Atlantic Yards Ombudsman faces audience frustrated with partial answers regarding stimulus funds, Carlton Avenue bridge

Last night, after another year of contention, (significant) stagnation, and (sporadic) revelation regarding the Atlantic Yards project, Taylor faced a somewhat more prickly and clearly more frustrated audience, which deemed many of Taylorās--and thus the ESDCās--answers inadequate or evasive. He spoke before about 60 people at the same venue--St. Cyril's Belarusian Cathedral on Atlantic Avenue.
(Copyrighted photos by Jonathan Barkey)
Notably, he was unable to say whether the ESDC formally backed an effort, encouraged at least by Borough President Marty Markowitz and reportedly developer Forest City Ratner, to gain federal stimulus funds for the Atlantic Yards project. He suggested that the city Department of Transportation bore all responsibility for the contract it signed allowing the reconstruction of the Carlton Avenue Bridge to take up to three years, even though the ESDC publicly announced it would take two years. And, as the ESDC has done, he maintained the official position that lawsuits, rather than the credit crunch, have stalled work on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's Vanderbilt Yard.

(Here's video of James's questioning of Taylor. Here's coverage in the Brooklyn Paper.)
Project fundamentally altered?
"When is this project no longer this project and is so fundamentally altered that we need to look at it again and start over?" asked District Leader JoAnne Simon, a candidate for the City Council seat currently occupied by David Yassky.
āItās a very good question,ā Taylor said. āWe are not at that point yet--because Iāve asked that question." He said he'd take her concern back to the agency and be willing to respond publicly.
Taylor remained mostly on an even keel, but responded at times contentiously or with a touch of humor. While a few challenged him harshly and several expressed frustration, others said he was personally responsive but in an awkward position as the stateās AY point man. Indeed, he acknowledged he was "out of the loop" on some issues and "pretty low on the totem pole."
Council Member James, who knows Taylor from his previous stint as a Council aide [actually: Chief of Staff to Speaker Gifford Miller], teasingly suggested sheād like to see him in another job.
Also at the meeting, an aide to State Sen. Velmanette Montgomery announced an oversight hearing would be held on April 24.
Opening statement
Opening the Q&A session, which lasted a little longer than an hour, Taylor briefly described his job: āWhat I do is respond to complaints and questions by individuals, various community groups, as well as elected officials. I try to respond to those questions as quickly as possible. If people need to see me, I schedule appointments.ā
āThe past year has seen some infrastructure progress [for the project], mainly along Flatbush, Dean, and Sixth Avenues. A new sewer main was installed, a new water main, a new sewer chamber, as well as significant demolitions at roughly 33 addresses. Approximately $70 million has been spent,ā he noted.
āBut oddly enough, it seems we are no further along than we were a year ago,ā he said, to some laughs and mild jeers. āWhen I came here a year ago, a number of folks said there were issues in the credit market, issues with lawsuits that may slow up or hinder the projects.ā Thatās what has happened, and Taylor acknowledged, it is probably worse today than it was a year ago.ā
Questions begin

Where does the money come from, one resident asked. The developer, Taylor said, spends the money on infrastructure, and the ESDC will reimburse up to the $100 million it had pledged.
Security questions
Taylor couldnāt shed much light on a report in the New York Daily News that the arena design changed because security glass cost $625 a square foot. Asked by CBN's Patti Hagan (below, right) about a reported early 2008 meeting involving the New York Police Department and the Department of Homeland Security, Taylor said that the meeting--which also included ESDC and FCR reps--had not led to design changes.

Were changes in the glass a result of the meeting?
āThe meeting I attended was a confirmation that NYPD was comfortable and happy with the security measures vis a vis that design,ā Taylor responded.
CBNās Jim Vogel pressed him, asking if those changes occurred at any other time.
āI can only speak to the meeting I attended,ā Taylor responded.
āWe read about the design changes,ā Vogel continued.
āThat did not hit my radar,ā Taylor maintained.
Reason for delays
Taylor was clearly familiar with many of his interlocutors. āMy name is Wayne Bailey,ā one resident began, and Taylor nodded in acknowledgement.
āI live at the epicenter of this, and one of the things this project was supposed to do was eliminate blight,ā Bailey said, pointing out that now āI have nothing but a blighted neighborhood around my area,ā He cited increasing trash and building break-ins. āWhen are we going to get some true dialogue that we can believe?ā
āI think ESDC takes the position that the project would be moving along in the way and the spirit that it suggests in the EIS,ā Taylor said. āHowever, there are some folks that are petitioning the court for redress that do not want to see this project happen, and therefore that has resulted in lawsuits, and as long as the lawsuits are hanging out there, the developer feels heās gotten to a point where he cannot go any further in the process. Yāknow, I try and be as transparent as I can... and certainly I will take your concerns back to ESDC, and you can rest assured I will lay them on the doorstep of my boss... Rest assured, when I come to these sorts of events, the concerns that the constituents in the community share with me I share those with the folks at the ESDC.ā
Carlton Avenue Bridge

Taylor answered the second question: āThat agreement is actually between the New York City DOT [Department of Transportation] and Forest City Ratner. The ESDC is not a signatory or party to that agreement. When you tear up a street, a bridge in the city of New York, it is a city issue. That is a negotiation that took place that ESDC was not sitting at the table.ā
But the ESDC, McClure pointed out, publicly announced that the closure would take two years. What responsibility does ESDC then take?
āI certainly recognize that ESDC said two years. And that was in fact my understanding,ā Taylor said slowly. āThe agreement between the DOT and FCR was negotiated--certainly, I was not at the table, and Iām pretty confident no one at ESDC was at the table. Certainly there are things that merit city attention and city approval that ESDC is not going to argue with the city, and that was certainly one of those occasions. ESDC continues to take the position that there are certain agreements weāre not party to, and weāre not going to interfere with, such as the Community Benefits Agreement.ā
McClure pointed back to the first question. (Forest City Ratner officials, in sworn affidavits, told a court that the construction schedule was ācarefully drawn to allow the arena to be ready for the 2009-10 season by commencing work now on vacant properties that are owned by FCRC, the MTA and the City, with work on properties that are owned or occupied by other parties deferred until the pending judicial challenges to the Project have proceeded....ā)

FCRās bridge explanation
Later, Council Member James returned to the issue: āI know you... basically punted on whether ESDC has any jurisdiction over Carlton Avenue [Bridge] and I really take issue with that, because I know you are the lead agency. And I know that as a city we are a creature of the state.ā
James read from an email sheād received from Forest City Ratner executive MaryAnne Gilmartin. It stated: āWith respect to project delays, we are working diligently with our partners in the City and State toward a closing in 2009 and strongly believe we will achieve that goal. We also expect to resume infrastructure construction around the site later this year. Regarding the Carlton Avenue Bridge, we have successfully completed the first phase of the work. The next stage has been delayed as a result of litigation, which is delaying both further work on the bridge and the construction of the Permanent Yard for the LIRR. While we anticipated that, absent these delays, the bridge could be completed more quickly, the construction agreement we entered into with DOT allows us 3 years to complete the bridge, subject to unavoidable delay. I cannot provide any further detail on timing until the litigation is resolved and we have a Master Closing with the City and State.ā
Thereās been no Master Closing, Taylor confirmed. Asked about the āfirst phase,ā he responded, āI assume the first phase sheās referring to is taking down the southern portion of the bridge. They have to take down the northern portion of the bridge, as well.ā
As noted, FCR apparently never informed the ESDC of that milestone, and thereās no evidence that FCR has completed the āfirst phaseā of a partially built train trestle.
Harsh questions

āYouāre saying you blame the community for the delays Bruce Ratnerās own mismanagement caused, is that correct?ā Turner asked.
āIām not blaming anybody. itās clear there are lawsuits,ā Taylor responded.
āIām asking if Mr. Taylor blames the community for all the problems with the project,ā Turner continued.
Moderator Carponter gave Taylor a sympathetic look.
āYes or no,ā Turner pressed on.
āDo you have another question?ā Taylor responded bluntly.
āYes or no,ā Turner repeated.
āDo you have another question?ā Taylor said again.
āAll right, yes, then,ā Turner concluded. āDo you support--ā
ā--Are you going to answer that question?ā Taylor asked, intercepting the query.
āDo you support federal bailout money, stimulus package, for Bruce Ratner?ā Turner asked. āAnd does the ESDC support Bruce Ratner getting federal bailout money?ā
āWell, ESDC supports this project, and I think it will come down to a decisions by the governorās office where federal stimulus money goes,ā Taylor responded evenly.
āSo, even though you [ESDC] are the main progenitors of economic development,ā Turner asked, āyou yourself donāt have anything to say?
āIf youāre asking my personal opinion,ā Taylor responded with a touch of exasperation, āitās really none of your business.ā
āSure it is,ā Turner pressed on.
āNo, it isnāt,ā Taylor responded.
(Here's more on the stimulus debate: letters sent to the Brooklyn Paper in response to its editorial supporting federal funds for the arena.)
Back to the bridge
What happens if the bridge is not rebuilt, another audience member asked. The agreement with the city, Taylor confirmed, provides for liquidated damages.
āIf Ratner was not ready to start the railyards work, why did he tear down the bridge?ā came the query. āAnd why did ESDC let him tear down the bridge?ā
The audience clapped.
āOnce again, the bridge is a city bridge,ā Taylor said. āCertain issues are city issues, certain issues are state issues. The ones that are city issues ESDC weighs in on." As for Forest City Ratner's agreements with various city agencies, "[Bruce Ratnerās] free to cut those deals as he sees fit and as the city sees fit.ā
What was said in court
CBN co-chair Terry Urban was skeptical: āHereās a little bit more information on that. As far as I recall, the ESDC was the prime law firm fighting the communityās wish for injunctive relief. The community wanted to delay tearing down the bridge until the lawsuits were decided. But at the time, the ESDC claimed in court that that wasnāt necessary. And now theyāre claiming they have nothing to do with the decision to tear it down, and supporting the developer when he says itās the lawsuits that are keeping it from being rebuilt. I donāt think the ESDC can have it both ways. It looks to me like itās trying to.ā
āRather than a question, weād like you to question ESDC why they canāt have a temporary bridge erected while the project is being redesigned,ā Urban asked.
āMs. Urban,ā Taylor said steadily, āIām more than willing to take that question back to ESDC and see that you get an answer.ā
The exchange in court papers in January 2008 didn't quite get to the issue. Jeffrey Baker, attorney for the community coalition, including CBN, challenging the project environmental review, warned that, if the lawsuit was successful, appellants "could be faced with a bridge that has already been demolished without the financial means for its replacement or an extended period of time before it is replaced."
Forest City Ratner responded that a contract between the developer and the city obligated the developer's parent company to rebuild the bridge. Baker responded that there was not necessarily "means to assure that the bridge will be replaced in a timely fashion."
ESDC attorney Philip Karmel, stated in an affirmation, "The Carlton Avenue Bridge, whose southern abutment must be removed at this time to complete work on the temporary rail yard, will eventually be rebuilt in its current location, with different supporting girders that are compatible with the layout of the modernized and reconfigured rail yard."
He noted that the environmental review found no significant traffic impacts from the closing. But he didn't indicate that the lawsuit would have any impact on completing the work on the temporary yard effectuated by the bridge closure.
Ombudsmanās role

āAt what point do you [ESDC] stand up to the developer in defense of the citizens youāre supposed to represent, and what can you do to add credibility to the stateās process?ā he asked.
āAs an employee of the state, I attend all the meetings Iām invited to,ā Taylor said, āand I take those issues and problems and concerns back to my boss, Susan Rahm, at ESDC. I thought it was clear that Iām not a policy-maker in my role. I hear your problems... and I try to get answers for you.ā
For the first time publicly, Taylor identified his boss as Susan Rahm, an ESDC official with a very low public profile. (If you Google her name and ESDC, it comes up empty, though her name does appear on an email I got via a Freedom of Information Law request.)
āHow do we know that youāre actually listening?ā Rothblatt asked.
Taylor spread his palms: āI think Iām listening to you right now.ā
Carponter followed up, asking what Taylor could do to resolve problems posed.
Taylor got a second wind: āLetās back up for a second. I get answers. Sometimes you donāt like the answer and, yāknow, you may have a problem, I bring that back and try and get you an answer, but my job is not to just eliminate all the problems. I canāt do that, because sometimes I take your problems and ESDC, for whatever reason, feels that you guys may not be right on that particular issue, or has a different perspective than you. All I can do is make sure that the concerns that you bring to my doorstep, that you put in letters, emails, phone calls, are heard by the highest levels of ESDCā
āThe ESDC is supposed to be the lead agency,ā Rothblatt followed up. āIām a little confused. How can this be a negotiation [with DOT]?ā
āIāve answered the question two times,ā Taylor said. āThe streets in the city of New York are controlled by New York City DOT.ā
Community liaison

[Note correction below]
āMy understanding is that thereās a community liaison, and that personās name is Sonya Covington,ā Taylor responded.
[Update, 1:30 pm Feb. 12:]
Taylor tells AYR that he misspoke; Bill Murphy is the Community Liaison Officer.
[Original, no-longer applicable text regarding Covington: If so, sheās certainly not occupying the office where the former community liaison officer, Sheldon McCray [corrected], worked. Covington, an assistant VP whoās worked on minority contracting issues, has apparently added the role of community liaison officer to her portfolio.]
Stimulus funds
Goldstein referred to recent reports in which ESDC communications reps at first said the project was not āshovel readyā and thus ineligible for stimulus funds but then said it was.
āThatās what I read,ā Taylor responded, indicating he was out of the loop.
Later, he was asked how ESDC changed its position.
āI read it. It was not my quote,ā Taylor responded. āThe Communications department is actually right next to the CEOās office. My office is actually in Brooklyn.ā
Later, he was asked the definition of āshovel-ready.ā
āI think that āshovel-ready' will be a federal term,ā Taylor said.
A design for the arena?
āIs there a design for the arena, as we speak?ā Goldstein asked.
āThere was a design for the arena, butā--he smiled slightly--āI read what you read.ā
The audience laughed.
āYou donāt know,ā Goldstein pressed cordially.
āThere are times when Iām with you, Mr. Goldstein,ā Taylor responded. āThere are times when Iām not.ā
Project status
Goldstein asked, āIt would be good to know--the ESDC really should explain to the people where we are on this project, what it is what the arena is, how much it costs, what the design is. Weāre all pretending they can build the project as approved, and we all know they canāt. Why not get a little honesty from the ESDC--say what the changes are, say what they really think is going to happen. Instead, we read in the paper often, the ESDC saying, āAsk Forest CIty Ratner.ā Thatās really not Forest City Ratnerās job to answer questions for the state.ā
āI will work on that, Mr. Goldstein,ā Taylor responded.
Interaction with James
James stood up. āI feel for you, Forrest, I really do,ā she said. āI hear Obama is hiring.ā The crowd laughed. āI respect your intelligence and I would love to see you in another capacity.ā
āDid I hear you correctly--you do not know if Forest City Ratner is lobbying the state, Governor Paterson, for federal stimulus funds?ā James asked.
"As I tried to make clear, Iām pretty low on the totem pole. Itās not like the old days,ā Taylor responded. āSo I do not know. So I can imagine, and I know what I read, but I have no firsthand knowledge.ā
She asked if ESDC had disagreed with DOT on other projects theyād worked on. Taylor noted heās only been at ESDC a year and worked only on this project.
Ping-pong balls

Taylor chuckled. āI certainly do feel the crabbiness,ā he said, āand I actually feel quite a bit like a ping-pong ball as well,ā
āBut youāre paid for it,ā one audience member riposted.
āBut not nearly enough,ā he quipped. (Well, his salary last year was reported at $105,000.)
āThe Councilwoman certainly can call a meeting between ESDC and DOT and attempt to get to the bottom of it,ā Taylor said. āI am always available to the elected officials and their respective staffs.ā
Braun continued, āYou might be willing to help get the ESDC--ā
āI work for ESDC, I try to resolve issues,ā Taylor interjected, clarifying that he was not a community advocate.
Unanswered questions

Krashes said he was concerned not just about current blight but āthe goals of the state, which is to eliminate blight, will be exactly what the project achieves.ā He asked the state to look at the potential income of the project, citing the market for apartments, access to credit and public money. āThe government presumably is looking rationally at the project.ā
Would federal stimulus money, he asked, lessen the burden of the developer or lessen the burden of government?
āWeāre not there yet,ā Taylor responded. āNo bill has been signed. So I canāt imagine the ESDC knows what the money can be used for. To my knowledge thereās no process established to rank projects.ā
As for concerns about subsidies and the condo market, Taylor responded, āMy bosses say that the agency I work for supports this project, and the developer has not said that he is not trying to pursue this project, has not walked away from this project. So we are, as I said earlier, where we were a year ago, except the credit markets are probably in a much worse situation.ā
Krashes said the Community Liaision Office closed two months before work stopped. (Itās not clear if the office at the 24 Sixth Avenue is currently staffed.) He said that the security company Forest City Ratner hired to protect the site is gone.
āSecurityās been dropped by Forest City Ratner, and thatās outrageous,ā Krashes concluded, pointing out that had nothing to do with lawsuits.
Assessment

āTo my knowledge, no one has gone back to do that,ā Taylor said.
Traffic issues
McClure followed up, asking if there was any analysis of Fire Department response times since the bridge was closed.
No, Taylor said, but heād be willing to check.
āThe last time you were here, in response to questions about the future of traffic, you had stated a traffic plan was being worked on,ā McClure noted, asking about its status.
Taylor again said heād check on it.
Arena cost
āAs of today,ā McClure continued, ādo you know if the estimated cost of the arena is still $950 million, or has that gone up or down?ā
āWell,ā Taylor said. āI know that they are engaging in some value engineering to get the cost down, so I donāt know where theyāre at today... Itās still 950 until they come back and say itās not something less.ā
āNo longer this projectā?

āItās a very good question,ā Taylor said. āWe are not at that point yet--because Iāve asked that question. I will take your concern back and obviously more than happy to come hereā and discuss it.
Lingering over that was the recognition that the design for the arena has apparently changed drastically and that few outside the developerās office believe the announced ten-year construction schedule is plausible.
As the meeting closed, James asked attendees to sign a letter asking Governor Paterson not to consider Atlantic Yards for stimulus funds.
WOW, 60 people attended.
ReplyDeleteSIXTY people to discuss a project that will alter the face of Brooklyn!
SIXTY people who have been doing the same thing for so long that the ombudsman knows most of them.
You missed the lead(s): there is no diminution in ESDC's support of the plan; that the Daily News story, which was based on ONE source, appears to have been dead wrong; and that the project is neither abandoned nor dead nor changed significantly enough to warrant a review.
Or: the ESDC is not willing to publicly say it supports stimulus funds.
ReplyDeleteOr: the ombudsman knows them because they call him with concerns and complaints.
Or: he didn't deny the Daily News story.
Or: while the project is certainly not abandoned nor dead, no one believes it would take a decade or be the same project as approved.
Bobbo, NetIncome, Mr. W.: if you're such an expert, why don't you tell everyone who you are? And maybe show up in Brooklyn and do a little reporting.
ReplyDeleteI didn't attend because I didn't want to hear the same old same old again. So the reality is nothing new. I like Forest as person. But calling him an "Ombudsman" is a stretch. What he is is a flak catcher(that's the nice way of saying it). the answer is the governor doesn't want to hear it and the ESDC wants to hear it even less. As long as Shelly supports this it will go forward.
ReplyDeletei didnt go. and i continue to be concerned about the abuse of process.
ReplyDeleteraw numbers for a perfunctory, pointless meeting are not what i, or other opponents are about. the powers that be would be well advised that our attendance, or lack thereof, at such a meeting does not indicate more than the tip of the iceberg.