Tuesday, May 4, 2010

“$hhh!” A Thieving Developer Wants Daniel Goldstein Quiet About Its Misdeeds, Meaning the Atlantic Yards Fight Ain’t Over


We are going to point out something extremely odd that the media has failed to notice for all its willingness to frenzy itself in reporting about the settlement whereby Daniel Goldstein’s finally received money from Forest City Ratner to move out from his apartment in the proposed footprint of Atlantic Yards.

After nearly seven years of fighting to stay in his home Mr. Goldstein, already stripped of his home ownership and facing imminent eviction as eminent domain was being wielded against him to build the basketball arena that is proposed to be owned by Forest City Ratner and a Russian close-to-the-Kremlin oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov, agreed to the compensation figure he would receive. That compensation turns out to amount to far less than that value of his property’s development rights and therefore far less than the value of what was taken from him, far less than the value of what we think he should have been entitled to. More on this further in.

The thing that was so odd in this process and about which the media yet failed to report is how important it was to Forest City Ratner to attempt to deprive Daniel Goldstein of his right to speak out against the project. Because of the way it was negotiated, with Daniel Goldstein stoutly refusing to give up his free speech rights, we will never know the exact dollar value Forest City Ratner put on his unrelinquished rights. We would have been thrilled if Mr. Goldstein had played the negotiations in a way that teased out that precise figure before he rejected it but had he been so clever he could have run the risk of appearing unprincipled and insincere to the judge.* Nevertheless, the fact that Forest City Ratner pressed hard to deprive him of his rights, enlisting the weight of the state and Judge Gerges in the negotiations to do so, has to be viewed as highly significant and startling.

(* Mr. Goldstein did find himself in a bit of an ironic PR box: It seems the more principled one is, the more altruistically principled people want you to be. Some thought Mr. Goldstein should have taken none of the compensation that was offered late in the game and should have been led out of his apartment in chain gang-style with the rest of his family.)

Before we proceed, we like to offer an analogy . . .

Daniel Goldstein as Dachshund

I grew up in a grand old building, 34 Gramercy Park, the oldest continuously co-op building in the city of New York, and I have this vivid recollection of growing up. We had a pet dachshund, a standard, who with his short legs stood about 11 inches high. There was also in the building a Great Dane who at the time of this story, when I was not yet a teenager, stood chest-high, almost shoulder height to me. One day, as I stood with our leashed dachshund waiting in a just-descended elevator, the elevator door opened and, inches away, the Great Dane was on the other side of it. The Great Dane was instantly, absolutely terrified. It heaved itself backward and upward its legs, backpedaling frantically, losing traction on the slick ceramic tile of the floor but managing with constantly reapplied effort to keep sending itself skidding in reverse. Its owner was dragged backward by the leash he was holding. Within seconds the Great Dane was four or five yards back, its body still an unscrambled tangle of desperately wheeling legs. There was an enormous piece of Victorian lobby furniture behind it, the largest and heaviest carved table you can imagine. The Great Dane crashed into it and the table and the enormous table lurched. One of the massive ornate armchairs beside it toppled sideways, the other bounced away several feet. The huge vase of flowers on top of the table flew into the air and smashed to the floor. And my dachshund? He was still standing in the doorway of the elevator exactly where he had stood moments before with a look on his face like, “What happened?”

This is not a perfect analogy but it should get us off to a start. (BTW: Did you happen to notice that convention dictates that “Great Dane” be capitalized but “dachshund” not?)

Corporate Speech Megaphones: Forest City Ratner as Great Dane

With the Citizens United case recently decided by the U.S. Supreme Court, the nation focused a lot of attention on the disproportionate power of corporations when it comes to free speech. The concern people have involves the corporate megaphone theory: that when government can’t limit corporate spending on elections, politics and public governance decisions, corporations will be able to drown out all other voices. (Another concern is that corporations which are substantially less complex than living, breathing, flesh, blood, sweat and tears human beings, are mono-motivated: Corporations can only see profit. They may need to steer clear of breaking laws but they do not come equipped with consciences.*)

(* One proposal for reform requiring shareholder approval of political spending might begin to address that kind of concern.)

We don’t know what your general personal assessment of the cooperate megaphone theory might be but you can consider the following to evaluate how figuratively or literally true it is in regard to Forest City Ratner’s promotion of Atlantic Yards. The recent ‘groundbreaking’ for the proposed Prokhorov/Ratner basketball arena involved an event with a stage, microphones, an amplified public address and sound system, elaborately produced videos projected on a screen, in addition to having Mayor Bloomberg, Governor Paterson and Borough President Marty Markowitz speak. Ratner also featured rapper-entrepreneur-Atlantic Yards-investor Jay-Z and his multi-Grammy Award-winning wife Beyoncé, who in another venue was brought in to spiff up Hugh Jackman’s performance at the academy awards. It is worth contemplating, in connection with this Brooklyn-destroying appearance of Beyoncé, that Forbes listed her fourth* on its list of the 100 Most Powerful and Influential Celebrities in the world.

(* Atlantic Yards Report in its coverage of this post adds that “Jay-Z was number 32 on the list.”)

The speakers were all salaried and doing their jobs or compensated in one manner or another. Those who were just there to gawk or who were amongst the press getting publicity handouts were fed (turkey and lobster roll sliders, and chic little dessert thingies in cocktail glasses) and sent away with PR swag. Those who consented to wield a groundbreaking shovel took it away as a silverized, engraved souvenir.

By contrast, the unpaid crowd of protesters outside, who certainly all had a great deal to say, did not have corporate dollars and publicly provided subsides to amplify their voice. This outside crowd may have been the larger and its views of the shenanigans going on more trenchant but the police arrested one man for making protest noise by playing a tambourine (an “amplified drum”). So much for an amplified voice! The police were specifically admonishing those of us who were protesting not to use any mechanical assistance as we raised our voices. Nevertheless, because of our numbers we were heard over the charade inside though a lot of us were hoarse for days.
Our crowd was huge but we might have been outnumbered by the police. At one point I carefully counted aver 100 police standing in Atlantic Avenue on our side of the block. I mentioned that count to another urban planner present who pointed out that there were even more police if I looked elsewhere: A lot more. Indeed there were. There were many more visible on the other side of the block. And when I looked up I noticed that there was a small swarm of officers stationed on top of the buildings as well. My companion noted that the police had sent out the anti-terrorism unit (even though the arena had been largely ignored as a terrorism threat.) By comparison, a public town forum held by Governor Paterson the preceding Monday had virtually no police presence.
The police apparently going on automatic about standard procedure were telling the protestors to move back and confine themselves “to the sidewalk” which, ironically, was not possible since Ratner had removed the sidewalks and taken over the space where they used to be with a proprietary fence, thus symbolically emphasizing how eager the Bloomberg administration has been to give the public’s sidewalks, streets and avenues over to this developer. Not only are sidewalks, streets and avenues being permanently given to developer at no cost, they were turned over to the developer back in the beginning of March with that conveyance (and the “groundbreaking”) occurring even before it was known whether it will be possible to build the arena. Even today in May, almost two months later, it is not known whether the arena can be built although the “odds” are that Prokhorov will be approved by the NBA and that it will ultimately proceed. (See: Wednesday, January 27, 2010, At another meeting on AY street closings, FCR's Marshall faces some tough questions from the crowd.)

Protestors were advising the police that even though the police had been directed to focus their attention on the protestors the real crimes (the “amplified drum” aside) were going on inside the event. The police were most mostly good-natured upon being so informed.

There was also a crime going on in certain news rooms in terms of the coverage of the event. As Norman Oder of Atlantic Yards Report wrote:
. . . the New York Times sent a reporter to the Atlantic Yards groundbreaking who had never covered AY before, as if this were some spot news story that any warm (journalism degreed) body could have handled.
(See: Monday, March 15, 2010, The New York Times and Atlantic Yards: A Pattern of Inadequate, Misleading, Mostly Uncritical Coverage. Still and Monday, March 29, 2010, A Very Brooklyn Passover Haggadah and the world of Internet content.)

Suffice it to say, the media paid too much attention to the Great Dane of Ratner’s manufactured and paid-for hoopla and too little attention to the substance of the debate.

(For more on the Groundbreaking see: Friday, March 12, 2010, Team hype: pomp and (questionable) promises, bitter (and near-final?) protest mark ceremonial groundbreaking for Barclays Center arena.)

Why Does the Ratner Great Dane Fear the Dachshund?

So why is Ratner so afraid of the exercise of Daniel Goldstein’s comparatively small dachshund-size free speech? One answer can be found in who was not there at the groundbreaking: None of the local politicians representing the community were there. Ratner may have pocketed Bloomberg and the pathetically weak Paterson, he may have Markowitz on his payroll with contributions to his pet charities-used-for-politics, but the crowd outside protesting reflected the local community. The image we used of Daniel Goldstein-dachshund vs. Ratner’s Great Dane-sized PR machine may make Daniel appear rather outmatched but when it comes to bark and bite Daniel’s bark has the bite of truth. By contrast, the Ratner PR machine has the job of selling fictions. To see an assembled list of the pack go here: Tuesday, December 1, 2009, Unfair Substitution of Fiction For Fact in the Atlantic Yards Dialogue. Selling those fictions means that Ratner can’t have (to invoke another overworked metaphor) the little boy making the simple but powerful statement that the emperor has no clothes.

The Atlantic Yards Fight Ain’t Over

Ratner not only cares about what Daniel Goldstein says, it is important to note that Ratner cares now, today and going forward. In this regard, the Brooklyn Paper which did publicize Ratner’s efforts to negotiate away Goldstein’s free speech rights (though in self-confessed he-said/she-said fashion: “this she-said, they-said story”) published two stories by Stephen Brown with antithetical facts, or at least with one having an antithetical headline. Their story about the settlement contained the following:
“The money amount was settled pretty quickly,” Goldstein said. “The sticking point that led to nearly four hours of discussions was Ratner’s insistent desire to bind me to some sort of gag order.

“Apparently, taking my home and razing my neighborhood wasn’t enough for them,” he added.

The lawyer backed up his client.

“The money was never the problem!” said Rikon. “For [Gilmartin] to say that is outrageous.”
(See: Just in it for the money? Ratner Exec say yes but Daniel Goldstein says no, by Stephen Brown, Wednesday, April 28, 2010.)

The other “news analysis” article by Brown assessing Goldstein’s “legacy” was supplied with this headline:
The Yards Fight - - It’s Over: The Goldstein Legacy: Noble activist or sellout?
That article carefully and fairly points out that Daniel’s options were highly circumscribed when he agreed to the settlement (“His decision to not face a physical eviction only avoided a colorful moment for the media, but not much else. Goldstein was left with few favorable options: he could have chosen to fight on and face an eviction date as soon as mid-May and less money for his apartment, or take a more generous settlement. Either way, the state was going to remain his landlord — it took title to his apartment in March.”). Nevertheless, the fact that Daniel was at the end of his personal options in this regard was not grounds for the editor to slap a headline on the story that said: “The Yards Fight - - It’s Over,” discouraging important further reading.


Goldstein Quotes on His Free Speech Accomplishments


If the Atlantic Yards fight is over, past tense, passe, then why would people even bother to read the article which has the following quotes from Daniel within:
“We’ve done a lot of what the media should have been doing — what well established good-government groups should have done,” Goldstein said. “Watchdogging minute details of an attenuated process. Every false statement, exaggeration and broken promise has been exposed.”

* * *

“We have convinced nearly all good people of good will that the project is a sham and a poster child for the wrong way to develop cities,” Goldstein said. “We shined a bright light on the way eminent domain is abused in New York State to the point where there is now a legislative effort … to reform the state’s laws.

“We’ve exposed the way eminent domain is used and abused in New York as a tool for the most powerful interests in the state,” he added. “It’s on everyone’s radar. … I don’t think any developer will try to things this way again.”
Ratner’s Bind When It Comes to Free Speech

Is the Atlantic Yards fight “over”? Hardly. Does Forest City Ratner still care a lot about what Daniel has to say? You betcha. Also from that Stephen Brown article:
Ratner, for his part, has been quiet about Goldstein — though yesterday’s settlement leaves little doubt he gave a lot of thought to this longtime thorn in his side.

The developer’s recent statements have not mentioned Goldstein specifically, but the presence of numerous lawyers and two top executives, Bruce Bender and MaryAnne Gilmartin, at Wednesday’s final negotiating session in Justice Abraham Gerges’s chambers in Downtown reinforce how coveted Goldstein’s Pacific Street condo had become and how badly Ratner needed him out quickly.
It is not just Ratner that wanted Goldstein out of his historic loft building condo, Ratner wanted Goldstein silenced.

Decades Into the Future Ratner Desperately Needs Support

Why? Ratner doesn’t want to see the project broken up. Ratner is going to try and hold on to the development rights for this project for perhaps forty years. Support matters. Ratner can't move one foot forward without huge amounts of subsidy (which other developers will want and need for other projects elsewhere in the city). Support matters. Ratner wants to resist investigations of his actions and possible indictment both with respect to his Yonkers Ridge Hill project and with respect to Atlantic Yards. Support matters. Prokhorov is under attack in the U.S. Congress. Failing some surprises he will probably still be approved. . . But support matters. Support matters a lot and will for decades. And remember that the groundbreaking event was pretty empty of supportive politicians. Ratner’s support has been continually waning.

If, for instance, a possibly wavering Senator Schumer finds himself on the spot once too often (See: Wednesday, April 28, 2010, Schumer Says Atlantic Yards Area Is Not Blighted. Doesn’t See AY As A Ratner Mega-Monopoly, But Could His Support Wane?) and if Schumer realizes that he shouldn’t be ignoring Representative Bill Pascrell’s investigation into the relationship of Mikhail Prokhorov and his firm to sanction-busting and the Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe, if Schumer realizes that Mugabe’s reported secret sale to Iran of rights to mine uranium reserves heats this issue up for him, Ratner would be in trouble, serious trouble.

Ratner’s Negotiations to Limit Goldstein’s Right to Free Speech

The Brown article recounts the mustering of the Ratner forces before the settlement: “the presence of numerous lawyers and two top executives, Bruce Bender and MaryAnne Gilmartin, at Wednesday’s final negotiating session in Justice Abraham Gerges’s chambers , at Wednesday's final negotiating session in Justice Abraham Gerges's chambers.” From our own observation in the courtroom hallways before the settlement, Forest City Ratner Executive VP Gilmartin was the one who was most involved in running the show. State officials hung back observing. One couldn’t overhear exactly what was said but figures were clearly being mentioned by Ms. Gilmartin, “So, he bought it for $600,000. . "

According to Daniel Goldstein’s version of events (in a statement he later got out to the public), while Forest City Ratner was busy zeroing in on the number for settlement and apparently had a press release primed and ready to go, he:
. . did not expect that this argument would then lead to a settlement, so I did not have a press release prepared when an agreement was reached around 3pm. I did not even think of the press implications because I was thinking about my personal situation and my family, not the press. I should have known better because clearly Forest City Ratner saw it as a big press event and sent out a press release immediately.
Indeed, we observed that Forest City Ratner was definitely cooking something up but Mr. Goldstein was in position of having to quietly wait to find out what that might be.

Ratner As Condemnor Controlled the Timing for Seven Years

We have previously written in detail about how one of the ways that the condemnation process is weighted unfairly in favor of te condemnors is the way that the condemnors can pick and chose their time to move, keeping those who are having their property seized on tenterhooks:
If you are one of the condemned, the loss of control over the timing of one’s affairs is a hidden uncompensated loss. It is also a loss that New York State eminent domain compensation procedures unfairly accentuate (one might say manipulate) for the probable purpose of paying condemned property owners even less than they otherwise might be able to negotiate or win in court.

* * * *

Eminent domain acquisitions involve a many-step process with torturous uncertainty for the condemned property owners that is manipulated for the developer’s advantage when property is being taken for private use. To give you an idea, the Atlantic Yards project, which obviously was going to require eminent domain, was announced December 10, 2003, yet the developer was allowed a full three years to negotiate acquisition contracts to its advantage using the threat of eminent domain before the use of eminent domain was officially authorized by a public agency vote on December 8, 2006. Even then it was uncertain when that next step, official authorization, would come . . .
(See: Tuesday, January 19, 2010, U.S. Supreme Court to Get a Doubleheader on NYS Eminent Domain Abuse? Pretext and Lack of Due Process PLUS No “Just Compensation”.)

Ratner Picked the Time

Forest City Ratner was picking its time to make an acceptable offer to Goldstein. As recently as November Goldstein was offered $510,000 for his apartment in the proceeding, an insultingly low figure far below what he had paid for it in 2003 even though the market had gone up substantially since then. The Brooklyn Paper quoted “a condemnation lawyer who is not involved in the Goldstein case”:
“This is such an extreme lowball that it’s startling,” said the lawyer, William Ward. “You’re always going to get a low offer from the condemning authority, but not so extremely low. They’re being very punitive.”
(See: November 17, 2009, Is the state playing lowball with Daniel Goldstein? By Stephen Brown.)

The Unspeakable Being Unacceptable

Throughout this process which began in December 10, 2003, Mr. Goldstein was faced with an unacceptable choice. If he were to have succumbed to threat of selling his home in the face of Ratner’s abuse of eminent domain he would have to have given up his right to say that he has been outrageously screwed by a thieving bastard with the help of the government or to criticize the process in any other way. Notwithstanding, this was precisely the deal many of his neighbors took. Resolute, Goldstein opposed these gag order deals and if he hadn’t, you might never have known about them.

Public Actions Abhorrent to Public Policy

We have written previously to point out that before eminent domain assumed its present-day, developer-driven incarnation, governments did not seek the kind of gag order, nondisclosure or Omertà agreements that Forest City Ratner pursues and obtains. We have recommended that such agreements need to be outlawed as part of eminent domain reform as a violation of public policy. They are designed to sweep the facts and necessary public policy debate under the rug.

By the time it got to Supreme Court Justice Abraham Gerges’ court the only way Forest City Ratner was going to get its gag order agreement silencing Goldstein was if the agreement was obtained, signed and enforced by New York State as its agent. Absolutely outrageously, New York State officials assisted Ratner in the negotiations to pursue this aim. Even worse, the judge participating in the settlement negotiations pressured Mr. Goldstein to accept such a deal. Were we the judge in this case we would have done no more than perhaps stand by as such an odious provision was negotiated, see what higher price for the property was going to be paid by Ratner as a result, and then announce that the settlement deal would be enforced in terms of the amount to be paid but that the gag order part of the agreement would be voided and stripped out of the agreement as against public policy.

But apparently Gerges pressed the agreement, acting as if he didn’t understand why it should be objectionable for Goldstein to agree “not to oppose the project in any way.” Do we want a country where citizens need to be looking over their contractual shoulder when it comes to speaking honestly about how our cities are shaped and the government run?

Money (Intercepted From The Public) Becomes the Absence of Free Speech

“Money = free speech” has been offered as a short-hand reference to the Citizens United case that was recently decided by the U.S. Supreme Court respecting corporate political spending. Well if “Money = free speech,” here we see how the power of corporate spending to buy the government goes one step further to arrive at a different equation: “money = the absence of free speech” for all the rest of us.

Here is what needs to clearly understood about the funding of Forest City Ratner’s purchases to extinguish free speech rights:
• It’s funded by public subsides to Ratner (Ratner is able to do this project and has been pulled back from the brink of bankruptcy only by virtue of public funds and subsides that have been lavished upon it by Bloomberg, Paterson, the MTA and ESDC.)
• It’s funded by the value of development rights and the value of property being seized from the very owners and community members who are silenced.
Unfortunately, the funding also facilitated one thing we are very sorry about which is that when Mr. Goldstein was forced to settle the condemnation proceeding, he also agreed to withdraw his participation in one other related lawsuit which will weaken the community’s chances with respect to it. Might we entertain the pleasant notion that (after Mr. Goldstein has cashed his check) the Gerges court will think to quash this litigation withdrawal agreement because it has been funded with public money?

Did Goldstein Really Get a Good Deal?

The press has taken up some of the PR circulated by Ratner, its cronies and their corporate-megaphone PR machines that Goldstein got a good deal and Goldstein has received some criticism for unprincipledly getting too good a deal. We ourselves opined that the sum Goldstein is getting is “not insultingly small.”
Many of us will necessarily have mixed feelings about Daniel’s settlement. Even though it comes very near the end of much of the most pertinent litigation it slightly weakens the ongoing and essential fight against the Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly boondoggle. But Daniel deserves congratulations for a seven year fight well fought and ought to be congratulated on getting a sum that is not insultingly small.
(See: Wednesday, April 21, 2010, DDDB's Goldstein settles for $3M (or less after attorney's fees), agrees to leave May 7, will take a step back from anti-AY activism.)

We have also said:
Had Mr. Goldstein been able to get an even higher price for his apartment from Ratner it would have been that much better for the community because keeping the price paid high is what it takes to make eminent domain abuse less attractive.
(See: Bertha Lewis, ACORN CEO, Not Happy for Daniel Goldstein, by Eliot Brown, April 22, 2010.)

Which synchronizes with our sentiment that had Daniel litigated further we would:
have loved to see the issue of truly adequate compensation go to the U.S. Supreme Court because it is developer windfall that drives these land grabs and truly adequate and fair compensation for all involved would help take the wind out the sails of a very corrupt process.
But while Mr. Goldstein got a “not insultingly small” amount and took a bit of a bite out of the developer he got little more than the minimum he should have been entitled to and we think that in a more perfect world he should have been entitled to a lot more.

What Did Goldstein Get and What Should He Have Gotten?

Norman Oder in an Atlantic Yards Report piece offered calculations of what Goldstein got by virtue of his $3 million settlement.
$3 million man?

Goldstein, who paid about $590,000 for the apartment in 2003, will not take home $3 million. While I don't know the cut for attorney Michael Rikon (and Goldstein wouldn't specify), another eminent domain attorney told me that the fee is typically one-quarter to one-third of the settlement beyond the initial offer.

With an original offer of $510,000, the additional sum is $2,490,000. Thus, the attorney's fee would be either $622,500 or $821,700.

That would leave Goldstein $2.18 million or $2.37 million. That's approximately double what a commensurate apartment would cost.

So, it might be framed this way: beyond the apartment, Goldstein's getting a $1 million-plus in exchange for activism--with impact much beyond Atlantic Yards--over six years that was barely compensated, plus "punitive damages" for "pain and suffering."
(See: Wednesday, April 21, 2010, DDDB's Goldstein settles for $3M (or less after attorney's fees), agrees to leave May 7, will take a step back from anti-AY activism.)

Hoops to Avoid Substantial Attorney Fees

The only way that Goldstein could avoided the above estimated $622,500 or $821,700 in attorney fees is if he had litigated the compensation issue to a final conclusion taking it through a judgement and appeal that could likely have lasted ten years. In that case he would have been allowed the attorney fees he is statutorily entitled to, but only if he had gotten sufficiently more than the last high offer from Ratner. (Again, we note we have written about how the process is weighted against those who have their property seized.)

The Value of Goldstein’s Apartment In a Normal Free Market: $1,543,469?

Goldstein bought his property for $600,000 in May of 2003. (We will go with the figure we heard in court that day- $601,000- and the $600,000 figure were heard Gilmartin mention in the hallway that day rather than the lower figure sometimes mentioned.) Since that time, the value of his apartment has gone up and down, but mostly up. We are not considering the so-called “holdout” value of is apartment in this regard. (Forest City Ratner was posturing in court that they had put themselves in a box where delay was costing them $6.7 million a month.) Instead we are trying to think in general, more theoretically applicable terms about what the value of his apartment should be Atlantic Yards aside. This means setting aside the fact that the “holdout” value of his apartment increases its value while the very real blight and uncertainty Ratner has brought to the neighborhood has had a depressing value on property there. One should, of course, remember that Mr. Goldstein picked a neighborhood that was doing a good job of being on its economic way up when he moved in, before Ratner showed up to depress property values.

From various sources (such as REBNY reports and reported indexes) we know that in New York apartment prices more than doubled between 2003 and early 2008 and that since their peak they are down again by 25-30%. (They are expected to keep declining for the next two years.)

Going by a REBNY report, that would mean that Mr. Goldstein’s apartment escalated in value to about $1,543,469 by early 2008 though its value would subsequently have come down. Back in its November article about how little Goldstein was then being offered in the proceeding, The Brooklyn Paper reported on the price the apartment was estimated to have currently declined to (which is still more than Goldstein paid for it):
One local broker, Jesse Temple, said that such a unit — in a desirable area such as Prospect Heights — could fetch $825,000 to $900,000.
That $900,000 actually works back to a roughly similar 2008 value ($1,285,714) if you calculate accounting for the recent 30% drop. That means that if Goldstein is getting the
net figure calculated by Atlantic Yards Report of “$2.18 million or $2.37 million” that Goldstein is picking up at least about $636,500 over what he his apartment would have been worth in 2008 if nothing else (including zoning) had changed. (It is not as if nothing else changed or factors in as we will get to in a moment.)

Handing Out the Benefit of the Doubt When Ratner Runs the Show

Of course all these figures leave a lot of room for speculation and fair price to Golstien might be much more or could be less and why, one might quibble, would one even think that Goldstein should be paid what his apartment was worth in 2008? Why? Because when Forest City Ratner takes control of the market for Goldstein’s apartment for seven years, when they get the exclusive right to chose the exact time of the sale (rather than Mr. Goldstein), why shouldn’t the benefit of all the doubt be in Mr. Goldstein’s favor and against them?

Under the pending threat of condemnation, for almost seven years Goldstein couldn't sell his apartment. In 2008, he had no ability to sell his apartment whether he wanted to either by happenstance or because of his perspicacity in understanding the market. As it turns out 2008 was the year that Goldstein and his relatively new wife had a baby, an event that is often associated with a change in homes, which means maybe he would have been impelled to sell at the top of the market. (See: November 25, 2008, And baby makes three! By Sarah Portlock., The Brooklyn Paper.) In point of fact though, probably, all other things being equal, Goldstein would not have sold his apartment at that time because a three bedroom, two bath, 1,300 square foot, 7th floor apartment with 10 foot ceilings and in-unit laundry in a newly converted historically significant warehouse-style building with superb public transportation was in all likelihood quite suited to his needs for years to come. Something superior or equivalent to it elsewhere was likely to be non-existent. But if he knew he had to sell in 2008 and could have picked his time perhaps he would have.

Other Costs

All of the above does not even get into something else: all the social costs to an individual or family when they are forced against their will move prematurely or at a time that is not of their choosing. It ranges from whether one got a good mortgage rate (perhaps paying it down with points) to the school you might have to pull your child out of, to whether you have found a good local bar like Freddy’s where (in Jane Jacobs terms) you have found a trusted bartender to hold your keys. The list of these things is endless.

The ESDC “Upzoning”

Was that extra $636,500 that Goldstein received over what the market might have given him, if it had been allowed to behave normally, enough? We would argue that it wasn’t. In a fair world it was far too low. The property, through an ESDC zoning override, was being upzoned. This means that the value of the apartment should not be gauged by what actually existed there but by what could replace it with the zoning increase. This is the way we previously expressed it:
Ratner megadevelopment involves an override of local zoning and procedures whereby Ratner is proposing to ultimately create the densest area in North America. Goldstein’s nine-story building is supposed to be replaced by a forest of 50- and 60-story buildings. Assuming, conservatively, that Goldstein’s apartment will be replaced by development that is four times the current density, and assuming conservatively that we should use the $850 p/s/f condo figure, this increase in density transmutes the square foot value of Goldstein’s apartments in development terms to $3,400 p/s/f ($850 p/s/f times 4). Then the gap between what Ratner is offering Goldstein and what the unit is really worth is $450 vs. $3,400 p/s/f.
(Sunday, November 1, 2009, Compensating Justly? What Is the Property Being Condemned at the Atlantic Yards Site Really Worth?)

Admittedly, some adjustment downward from this higher value ought to be made to account for the cost of demolishing an existing building (one newly renovated and of historic value) and to newly construct the bigger buildings. (A better style of development involves interweaving preservation with the denser construction and transferring development rights paying the owners of Daniel’s building for them.) Higher density also has its diminishing returns including its lesser appeal in Brooklyn so this too ought to be accounted for. Still, the bottom line is that the zoning increase makes Mr. Goldstein’s property far more valuable than what was paid for it.

Public Policy on Developer-Driven Eminent Domain Coupled With Upzoning

Developer-driven eminent domain is now typically coupled with upzonings precisely because preferentially handing out such upzonings to the initiating politically-connected developer provides the monetary profit to fuel and pay for the eminent domain abuse. We, however, have made the case that all the value of upzoning should go to the owners originally in place:
If the density of the property is being increased to the density that reflects good city planning, then it should be considered that this was an increase that should have been anticipated and expected from the government. If the increase should have been expected upon request from the government and it can therefore be considered “probable” then there is case law that says that the upzoned value needs to be taken into account when compensating the original owners.
(For more of this analysis: Tuesday, January 19, 2010, U.S. Supreme Court to Get a Doubleheader on NYS Eminent Domain Abuse? Pretext and Lack of Due Process PLUS No “Just Compensation”.)

Was Goldstein therefore compensated enough? Would the amount he received in compensation be enough to dissuade a developer from coupling eminent domain abuse with a density increase to make the initiation of a seizure of your home highly profitable? Hardly. Was the amount Goldstein finally negotiated nearly as big a bite as Goldstein, under enormous pressure and facing significant personal risk, could take out of the developer in a system that is so unfairly weighted in favor of politically connected developers seizing land from the rest of us? We think he got about as much as he could under the circumstances.

Who Has What to Be Proud Of? The Illuminating Irony of Bertha Lewis’s Attempted Goldstein Critique

Something Goldstein has to be really proud of is that with all the Ratner money that sloshes around to buy people’s silence and complacency in the face of the thefts from the community, he did not accept any of it.

It is ironic and probably extremely telling that the most venomous criticism of Daniel Goldstein settlement comes from someone who sold Ratner the rights to her free speech years ago: Bertha Lewis, the head of ACORN, (now rechristened New York Communities for Change in a tactical evasion of PR shame). Ms. Lewis, theoretically a booster of Atlantic Yards, sold her rights at the very outset of the Atlantic Yards and so has been unable to criticize the project even as it became clear what it really was and even as it has degenerated with subsequent revelations into something far worse. Accordingly, we provided the following comment to Eliot Brown’s April 22, 2010 story in the Observer about what Ms. Lewis had to say:
Regarding Bertha Lewis's vitrolic remarks about Daniel Goldstein. DDDB's Daniel Goldstein has a lot to be proud about that ACORN's Bertha Lewis does not. For one thing, Daniel didn’t sell his first amendment rights to Forest City Ratner: Ms. Lewis did precisely that. Daniel can say whatever he honestly thinks about Forest City Ratner or about Ms. Lewis. Ms. Lewis contracted away her right to say anything critical about Forest City Ratner or to urge a better, corrected or amended project. It is not clear she even has the right to say positive things about Daniel. She may find all this rankling inside her contractually confining cage. For more about how she signed away her right to defend the community see the two links at the end of this comment.

Next, Daniel didn’t sell out the community and shill for Forest City Ratner’s plan to do only the bare bones minimum that the tax code requires combined with what for economic reasons the market would pretty much dictate that Forest City Ratner would pretty much do anyway in terms of renting apartments. Ms. Lewis did essentially that: Bottom line, she negotiated for the community to get nothing at all. Mr. Goldstein fought for and achieved a lot for the community and it is very important that he, unlike Ms. Lewis, can still be a voice to criticize Ratner on the community’s behalf to achieve more. BTW: Had Mr. Goldstein been able to get an even higher price for his apartment from Ratner it would have been that much better for the community because keeping the price paid high is what it takes to make eminent domain abuse less attractive.

Saturday, June 28, 2008
SELLING OUT THE COMMUNITY FOR BEANS (A GIANT WRONG)

Thursday, July 24, 2008
FALLING ACORN! HOW FAR FROM THE TREE?
(See: Bertha Lewis, ACORN CEO, Not Happy for Daniel Goldstein.)

Friday, April 30, 2010

Unveiled: Two New Towers In Prospect Park By Grand Army Plaza Entrance To Help Green The Area

(“The Gates of Prospect Park,” two new towers proposed to be constructed in Prospect Park to help raise funds to cover city expenses.)

This looks like it is our day for photoshop pictures. (See our other post Friday, April 30, 2010, Barclaying Up The Wrong Tree: "Brutally Weird" Advertising That Hits “Home” In All The Wrong Ways.)

For those of you who think that above picture of two new towers proposed to be built in Prospect Park appears here because the towers were unveiled last night at Department of Transportation meeting (before Brooklyn Community Boards 6, 8 and 9 - April 29, 2010) as part of a city plan to raise funds for the redesign and reclamation of pedestrian space around Grand Army Plaza, you’ve got it wrong. Dead wrong. Described as “crowd pleasing” by Streetsblog, the DOT plan unveiled last night does a wonderful job of reclaiming “Lots of asphalt will be . . . for walking and biking” and “Getting to the central plaza will be a much-improved experience, as will biking to the greenmarket, the Brooklyn Public Library, and the park, thanks to an entirely two-way system of bike lanes.” (Read about it: Friday, April 30, 2010, DOT’s Grand Army Plaza Plan: Bold, Exciting, Crowd-Pleasing, by Ben Fried on April 30, 2010 and also see our own earlier coverage at Sunday, October 5, 2008, Modifying the Grand Army Plaza of Olmsted and Vaux.)

Thankfully, none of the above involves building two new towers in Prospect Park to pay for it.

So what is this proposal to build to new towers in Prospect Park about then?

Monday night at the Brooklyn Bridge Park hearing there was a lot of discussion about building housing in Brooklyn Bridge Park to pay for Brooklyn Bridge Park. Tupper Thomas, recently resigned from the position of Prospect Park Administrator, a role she was in since the 70s, spoke at the hearing saying that she was in favor of the housing and that she wished that a similar mechanism was in place to help pay for the upkeep of Prospect Park: “When Prospect Park was formed I wish we had the foresight to create a revenue source just like this one.” Well, if there were, Prospect Park’s entrance might look as it does in the picture with these two proposed towers on either side of its entrance.

The image of the two towers was sent over to us by the friends of the Brooklyn Bridge Park Defense Fund to help illustrate the implications of what Ms. Thomas was apparently talking about.

We don’t want to be too snide with respect to Ms. Thomas on her way out the door but there are definite problems with her idea that housing is a great way to pay for city parks.

For one thing it is directly contrary to the precepts expressed by the Parks Department itself about what should guide the department when they consider generating income form the parks. On the Brian Lehrer show when New York City Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe and she were guests, Betsy Smith, Assistant Commissioner for Revenue and Marketing, said that the goal in such endeavors should be to enhance the public’s park experience:
As commissioner Benepe has said previously, really the driving force on what we want to do with businesses or concessions on parkland is to provide services to park users. And I think that sometimes people think of it as commercializing the parks, but that’s, of course, not what we are trying to do. We’re trying to animate the parks with golf course, and tennis courts and bike rentals, all the things that New Yorkers really love to use in their parks, and we use concessions as a way to get the expertise in the parks so that the public can have the best possible experience.
(See: The Brian Lehrer Show: Money for Parks, Wednesday, April 14, 2010 at about 8:31.)

We recommend the Brain Lehrer show segment as an extended meditation on what should be considered as we walk the line in commercializing activities in parks.

The other problem with the idea that housing can somehow pay for parks (as opposed to paying taxes for city services generally) is that all these funds are fungible, as Commissioner Benepe himself admitted in that same Brain Lehrer segment, and irrespective of what is `designated’ for what, it is really all going into the same pot. This is something we raised in our testimony Monday night referencing Mr. Benepe’s own remarks. (See: Tuesday, April 27, 2010, The Absurd Formula to Finance the Brooklyn Bridge Park Chosen By Those in Charge: Noticing New York’s Testimony at Last Night’s Hearing.)

Asked by Brian Lehrer about whether the approximately $90 million in income generated by parks was retained by the Parks Department for park uses, Commissioner Benepe explained that, except for a few not-for-profits allowed to retain and recycle income from some of the operation of franchises, it was not. The commissioner explained that while there were park advocates who believe all of the money should be kept by the parks department he didn’t see that it would make any difference because of its `fungibility’:
. . . we could do that, but I’m afraid that at the other end the office of Management and Budget would say, OK. you keep the $90 million and we’ll take $90 million out of your budget. So either way it’s fungible money that’s paying for city services.
In other words, though Ms. Tupper Thomas might imagine her life would somehow have been made easier with towers in Prospect Park, it wouldn’t. Even if you said that you were locating two towers in Prospect Park to help pay for Prospect Park all that money could actually be taken anyway to pay for the redesign of Grand Army Plaza, the police or fire department, or whatever. Simply because you put housing development inside a park doesn’t mean that it will pay for that park. By the same token, just because you build housing within a park doesn’t mean that it should be exempt from paying the same taxes toward general services that all residential development housing should be expected to pay.

Barclaying Up The Wrong Tree: "Brutally Weird" Advertising That Hits “Home” In All The Wrong Ways

Who thunk that one up? (Clunk!) And what were they thinking? What were they thinking?

The other day when we saw the photo below (it’s real- no joke!) in No Land Grab (picked up by Brownstowner from an earlier No Land Grab post) we couldn’t help but reel. The advertising for the proposed Ratner/Prokhorov “Barclays Center” super-subsidized Nets basketball arena is so “brutally weird” to borrow a favorite trademark phrase from Norman Oder’s Atlantic Yards Report.
How incredibly tone deaf can an advertising copywriter be to promote what is one of the most notorious modern icons of eminent domain abuse as:
“Your Home Away From Home”
“Your Home Away From Home”? Who are they speaking to anyway? How in heck can a 675,000 square foot arena be anyone’s “home”? They must be pitching this advert to those they hope to rent the luxury suite sky-boxes to. I suppose those wealthy expense-account people might be lounging around on couches, with their own kitchens, might feel as if they hanging out in an apartment rather than watching a sports competition. If you want to see a rendering of the digs we are talking about go here.

The No Land Grab photo just cried out for a photoshopping correction, and lo and behold, no sooner does that obvious thought present itself than the elves over at the Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn workshop have presented a reedited version (see photo below):
“Taking Your Home Away”
We noticed on Brownstoner that others had the same take and perhaps we should have a contest for what should be the best phrase to substitute as a correction. In Brownstowner comments we saw:
"We take away your home."

"Your home is not your home"
Another hewing to the original foolish copywriter's text might be:
“Homes Stolen Away From Homeowners”
Now we just need to get an army or urban guerillas out there plastering corrections on the actual New York City cabs, sort of like when the traffic sign on Brooklyn's Fifth Avenue was hacked with a correction and got such immediate coast-to-coast attention that within hours I was notified of it in Texas by Austinites paying attention to the national news. Unfortunately the national news didn’t get the whole story, something they would have, Norman Oder at Atlantic yards Report pointed out, if the hack had said
“Construction
For 25 Years”
or
“Fuck Ratner
FOR 25 Year
Construction.”
BTW: One more correction. The ESDC documents say that Forest City Ratner may take at least "25 years" to complete construction on all the property it seized through eminent domain abuse, but former ESDC head Marisa Lago said she perceived construction of the mega-monopoly handed to Ratner to be on a time scale comparable to Roosevelt Island, which would make it over forty years. Brooklyn: Enjoy your 40+ years of dispossession.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Schumer Says Atlantic Yards Area Is Not Blighted. Doesn’t See AY As A Ratner Mega-Monopoly, But Could His Support Wane?

(Above, U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer with State Senator Daniel Squadron at the 25th Senate District Community Convention were Senator Schumer spoke about protecting the public from vested interests saying that the political spending of big corporations receiving government largess should be restricted.)

We had a short conversation with Senator Charles E. Schumer on Sunday April 11 following his statement at the 25th Senate District Community Convention held by State Senator Daniel Squadron in downtown Manhattan. We talked about Atlantic Yards and Senator Schumer said some interesting things.

Schumer said that he bicycles around the Atlantic Yards area (which he says he lives “very close to”) and that he knows it is not blighted. He also denies that Forest City Ratner has been granted a mega-monoply (while attesting that he strongly opposes monopolies) even though he acknowledges that the single-developer mega-deal is being handled totally differently from the multi-developer Battery Park City. Schumer said he still supports the Ratner mega-project but used words to indicate he may not support the project now as much as he used to. He said that his support is because of the housing it will provide.

Among other things, we discussed whether the no-bid Atlantic Yards effectively leverages the housing subsidies it is getting. Supplying the Senator with documentation that Atlantic Yards is not leveraging its housing subsides effectively could conceivably get the Senator to withdraw his support for the project if it is provided in a manner so as to be sufficiently incontrovertible. Such documentation, however, is already available and we are not overly sanguine about politicians, Schumer included, paying attention to facts over politics and campaign contributions when it comes to Atlantic Yards.

Atlantic Yards “Not Blighted” (Is It Official and of Legal Weight When a Senator Says What He Sees With His Own Eyes?)

Schumer’s statement that he knows the Atlantic Yards area well and that it is “not blighted” is extremely important because even if one envisions that Atlantic Yards is somehow a desirable mechanism to create “affordable housing” it would be illegal to seize all the acreage for it so as to give Bruce Ratner and his Forest City Ratner company his 30-acre mega-monopoly unless that area were in fact “blighted.” Though Schumer says he knows it doesn’t exist at Atlantic Yards, finding “blight” was a prerequisite for state agencies to proceed with the mega-project and that finding was a prerequisite for state and federal courts to find that Ratner’s mega-deal was legal.

Atlantic Yards as Ratner Mega-monopoly

We began our discussion with Senator Schumer about the subject of Atlantic Yards as a monopoly, referring to a jocular remark he had made moments before about how the fancifully-envisioned merger of the efforts of a number of politicians (consolidated in one giant form) would violate the antitrust law. We previously wrote about Schumer’s opposition to monopolies and how his message on the subject is muddied by his support for Atlantic Yards (See: Friday, November 27, 2009, Schumer's Multi-Monopoly Positions Unhealthily Muddy Debate on an Issue With Left, Right and Center Appeal.)

Schumer denied that Atlantic Yards is a mega-monoply but given what we have written about the scale of the project that is being handed to Ratner on a no-bid basis that is hard to conceive. Nominally and conventionally referred to as a 22-acre project with 17 buildings, eminent domain has actually been abused so that Ratner can carry out plans to construct 19 new towers plus an arena. And that is just the new development Forest City Ratner intends to hold the rights to. When all is said an done, the Atlantic Yards mega-development site Forest City Ratner intends to own includes the following on 30 contiguous acres of prime Brooklyn real estate:
• Two large suburban-style shopping malls (existing)
• One sports arena (proposed)
• 20 towers of both residential and commercial development. (One built and 19 planned.)
(See: Wednesday, January 27, 2010, Did New York City Planning Officials Sidestep Looking at the Bigger Atlantic Yards Picture?)

(Above, map of Ratner's 50-acre mega-monopoly of government-assisted high density development sitting astride Brooklyn's subway lines.)

Extended Implications of Ratner Mega-Monopoly

We have also written providing analysis about how Forest City Ratner’s of these 30 acres is coordinated with its ownership of other nearby properties so that it is, in this process, seizing most of the density available for development above our major Brooklyn subway lines getting an aggregate of approximately 50 interlinked acres most of which it has acquired with government assistance and playing-field-tilting devices like eminent domain. (See: Saturday, November 21, 2009, Mapping Out Forest City Ratner’s Monopolistic Strategy of Subsidy Collection.)

Cracking the Nut of the Question: Who Says Atlantic Yards Is Providing “Affordable Housing”?

Previously we reported that when confronted in a neighborhood Park Slope barber shop about his support for the project Schumer used the `it provides housing’ defense in support of Atlantic Yards. Back then, as we were told, he used a short cut that would be much less politically convenient now: “I just accept what ACORN tells me about the project.” ACORN, having undertaken the PR necessity to reinvent themselves as “NY Communities for Change,” is viewed now as significantly less trustworthy than it was back then, not a good entity to be passing off the reliance-buck to. We have also tackled the way that Bertha Lewis, the head of ACORN aka “Communities for Change” was totally irresponsible when it came to seeking affordable housing for the community, how she essentially negotiated for the community to get nothing at all. She did this by shilling for Forest City Ratner's plan to do only the bare bones minimum that the tax code requires combined with what for economic reasons the market would pretty much dictate that Forest City Ratner would do anyway in terms of renting apartments. (See: Friday, July 31, 2009, Ratner: The Little Boy Trying To Get Too Many Cookies Out of The Cookie Jar and Getting None.)

Ratner Getting a Lot of Housing Subsidy Anyway

That doesn’t mean that a lot of scarce housing subsidy won’t be directed to Ratner when it could and should be directed elsewhere. We have written about our calculation of the amount of subsidy being concentrated on Ratner without bid. We came to a total of $638.67 million in housing subsidies alone. (See: Monday, February 8, 2010, Award of No-Bid Mega-Monopoly Means Forest City Ratner Hopes To Claim an Awful Lot of Housing Subsidy, ALSO Without Bid.) Of course the figures we gave are subject to increase as costs escalate. They are mostly based on figures publicly available in the fall of 2006. Further, as we noted in the post where we calculated that number, it does not represent the total subsidies going to Ratner for the no-bid deal which come to between $2 and $3 billion.

Schumer Walking the Walk on His Own Sidewalks

Had Schumer denied the pretext of “blight” that was used to give Ratner his no-bid mega-deal we would have known he was off-base. As we noted when we spoke to him, the same sort of cracked sidewalks that were used as a pretext to find “blight” necessary to transfer the many acres to Forest City Ratner can be found right outside Schumer’s own home, something we covered in a previous post. (See: Thursday, January 21, 2010, Senator Schumer’s Block Is (Super) “Blighted”! (And Back to You, Marty).)

Atlantic Yards Detracts From Schumer’s National Message

We think that Schumer’s support for the Atlantic Yards project weakens him as a Senator and the messages he needs to convey to do a good job. In his statement to Senator Squadron’s Senate District Community Convention Schumer staked out positions on a number of issues that should relate to Atlantic Yards. Among them he spoke about:
• The people vs. the special interests
• The need to appoint a suitable replacement for Justice Stevens on the U.S. Supreme Court. Justice Stevens noted that one of his most unpopular decisions during his tenure on the court was the Kelo eminent domain abuse decision without which Atlantic Yards could never have proceeded. (Most unpopular as in over 90% of the country strongly opposes Kelo whereas on controversial abortion choice decisions the country is more or less split.) He also noted it was bad policy. Schumer observed that he personally had recommended Justice Sonia Sotomayor for appointment to President Obama. (See our open letter to Justice Sotomayor concerning Atlantic yards and eminent domain abuse: Tuesday, October 6, 2009, First Monday in October: An Open Letter to Sonia Sotomayor about Noticing an Eminent Reality.)
• The need to control money going into politics from big corporations (a Supreme Court issue given the much-reviled Citizens Union case that corporations are “persons” for the purpose of campaign spending). He suggested disclosure and, addressing pay-to-play specifically saying that corporations that receive sizable contracts from the government (like Forest City Ratner?) should be barred from making political contributions.
• The need for financial services reform to protect the consumer and the average citizen. Of course a big part of the financial services reform debate is addressing the way that “too big to fail” has been used as an excuse to soak the taxpayers. The same kind of concept and maneuvering is very much in evidence respecting Atlantic Yards.
For those of you who wish to listen to the above referenced remarks which Schumer made just before we spoke, a sound file including them is provided here.

Our Actual NNY Exchange With Senator Schumer

You can read my conversation with Senator Schumer below. If you would prefer to listen to it (I acknowledge that “His Girl Friday”-style we are talking over each other to a certain extent) go here.
NNY: Michael White, Noticing New York.

CS: Yes, I know who you are.

NNY: You made a jocular remark about anti-trust while you were speaking and I know that you have spoken about the evils of monopolies.

CS: I am strong anti-trust, you bet.

NNY: But you have been supporting Atlantic Yards which is 30 acres of mega-monopoly through eminent domain abuse for Forest City Ratner, which gives him essentially, with his neighboring properties, about 50 acres of monopoly.

CS: Well it’s not monopoly. You can’t call that a “monopoly.” He’s going to build, he still is going to build. . . .

NNY: You’ve got the density that’s sitting on top of the subways. . .

CS: I know, but . .

NNY: . . . contiguous acreage. It’s not Battery Park City. . In Battery Park City, right over there, every parcel is bid out separately to developers. [Next to us, Battery Park City was visible right outside the windows of the school we were in.]

CS: Yes it was. It’s true.

NNY: And that is the way it could have been done.

CS: The reason I supported it, and it’s still part of it, not as much but still, is affordable housing. We’re desperately short of affordable housing.

NNY: That’s not what’s being built.

CS: Oh, Some of it is.

NNY: It’s like Yankee Stadium.

CS: No, No, some is affordable housing. 1,800 units. It was 3,000; it’s still 1,800. You know how long I fight to get 1,800 units of affordable housing to New York? Do you know how many families that helps?

NNY: And what you are doing is you are redirecting subsidies away from where they would be better leveraged elsewhere in the city.

CS: It’s not subsidies. It’s not subsidies.

NNY: You and I worked . . We worked on the housing programs together over the years. We go back to the 80s.

CS: Yes, we did. We did.

NNY: What you are doing is you are taking subsidies that would go much further with other developers elsewhere in the city.

CS: Yes, well I will look at that if you’ve got paper on that. OK? I don’t think that’s true, but if it is, I will look at it. OK?

NNY: OK. And the area is not blighted. I mean sidewalk cracks, the same as outside your building; Right?

CS: I live very close to it. I ride my bicycle around there all the time. I know it’s not blighted. But, I care about affordable housing, I really do. OK? I do. Anyway, send me something about how it could go better elsewhere, I’d be interested in that.

NNY: OK.
Schumer’s Possible Reconsideration of Support For Atlantic Yards

So might Senator Schumer further reconsider his support of the mega-project? (In fact, is there maybe even an indication of the possibility of ebbing support when he uses the phrase “not as much” saying: "The reason I supported it, and it’s still part of it, not as much but still, is affordable housing.") If there is no “blight” as he assures us he knows there isn’t, then it’s illegal. And as for the inappropriate use of housing subsidy, surely our calculations that there is approximately $638.67 million in housing subsidies involved should convince him that the amount is substantial. Our review of what Ms. Bertha Lewis of ACORN “negotiated” should convince him that the community is really getting virtually nothing in terms of true affordable housing. And the testimony of urban planner Ron Shiffman and Michelle de la Uz, Executive Director of the Fifth Avenue Committee, ought to convince that the subsidies can be far better used and leveraged elsewhere.

Analogy of a Schumer Shift on Wall Street and Financial Services Reform? Financial Patrons vs. Harmed Constituents

Last week the New York Times wrote a story indicating that when it’s time to do so, Senator Schumer can back away from the support of special interests working against the public good. We mentioned that the day of the community convention Senator Schumer spoke about the need to reform the financial industry. The Times wrote about how Schumer has backed away from defending the financial industry, describing how this means he has been navigating “gingerly between the financial patrons he has mined for millions in campaign donations for himself and his party, and constituents who were hurt by the economic collapse.” (See: Friend to Wall Street, Schumer Is Suddenly Quiet, by Carl Hulse, April 22, 2010.)

From that article here are statements by Mr. Schumer that could, with only the slightest change, be applied to Ratner and Atlantic Yards:
“There are some on Wall Street who want me to say Wall Street right or wrong, and I’m not going to do it,” Mr. Schumer said in interview on Thursday, a few hours after Democrats brought their overhaul of financial rules to the floor.

“Clearly they did a lot of things wrong,” he said. “Too many Wall Street firms had no one looking over their shoulder, and they went off the deep end.”
The Times article also notes that Schumer’s shift on Wall Street and financial services reform had put him at odds with Wall Street-defending Bloomberg. Were Schumer to withdraw his support from Atlantic Yards he would similarly be at odds with Bloomberg, who is an Atlantic Yards stalwart without whom Ratner’s megadevelopment would not be happening. (Bloomberg’s seems consistent about supporting big vested interests at the expense of the public.) Democrats (presumably Schumer included) who expect to support Obama in the 2012 presidential race may well want to put some distance between themselves and Bloomberg so they can effectively attack him when Bloomberg runs to depose Obama.

Financial Patrons vs. Harmed Constituents: Political Business-as-usual?

Why are we worried that in a political business-as-usual fashion Schumer may not change his support for Ratner’s mega-deal as he should? This article in Politico about Bruce Ratner being a headline figure in some fund raising Schumer was doing for harry Reid and the Democrats on Monday morning is the answer to that. (See: Would-be replacements raise for Harry Reid, By Manu Raju & John Bresnahan, 4/27/10.) The article reports:
Sen. Chuck Schumer invited Harry Reid to spend Monday morning with him in Brooklyn, where some of Schumer’s well-heeled friends opened their checkbooks to help the Senate majority leader’s struggling reelection bid.
and
Monday’s fundraiser was headlined by Bruce Ratner, the real estate mogul who owns the Nets — and who has donated more than $127,000 to Democrats in recent years.
(In aggregate, the money directed by Ratner and those connected with him is probably much greater than this stated figure.) What’s going on is complicated. Harry Reid is currently the Senate leader but as the article points out about Schumer, “most Capitol Hill insiders think there’s little doubt each sees himself as the next Democratic leader if Reid goes down to defeat in November.” Factoring into the overall complexity is the log-rolling that hides who is getting what campaign money from whom for what.

The question is whether Schumer can, like he did with Wall Street, collect lots of money on behalf of Democrats from Mr. Ratner and his cohorts and then take a stand on behalf of those who should be his true constituents to oppose the harm Mr. Ratner’s projects are doing to Schumer’s Brooklyn and the rest of the city? What is more important to Schumer: The money he is collecting from Ratner or a clear and consistent message for Democrats about what needs to be done in this country? When Schumer made a distinction speaking of the people vs. the special interests wasn’t the idea that he would stand up against the vested interest on behalf of the people?

Financial Patrons vs. Harmed Constituents: A Clear and Consistent Message for the Schumer Democrats?

Remember what we said about how Senator Schumer had spoken out at the community convention against pay-to-play and in favor of disclosure when it comes to accepting contributions from huge companies, especially those receiving huge contracts (and subsidies?) from the government? Here again from the Politico article about Monday’s morning’s fund raising:
While Schumer’s office won’t say how much money the event raised for Reid, cash poured in from a number of developers and real estate types. The event came just hours before a procedural vote on a plan to rewrite the rules for Wall Street, but Reid’s office stressed that the donors who turned out Monday weren’t bankers or Wall Street officials — and that, in fact, many work for Ratner’s company as well as for electrical and construction companies.
Forest City Ratner is getting between $2 and $3 billion in subsidies from the government (state, local and federal combined) and Schumer’s support has been an important part of making that happen on all levels. In terms of a message that needs to clarified, is that clear enough?

Postscript on Schumer’s “Affordable Housing” Unit Count vs Actual Numbers: Schumer’s reference to there being 1,800 units of affordable housing in the proposed Atlantic Yards or the mega-deal having been reduced down to the that number of affordable units from 3,000 (“1,800 units. It was 3,000; it’s still 1,800") doesn’t parse with any publicly released descriptions of what has ever been agreed to. Officially, the nominal number of affordable units (to be included in 16 of the 19 new towers to be built on the 30-contiguous acres the developer is getting) is still 2,250, half of the non-condominium units in the sixteen towers. In real terms, the truly affordable units will actually be only 20% of the non-condominium units in the sixteen towers as required by the tax code, or 900 low income units, which is less than 20% of all the units in those sixteen towers and far, far less than 20% of the units in all 19 of the new residential towers the developer plans to build on his 30 contiguous acres.

Schumer might simply be flat-out wrong about his numbers for the project which is entirely possible since he hadn’t prepared for our questions. Alternatively: Might this be a hint that some sort of reduction of the mega-project is planned? The only public reference we can find to there being a reduction in the nominal number of “affordable housing” units at Atlantic Yards to “1,800" is with respect to the bill Assemblyman Jim Brennan proposed (initially in 2006) to reduce the size of the project so that 1,800 would then be number of nominal “affordable” units required of Ratner. (See: Friday, March 28, 2008, "Deeply troubled" Jeffries says it's time to evaluate changes in AY; Brennan's subsidy bill resurfaces.) Unfortunately, that kind of compromise, to reduce just the size of the project, is not the fix we need to address the corruption of the Forest City Ratner mega-deal. Yes, the project needs to be taken back to the drawing board and redesigned along the lines of the community’s UNITY plan design (which means it would be significantly smaller), but what is also needed is for the property to be taken away from Forest City Ratner so that it can be divided up and properly bid, parcel by parcel, among multiple developers, just like the Battery Park City model the senator and I discussed. That way it won’t give Forest City Ratner a government-assisted 50-acre mega-monopoly on prime Brooklyn real estate. Breaking up ownership of the huge acreage needs to be done even if the monopoly-opposing Senator Schumer wishes to deny that Atlantic Yards is indeed a mega-monopoly that he needn’t therefore oppose.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Surprised? MTA Restructures the Hudson Yards Deal; Developer Cherry Picks More Benefit While Public Keeps the Risk

In light of the New York Times report today about delays and proposed developer-favorable modifications with respect to the West Side’s 26-acre Hudson Yards Project we would like to note how it confirms and hearkens back to concerns we raised a long time ago. (Railyards Deal May Still Be Weeks Away, by Michael M. Grynbaum, April 26, 2010.) Are we really that much smarter than the MTA’s board? Or are we just more attentive to protecting the public interest?

In an extended overview piece in early 2009, we wrote about Hudson Yards (and a number of other projects) while reflecting how Bloomberg’s attraction to privatizing public development with his accompanying propensity for huge mono-developer projects doesn’t serve the public. (See: Monday, February 23, 2009, Un-funny Valentines Arriving Late: Your Community Interests at Heart.)

The Benefit of Hudson Yards That Could Be Accruing Now

The pith of our concerns with respect to the Hudson Yards project as they are now very much materializing in the most recently reported events was republished by Norman Oder in an Atlantic Yards Report story. (See: Wednesday, February 25, 2009, Noticing New York's critique of major projects, and the path not taken of site preparation (at Hudson Yards and AY).)

We said then that delay at Hudson Yards was being occasioned precisely because the project was proceeding as one massive project with a single developer and that if instead the MTA site was prepared by the “government (as opposed to a private developer) . . . it would not be necessary to postpone the site’s preparation at this time. Site preparation during the current economic downturn might even be cheaper.” If MTA development of the site were proceeding immediately it could be a be providing a counter-cyclical benefit to fight the economic downturn and we noted that:
As it would be a public work, it would arguably be in the running for funding through federal stimulus, an important part of that being that the prepared parcels would later be bid out. But stimulus money cannot be given to a private developer already signed onto the deal because it would totally change the equation based upon which the developer bid to pay the public a low amount for the site. Used that way, the money would eliminate the risk developer assumed and constitute an award of enormous private benefit to the developer without bid.
Atlantic Yards Report reiterated the obvious parallels to the Atlantic Yards megadevelopement.

A Golden Sacking?

Instead of the above envisioned benefits being available for the public, the Times is reporting how (much the same way that happened with Atlantic Yards) the MTA is being asked to forgo these benefits and reformulate the mega-deal so as to make it more beneficial to the developer, Related, whose financial partner is Goldman Sachs.

Per the Times:
Under a deal unveiled Monday, Related would commit to the project with a $21.7 million down payment.
Later on it explains:
After signing the contract, Related will still have to post another $21.7 million in the following 12 months. But the new plan allows the developer to post a promissory note in lieu of cash.
Putting this in context (which the Times doesn’t): In the original deal with Tishman Speyer that was abandoned with substitution of second-choice Related as the developer, a total of $43.5 million was supposed to have been paid in two installments with the second being paid “in 2009 or 2010.” In May of 2008 Related agreed “to the same tentative $1.054 billion deal that Tishman had signed in March” with the payments aggregating to the same $43.5 million on essentially the same schedule. In other words the amount the developer must now pay is lower, delayed and reduced to being only 50% of what previously had to be paid entirely in cash.

The Times goes on today saying:
But the company would not have to close on the project — and therefore start paying the 99-year lease — until after the city’s real estate market improves.

The arrangement addresses a sticking point in a negotiation that began in 2008, when the economy was still going strong. The deal had been delayed by protracted negotiations and the strains of the economic downturn, as financing for major real estate endeavors has dried up.
Remembering When the Economy Collapsed

The truth is, 2008 is not when the economy was "strong" but when it was collapsing. When the deal with Related was struck in May of 2008 the economy was already in a dramatic collapse. Here is what the Times said back then in an article about why the Tishman Speyer deal for Hudson Yards didn’t consummate:
Developers who a year ago would have gleefully bid any price for a building or a project are now delaying or abandoning projects in New York and elsewhere as the economy has slowed and many lenders have balked at financing real estate projects in the wake of the credit crisis.
(See: Deal to Build at Railyards on West Side Collapses, by Charles V. Bagli, May 9, 2008.)

So the MTA is structuring a new plan. As is typical with so-called public-private partnerships where what is public and what is private is confused and up for grabs, the public is taking all the risk and the private developer (now getting a lower price and having less obligation) is cherry-picking to get all the benefit. (Remember, as we pointed out back in 2009 and at at the outset of this piece: If there were not a privatized development scheme for the 26-acres as a mega-deal, the public would, in fact, be getting a lot of benefit now without waiting. It would be get the boost it needs in a bad economy.)

Here is the description of the new plan that appears in the Times today:
Under the plan, Related would commit to a 99-year lease on the 26-acre railyards for $1 billion, the original price. But three specific measures of the real estate market, including average prices for Manhattan co-op and condo sales, must be met before the company would be forced to close on its contract; in the earlier plan, Related would have had to close within 150 days of signing.
Presumably, if the original bid had made it clear that the buyer had the option of proceeding only when the market was good, the competing bidders would have been willing to bid far higher amounts at the outset.

The Benefit of Forethought vs. A Rush Without Review and Reasoned Consideration

Just like the recasting of the Atlantic Yards deal with the MTA (which was also phenomenally bad for the public and also no doubt a long time in the making) the Hudson Yards deal was rushed to the MTA board with no time for reasoned consideration. (Regarding the Atlantic Yards rejiggering see: Wednesday, June 24, 2009, Noticing New York Discloses What MTA Chairman H. Dale Hemmerdinger Has in His Closet, Tuesday, June 23, 2009, Thoughts on the MTA’s Finance Committee Meeting Wherein Atlantic Yards Was Considered as an “Information Item” and Friday, December 18, 2009, Big Picture Questions: Does MTA Chairman Jay Walder Comprehend Atlantic Yards Link to MTA Cutbacks?)

Here again is the Times. The Times points out that the MTA’s Finance Committee was bypassed (again similar to what happened with Atlantic Yards):
Members of the authority’s board, who received details of the deal on Sunday, expressed frustration that they had no time to review the plan before being asked to approve it. “I really feel that in these big developer deals we get the bum’s rush,” said Doreen Frasca, a board member. The finance committee issued no recommendation on the plan.
Here is some advice for "frustrated" MTA board members: You wouldn’t be getting in these kinds of binds if they abandoned the ill-advised practice of doing these single developer mega-deals and you wouldn’t be surprised with so little time to think about things if you were reading some of the Noticing New York articles where we consider these critical issue ahead of time.

The Absurd Formula to Finance the Brooklyn Bridge Park Chosen By Those in Charge: Noticing New York’s Testimony at Last Night’s Hearing

(Above city parks commissioner, Adrian Benepe, speaking on behalf of the Bloomberg administration at last night's hearing.)

Here for your consideration is the Noticing New York testimony we provided at last night’s hearing with respect to the evolving (“modified”) plans for Brooklyn Bridge Park. We have a lot more to say about the park which we will have to provide in due time but we took our opportunity last night to provide three minutes drilling down on one specific point; that the notions of those in charge that the park should be expected to completely pay for itself by including development such as housing are nonsensical. We were not the only ones speaking last night to hit upon this theme. Not only was it a repetitive theme for members of the public who spoke, but we note that politicians like Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz and City Councilman Steve Levin also expressed various shades of opposition or skepticism to this misguided concept of how the park would be financed. (Shifting to positions more in line with the lead being taken by State Senator Daniel Squadron and Assembly Member Joan Millman.)

Our letter of comment is formally addressed to the Empire State Development Corporation (“ESDC”). Does that make sense? Probably. If in this short post we had to get down to the technical level necessary to explain the labyrinth of public authorities under ESDC (or really Mayor Bloomberg?) your head would reel. That lack of transparency and accountability is some of what other people’s testimony was about last night. Among other things, a major aspect of the modification for which the hearing was being held is that much of the sum effect of all the tangled new documents being put into effect is to achieve an unprecedented amount of power for Bloomberg without corresponding checks and balances. Speaker Doug Biviano, analogizing to the out-of-control Metropolitan Transportation Authority (“MTA”) dubbed the new set-up the creation of the “MPA,” the “Mayor’s Project Authority.” We suggest the “P” in that new acronym could also stand for either “Power” or “Personal.”

Comment that questioned what is proposed to be done in the park extended to other issues as well. People criticized aspects of the park’s design and (often related) spending decisions. Per our comments below, questions were raised about whether the spending is excessive (e.g. "wave attenuators" will be very expensive).

The city parks commissioner, Adrian Benepe, (see picture from last night above) to whose recent statements we twice referred in our own testimony was there to make a very long (eight minute) statement that made one thing very clear: That Bloomberg and the city intend to hold back the $55 million for which it “bought” or obtained control over the park until it gets the financing arrangement it wants for the park. Judi Francis, Brooklyn Bridge Park Defense Fund President, referred to this tactic as the city holding the park improvement “hostage” to development. Is that the way that parks were ever funded before when great parks like Central Park or Prospect Park were created? Absolutely not.

Here then is what we had to say about why the absurd notion that parks should self-finance themselves with development makes no sense.

* * * *

April 26, 2010

Empire State Development Corporation
633 Third Avenue, 37th Floor
New York, NY 10017

Re: April 26, 2010- Hearing on Brooklyn Bridge Park

Dear ESDC:

This comment is being offered in the name of Noticing New York, an independent entity dedicated to the proposition that developing New York and appreciating New York go hand in hand.
1. I have to remark that you* do not seem to know what you are doing in terms of your plans for the financing of this park.

(* those of you in charge)

2. By definition, any successful park, any park that should be created, involves exogenous or external benefit for the surrounding community. That means that, by definition, any formula that is set up to require such a park to pay for itself is wrong and skewed to favor any development (housing, etc.) that such a formula dictates should pay for the park.

3. This park, if we are to believe what most people are saying, is supposed to be a spectacular new asset for the city. If Nicolai Ouroussoff is correct in assessing that the positive effect the park “will have on New York is immeasurable” and if he isn't off-base when he equates Brooklyn Bridge Park with Frederick Law Olmsted's (and Calvert Vaux's) Central Park then the park can be expected to have substantial external benefits far beyond its boarders, which means the idea that it should pay for itself is way off base.

4. This is not to say that there can’t be a question about how much park there should be in the city or how large this particular park should be . That is an entirely different question that needs to be answered in an entirely different fashion.

5. One thing that a formula requiring that a park be paid for by development does is engender a healthy and deserved suspicion on the part of the community about how much a park really needs to cost and whether costs are being artificially inflated in order for an overseeing development-oriented agency (like ESDC) to call for more of what it likes best, which is development catering to developers. (We all remember the fleet of 31 Toyota Priuses and dune buggies.)

6. The question of whether to pay for the park with property taxes from the escalating value of the surrounding property or to pay for it from a PILOT agreement from development in the park is so misleading as to be absurd:

a. No matter what, there will an escalation of real estate values in Brooklyn, (close to the park and farther away) and in the city as a whole because of this park. Even if those escalating values are not tracked and specifically seized to pay for the park they will still accrue and flow into the city’s general fund. In essence, no matter what, they will still be paying for the park. The good thing about these increased taxes is that they will fluctuate appropriately with the economy. When the economy burgeons they will increase; when the economy falters they can, as necessary, be subject, like all other property, to increases in the general levy that comes from changes in the tax rate. If my fellow residents of Brooklyn Heights dwelling close to the park expect that they would somehow not pay more taxes when their property values go up then they unfairly (and we think incorrectly) expect to benefit in a freeloading fashion at other New Yorkers’ expense.

b. Conversely, whenever real estate is developed it ought to pay taxes and it is not a good idea, as proposed in this park development formula, either to segregate those taxes from general city revenues or to lock them into a special amount via a PILOT agreement. These negotiated bargains are likely to benefit the developers too much and for too long as political handouts.

7. Whatever the “right amount” of development for is an area, that’s the “right amount.” It doesn’t make sense to reverse engineer the how much that should be based on a snapshot of what it costs to support a park in a particular year. The Bloomberg administration wants to proceed with development under this formula in the next two years.* Really? Does that mean that development will therefore be greater because today’s newly low real estate prices are projected to go down even more for the next two years?

(* As Commissioner Benepe has spoken about in just the last few weeks.)

8. Another underlying fallacy associated with nominally dedicating funds from one source to support a park is that those funds are fungible irrespective of “dedication,” a point city parks Commissioner Benepe essentially acknowledges when he goes on the Brian Lehrer show to say he is against dedicating park revenues to park support because he figures that whatever is locked in by dedication will just be taken back by the city reducing the budget on the back-end.

9. In sum, you need to thoroughly rethink this so-called plan. It’s very unworkability argues that it is more contrivance and device than anything else.

Sincerely,


Michael D. D. White