Striking a Balance in Bay Ridge

A massive black binder stuffed with paper labeled “93 Lounge” sits on a row of file cabinets in the Community Board 10 office in Bay Ridge. This collection of paperwork, forms, and handwritten letters marks the beginning of the Board’s involvement in the neighborhood’s decade-spanning noise issue.

“The joke was that there was a bar on every single corner in Bay Ridge,” long-time resident Denise Diacoumakos said of the neighborhood’s past. “The noise used to be part of the summer here. You knew that on Friday and Saturday nights especially that it was going to be really noisy.”

Music blared. While night owls shouted and laughed, Bay Ridge residents lay in bed and covered their ears. It was the price paid for living in an area whose reputation for lively nightlife stretched back to the 1970’s.

But frustrated and sleep-deprived families no longer have to suffer in silence. Since 2012, members of Community Board 10 have worked with Bay Ridge and Dyker Heights residents and neighborhood businesses to combat the noise issue.

“93 Lounge was the turning point,” Community Board District Manager Josephine Beckmann said.

After over three years of complaints from residents about the disturbances that the lounge brought with its opening, Beckmann and Chairman Dennis Rosen of the New York State Liquor Authority worked together to create a list of stipulations to ensure residents quiet nights. Most of these stipulations—such as the requirement to keep windows and doors closed when music is playing—have to do with minimizing noise.

On a wet and windy December night, board members gathered around a small conference table and listened as prospective business owners discussed discussed the futures of their establishments. Architectural drawings, occupancy documents, and a list of liquor-licensed businesses in the area made their way around the table. An eager restaurant and karaoke bar owner hoped to gain the board’s approval to operate at one of the most problematic locations CB10 has ever dealt with. Drug use, underage drinking, excessive noise, and stabbings constitute the spot’s past.

“We understand the community’s concern,” the restaurant’s representative said. “We are more than happy to make accommodations to satisfy the board.”

Since June 2014, the storefront remained vacant. When residents caught wind of a new and potentially noisy business moving into the troubled space, they sent their noise concerns to the board’s email inbox. Some even started a written petition which collected about 100 signatures.

“This is a serious situation,” said Lori Willis, chair of Police and Public Safety at CB10. “We’re dealing with a location with quite an adverse history. We have to make sure that residents are heard.”

After almost an hour of clarifications about the planned security, promises to keep to their proposed plan of operation, delegations about the size of the in-house speakers, and the steps being taken to soundproof the space, board members delivered their verdict. All in favor.

complaint chart

Number of noise complaints filed by Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, and Fort Hamilton residents

Although much is being done to resolve the problem, 2014 saw the most noise complaints out of the past five years according to NYC Open Data. Beckmann believed that this may be due to the instructions posted on the board’s website which explain how to file a nightlife complaint to 311, the New York Police Department, the SLA, and directly to CB10, but the growing economy also may have something to do with it. According to a 2014 Market Watch survey, October marked the sixth straight month of boosted spending at bars and restaurants.

An increase in consumer spending ignites a spark in the hearts of business owners, but the only thing that some locals can do is groan. At a recent CB10 meeting, Tommy Casatelli—owner of the Lock Yard, Bay Ridge’s first and only craft beer garden—was the subject of complaints.

“The doors are always open so that noise is spilling out into the street, and he has music playing in the rear yard,” Marisa Falero, a resident who lives by the bar said. “Our fears are being realized that we’re going to have a backyard nightclub going on.”

Another resident who lives near the Lock Yard voiced minor noise complaints about the bar’s trivia night on Wednesdays which he said he could hear through his closed windows. “In the summer, forget it,” he said. “But I’m here because I just want things to stay calm. I’ve spoken to Tommy about it and we’re working it out.”

Even before its opening last summer, neighbors expressed concern over the possible noise issues the business might bring. Elizabeth Pebian told The Brooklyn Paper that she feared that the bar would cause noise problems and property damage if it opened, and created a petition in order to keep the bar from opening. 29 other residents also signed the petition.

“I have $20,000 worth of soundproofing with probably another $3,000 worth to be put up in my storage room,” Casatelli said. Although he loses seven plus hours of work a week because of the stipulations, he promised that he will continue to make any needed changes in order to comply with residents’ complaints.

“I understand,” he continued. “I’ve dialogued with two or three other residents, one of which has a two-year-old baby. If we need to make further adjustments, we will.”

Despite the petitions, 311 calls, and concerned emails, however, some Bay Ridge residents said they have seen an improvement. “The noise level is down considerably,” Diacoumakos said

And while some might assume that Bay Ridge seniors who account for about 20% of the area’s population are the ones doing all the complaining, Beckmann disproved the old myth about angry retirees.

“Complaints are from young and old,” she said. “Everyone wants to sleep!”

Johanna Mattsson: Media Dreamer

She is always caught up on all of the latest news with the help of her TV and breaking news phone apps, and she’ll never forgive you if you know a piece of current events trivia that she doesn’t. That’s because Johanna Mattsson is a self-proclaimed news junkie.

“I get anxious if I don’t know all the news that’s happening!” she said.

Mattsson, 23, first began reporting in high school when she chose to give up lacrosse and soccer due to too many concussions. Though she could no longer play, she became the manager of Greenwich High School’s lacrosse team where she helped to write up game reports. During her time as both a player and manager, Mattsson was surrounded by reporters and broadcasters who were covering the games and loved the special atmosphere she found herself in. It was then that she knew that she wanted to work in media. “It’s so exciting to see how fast everything happens,” she said.

IMG_7430Her passion for media landed her various different internships with local publications and TV stations. She is currently working as an intern at a national media company, where she is experiencing the media world firsthand.

Mattsson emigrated from Sweden to the United States with her family when she was seven years old, and settled into Greenwich, Connecticut where she still lives today. Though going to school in the US without knowing a word of English was hard, Mattson said that learning English from the bottom up made learning other languages such as Spanish and German easier.

The biggest challenge she faces, Mattsson said, is deciding which area of media she wants to pursue. What she does know, though, is that she will be happy with “any job that requires an attention to detail in a media atmosphere.” She also enjoys copy editing and will start a copy editing job in December. “I’m a grammar nerd,” Mattsson said with a smile.

Travelling is also one of her passions, and she was able to combine journalism and travel on a trip abroad to Australia where she reported on and studied media in Australia. “It was the best decision I’ve ever made,” she said of the trip.

Today, Mattsson is a Macaulay Honors student at Baruch College and is a double major in journalism and psychology. She hopes to one day move to New York City and live in the media capital of the world.

“If you work in media,” Mattsson said, “it’s where you want to be.”

A Muslim Leader in Brooklyn, Reconciling 2 Worlds

The way Andrea Elliot organizes this New York Times piece shows that it is an exemplary work for how a story should be organized. She was able to shadow Mr. Shata for 6 months and was therefore able to narrate his story and describe the challenges he went through as he struggled between following his faith and teaching the modern generation in a mosque in Brooklyn, New York. Elliot uses chronology in her story, including time jumps, flashbacks, and flash forwards. An interesting technique that was brought up during class was “sign posts”. Similar to a nut graf, Elliot gave us a hint as to where the story was going. Lastly, the reporting of this story must have been a challenge as Elliot translated many of the conversations that were observed.This is a technique in itself. It shows future writers that although a story may be challenging at first, once the final product is complete, it’s well worth it in the end.

Battle in Black and White Blog Response

What techniques does Amy Fox use in narrating this conflict story? Who are her sources? What kind of research did she do? What is the arc of this conflict story and where is the nut graf?

Amy Fox narrates her conflict story with many techniques. She uses instances of flashbacks to her grandparent’s recollection of their memories in Stuyvesant Town. Fox also uses real life accounts from her family including her grandmother, grandfather, and even from local residents that lived during that time and who currently live there. Real life accounts definitely gave her story a personal touch. At the same time, she balanced the personal content with research content. She did a bountiful amount of research about the housing in Stuyvesant Town, including researching at the public library. The arc of the story occurs when residents began to protest and stand up for what they believed in, which was standing up for the black residents in the housing units. They wanted the racial tension to stop and instead for people to be integrated no matter what the color of their skin was. Fox does a great job at linking the different parts of her story from the arc, to the flashbacks, and to the current. She also does an excellent job at making her nut graf known, which was the 5th graf, when she links personal and research content perfectly.

Hayley Bifulco

For most people, saying that your major is in journalism and creative writing leads them to think that you may like to write stories of some kind, whether it be news or tales of fiction. But for Hayley Bifulco, the motive to have a major in journalism is slightly different. “I never particularly loved writing because I didn’t think I was very creative or good at it. Journalism gives the plot of the story and then I get to choose the way to tell it.”

The 21 year old senior at Baruch lived in West Hempstead her whole life, and while she may not love writing, she certainly enjoys acting and theater. “I’m in the Fine and Performing Arts Department’s Fall production of “Lysistrata” as Lysistrata, which runs from November 18-22,” Bifulco said. “I studied acting at my community college and picked up the theater minor at Baruch  because I need more credits to graduate on time and I already had a lot of the theater minor prerequisites.” Other than acting, she also works on Long Island as a soccer instructor for preschool-aged children and volunteers at her church.

The decision to transfer from a community college to Baruch was a relatively easy decision though. “I needed to transfer after receiving my associates and CUNY and SUNY schools were the only affordable options, but very good ones.” Eventually, a journalism faculty member recommended taking feature article writing. “I’m glad I registered for it this semester,” she said. Ideally, in the future, if there was a way to combine her theater and journalism experience together, “that would be awesome.”

 

 

A Muslim Leader in Brooklyn, Reconciling 2 Worlds

In her piece in The New York Times, Andrea Elliott masterfully writes and organizes this long-form piece about an imam who faces the challenges of tailoring his Muslim teachings to the people of a modern mosque in Brooklyn. One way that Elliott chose to organize this piece is by comparing and juxtaposing Sheik Reda Shata’s Muslim way of thinking with the westernized issues that are presented to him on a daily basis. This allows us to gain insight into the challenges that Shata faces on a daily basis as an imam. For example, Elliott cites that one of the challenges that Shata faced in America was whether or not to grant a Muslim woman a divorce from her husband. Divorce is usually prohibited in the Muslim religion, however, he granted the woman a divorce to balance his traditional teaching to his new western way of life. Also, as mentioned in class, Elliott uses chronology to organize her piece, sometimes flashing back to his early upbringing in Egypt, and then coming back to the present day in order to show how his past and present are intertwined.

Re: A Muslim Leader in Brooklyn, Reconciling 2 Worlds

Elliott uses jumps in time to narrate her story, and weaves the past and present together with Muslim beliefs and customs. I think that this was a great approach because it engages the reader and keeps the article from being a boring story about the duties of an imam. The interesting chronology that Elliott chose is also very affective in that it gives life to the story. An example of one of these time skips is in the section entitled “An Invitation to Islam.” In this section, Elliott explains how Mr. Shata became an imam and how the appointment process works and also mentions how Shata’s family was granted visas to come to the US. Instead of going right into the narrative of Shata landing at JFK in the next section, though, she talks about the mosque and all of the services it provides. It is only after the mention of immigrants in “A Mosque, a Magnet,” that Elliott returns to Shata’s arrival in New York in “Skip 911. Call the Imam.” She also does a nice job of mixing in descriptive and visual details with hard facts about mosques in the city and the number of worshipers who pray at the mosque every Friday. All of the different voices and conflicts included really give the story color and they make clear how much Shata does for his community.

Anson Chan: Gamer and Writer

Anson Chan from Douglaston, New York prepares to graduate from Baruch this school year with a degree in Politics and Journalism.

“I like things that don’t involve math,” Chan said. The craft of writing has always been “the most natural thing” to him. While his peers, who excelled in math, complained about essay assignments, Chan never minded the task.

“Sure, they took longer to write than a math assignment or something, but it was much easier,” Chan said.

Chan writes his own column in The Ticker about video games. “It gives me an excuse to play more often.” When he’s not gaming he watches videos produced by Rooster Teeth, a short-film production company. They create short films, live action and animated, or films that use interactive engines from computer and video games. This company influenced Chan to work on video-editing of his own in his free time.

His dream job is to work for Rooster Teeth. They recently opened a news-related department and Chan hopes his journalism skills learned at Baruch will help him in the hiring process post-graduation.