MESSAGE
DATE | 2010-12-28 |
FROM | Michael L Richardson
|
SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Mayor Turns a blind Eye to Brooklyn
|
Can Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island succeed from New York City, and New York State?
On 12/28/2010 9:42 AM, phantom21-at-mindspring.com wrote: > The blind eye wasn't just for Brooklyn. Most streets here in Queens (at least here in Ridgewood) haven't seen one touch of a plow, and there are drifts 3 feet high. > > Mark > > > -----Original Message----- > >> From: Ruben Safir >> Sent: Dec 28, 2010 2:12 AM >> To: hangout-at-nylxs.com >> Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Mayor Turns a blind Eye to Brooklyn >> >> ~ >> Snow job! Brooklyn pols blast lackluster storm response >> Brooklyn pols blast city for lackluster storm response >> >> By Gary Buiso >> Monday, December 27, 2010 11:09 PM EST >> Comment (No comments posted.) Email To a Friend >> >> Brooklyn received a one-two punch on Monday — first when Mother >> Nature pummeled us with the sixth-largest snowstorm ever, then when City >> Hall didn’t do enough to clear the streets of the most-important >> borough. >> >> The blizzard that dumped two feet of snow ended in the wee hours on >> Monday, but hundreds of streets throughout Brooklyn remained untouched >> by city plows all day, stranding and endangering residents, and >> infuriating critics. >> >> And elevated subway tracks — common in Brooklyn, though virtually >> unheard of in Manhattan — were rendered impassable all day long >> (though limited service on the F line was restored by 10:30 pm and was >> expected to be available for Tuesday’s rush hour). >> >> “This isn’t the worst storm we’ve ever had, but it seems to >> be the worst response to any major storm in recent memory,†said >> Councilman Steve Levin (D–Williamsburg). >> >> Indeed, much of Brooklyn remained inaccessible by public or private >> transportation. Major arteries, such as Nassau Avenue in Greenpoint and >> Fourth Avenue in Park Slope were impassable. >> >> And Southern Brooklyn was no better off. >> >> “Here, in the ‘outer-boroughs,’ we are used to being the >> step-children of Manhattan and waiting for available plows, but there >> are major streets in my district that haven’t see a plow at >> all,†Councilman David Greenfield (D–Midwood) said around >> midday. “I’ve never seen such a wholesale failure of government >> to provide basic services.†>> >> Borough President Markowitz agreed. “I would doubt the Upper East >> Side is like this. Or the Upper West Side for that matter,†he said. >> >> “Something happened in this snowstorm that we got behind the curve. >> Something came up short, and Brooklyn … took the brunt of it.†>> >> But Sanitation officials saw things differently. >> >> ADVERTISEMENT >> “There is no difference for any borough,†said agency spokesman >> Keith Mellis. “It’s the same plan we use for the entire >> city.†>> >> The city insisted that the culprit was simply the storm’s ferocity, >> though abandoned cars at a variety of intersections didn’t help the >> clean-up effort. >> >> At the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 21st Street in the South Slope, >> for example, a traffic jam of abandoned cars imprisoned a plow, >> rendering the vehicle impotent. >> >> The same scene played out down in Midwood, on Avenue N and East 13th >> Street. >> >> “I don’t want to hit the parked cars,†a Sanitation worker >> told our photographer on a side street, explaining why he didn’t >> risk moving down the narrow road. >> >> The agency said it assembled 365 salt spreaders, 1,700 plows and 2,000 >> workers to clean up the mess. Meanwhile, Mayor Bloomberg didn’t >> exactly feel the borough’s pain, saying at a Monday news conference >> that “the world has not come to an end.†>> >> “The city’s going on,†he added. “Many people are taking >> the day off. Most stores are open. There’s no reason for anyone to >> panic.†>> >> At press time, no weather-related deaths have been reported. The roof of >> a parking garage on Second Street in Park Slope collapsed because of the >> snow, shutting down Fourth Avenue from Atlantic Avenue to Eighth Street. >> >> And things weren’t all bad. At least not for WR Hardware on >> Manhattan Avenue in Greenpoint, where White Monday became Black Friday. >> >> “People were lined up in front of the door this morning,†said >> manager Martin G, whose hottest sellers were ice choppers, shovels, >> window-washing fluid and salt. A snowstorm “always helps,†he >> added. >> >> And in Gowanus, fresh air was a welcome respite from the familiar, fetid >> odor arising from the polluted Gowanus Canal. >> >> “This is one of those rare occasions that you can’t smell the >> stink,†said President Street resident Linda Mariano. >> >> Brooklyn’s business hub — the Metrotech complex, which includes >> the Community Newspaper Group Building — was all but abandoned, save >> for a handful of hurried pedestrians, and a small boy with plastic bags >> strangely tied over his winter boots, frolicking in a massive snowdrift. >> >> Train service was suspended in much of southern Brooklyn, trapping the >> area in a snowy isolation. >> >> “We haven’t been plowed and we can’t get out,†said >> Edith Storch, a resident of Sea Gate, a private community near Coney >> Island, that is without public transportation altogether. “I >> don’t see my way out of here. We were praying we don’t need >> medical care.†>> >> Transit spokeswoman Deirdre Parker said the storm scuttled the >> agency’s pre-blizzard preparations, which included moving trains >> > >from outdoor yards to enclosed areas. > >> “It just overwhelmed our equipment,†she said. Ice on the >> electrified rail stalled trains, some as long as seven hours. “We >> had snow blowers, but at some point during a blizzard, it just blows >> right back.†>> >> Suspended train service meant a rare day of silence for those living >> adjacent to the elevated tracks. >> >> “It’s very quiet here today,†said Barbara Donnelly, who has >> lived on E. 15th Street and Avenue P, near the Q and B trains, for the >> past 55 years. “It seems strange without them.†>> >> >> >> > >
|
|