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Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park FAQ, timeline, and infographics (pinned post)

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BrooklynSpeaks responds to Community Engagement draft: respondents' skew affects affordability; open spaces praised are public, not private; subsidies ignored; accountability sought

The coalition BrooklynSpeaks this morning circulated an email to its mailing list, titled What we learned from ESD’s community engagement report . While the message doesn't credit my earlier coverage, Draft Community Engagement Report Backs (!?) Developers' Aim to Downplay Low-Income Housing , there is significant overlap. BrooklynSpeaks, though, offers valuable focus. "The median annual income of most participants and respondents was more than $150K." BrooklynSpeaks notes, as I'd pointed out, that the income skew likely affects the respondents' purported support for more expensive below-market "affordable housing," though, according to a respected housing organization, "moderate and middle income levels make up only about 7% of the more than one million rent-burdened households in New York City." BrooklynSpeaks asks : shouldn't Atlantic Yards address where the need is greatest? "The open spaces cited by participants as examples ...

Atlantic Yards CDC agenda: Executive Session should include details of developers' subsidy request. Routine budget approval invites scrutiny of annual spending.

Sometime in the last day, with barely enough time to post public comment by today's deadline of 3 pm , Empire State Development (ESD), the state authority that oversees/shepherds Atlantic Yards, released the agenda for tomorrow's meeting of the purportedly advisory Atlantic Yards Community Development Corporation (AY CDC). The directors will get an oral report on the Draft Community Engagement Report, regarding public input on the future of the project, that was issued a few days ago.  My critique is here:  Draft Community Engagement Report Backs (!?) Developers' Aim to Downplay Low-Income Housing . Executive session Also of note, the directors will go into executive session regarding "Negotiations with the Project Developer Regarding Memorandum of Understanding and Development of Property/Project." The presumably involves the developer's desire for $350 million in subsidies for the platform (as I reported ), its announced request for 1.6 million in additiona...

Foregone property taxes on Barclays Center now estimated at $122.7M, tiny decrease. Other venues see growth. PILOTs pay off tax-exempt construction debt.

OK, it's time for the annual look at the foregone property taxes for the Barclays Center and the other major New York City sports venues.  While the non-paid taxes for the Brooklyn arena had risen from $53.7 million to $123.6 million, as of last year, as I  reported , this year, there's been a slight reversal, to $122.7 million, as indicated in the screenshot below, according to the New York City Department of Finance's  Annual Report on Tax Expenditures . That, of course, dwarfs the $5 million a year "invested"  since 2020 by the Social Justice Fund of the Joe and Clara Tsai Foundation, the philanthropic venture of the arena company owners By contrast, as shown in the screenshot below, the tax exemption for Citifield, home of the New York Mets, rose from $159.7 million to $165 million and the exemption for Yankee Stadium (NYC Dept. of Parks and Recreation), home of the New York Yankees, rose from $129.5 million to $133.3 million. They get their tax break via th...

Before Draft Community Engagement Report, ESD posts copy of online survey questions: "Help Inform the Future of Atlantic Yards!"

As we wait for the Draft Community Engagement Report to be released ahead of the two meetings on March 19, first the Atlantic Yards Community Development Corporation and then a fourth public workshop, Empire State Development (ESD), the state authority that oversees/shepherds the project. has posted the online survey questions as a document (also at bottom). Survey responses, as well as public responses at the three previous workshops, should inform the report. As I wrote Nov. 19, citing the excerpt below,  there’s been no proposal yet of an alternate way to deliver public benefits without acceding to the developer’s blueprint—or of third-party experts to vet the validity of the plans.  Since then, the lack of details--height of the buildings? rendering of the proposed plan? requested subsidies?--have been absent. So it's not likely that they'll be in the report, which may be issued today or tomorrow to allow for a minimal opportunity to digest and respond before the meetin...

Atlantic Yards CDC meeting scheduled for afternoon of March 19, hours before public workshop. Topics surely will include Draft Community Engagement Report.

Just today, with less than a week's notice, Empire State Development (ESD), the state authority that oversees/shepherds Atlantic Yards, has announced a meeting on Thursday, March 19, of the advisory Atlantic Yards Community Development Corporation (AY CDC). That meeting, at 3 pm, starts just hours before the fourth of four public workshops , which will be held online  at 6:30 pm . Ahead of this meeting, though  the timing is unspecified, ESD will release the Draft Community Engagement Report on its website . The report summarizes key themes and insights from the first three public workshops and the online survey. As I wrote, my bet is the report will be used to ratify the new developer's request for an additional 1.6 million square feet of bulk, worth perhaps $320 million, as needed to deliver promised open space and, as of now, unspecified amounts of below-market affordable housing. The Draft Report will be posted on the ESD website along with an online form for people t...