Search

Federal red tape holds up city’s first outdoor film studio

Senator Charles Schumer and other local representatives are calling on the National Park Service (NPS) to green light construction of an outdoor production studio outside of Kaufman Astoria Studios.
The project would close 36th Street between 35th and 36th avenues in Astoria for the studio, which would be guarded by what speakers called an iconic new gate.
It is the gate that’s holding up the $2 million project, however, after minor changes to its appearance triggered NPS to call for a renewed review after construction was already reviewed and approved.
“The one thing California has over us is that they have an outdoor movie studio,” Schumer said. “We’ve lagged behind Hollywood as the center of film and television for this reason, because they want to be in New York. They know the talent is here.”
If the project is approved, the studio will open for the summer of 2013 and create thousands of jobs over the next year, Schumer said.
Outdoor studios allow for exterior and special effects shots. The project is aimed at attracting film and television clients who might otherwise go to Los Angeles, New Orleans, or other cities with outdoor studios.
“It would be a destination not only for film and TV clients, but for tourists,” Schumer said. “But unfortunately, instead of going forward, this project has been held up by needless delays and a sea of bureaucratic red tape that could postpone construction and threaten the ability of the studio to allow filming here by the summer of 2013.”
Schumer pointed out that New York is doing well in film and television, with 188 films and 23 primetime television shows shot in the city in 2011. However, clients are expressing interest in filming in the outdoor studio, he said, but scheduling can’t be secured until the project is approved.
In the 1970s, NPS deeded the land outside Kaufman Astoria to New York City with the stipulation that the site, which was a silent film mecca in the 1920s, continue to be used for filming.
According to the deed, NPS must sign off on projects to assure that the land is being used for that purpose.
Although NPS already approved the project, when the Public Design Commission proposed slight changes to give the gate a grittier, more industrial look, the agency called for a completely new review of the project.
Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer, who also spoke at the press conference, grew up in Astoria and said he used to ride bikes with his sister along 30th Avenue in the 1970s, when the area looked abandoned.
“Like an old warehouse, business, factory district with nothing going on,” he said. “And to see 35th Avenue reborn the way you see it today, it would not have happened without Kaufman Astoria and the Museum of Moving Image.”
“But we can’t have it as good as we want it to be without this outdoor soundstage and studio,” he said.

Glendale CSA calling for new members

Glendale is getting ready for another year of fresh vegetables, fruit and flowers, as its Community Supported Agriculture Program (CSA) is taking on new members for 2012.
Members of a CSA pay for the season in advance and sign up for vegetables and flowers, eggs or non-organic fruit. Members can choose one, two or three of the items.
Items can be picked up on every or every-other Saturday, and the program lasts from June through Thanksgiving.
The Glendale CSA is partnered with Garden of Eve Organic Farm in Riverhead, Long Island. Kevin Burns, who founded the organization in 2010 with his wife Kimberly Ferstler, said CSA’s are good for farmers because they get paid before their season starts.
Although New York City has about 100 CSA’s in total, few are in Queens, Burns said.
“It’s fun and adventurous,” he said of being a CSA member.
“You get some things that you maybe wouldn’t have purchased,” he said, “It does change a little bit your cooking habits and shopping habits.”
He said there is also a large social aspect involved in joining a CSA, because members share recipes and cooking tips. People often linger at the stands and talk to each other.
The CSA is hosting a trip to its partnering farm on May 19 and another in August.
“Each community has a different dynamic,” he said, adding that he was previously a Greenpoint and Forest Hills CSA member.
Burns said the Glendale CSA showed him a lot more diversity in the neighborhood, including a wide range of ages, occupations and opinions.
Some members join for health reasons, others because they care for the environment, while some are community oriented.
“I think everybody wants to eat better,” Burns said.
There are scholarships available for low-income members, and food leftover at the end of every Saturday is donated to a local food pantry.
The CSA last year had 75 members, it so far has 50 signed up for this year, but Burns is aiming for 80.
Bill Wenzel, a Glendale CSA member who’s lived in the area since 1980, said he used to be a member of a Manhattan CSA ,but joined this one when it opened three years ago because it is closer to where he lives.
“I believe that eating food that you don’t know quite where it came from and how it was processed is somewhat dangerous dealing with the long term,” Wenzel said.
In addition, “I believe that farmers should be able to get a fair price for their food.”
Wenzel also said not knowing exactly what he will get every week is an added thrill.
“I have gotten to sample foods that I walk passed in the local super markets and looked at them, but never knew how to eat them or how to prepare them,” he said. “So I’ve widened my food consumption quite a bit.”

For more information, visit GlendaleCSA.blogspot.com.

Goldfeder renews push for working train at abandoned line

In an effort to restore train service on Rockaway Beach Rail Line from its namesake neighborhood to Rego Park along 100th Street, Assemblyman Phil Goldfeder and residents of the Rockaways and South Queens communities unveiled an online petition in favor of the train line.
The petition, Goldfeder says, sends a strong message to Governor Cuomo and transit agencies that Queens residents “strongly support full restoration of the long-abandoned line.”
“Residents from all demographics, from all neighborhoods, are really uniting to send a strong message to the MTA, the Port Authority and the governor that we must improve transportation access in Queens,” Goldfeder said. “And the best way to do that is by bringing back the Rockaway Beach rail line. This line is the only line that will allow us in Queens to go north and south.
“Our corridors are all jammed up,” he added, “and bringing back this line would really alleviate the transportation problems and give all Queens residents access.”
Urging residents to sign the petition, Goldfeder noted that it’s important that people realize it’s not only one neighborhood or one group fighting for the restoration.
Goldfeder is also pushing for the rail line because of the estimated growth of South Queens with Resorts World Casino, the governor’s proposal to build the largest convention center in the country in the area, and the new image of the Rockaway Peninsula as a tourist haven.
“The Rockaway Beach line is the way to go to get people to Resorts World Ne York and the Rockaways,” he said. “It’s about interconnectivity in the borough.”
Residents can sign the petition at www.rockawaybeachrail.com.
Goldfeder said that with enough signatures, he will show the petition to the governor, the Port Authority and the MTA.
Although some residents are in favor of a restored rail line at the abandoned tracks, others would like to see a High Line-like park along the tracks, or a “Queensway,” adding more green space to the borough.
“We’re talking billions of dollars here,” CB9 chair Andrea Crawford, an avid supporter of park space on the rail line, said in February. “To say that you can reactivate the track is disingenuous. We need more open space in Queens and I don’t think the time and energy spent on a railway project helps anyone. I don’t think it’s a viable solution.”
Goldfeder said that he is not against that idea. He said if there is a way that a rail line and green space can coexist side by side he will be all for it.
Crawford suggested updating the A train so that it becomes more reliable and offers more express train service.
But some supporters of a train line, including mass transit advocate John Rozankowski. said that it would be a huge benefit as it would give Queens residents, particularly Rockaway residents, greater access to and from Manhattan.
“Reviving the Rockaway line will have a dramatic impact on Queens,” he said.
Rozankowski also hopes that the reestablished rail line will bring more businesses to the borough since it will bring intra-borough connectivity.
If built, the rail line will run through Ozone Park, Forest Hills, Glendale and Rego Park.

Grover Cleveland and Bushwick High Schools taken off closure list

After months of protests, hearings and community meetings residents held to fight to keep their local high schools open, Bushwick Community and Grover Cleveland high schools were taken off the Education Department’s list for potential closures, just hours before a panel was set to vote on them.
The schools were being considered for the “turnaround” method, which would give the buildings new names and eliminate 50 percent of their staff come September. Schools are slated for turnaround when they’ve been on the state’s Persistently Low Achieving (PLA) list, meaning graduation rates were below 60 percent, for the last three years.
The Education Department (DOE)’s Panel for Educational Policy (PEP) voted on whether to turnaround the remaining schools on the list at a meeting on Thursday, April 26th at the Prospect Heights Campus at 883 Classon Avenue in Brooklyn.
Communities across the city have fought the turnaround method for months, with teachers potentially losing their jobs, students losing favored staff and school names reflected in alma matters spanning back through family generations potentially changed.
But DOE representatives argue that the turnaround model is intended to help schools by speeding up the pace of improvement, particularly since those that enter the program would receive upwards of $2 million in federal funding for reform initiatives.
Bushwick High School was put on the turnaround list last year also, but the community fought successfully to keep it open.
The school serves many 17 to 21-year-olds who struggle to graduate, but State Senator Martin Dilan said the students to care about their educations.
He said the school has small class sizes and one-on-one educational opportunities tailored to help struggling students.
“This school and it’s programs are tailored to students that have not excelled in traditional classrooms and curriculum,” Dilan said in a statement after the school was taken off the turnaround list. “This school offers a second chance and any success, no matter how small, is worth fighting for.”
Over at Grover Cleveland, parents, staff and students held protests at 7 a.m., bombarded the school’s PEP hearing with opposition, and dominated local civic meetings with their concerns.
The school, which started the 2011/12 school year under the federal restart model, got a new principal midway through September and therefore did not get the chance to prove its ability for success yet, they argued.
Staff said the school’s graduation rates are low in part because many students don’t speak the language when they enter the school, and sometimes are illiterate in their native tongues.
After the school was removed from the turnaround list Thursday morning, Assemblywoman Cathy Nolan, who graduated from Grover Cleveland in 1979, and Queens Borough President Helen Marshall’s PEP representative Dmytro Fedkowskyj, class of 1984, released a joint statement thanking DOE for its decision.
“The have recognized the strength and improvement under Principal Denise Vittor and all the excellence that the Grover Cleveland community offers,” the representatives said.
However, they added, “we continue to express our opposition and concern with the proposed turnaround model and we urge the city to drop their quest to close all these schools, especially the large comprehensive Queens high schools.”

104th Precinct Crime Blotter

Monday, Apr. 23

Ibrahim Ali was arrested at Cypress Avenue and Vermont Place for criminal possession of a weapon by Officer Rodriguez.
Anisoava Caldavas was arrested at 60-16 Myrtle Avenue for criminal possession of stolen property by Officer Toor.
Stormy Alvarez was arrested at 1730 Madison Street for assault by Officer Simone.

Tuesday, Apr. 24

Bruce Wilson was arrested at 54-19 Myrtle Avenue for assault by Detective Diaquoz.
Stephen Mullins was arrested at 60-95 69th Avenue for assault by Detective Murray.
Alexander Muchin was arrested at 67-41 Myrtle Avenue for robbery by Officer Marixyaccz.
Edilberto Correa was arrested at Maspeth Avenue and 61st Street for menacing by Officer Rodriguez.

Wednesday, Apr. 25

Daniel Nemeth was arrested at 59-15 Maspeth Avenue for assault by Officer Hyatt.
Abraham Sanchez was arrested at 503 Fairview Avenue for assault by Officer Diaz.
Jeremias Caac was arrested at 56-08 61st Street for criminal possession of a weapon by Officer Peart.
Maria Bauer was arrested at 60-10 83rd Street for assault by Officer Nappi.
Michael Nelson was arrested at Menahan Street and Grandview Avenue for petit larceny by Officer Miller.

Thursday, Apr. 26

Michael Parker was arrested at Fresh Pond Road and 68th Avenue for assault by Officer Krokondelas.
Phillip Babtok was arrested at 876 Woodward Avenue for criminal trespassing by Officer Varecka.
Edward Warren was arrested at 876 Woodward Avenue for criminal trespassing by Officer Varecka.
Porfirio Garrastazu was arrested at 59-55 Madison Street for criminal contempt by Detective Webb.
Josephine Hargrove was arrested at 475 Wyckoff Avenue for aggravated harassment by Officer Williams.
Eduardo Santos was arrested at 58-09 Myrtle Avenue for petit larceny by Officer Dupont.

Friday, Apr. 27

James Smith was arrested at 67-53 78th Street for criminal contempt by Officer Toor.
Pasquale Dellaratta was arrested at 21-27 Himrod Street for graffiti by Officer Simone.
Kelly Grullon was arrested at 765 Seneca Avenue for criminal possession of stolen property by Officer Mendez.
Christopher Rodriguez was arrested at 16-39 Woodbine street for criminal possession of stolen property by Officer Rodriguez.
Hannna Hanna was arrested at 17-01 Gates Avenue for criminal possession of stolen property By Officer Mendez.
Wilfredo Awdujar was arrested at Myrtle Avenue and Cypress Avenue for criminal possession of stolen property by Officer Rodriguez.
Paul Devlin was arrested at Flushing Avenue and 57th Street for graffiti by Officer Dambinskas.

Saturday, Apr. 28

Victor Gonzalez was arrested at Myrtle Avenue and the Jackie Robinson Parkway for driving while intoxicated by Officer McCarren.
Rosa Salto was arrested at 61-31 Madison Street for acting in a manner to cause injury to a child by Officer McKevitt.
Steffany Manguia was arrested at 66-26 Metropolitan Avenue for criminal possession of stolen property by Officer Ock.
Joseph Stine was arrested at 20-31 Bleecker Street for assault by Officer Misomen.
Gerny Carroll was arrested at 77-27 82nd Street for assault by Officer Aviles.

Sunday, Apr. 29

Maverick Matos was arrested at Borden Avenue and 60th Street for forgery by Officer Varecka.
David Cadavid was arrested at 60th Street and 55th Drive for aggravated unlicensed operation of a vehicle by Officer Arata.
Kelvin Mazyck was arrested at Seneca Avenue and Palmetto Street for robbery by Officer Swiistun.
Victor Nunez was arrested at 17-22 Woodbine Street for assault by Officer Mays.
Jose Aguilar was arrested at 587 Onderdonk Avenue for assault by Officer Ziman.
Sandra Echevarria was arrested at 60-52 Cooper Avenue for assault by Officer Murtha.
Daniel Rapala was arrested at 20-26 Himrod Street for criminal contempt by Officer Gomez.
Diego Garcia was arrested at 578 Woodward Avenue for assault by Officer Sanchez.
Luis Calle was arrested at 20-21 Woodbine Street for burglary by Officer McKevitt.
Lindsey Ortiz was arrested at 66-26 Metropolitan Avenue for criminal possession of stolen property by Officer Thompson.

Grover Cleveland HS gets last-minute reprieve

After months of protests, hearings and community meetings residents held to fight to keep their local high schools open, Bushwick Community and Grover Cleveland high schools were taken off the Education Department’s list for potential closures, just hours before a panel was set to vote on them.
The schools were being considered for the “turnaround” method, which would give the buildings new names and eliminate 50 percent of their staff come September. Schools are slated for turnaround when they’ve been on the state’s Persistently Low Achieving (PLA) list, meaning graduation rates were below 60 percent, for the last three years.
The Education Department (DOE)’s Panel for Educational Policy (PEP) will vote on whether to turnaround the remaining schools on the list at a meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday night at the Prospect Heights Campus at 883 Classon Avenue in Brooklyn.
Communities across the city have fought the turnaround method for months, with teachers potentially losing their jobs, students losing favored staff and school names reflected in alma maters spanning back through family generations potentially changed.
But DOE representatives argue that the turnaround model is intended to help schools by speeding up the pace of improvement, particularly since those that enter the program would receive upwards of $2 million in federal funding for reform initiatives.
Bushwick High School was put on the turnaround list last year also, but the community fought successfully to keep it open.
The school serves many 17 to 21-year-olds who struggle to graduate, but State Senator Martin Dilan said the students to care about their educations.
He said the school has small class sizes and one-on-one educational opportunities tailored to help struggling students.
“This school and it’s programs are tailored to students that have not excelled in traditional classrooms and curriculum,” Dilan said in a statement after the school was taken off the turnaround list. “This school offers a second chance and any success, no matter how small, is worth fighting for.”
Over at Grover Cleveland, parents, staff and students held protests at 7 a.m., bombarded the school’s PEP hearing with opposition, and dominated local civic meetings with their concerns.
The school, which started the 2011/12 school year under the federal restart model, got a new principal midway through September and therefore did not get the chance to prove its ability for success yet, they argued.
Staff said the school’s graduation rates are low in part because many students don’t speak the language when they enter the school, and sometimes are illiterate in their native tongues.
After the school was removed from the turnaround list Thursday morning, Assemblywoman Cathy Nolan, who graduated from Grover Cleveland in 1979, and Queens Borough President Helen Marshall’s PEP representative Dmytro Fedkowskyj, class of 1984, released a joint statement thanking DOE for its decision.
“The have recognized the strength and improvement under Principal Denise Vittor and all the excellence that the Grover Cleveland community offers,” the representatives said.
However, they added, “we continue to express our opposition and concern with the proposed turnaround model and we urge the city to drop their quest to close all these schools, especially the large comprehensive Queens high schools.”

Glendale loves its neighbors for Earth Day

The Glendale Civic Association hosted a Love Your Neighbor event for Earth Day on Saturday, April 21st. The event encouraged local residents to spend time outside enjoying the day, chatting and cleaning the neighborhood together.
Volunteers from the Maspeth High School Green Club, the New York Municipal Credit Union joined Councilwoman Liz Crowley’s office and local residents to remove trash and debris from community-shared blocks. Many students and neighbors came out to rake leaves and weed overgrowth while others collected trash and swept sidewalks and drains.
The street revitalization and beautification project focused on a cleanup of public gardens, sidewalks and railroad sittings throughout Glendale and Ridgewood.
“Earth Day is not just about solar panels and electric cars. It is also about what we can do in our neighborhood to keep our planet beautiful,” Crowley said. “Collecting trash, recycling and planting gardens go a long way to keep our City clean. I am thankful to the Glendale Civic Association and to all the volunteers who came out and made this event a success.”

Photos: Michael O’Kane

In the making: Forest Park Civic Association of Queens

There is never a shortage of civic deeds, but it is only periodically that we come across young community leaders of Queens who recognize problems in their community and feel obligated to unite neighbors and find solutions.
There are “armchair residents” who complain and take it for granted that other residents will improve their communities, and there are “defeatist residents” who feel problems can never be remedied. Then there are creative visionaries, which fall into a stand-alone category.
The latter is the case with Paul Gagliardotto, a 26-year-old Glendale resident who is forming the Forest Park Civic Association of Queens.
The Forest Park Civic Association of Queens would unify residents of all areas surrounding Forest Park, which include Glendale, Forest Hills, Kew Gardens, Richmond Hill, and Woodhaven. The new civic association’s mission statement is “To maintain the integrity of the social, cultural, historical, and infrastructural standards, as well as encourage community involvement, pride, and neighborhood cooperation.”
Over pastries and beverages in a Forest Hills Starbucks, the well-dressed Paul Gagliardotto expressed his passion for Queens and his civic goals. He has made the rounds in Queens: he is an Ozone Park native, a Glendale resident since age 13, and an alumna of Forest Hills High School. He began volunteering at age seven at a few churches, and participated in food and coat drives.
Gagliardotto’s long-term priority is creating a civic that unites everyone under a stronger voice. “There is a Glendale Civic Association, Woodhaven Residents Block Association, and Richmond Hill Historical Society, among others,” he said. “If an issue arises in one community, members from all the involved communities can join each other. I want to work with other civics, and not just be another one out there.”
Gagliardotto had his vision in early 2011, and owes his civic inspirations to his family and elected officials. He stated,
“My parents and sisters said to stop talking about trying to form a civic, but go for it,” he said. “I always looked up to the Vallone family, where Charles J. Vallone was a judge and grandson Peter Vallone, Jr. became a councilman. I read a great book by [former City Council Speaker] Peter F. Vallone, Sr. called Learning To Govern, which is about growing up in a political family and never abandoning their Astoria roots.”
In early 2012, redistricting became a contested issue. It was reported that four Queens legislators might be consolidated into two districts, and a Democrat would become subject to gerrymandering.
“If you take Forest Park and the five surrounding neighborhoods, you can quickly see how it borders three community boards, three of the new congressional districts, three or four assembly districts depending on how you view it, and five state senate districts,” Gagliardotto explained.
“I feel it is an outrage how Queens is divided by political representation, but this civic would do the opposite,” he said. “I feel I owe it to this area more than ever.”
Gagliardotto hopes to help save the Queens Community House Beacon Program at Russell Sage JHS 190, which might be forced to close due to budget cuts. “I played music, sports, and arts and crafts there after school, and I couldn’t imagine the program not being around for today’s kids,” he said.
Queens is often tossed candy, considering the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s designation rate in Manhattan and Brooklyn, Gagliardotto said.
“We have so much history, and should have more, if not just as many landmarks as Brooklyn and Manhattan,” he said. “I remember visiting Eddie’s Sweet Shop and the Forest Hills Tennis Stadium when I was younger, and it makes me wonder how the Commission would not landmark those historic sites.”
Gagliardotto denounces overdevelopment. “Developers want to build a condo everywhere, but they don’t see what people value from spaces such as the Tennis Stadium,” he said.
He referenced the demolition of homes and green spaces in the Cord Meyer section of Forest Hills for McMansions. He also mentioned the demolition of a 1906 Neo-Renaissance rowhouse at 108-21 72nd Avenue to build a sliver commercial building, which blocked all views on one façade of the Chatham apartment building.
Green initiatives are another interest. “If you walk down a block and it’s all cement, you don’t have that nice feeling,” Gagliardotto said.
He suggested devoting areas of Forest Park to teaching children how to grow flowers and vegetables, and also planting trees at large. He supports a bike path along the abandoned LIRR Rockaway Beach Branch, as long as parking facilities for the cars at the Forest View Crescent co-op are not sacrificed.
He envisions a general membership meeting paired by an executive board meeting, and hopes the civic will meet bi-monthly, in addition to any special weekend activity. He will promote his civic through his website and Facebook. He also visualizes a younger membership, spanning college age through the late 20s.
“We are the younger people who will inherit these neighborhoods, so we need to take care of these neighborhoods now before it is too late,” he said.
“This is a very community-based neighborhood, and this civic will be a great addition for the whole community,” said student opera singer Nora Mooney, a two-year resident of Forest Hills.
“I am responsible, caring, and patient,” added Gagliardotto. “My personality as an individual is carried into my personality as a community leader.”
With Gagliardotto’s vision, Queens is improvement-bound.

The civic’s introductory meeting will be on May 2 at 7 p.m. in the Atlas Park Community Room at 80-00 Cooper Avenue in Glendale. Residents can get to know each other and exchange ideas, as well as meet congressional candidates.

Fill the Form for Events, Advertisement or Business Listing