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission on August 14, 1973, was bordered by Houston Street to the north, the easternmost portion of West Broadway to the west, Crosby Street to the east and Canal Street to the south.

On May 11, 2010, the Commission extended the neighborhood’s eastern borders to Centre and Lafayette Streets, and included on West Broadway what was once excluded.

The borders of SoHo may have grown, and its buildings extended upward. But the picturesque, albeit narrow cobblestone streets, remain the same size. And the population density has only increased. SoHo is a crowded neighborhood, and there has been both opposition and support as the historic artist’s colony-turned-shopping mecca has evolved into an area more saturated by pedestrians over the past decade.

Bob Gormley, District Manager for Manhattan’s Community Board 2, ascends from the R train subway station at Prince Street on Broadway every day to walk to his office at 3 Washington Square Village. Gormley has held this position since 2006. Before being elected to the board, he worked at the city’s Department of Consumer Affairs. Community Board 2 covers Greenwich Village, SoHo, NoHo, Little Italy, Chinatown, Hudson Square, and Gansevoort Market.

“It’s always crowded down there, and it’s even busier now for the holiday season,” said Gormley, hands clasped atop a conference room table in a Washington Square Village building. He acknowledges that there are an enormous number of street vendors in SoHo, which lend themselves to crowding on the streets. “We’ve been asking the city to make sure that all the food vendors have proper permits … it’s a safety thing.

Gormley, a graduate of CUNY Hunter College and later of Buffalo State Law School, says the competition of street vendors and a “crush” of pedestrians makes for a crowded neighborhood. “We are in no way in opposition of street vendors,” said Gormley, “but we have been asking the city to ensure that street vendors are complying with regulations.”

“They go where their clientele is; the sidewalk,” Gormley added. He is also aware that officers from the 1st Precinct, which encompasses SoHo and its surrounding neighborhoods, have begun to hand out tickets for vendors’ violations in Hudson Square in the past months for not complying with street regulations. Hudson Square is often referred to as “West SoHo.”

Seymour Miles, 63, lives on the Upper West Side and has worked in SoHo since 2007. He is a real estate broker for Corcoran Group Real Estate, whose offices are on Broadway in SoHo.

“Let’s put it this way,” Miles said with a tall Starbucks coffee cup in hand, “I don’t walk on Broadway anymore. Why? Because Broadway sucks.”

Miles, referring to the section of Broadway that cuts through SoHo between Crosby and Mercer Streets, described the small transformation he has seen since he began working in SoHo.

“I think more people are walking on Crosby now,” he said, one leg resting on the other inside Starbucks on the corner of Crosby and Spring Streets. “I think people are realizing how much cooler Crosby is than other streets. There are still small stores on Crosby, not like the big box stores around here.”

Miles was referring to the large chain stores that have moved into SoHo, which was once dominated by independently owned shops and galleries. Among the chains in the neighborhood, a 25,000 square feet-wide Old Navy sits on Broadway between Broome and Spring Streets, a Chipotle Mexican Grill is located on Spring Street between Crosby and Lafayette Streets (at what some would call the very eastern border of SoHo and becomes Little Italy), and an Apple Store occupies the corner of Prince and Greene Streets. SoHo wasn’t always a conglomerate of tour buses and boutique stores that have drawn in hoards of tourists from all over the globe, though.

“The area has totally changed since we moved here in 1974,” said Judy Blum Reddy, an artist and longtime SoHo resident. She lives on Wooster Street. In the 1980’s and 90’s, SoHo was full of bars and clubs, recalled Reddy, who mentioned it was a lot like the neighborhood of Chelsea. When the noisy bars and clubs disappeared, the neighborhood became quieter and had less nightlife. Since then, walking tours and other daytime activities have become the predominant leisure.

Reddy, a Queens native, returned to New York in the 1970’s with her husband, printmaker and artist Krishna Reddy, after living in Paris, France for some time. She believes SoHo is practically “unrecognizable” and a “destination, not a neighborhood.” Reddy mentioned the irony of finding it difficult to walk her dog on congested SoHo streets when she sees hired dog walkers with eight or nine dogs at one time. So overrun by tourists in crowds on walking tours (which she likes because they promote the history of the neighborhood), Reddy rarely frequents stores and eateries in SoHo.

“My daughter moved to Carroll Gardens,” said Reddy, “they have more room there. [My husband and I] don’t eat in this neighborhood. We go to Brooklyn! They’ve got the Fairway, Trader Joe’s, Italian food and bread and cheese stores. We don’t.”

In 2011, the city’s Department of Transportation released a “pedestrian volume index,” showcasing that the sidewalks of Manhattan are indeed becoming more crowded. In an elaborate chart, the department highlighted fifty of the city’s busiest intersections. Although a SoHo intersection is not explicitly noted in the list, lower Manhattan intersections such as Broad Street between Beaver and South William Streets are noted with growing pedestrian volume. Overall, the city’s index grew exponentially between 2007 and 2011: from 367,935 pedestrians at the fifty select intersections at select hours in 2007, to 416,648 pedestrians in 2011.

Ron Smyth, who works in media, has an office in SoHo. He believes that SoHo is “delightful” to walk through in the morning, “…around 8, 9, 10:30 in the morning.” Smyth pointed out that we have a growing number of hotels in SoHo, naturally attracting tourists and crowds. He mentioned the Crosby Street Hotel and the Mondrian SoHo Hotel, both on Crosby Streets, with roughly three blocks between them.

“SoHo is crowded, of course, because SoHo is where the world comes to shop. It’s delightful in the morning, but gets crowded in the afternoon,” said Smyth, 61, a graduate of the City University of New York and New York University Stern School of Business. He believes crowds and tourism is “great” and promotes commerce.

Vince Prezioso, a New York native, is co-founder of The Access Organization, a health and lifestyle group who matches members with doctor visits, pharmacies, and general care plans at discounted rates. The Access Organization’s office is located in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, but Prezioso often holds meetings throughout the city.

“We like to keep our meetings out of SoHo,” said Prezioso, “because it’s just so crowded. It’s not easy for trucks to get through the narrow streets and there are always lots of people around Lafayette [Street].”

Prezioso used to drive in from Yonkers to Manhattan for work, but finds it more difficult than he did when he began working in Manhattan in 2005. “It’s a little tighter to walk through, a little more difficult,” he said of the streets of SoHo.

“I’m not sure what the solution will be,” Gormley said of the crowding of SoHo, “maybe restricting vendors on any given street. The [sidewalk] space is there. But for now, I don’t know.”

Posted in Conflict Story | Tagged | 2 Comments

Getting Your Blog Portfolio in Order

Dear Feature Writers:

Please make sure that ALL of your blog work is linked to your name so that I can look at your entire portfolio! And do add comments!

Thanks,

Prof. B.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Getting Your Blog Portfolio in Order

Profile of Tiger Writing by Gish Jen

Gish Jen’s Tiger Writing is an interesting biography of her family. It chronicles her family seeming from the dawn of time, coving a couple thousand years. The story is not the fiction Jen is known for, but contains all of her literary talents in the story delivery.

 Jen tells the story in first person. This is the way she captured the reader’s attention bringing then into her family; their culture and taking the reader back to her mother country of China. . She also gives the reader the perspective of what it is like to be an immigrant in the United States and what it means to be a second, third, fourth, etc., generation immigrant in America. Jen uses this as a strategy to bring in a deeper discussion of her family stories over the course of time.

 Jen narrates the story, but tells detailed stories of her ancestors, parents, and the origin of her family name. This technique keeps the writing fresh and entertaining for the reader as they progress through the story.

 The story is accompanied by visuals of the images such as the set up if the traditional Chinese home and of her family members. These images give a more concrete image of what Jen describes in her writing. If the story was presented without the images, the story itself could stand alone given Jen’s gift of providing a detailed description.

 The story further shows a great deal of information has been gathered over time. The historical information adds a sense of awe allowing the reader to ponder what it would be like to trace their family as far back as Jen has been able to do  This is reminiscent of stories like Roots by Alex Haley. At one point in the story, Jen compares her ancestors’ stories to that of stories told by African Americans. The elements she mentions that are the same are there themes of overcoming struggle and of the chosen one.

 This analogy gives more credit to Jen as a writer showing her depth of knowledge about literature, history, and humanity in general. Her choice to include this information makes the story more relatable to a reader of a different ethnic background.

 If I had a chance to ask Jen a few questions, I would ask what inspired her to choose the literary elements included in the story to tell her family story. I am also curious to know how long it took her to realize she wanted to turn the stories into a novel. Since the story takes the reader back to China, I am would want to know if at any point did she travel to China to gain more inspiration, sources and visuals to include. The writing process is another area of interest to me. What was it like? How long did it take? Did you find yourself on edge about what to include or did it come easily? Will the story have a sequel or is everything that was needed to be said, said in this piece.

Posted in Gish Jen | Tagged , | Comments Off on Profile of Tiger Writing by Gish Jen

Teen Joyrides Run Awry, Leaving Behind Community in Questions

Vigil in memory of four Indo-Caribbean teens held in Smokey Oval Park, south Richmond Hill in October 2012.

Vigil in memory of four Indo-Caribbean teens held in Smokey Oval Park, south Richmond Hill in October 2012. (Photo Courtesy of Jeffrey Liu, Wheel and Torque.com)

TOGETHER Indo-Caribbean teens, parents, community leaders, car enthusiasts, elected officials, teachers, and principals stood on a brisk October evening in the Smokey Oval Park as they heard a neighborhood pandit offer a prayer in Hindi in memory of the tragic death of four teens.

At the end of the vigil, hundreds of teens holding candles dripping of wax and tears swayed to a Jamaican reggae song “Fallen Soldier” stating life on the battlefield is so real.

“That was the first time ever the community has seen such an outpouring of emotions,” said Dhanpaul Narine, a vigil organizer, community leader, and president of a Hindu temple in south Queens.

He mentioned that many family members and friends were in denial that such a tragedy could occur.

Last year on an October night, 17-year-old Joseph Beer took his new Subaru Impreza on a joyride on the 25 and a half-mile Southern State Parkway—a highway notorious for its sharp curves and unpredictable interchanges.

Beer’s parents did know where he was going but he took along four of his friends. They never returned. Later the next day, Beer was found wandering around the wreckage; a tree crushed the car. According to a Patch article, a Nassau County trooper noted that Beer was under the influence of marijuana that night and he was speeding at a rate of over 110 miles per hour.

The accident is just one of many in the Indo-Caribbean community, which have left families, friends, and relatives to mourn the death of such young men for, as local critics say, “reckless” and “stupid” behavior. In 2007 two Indo-Caribbean high school students died after speeding into a guardrail along the Van Wyck Expressway with a black Dodge Charger. And in 2011 Bishnu Dinanauth, a car enthusiast, raced another vehicle along the Southern State Parkway, that ultimately ended in his death.

A New York Times feature suggests that Indo-Caribbean immigrant parents of modest means should be more careful when giving their children an expensive, fast vehicle and many members of the community agree.

“Why is it we would give a 17 year old an expensive vehicle to go joyriding on a dangerous night in a dangerous city?” asked Narine later adding, “Children are having all this freedom and aren’t accountable to any.”

Bhopaul “B.P.” Singh, a parent and long-time owner of an auto repair shop in Ozone Park, Queens said that if parents give their teenage son or daughter a sports car, they should be able to monitor how and when they drive it. “If you give them a sports car you have to watch them,” he said noting that parents can also keep the keys of the car.

Though he also mentioned, “You have to know what kind of car you give them.” He pointed out that often parents are not aware that some cars are specifically made for performance value and racing.

Yet while giving a car to a teen may be a concern, the right group of friends is also an important factor to Singh and Narine.

Narine said it is almost like a rite of passage for young men to receive their learner’s permit at 16 years and then when they get a vehicle, the friends appear.

“Because he got wheels now everyone goes for the joyride,” he said.

“You got to know who your kids friends are,” said Singh.

But when friends are not the problem, the culture can be. To many teens and car enthusiasts, racing is often portrayed as glamorous and is a culture that they say will never end, even to those who oppose and have coped with the deadly consequences.

“There’s no stop to racing,” said Sateesh Parsotan, a twenty-six year old ‘low and slow’ car enthusiast. “You have movies like Fast and Furious, you have movies like Need for Speed, you have video games, you have things that come out every single day that causes racing to come out on top—when it comes to stance you only have me.”

He explained that after the death of Bishnu Dinanauth, his best friend, found racing his car on the Southern State, he no longer wanted to engage in the risky behavior.

“The consequences are not fun,” he said pointing out that “stance,” or lowering the coil springs of cars to ride slow with a “slammed, pretty” look is the new culture he is advocating with his network called Lowered Congress.

But he added that racing is a behavior that is not likely to be tamed anytime soon among not just Indo-Caribbeans, but a community of those who speed with beautiful cars throughout the city.

“You have no control over it, I have no control over it. Racing in itself is just something that people are just gonna do, because its just competitive and its just fun,” he said. “When they can’t do it on the track they do it on the street”

Unlike many other states like Florida, there is no racetrack in New York City designed for racing fast vehicles with a nearby emergency crew and no other vehicles on the road. Although, there are paved asphalt speedways for motorsport enthusiasts, many teens prefer longer strips of lonely highways for drag racing.

But some say that driving while under the influence of alcohol and marijuana are other factors in the issue of joyriding. “The problem is a combination of a lot of things,” said Narine who noted alcohol being an issue seen both back home and in the Indo-Caribbean immigrant enclave in south Queens.

With popular chutney songs, originating from Guyana and Trinidad, and broadcasted through the homeland and spreading to the Indo-Caribbean diaspora in the U.S., rum is often heard as an object of desire. “Ah drinka,” “Bring de Rum,” and “Where deh Puncheon deh?” are just some of the top hits within the past several years among Indo-Caribbean mainstream music.

Some Guyanese officials argue the glorifying of alcohol in music and lifestyle of Guyanese people are related.

According to a piece in TIME published in 2010, Evan Persaud, Guyana’s chairman of broadcasting advisory committee has said they are considering issuing a warning to television stations against airing chutney music videos that promote drinking after reports show Guyana drink nearly a gallon and a half of alcohol per capita.

Though despite the semblance of issues from fast cars, peer pressure, a dangerous culture, substance abuse, and bad music, schools continue to be the playing field where having a car means much more than being able to drive to the nearest grocery store or even to school.

“What does it mean to really have a nice car in high school? It means a lot. It means the world. It means you get to pick up girls and go someplace and then go back to school. You know, you’re one of those lucky kids,” said Parsotan who pointed out, “There’s a lot of kids that have to take the bus.”

He was gifted a “really fast car,” a RX 7 that he modified to make even faster at his father’s auto shop in Queens. Though he mentioned that although he did experiment with driving fast, he quickly graduated from the risky behavior.

Although many cite the issue of teens driving fast with cars gifted by their Indo-Caribbean parents, Parsotan said it is okay to give your child a sports car, as long as you teach them how to use it. After all, it’s not a bad thing to give your child what you never had in life.

“I wouldn’t call you lucky, I would call you fortunate—not wealthy but someone whose actually fortunate to have parents that worked in life,” he said.

Singh noted back home in Guyana, he was one of the very few who had the opportunity to drive a car. His father was a rice farmer and in addition to their tractor, their family also owned a car though most of his neighbors in the village used the bus, motorcycles, or simply bicycles to get from one part of the country to the next.

Though Beer was also gifted a fast car by his parents but after the death of four of his friends, he has been sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

Was it the right sentence?

“That’s a long time, and he was a teenager,” Narine said. “I don’t know if it’s too much or too less. It’s kinda hard to say because he’s a young man.”

Beer’s Facebook page, still open for comments, reflects a number of teens who support and miss him.

“It’s been almost a year bro. Hope your doing well,” said one family member. “The justice system of America is f*cked up. Keep your head up bruh.”

 

 

Posted in Conflict Story, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Protected: Stigma of the Past

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

Posted in Conflict Story | Tagged , , | Enter your password to view comments.

Heading Elsewhere for a Better School: Education in Washington Heights

Growing up in Washington Heights, when I was in the fourth grade I had the opportunity to take a test to get into a charter school in upper Harlem, a few miles south of my current school on 189th Street and Amsterdam Avenue. My parents were elated when they found out I eventually got accepted into the school, and then they had a similar reaction when I was accepted into the high school on City College’s campus, one of the “specialized” public high schools.

The reaction from my parents is an extension of the sentiment sometimes felt throughout Washington Heights, to have the students from the area head elsewhere for a better school than what’s available. This is mainly due to subpar graduation rates and a feeling that teachers could be doing more to help their students.

For decades, many students in Washington Heights were zoned into George Washington High School, a wide campus-style building on 192nd street and Audubon Avenue. The school was notorious for being dangerous and having low graduation rates, and closed in 1999. It then reopened with four smaller schools within it, one on each floor. Community Health Academy of The Heights, a new school with students from grades 6-12, opened in 2006 with an aim to increase the student proficiency levels in the neighborhood.

The school had promise, but ultimately it left some parents feeling underwhelmed. Awilda Fernandez, resident and mother of four, enrolled her daughter Joelle in the school from the 6th to 12th grade. She felt that the students needed “more help in math, and the basic classes they needed to take so they can get into good colleges.” According to Insideschools.org, the 2012 graduation rate for Community Health Academy was 72 percent, higher than the citywide average of 66 percent but still not as high as it should be. In comparison, the four schools that make up the George Washington High School campus have an average graduation rate of 64.5 percent, lower than the citywide average.

Diana Santos, resident and mother of two, sent her son to George Washington and her daughter to Community Health Academy.  Her decision to send her son to George Washington was mainly based on location, “I sent him there because it’s right across the street.” She was satisfied with the school, but she knew there was more at fault with her son’s effort than the school itself. He managed to graduate on time, but according to her it was “just by the crack of the doors.” Diana went to George Washington for high school when she was younger, and, at the time, the school “wasn’t safe at all.  But by the time her son went there, the school was divided into four different campuses, and that meant more security guards on each floor.”

When she decided to send her daughter Cristina to Community Health Academy of the Heights, it was because “Cristina’s teacher had recommended her to go there, saying that it was a really good charter school.” She said even though it’s called community health academy, the group was so tight knit that it was like “the kids themselves were a community” and “the first year that she was there she did really well.” Diana was especially appreciative of the fact that the teachers seemed to care about the students, and they would contact her whenever Cristina’s performance waned. She said this didn’t happen with her son at George Washington, and instead she only got the standard call every marking period indicating that he wasn’t doing well.

Diana felt that communication was the most effective aspect of Community Health Academy, between the teachers and students and parents. She said “when I was growing up, the teachers rarely gave communication with the parents” but added that “now, the teachers were calling me.  I’d get automated recordings for meetings, sometimes the teachers themselves would call me and tell me what they’re doing, and we would participate.” She said there was an “extreme difference” between the two schools.

The daughters of the respective daughters added their own insights to their experiences at the school.  Both have graduated and are currently attending college. Awilda’s daughter Joelle said that “the only thing I liked about my high school was the family feeling that we had,” and then added that “I’m sure I would’ve been better off at another school. My high school didn’t prepare me enough for college life.” She also believes that when it comes to the poor quality of NYC public schools, “it’s the students who make it harder for others to learn, so it’s probably the same kind of students” throughout the city. Diana’s daughter Cristina felt that she got a “good education” but the school “failed to provide the basic high school experience.” Despite this, she “wouldn’t have preferred to attend another school.” She said that “I think the same amount of education is given equally in all public high schools in NYC.”

Even though there is a standardized curriculum throughout the public high schools, it is standardized in the sense that the teachers mainly have the same ultimate goal – getting their students to pass the statewide Regents tests. According to a report from the New York Times, the graduation rate had been generally improving since 2005, but fell from 65.7 percent in 2011 to 64.7 percent in 2012. Even more alarming is the statistic indicating that only 38.4 percent of high school graduates are ready for college or a career. This means that even though the city is making an effort towards having the students graduate, a larger issue looms: students may graduate but they are not ready to handle college and careers after high school.

Posted in Conflict Story, Uncategorized | Tagged | 2 Comments

Bullied over Parking Spots—

By: Crystal Simbudyal

Parking cone sits outside of Queens resident home.

 
Parking cone sits outside of Queens resident’s home.

 

 

As the days darken faster and the weather brings more chills, Shanel Mendonca arrives home from work in the afternoon carrying her daughter snugged asleep in her arms. A mother, who works full time and arrives home late some evenings, meets a neon orange cone along the road in front of her neighbor’s home. Sometimes it is a garbage can, holding the place for a resident to return and retrieve their parking space. Their driveway remains empty most of the time.

“It is ridiculous that people hold parking spaces. To avoid conflicts with my neighbors, I just park a few blocks up and take a walk several minutes to and from my car,” said Mendonca.

It used to be first-come, first-served, but not in this Queens Village neighborhood. It has become a trend, block after block, orange cones and garbage cans standing in the street have contributed to disturbance of relationships between neighbors because of the lack of parking available.

Shanel Mendonca, a Queens Village resident for 17 years, faces this matter on an everyday basis, as her next door neighbors hold a parking space anytime they leave their home. She is a driver in a home of several other drivers and this issue, she claims, “has become frustrating.” The family owns more than one car and if the driveway is filled up, they have to park on the street.

According to the 2013, Queens Village, New York Census Data & Community Profile, within the 7,588 households in Queens Village, “vehicle ownership trends with 16 [%] of household without vehicles, 38 [%] with one and 46 [%] with two or more vehicles.” If this trend continues, there will be less space available for people to park on the street and a rising number of frustrated neighbors if nothing is done about those marking what they think “is” their private entitled parking space.

Street parking is public. Churches can have no parking anytime.  People can make parking private in front of their home if someone is disabled;  then it will be designated as handicapped parking.

“Cops do not do anything about this. They hardly ever pass through this block anyway, and a few blocks over orange cones take over the road.” said Mendonca.

Objects are filling up the streets, not cars, some driveways even remain empty. “I think people avoid parking in their driveway because it is harder to get out in some instances. So they reserve their spot and claim it when they return home. I’m sure they know they don’t own the street,” said Mendonca.

Neighbors have noticed the inconvenience, but not much has been done to stop this trend. “This has been going on for six years, as long as I have been driving. My sister once moved a garbage can out of the street and parked. The owner of the home waited patiently for her to get out of her car. He then, told her, that’s his parking spot,” she said.

“Parking tickets are issued by street cops. Anyone who breaks the law for street parking, [such as] parking in handicapped spots, double parking, parking during no parking or standing hours, will have to pay a fee of $45 to $165– almost double in Manhattan,” said Ally, a NYPD Officer.

Kamey Tywarie, a mother, wife and resident of 13 years at a Queens Village home, noticed the trend of garbage cans being placed to hold parking spots about four years ago when businesses became more present in the neighborhood. “People just do not want to navigate in and out of their driveway,” she said.

“My husband had pulled up to park at what we thought was a parking spot but noticed someone had their parking cone in place so we couldn’t park. The owner of the home peered out their window. We had a staring contest. I was so upset,” she said.

Another time, Tywarie’s car was scratched with a nail along the sides, after she parked in front of someone’s house. It wasn’t until a year later, that one of her neighbors warned her not to park in this area anymore because her car would be keyed. “I never reported it because I didn’t have enough proof,” Tywarie said.

With the growing populations, families have more than one car; it becomes harder to park these cars in front of each other in a driveway, so people prefer to park in front of their house.

Tywarie has been tempted to the call cops but didn’t feel that it would interest them. “Unless it is a murder, a shoot-out or robbery, the officials don’t care,” she said. However, Shanel Mendonca has called 311, to report her concern about parking spots being held and very little was done in her defense.

“I live in the city, houses are practically on top of each other, and families have more than one car, some house owners, renters, even adults once kids have their own car,” Tywarie said.

It is not only residents who deal with the issue of parking wars. People who take mass transit, or who live by a major subway station like Tywarie has seen an increase in the number of people parking their vehicles and taking the subway to work and school.

“Although it may be a convenience to park in front of someone else’s home and only return to pick up their vehicle , it makes a huge inconvenience for the residents of the community. There is a home health agency building up the road from me and employees and visitors come in the morning and take up parking,” said Tywarie.

If someone takes two hours to shovel the snow in front of their home and wants to park there, they should be able to. “Part of it is being a good neighbor. Move the cone if it’s in your way. If a fight occurs after then we get involved. We can’t summons a ticket because we don’t know what the cone is for. It can range from temporary construction or a dumpster drop across the street from a house that going under construction. Besides without the cones, it wouldn’t be a safe environment if waste materials are just lying around., said Officer Ally.

Although the police will not do much about holding parking spots, residents look for a solution. “I think a solution to all this would be, if people just used their driveway we would have more parking available and if parking spots were available for businesses or apartment building residents then maybe people could just park in places provided when going to that specific home care, or pharmacy or school,” said Tywarie.

Posted in Conflict Story, Neighborhoods, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Restaurant Row in Spanish Harlem

Laisla

In the middle of the day on Third Avenue between 104th and 105th Street, Geraldine Mariano walks slowly to the corner where La Isla, a Spanish restaurant is displaying a couple of roasted chickens spinning slowly above a warm fire for all pedestrians to see. She stops and looks across the street where another Spanish restaurant is displaying its own assortment of roasted chickens on a rotisserie surrounded by pork, fried chicken and a couple of yellow rolls full of cheese known as Bollitos. After a moment of indecision, Geraldine turns around and enters La Isla.

“This is a constant struggle for me to decide where to eat everyday. Once it was a good struggle, now it is simply annoying,” Geraldine says. Geraldine is a Filipino professional chef born and raised in the United States who loves food and has lived in Spanish Harlem for a couple of years. Despite being a professional chef, she loves to just buy Spanish food because she isn’t Spanish herself. Talking about the restaurants, she said that, “These restaurants have been in constant war with each other for quite some time, and everyday there’s a new twist that sort of makes this a soap opera.”

In a radius of two streets there are three Spanish restaurants. Each restaurant has a similar menu, which usually consist of lunch specials and combos tailored made for whatever they are serving that day. The first is La Isla on the corner of 104th Street and Third Avenue; it is a small cozy place that is known for its commitment to the customer by offering delivery service and great store hours of operations. They have four small tables, and 5 high chairs to eat over the counter. El Caribe is on 105th Street and Lexington Avenue and is known for the number of locations it has in the upper west and east side of Manhattan. It is a bit darker and unlike La Isla, you cannot see what is going on unless you are inside. The third and final one is La Lechonera located on 103rd Street and Third Avenue. La Lechonera has a little bigger menu that includes pasta and seafood and benefit from being the first restaurant viewed for commuters coming from the 6-train line. It has a lot more tables, and a bathroom for the customers. However, they do not offer delivery like the first two restaurants.

The Hispanic restaurants in Spanish Harlem have escalated what was a friendly competition, into one that is becoming an issue in the neighborhood. Escalating pressure between trying to dominate the area, has led the restaurants into a war among themselves. There is a divide among those in the area on whether the competition is good or bad for the neighborhood. The conflict among these Spanish restaurants is significant because the area is predominantly Spanish. According to the Community District Needs report for the 2012 fiscal year, Spanish Harlem houses over 18,000 residents of Hispanic origin. The issue lies on whether the restaurants should come to an end on their war, or whether letting it run its course is what’s best for the neighborhood.

All three restaurants have a nice share of clientele. The idea however, that one is a hindrance to the other is a sentiment shared by both employees and customers alike. Catherine Johnson, a part time worker at La Isla believes that, “It’s a pick your poison with these restaurants. Obviously there are positives of having so many of us so clustered up together, because the area has become popular for Spanish food. So that attracts more customers constantly.”

On the flip side though she said, “there is a constant battle over who is better that affects everybody, if one of the restaurants brings down their lunch menu to $6.50 instead of  $7.00 then that forces the other to adjust in ways that may or may not be negative.”

Geraldine said that, “there are clearly strategies that come into play between these restaurants, La Caridad began bringing down the prices on the price of their chicken for example. This in turn made La Isla expand its hours of operations to 24 hours a day.” The consensus among all these restaurants is that there will always be a target audience, not because of what they sell but because of whom they sell it to. Spanish Harlem’s population is 48 percent Hispanic.

Another worker at one of the restaurants, who declined to give her name because of her employment, said that, “no matter, what big food chains move in here, the competition will never be MacDonald’s or Burger King. It will always be the restaurant across the street because this area is predominantly Hispanic, and Hispanics want Hispanic food, not a cheeseburger.”

Many Hispanics are aware of the competition, and there is fear that it will bring down the quality of the overall food and service. Geraldine who lives off cooking explained that, “If these restaurants are bringing down the price of these lunch menus, how are they compensating for the loss in revenue? By bringing down the quality of the food, which is really sad for all of us.”

La Lechonera is the first restaurant seen by commuters coming from the 6 train line

La Lechonera is the first restaurant seen by commuters coming from the 6 train line

Another surfacing issue is that of commercial food chains. They have slowly integrated themselves into the neighborhood. The MacDonald’s was remodeled a couple of weeks ago, and a Taco Bell was placed right across from La Isla. The conflict between the Spanish restaurants has a direct effect on this trend. When speaking to Hector Guzman, manager at the local pharmacy and resident of Spanish Harlem for over 10 years, he explained that, “the friendly competition kept these large food chains from interfering with the local businesses. Because they had no real incentive to come in and try to make money in an area that favorites Spanish food heavily.” The problem he said, “is that now that this competition has led to negative effects such as the decline of the quality of food that its not worth its price, people are turning towards these food chains because they are just as bad as the Spanish restaurants and the same or even cheaper price. I personally think this war needs to come to an end.”

La Isla has been around for over 10 years, and while it has its fair share of loyal customers, the constant war with La Caridad and the other Spanish restaurant Lechonero has prevented it from expanding. The location is about half the size of a classroom, and between 1 pm and 2 pm it is impossible to manage to sit and eat because of the high volume of customers.

Another interesting effect of their conflict is the effect it has on the small local businesses that aren’t food related.  “All of these small businesses benefit from the restaurants because people from all over Harlem and even the upper east side, come to this area looking for Spanish food. This brings footsteps to the area which in turn brings customers into our stores,” Hector said.

However, he continued, “If they continue to bicker and find ways to outdo each other, the traffic will diminish and businesses will do bad.  The overall economy of the area will suffer.”

As Geraldine sits in La Isla, the waitress who serves her food smiles at her and asks: “Where were you yesterday? I was expecting you.” She merely smiles and says, “I was undecided on where to eat, I wasn’t sure which roasted chicken I wanted today.”

Posted in Conflict Story, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Battling for Parking Spaces in Parkchester

It is 7:30 a.m. on Monday morning. The stressful challenge to avoid a ticket and circling city blocks for a parking spot begins again for car owners in Parkchester in the Bronx. Monday through Saturday residents play the parking games. They rise early because they aspire to keep their current space which stands on the side of the street where alternate side is suspended the next day.

"The frequent street cleaning is hard on residents having to run down stairs to move their cars and find a park," said Vanessa Lee.

“The frequent street cleaning is hard on residents having to run down stairs to move their cars and find a park,” said Vanessa Lee.

If plan A fails, the next best thing is to find a spot on a street not governed by the meter. In the most desperate attempts, meter parking is heaven sent. After the morning parking wars die down at 9:00 a.m., the shopper have begun to arrive. They must now try to find a space among the uninhabited cars that rest in the streets of Metropolitan and McGraw Avenues. The solution to end this chaos has yet to be determined.

“Parking is a big issue and I’m not comfortable with it at all,” said Vanessa Lee a 15 year resident. “I feel that as a person who is an owner of a unit in Parkchester, there should be something designated at least for the owners.” Residents and business owners are divided over the parking issue. Business owners are looking for a solution to the problem that benefits the shopper. Residents are hoping for a solution that grants them a guaranteed parking space.

Parkchester is a residential community situated on 129 acres of land and is home to 12,000 apartment units. According to the Social Explorer, the estimated population is around 30,000 people. There are approximately 2,926 people who are unit owners and 10,024 people who rent in the area. Out of this total number about 3,082 people use cars as a means of transportation to work and school. “It’s congested over hear it’s crowded and the meters make it a lot worse,” said Lee. “There’s a lot of fighting and controversy with people trying to battle to park.”

According to Lee, the frequency of the street cleaning and different hourly limits on the meters in different parts of the area is creating a major hassle for the residents. “The parking culture in the neighborhood causes people to be careless when it comes to others property,” said Lee.

“One night I parked my vehicle across the street on McGraw Ave there was an empty space in front of my car. When I went out to the car the next morning someone backed into the front of my car,” said Lee. Situations such as this are the reason she believes Parkchester should reconfigure the parking setup.

Parkchester Preservation was not available for comment. According to the Bronx Times, back in May Central Parking which oversees the garages wanted to eliminate the assigned parking in for residents. The monthly rate for a parking space in one of the three garages ranges from $180-$220 based on the Central Parking website. The proposal was later scrapped because frustrated residents signed a petition in order to keep their assigned spaces.

“It’s too congested they configured it for max amount of revenue for themselves which means nothing for the store owners,” said George Scopolitis the owner of Step Ins Restaurant. He believes that a reorganization plan needs to be implemented by Parkchester Preservation. “If no one can park they are not going to get out of their car and buy something,” said Scopolitis.

He alludes to the many times customers call into the restaurant asking for a to-go-order because they cannot find a parking space to go sit down and eat. “If you are going to sit down and order T-bone steak that’s not what you are going to order to go,” said Scopolitis. “I might have made $20, but I could have made $80.” This type of decision making also makes customers think twice before returning because they know the difficult parking situation that exist, according to Scopolitis.

Scopolitis and his family spent many years trying to find a solution to the parking problem and the effects that it has had on the business. Step Ins opened in 1974 and tried to rent spaces from several lot owners to no avail. “I think they should reconfigure the isles in the middle of the street or at least build another parking garage with self-rising elevators to maximize space,” said Scopolitis. He believes this will increase profits for the area stores and Parkchester.

“The area behind Macy’s, if that was designated for renters and owners then we wouldn’t be fighting each other in the street,” said Lee in reference to the parking lot located in the South Condominium’s Yankee Mall. Parkchester is divided into two sections north and south. The dividing line is Union Port Rd.

The South Condominium is in the heart of Parkchester commercial zone and has the least parking for its residents. The North Condominium houses more parking lots with residents allowed to apply for permits to park in them. This practice gives residents as sense of ownership to the community. The larger issue remains with the large number of residents with cars out numbering spaces.

“It’s gotten so crowded and I don’t think Parkchester is doing all they can,” said Lee. In 2007, Parkchester was forced to demolish its parking garage that stood vacant five years prior due to structural issues. Since the demolition, the building has yet to be replaced. Despite this, the complex is doing what it can to accommodate its residence, shoppers and business owners. Over the past year the complex invested in renovations of the plumbing and landscaping. The Metro North is also scheduled to build a Parkchester Station on East Tremont Avenue which may push the organization to address the parking situation further.

“Parking is an issue for some people, but for me my business gets a lot of foot traffic from people in the area,” said Chris Moriatis the owner of Ellie’s Diner located at 58 Metropolitan Oval. He agrees that parking is an issue, but he sees it as a way for people to visit the area walk around and take in the recreational landscaping the complex designed.

More parking in the area would only cause the air to become more polluted. According to the NYC Environmental Protection web site, “every year motor vehicles contribute approximately 11% of the local PM2.5 and 28% of the nitrogen oxide emissions.” The city is trying to reduce the amount of air pollutants emitted into the air and water each year. A green effort such as this is sure to keep Parkchester Preservation from adding more parking to the community. “I don’t know how much more they could do. It’s up to the city,” said Moriatis.

Posted in Conflict Story | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Searching for a Skateboard Haven in Hempstead

“Blake is my son- a twin, with a twin brother- and he went across the country to follow his dreams of skateboarding,” said Natalie Bethea.

Blake Gray left for California four years ago from Hempstead, where skate parks are miles apart. The Village of Hempstead does not have a skate park. The opportunity to become a professional skateboarder was nonexistent for Gray, as is the same for skateboarders today who are left to jump over milk cartons stacked in vacant parking lots.

“Blake was always the nontraditional kid,” Bethea remembered. He would bring classmates home from school to teach them how to ride and challenged them to do better. Bethea said that she raised her kids to be open-minded and they celebrated every holiday. Gray comes from a line of teachers but Bethea said that her son “is a teacher in a different right.”

He played other sports that were popular in Hempstead but he drifted to skateboarding because it was unpopular. He said that people probably watched him thinking, “Look at this idiot skateboarding down Jerusalem Avenue.” Gray and his small cohort would take on the night on four wheels. “We were only five people skateboarding in Hempstead at the time,” he said about the group of friends that stuck with him as they passed into a stereotypically white pastime.

Gray is African American. The skateboard nudged under his arm was a point of contention as he walked around his middle school. He was teased: white boy.

Heidi Lemmon, the executive director of the Skate Park Association of the U.S.A, said that in her visit to Hempstead, she noticed an isolated African American community. “They would take an attitude that this is a white kid’s sport and they would prefer a basketball or baseball player but basketball and baseball were once white,” Lemmon said.

According to “Spots of Spacial Desire,” a report in 2009 on skate parks, skate plazas, and urban politics, skateboarding is a “generally white, male, upper-middle class enterprise” and it “reproduces social inequalities that perpetuate contemporary race, class, and gender privileges.”

Bethea said that skateboarding does not have nationality, class, race, or economic bias because it does not cost much. The average cost of a skateboard is between $50 and $70 but indeed, the need for a skateboarding haven in Hempstead has caused skaters a price.

IMG_2907

15-year old Andrew Darnell, a young skateboarder jumping over a makeshift skateboard ramp in Hempstead.

Gray was the oldest of his crew and took responsibility for them, picking the places they would skate and how they would get there. “At the gas station on Uniondale Ave, all the kids would throw down,” he said. “It was pretty crazy having to travel around. There were all these variables.” Gray said that someone who drank too much could take a swing at them and they would have little protection. “It made you a target because you didn’t have the strength in numbers,” he said. Bethea said that “it was a horror” every time her son left the house because he was chased out of everywhere he skated. There was no legal place for them to skate. “They have to go so far from home to do something they love,” she said.

Many of the skaters are young and cannot afford to travel. Baldwin Skate Park is five miles away from Hempstead Village. The 11,000 square-foot park is divided into beginner, intermediate, and advanced sections. Liz Rosario of Parks and Recreation of Hempstead Village said that skateboarding is a camaraderie sport where the old and young prefer to work together. The entrance fee is three dollars for town residents and nine dollars for non-town residents with the purchase of a ten dollar ID. In these private parks, skaters must wear protective gear. In Nassau County, a skater or their guardian can be fined $50 if they forfeit a helmet.

Andrew Darnell, a 15-year old skateboarder who wants to become a pro.

Darnell is studying his fellow skaters while they practice. He wants to go pro.

The Town of North Hempstead opened North Hempstead’s Skate Spot in 2011. It is a 10,000 square foot park without an entrance fee. It is 12 miles from Hempstead Village, making it a trek for skaters.

Without a skate park, skaters used infrastructure as a playground: sidewalks, handrails, benches, curbs and the list goes on. “Spots of Spatial Desire” reported that private skate parks used to survive on membership fees but there were  many trespassers and the skate park enterprise experienced a bankruptcy around the 1980’s because members left and insurance premiums went up. Grinding on handrails instead, skaters were hit with charges for damaging public property.

With what Bethea described as a “negative stigma” towards skateboarders, skate parks are often viewed as drug trafficking hot-spots and an invitation to the delinquent. In 1990 in Portland, Oregon, a group of skaters built a structure under the Burnside Bridge, notorious for social misfits, including the homeless and prostitutes. The collaboration of the homeless giving the skaters random debris to build in a public space was, of course, illegal.

Lemmon said that skaters are perceived as “throw-away kids.” Heavy metal icon Rob Zombie reportedly wanted these kids off of his lawn in Woodbury, Connecticut. His wife called the Hollow Park Skate Park by their home a “noise pollutant” at the Litchfield County budget meeting. The noise escalates in a skateboarding crowd when tricks are landed but also when they flop.

Alex Dumas of the Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Ottawa and Sophie Laforest of the Department of Kinesiology at the University of Montreal looked into the medical aspect of skating on the streets versus a skate park. They said that “the streets represent the most common location for injuries.” They suggested that skate parks would be safer because of regulations and monitoring. In a 35-day study with 422 registered skaters in 11 parks in Montreal, they found that less than one percent sustained injuries that needed medical attention. They also noticed that the skaters often evaluated their physical limits and built new skills around them.

According to the Journal of Trauma in 2002 by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, skateboarding had an injury rate of 8.9 per 1,000 participants and basketball produced 21.2 ER-treated injuries per 1,000 players. Lemmon said that skating held the same liability as figure skating.

Figure skating is done on ice and ice for skaters is a problem. “The hardest part is you get six to eight months of good skateboard time,” Gray said about skating in Hempstead. He said he could continue to wake up at 7 a.m. to skate every day, “And progress, where?” He questioned. “The numbers aren’t big enough in Hempstead,” he said. Gray said that skating in California is at a magnitude that the East Coast has never seen. He believes a skate park is still necessary for the skateboarders out East. “It’s more so like an office,” he said.

Four years ago with the help of Lemmon, Parks and Recreation of Hempstead Village presented a proposal to Mayor Wayne J. Hall, Sr. with 250 signatures to build a skate park. Rosario said that they found three parks large enough to facilitate a decent-sized skate park. It costs $40 per square foot to build a skate park and 20,000 square feet is a fair size, according to Lemmon. They were refused. “I could think of 10,000 other kids they could be afraid of,” Rosario said.

Lemmon said that the mayor did not receive their message well. “With all the problems with kids, when a city has a lot of rambunctious males, council members should be jumping for joy to build something,” she said. She said Mayor Hall attended a skating event they had in a school gym and he was upset that they were there. He allocated funds to upgrading all of the baseball fields in Hempstead Village.

Gray was restless without his haven. Bethea remembers when he said to her, “Ma, I have to do this.” She said, “I often equate it to a young lady who wants to go to Hollywood to be an actress.” She gave him $121 for a ticket to California.

“You want to sacrifice your all just to skateboard,” Gray said. In California he started teaching skaters and taking them to competitions. He was noticed. He coaches skaters as a brand ambassador for NIKE now at 25.

He will always remember taking his chances winding through the traffic on his skateboard, a minority in the taboo sport of Hempstead. “When I’m on the streets, the streets become small,” he said. “I’m Godzilla.”

Blake Gray in the air.

Blake Gray in the air.

Posted in Conflict Story | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments