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  #21  
Old Posted Feb 8, 2008, 9:24 PM
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iTri Plan Closer to Junking Chop Shop Row?




The city's plan for a massive project next to the new CitiField in Willets Point is moving forward, with the New York Economic Development Corp. set to start the clock ticking on public review by the end of the month.

In the meantime, there was a demonstration against the project by business owners that would be displaced and workers that could lose their jobs if the city seizes property for it.

The $3 billion project would cover an area of 65 acres and would include up to 5,000 units of housing, a 700-room hotel, a 400,000 square foot convention center, 1.8 million square feet of retail space, 500,000 square feet of office space, a school and parks. Business owners say they have no interest in moving and that 1,500 jobs will disappear if the plan goes forward. They say the area is "an economic engine."


http://www.nycedc.com/Web/AboutUs/Ou...ntDistrict.htm
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  #22  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2008, 9:36 PM
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Willets Point Plan Rendered, Local Love Included



Monday, April 7, 2008, by Robert

That big city plan to tear down all the auto shops and other businesses in Willets Point and replace it with housing, hotel rooms, shopping and a convention center is still generating a lot protest. So much so that opponents plan to demonstrate at opening day at Shea Stadium tomorrow and organizers are predicting 1,000 people could show up to give Mets' fans something extra to watch.

In the meantime, the city recently floated out some renderings, a photo gallery of which appears above. The rezoning the city is considering would allow up to 5,000 units of housing and 1.5 million square feet of commercial space in a 13-block area. A lot of the property would have to be seized by eminent domain, however, and up to 3,000 workers could lose their jobs.

Opponents also say the plan doesn't include enough affordable housing. In the meantime, there's a letter writing campaign to city officials from members of the Willets Point Industry and Realty Association. One says, "We object to you taking our land and selling it to a private developer while profiting from our blood, sweat and tears." Another calls the plan "a disgrace." The plan could be headed into the land review process within a month and hopes to break ground in 2010.

http://www.nycedc.com/Web/AboutUs/Ou...ntDistrict.htm



















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  #23  
Old Posted Apr 11, 2008, 4:06 PM
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http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/..._sue_city.html

Willets Point property owners sue city





Arturo Olaya, president of the group Save Willets Point, speaks at a rally of business owners in February.


BY JESS WISLOSKI
April 10th 2008


Willets Point property owners filed a lawsuit against the city Wednesday, charging it has deliberately denied the area basic city services to grease the skids for condemnation.

About 150 business owners and their supporters gathered on the steps of City Hall to announce the federal case and to protest the city's plans to redevelop the gritty 60-acre industrial swath known as the Iron Triangle.

"The city knows that there are 2,000 people working here, and they have not invested any funds for the taxes that we pay," said Neil Soni, 28, vice president of House of Spices, the country's largest distributor of Indian foods.

The suit says the city has withheld services such as trash and snow removal and police surveillance; refused to maintain drainage, roadways and sanitary sewerage lines, and allowed curbs, gutters and fire hydrants to deteriorate beyond repair.

Janel Patterson, a spokeswoman for the city Economic Development Corp., called Willets Point "a blighted and seriously contaminated site that has developed haphazardly into a hodgepodge of small businesses."


"It requires a comprehensive remediation and redevelopment plan to clean up the mess and provide infrastructure for future sustainable growth," added Patterson, who did not address the property owners' allegations of neglect.

Currently, 250 companies are located in Willets Point. Many are small businesses, and are renters involved with auto repair and salvage. The suit was filed by 16 larger, predominantly manufacturing firms that together own the majority of the land.

City officials insist the redevelopment project will create affordable housing and 5,100 new permanent jobs with new office buildings, a hotel and convention center, retail shops and parks.

Eight City Council members backed the protesters Wednesday and denounced the city's negotiating tactics, which the business owners said have been in bad faith.

Mayoral hopeful Tony Avella (D-Bayside), who heads the Council's zoning committee, said he would refuse to approve any plans that would invoke eminent domain to develop something on the site other than a "good public purpose," such as a school or a highway.

"It is a completely different thing to take it and give it to another private individual, a developer, who will then turn around and make millions of dollars," Avella said.

"We're here today to say, 'No.' Go back to the drawing board, Mr. Mayor."With Adam Lisberg
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  #24  
Old Posted Apr 11, 2008, 4:38 PM
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Originally Posted by fioco View Post
Here's a ground level shot:
What is this pic of calcutta doing in a New York thread?
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  #25  
Old Posted Apr 17, 2008, 5:07 AM
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What is this pic of calcutta doing in a New York thread?
LOL, its the part of New York the tourists don't come to see. But maybe they would if they knew about it. It's worth a few photos before they raze it.
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  #26  
Old Posted Apr 17, 2008, 2:12 PM
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The stadium and the triangle...

From 94 Aug

























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  #27  
Old Posted Apr 18, 2008, 1:19 AM
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What is this pic of calcutta doing in a New York thread?
It's LITTLE Calcutta. Duy!

New York City has a "Little ____" or a "____town" for every culture out there.
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  #28  
Old Posted Apr 18, 2008, 3:36 AM
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Originally Posted by StatenIslander237 View Post
It's LITTLE Calcutta. Duy!

New York City has a "Little ____" or a "____town" for every culture out there.
I tell you though, if this redevelopment turns out half the way they plan it to, it will be one of the most dramatic transformations in the city.
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  #29  
Old Posted May 1, 2008, 4:29 AM
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http://curbed.com/archives/2008/04/2...ks_go_mets.php

Willets Point: The Other Side Speaks. Go Mets!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008, by Joey

One important voice left out of the white-hot Willets Point redevelopment controversy: What do Mets fans think? Hey, it sounds weird, but given that the new Citi Field will be a stolen hubcap's throw away from the Iron Triangle/proposed mixed-use village, it's Mets fans that have to stare at the thing, right?

Up until now, the Willets Point opposition has been getting all the press, thanks to a coordinated and highly-effective media campaign. Now, however, we hear from someone who actually wants Willets Point cleared and cleaned: a guy named Chris McShane, author of a blog called Develop Willets Point. From right up top: "Take Action to Make Willets Point the Best Neighborhood in Major League Baseball." From the About Me section: "I'm a Mets fan who would like to see Willets Point complement Citi Field." As far as we know, he doesn't work for City Hall. Or the Mets. But maybe his real name is Johan Santana?

Develop Willets Point
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  #30  
Old Posted Jun 23, 2008, 12:49 PM
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http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/21/ny...l?ref=nyregion

Still Opposing Plan to Develop Willets Point, One Business Decides to Sell



Daniel Sambucci, 77, in his salvage yard in Willets Point, Queens, accepted the city’s offer to buy the business.




Another business owner, Gordhandas Soni, at right with his son Neil, said the pressure to sell had become intolerable.



By JAVIER C. HERNANDEZ
June 21, 2008


The offer from the city was sweet enough to jeopardize the rewards of decades of tedious surgery — gutted transmissions, mix-and-match motor parts, skeletons of abandoned cars. So sweet, in fact, that it persuaded Daniel Sambucci to aid a plan he still opposes.

But Mr. Sambucci, 77, whose family owns an auto salvage company in Willets Point in Queens, would not say exactly how sweet. “They treated us well,” was all he would say on Friday.

The sale, announced on Wednesday, marked a flash of surrender in a community that has long opposed the city’s ambitious efforts to transform its scruffy 13-block industrial park into a $3 billion retail, office and residential district with restaurants and a park.

Under the deal with the city, the Sambucci Brothers business will move to College Point, Mr. Sambucci said.

In Willets Point, a triangle east of Shea Stadium and west of the Van Wyck Expressway where stray cats roam the streets and shoes are stained by muddy clay, news of Mr. Sambucci’s decision to sell was met with surprise and vows to continue to fight the city’s plan.

But even though many business owners remained resilient, some said they understood Mr. Sambucci’s decision and might do the same if the offer was sufficiently appealing.


“God bless them,” said Paul Cohen, who has owned Roosevelt Auto Wrecking for nearly two decades. “You got to do what’s best for yourself.”

Since the city’s plan was announced last year, Mr. Sambucci’s 57-year-old family business, Sambucci Brothers Auto Salvage, has stood as a symbol of the fight against city control.

Signs decrying eminent domain, the government’s power to seize private land for public use, line the fences and windows near the 52,000-square-foot lot, stacked with tons of metal, glass and chrome.

Mr. Sambucci said he agonized over the decision to sell. The son of immigrants from Naples, Italy, he built the business from a scrap metal dump into a popular trove of used auto parts by working 18 hours a day.

Despite his decision, he said, he still hopes that the city fails in its quest.

“My first wish was to stay where I was created,” he said over a quick hot dog lunch in his office. “I don’t want to go, but they’ve got the gun on the table.”

Mr. Sambucci’s business is part of a group of organizations and property owners that has opposed the city’s efforts. Ultimately, Mr. Sambucci said, the cost of protesting the city’s efforts grew too large.

“The city could fight us for 100 years,” he said. “We’re going to run out of money, but they’re not. You can’t fight a war without money.”

Down the pothole-covered streets from Sambucci Brothers sits House of Spices, a producer and distributor of Indian food and a member of the business consortium. Gordhandas Soni, owner of the business for 38 years, said the pressure to sell had become intolerable in recent months.

“It is like a sword hanging over you, spinning slowly,” he said. “They should not be using divide-and-rule tactics.”

Neil Soni, Mr. Soni’s son and the company’s vice president, said he did not see the sale of Sambucci Brothers as a significant threat to Willets Point.

“They are only one business out of more than 200,” he said. “I don’t call that progress.”

Mr. Cohen, owner of the nearby wrecking lot, said his business was in a state of limbo. He said that he wanted to make improvements to his business, but that they would be pointless if he reached a deal to sell his land or if the city invoked eminent domain.

The city has said that the development project will create union jobs and that eminent domain will be used only as a last resort.

“There’s no question that Willets Point has to be cleaned up and the businesses have to be relocated for that to happen,” said Andrew Brent, a spokesman for Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.


Mr. Cohen said he was also concerned about the employees of Willets Point businesses that would not be compensated if their owners decided to sell.

“They’re good people,” he said. “They come to work on time, 365 days a year.”

Mr. Sambucci said he worried most about his 50-year-old son and 21-year-old grandson, who have helped the business prosper.

When the business moves next year, it will start from scratch, leaving behind parts amassed over the years.

Mr. Sambucci said he also worried about the future of family-owned businesses in the area.

“I’ll be fine,” he said. “But where do they go?”
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  #31  
Old Posted Oct 21, 2008, 10:55 PM
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New York Observer

Thompson Pushes Willets Point Plan Amid Financial Crisis

by Eliot Brown | October 21, 2008




City Comptroller Bill Thompson this morning endorsed construction of planned mega-projects, including Willets Point, as a means to "prime the economy."

As the debate over term limits rages on (Mr. Thompson is opposed to extending term limits and said he plans to mount a mayoral bid regardless), Mr. Thompson turned his attention to the financial crisis at a Crain's breakfast forum this morning. His broad, three-pronged solution for the local economy: tighten budgets, spur economic development and diversify the economy.

In the speech, according to prepared remarks, he took a tangent to endorse the city's plan to redevelop the 61-acre industrial zone of Willets Point in Queens (the Council must vote on the contentious proposal by Nov. 18), though he said that affordable housing and business relocation issues must be addressed.

From his remarks, per the Comptroller's office:
"Today, its proximity to La Guardia Airport and public transportation makes Willets Point a prime location for a larger convention center, a successful model that other cities have developed....Over time, this convention center could replace the Javits Convention Center entirely, freeing up valuable land.
Such an investment would not only create good jobs and give northern Queens a shot in the arm, but it would take advantage of the enduring strength of our tourism industry.
...
But development of Willets Point must place a priority on the proper relocation of the valuable enterprises now operating on the site....Their owners have built solid businesses in a previously neglected area, providing jobs and important services....At a time when we want to keep and grow our small businesses, they must not be cast aside.

We must also endeavor to create low, moderate and middle-income housing there."


© 2008 Observer Media Group, All Rights Reserved Worldwide.
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  #32  
Old Posted Nov 9, 2008, 9:31 PM
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Crain's New York

November 07. 2008 3:21PM

Willets Point down to the wire

Thursday’s Council vote hangs in the balance as key housing and land issues have yet to be resolved.



With less than a week remaining before the City Council votes on the contentious Willets Point redevelopment project, the Bloomberg administration has made some progress on buying up land at the Queens site. But it’s still unclear if the city has the votes it needs to see the measure pass. To prevail, it may have to strike additional deals on land and one on affordable housing.

The Economic Development Corp. announced Monday that it agreed to terms with House of Spices—one of the leading Indian food manufacturers in the country —to buy its 4-acre property. The manufacturer had been the second largest member of the association leading opposition to the city proposal.

Another agreement, for auto salvage company Prevete Brothers’ 12,000-square-foot parcel, brings the total amount of private land under city control to 439,131 square feet, or about 10 acres. The city still needs to acquire another 38 acres of privately held land—including nine acres owned by Tully Environmental, Inc., the largest landowner in the area, and 3.3 acres owned by Fodera Foods, another major business. Owner Anthony Fodera says he has not had substantive talks with the city in more than a month.

“We remain committed to working with the remaining land owners and businesses to reach as many negotiated acquisitions as possible as the project moves through the public review process,” said EDC President Seth Pinsky.

The EDC is also in negotiations with an affordable housing coalition—comprised of ACORN, Queens for Affordable Housing and the Pratt Center for Community Development—which has insisted the city raise the proportion of affordable housing from 20% to 50%. Sources say a compromise of 30% prior to the vote is likely.

City Councilman Hiram Monserrate, who represents the area, continues to insist that he is opposed to the project in its current form and that more land deals, an affordable housing agreement and a plan to relocate 260 tenant businesses must all be reached before Thursday’s scheduled vote.

A spokesman for Mr. Monserrate says the city must reach deals for at least 60% of the privately-held land before the councilman would even consider voting in favor of the plan.

The mayor wants to rezone the 62-acre industrial area for a large mixed-use development that would include housing, a hotel, a convention center and retail and office space. The city says the land is contaminated and needs to be cleaned up.

A majority of Council members have vowed to reject the proposal Thursday over concerns about use of eminent domain and lack of affordable housing. City officials have intensified efforts in recent weeks to tilt the members’ opinions in favor of the plan.

Last week, Mayor Michael Bloomberg met personally with each borough’s Council delegation to press his case. The mayor and his staff also met with some Council members individually. Opponents of the project say the delegation meetings were unprecedented and indicate the mayor is worried he doesn’t have the votes to get the project passed.

“That’s never been done before,” said a Willets Point Realty and Industry Association spokeswoman. “In his seven years, the mayor never once did it, not on congestion pricing, not on term limits. If they had the votes, they wouldn’t have dragged him out.”

There have been rumblings the Council could break from tradition and not follow Mr. Monserrate, the local Council member, in the vote. But Council members have expressed grave reservations about the use of eminent domain, and their votes could end up being decided by how many deals the city signs in the next week.

“We’ve got six days,” said Mr. Monserrate’s spokesman. “I gather it’s going to be a very long weekend for the administration.”


© 2008 Crain Communications, Inc.
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  #33  
Old Posted Feb 20, 2009, 11:23 PM
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What's the latest on this project?
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  #34  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2009, 7:03 AM
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better be some good news
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  #35  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2009, 1:15 AM
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http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article...FREE/903129976

Companies sue to stop city’s Willets Point remake
Some two dozen industrial businesses still toughing it out in Iron Triangle ask state’s high court to block fancy redevelopment of site near new Citi Field.





In their latest attempt to thwart the Bloomberg administration’s plans to redevelop Willets Point, more than 20 Iron Triangle business owners filed suit Wednesday in state Supreme Court challenging the city’s environmental review of the area.

The suit alleges the city’s environmental impact statement falls short of requirements under state law, especially regarding the project’s potential effects on local traffic. It also contends Deputy Mayor Robert Lieber’s office does not have the authority to play a lead role on the project. And it argues the city’s plans for the area are too vague to serve as a justification for the use of eminent domain.

Manhattan attorney Michael Gerrard lodged the appeal, known as an Article 78 petition, on behalf of 22 members of the group Willets Point United Against Eminent Domain Abuse.

“We are confident that the courts will dismiss the findings of the environmental review,” says Jerry Antonacci, the group’s president and the owner of Crown Container. “The city council’s November 2008 vote authorizing the redevelopment will be rendered null and void.”

The city’s plan for the gritty 61-acre industrial area adjacent to the new Citi Field baseball park calls for apartments, a hotel, stores, a convention center, a school, offices and parkland. A developer has yet to be chosen.

Many of the area’s largest business owners reached agreements to sell their land to the city prior to last fall’s council vote, but some holdouts remain among the smaller owners.

A spokesman for the mayor’s office referred calls to the city’s Law Department. A spokeswoman there said the department has just received the official court papers and is reviewing them.
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  #36  
Old Posted Mar 23, 2009, 11:32 PM
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http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/...pen_to_bi.html

Willets Point team spirit EDC open to bid from Islanders, sources say

BY Nicholas Hirshon
March 23rd 2009


City officials in charge of the proposed Willets Point redevelopment would entertain bids from the Islanders if the storied hockey club decides to leave Nassau County, insiders told the Daily News.

Sources said the city Economic Development Corp. - now preparing a request for proposals to transform the 62-acre tract near Citi Field - is intrigued by rumors the Isles may relocate amid stalled plans to revamp Nassau Coliseum.

Queens leaders began pushing for an Islanders move to Willets Point last month after the team scheduled a preseason game in Kansas City, which wants a National Hockey League franchise to play in its vacant new arena, which opened in 2007.

The Islanders' Coliseum lease expires in 2015.


Asked if the city is hoping for an Islanders bid on Willets Point, an EDC spokesman said the agency is "looking forward to evaluating any ideas that fall within the guidelines of the approved rezoning."

The Islanders referred questions to the Lighthouse Group, which hopes to renovate Nassau Coliseum and the surrounding area. A Lighthouse spokeswoman declined comment.

But advocates of relocating the Isles to Willets Point took heart in the EDC's openness to dealing with Islanders management.

City Councilman John Liu (D-Flushing), a candidate for city controller, urged the EDC to stop the four-time Stanley Cup champs from heading to Kansas City or Saskatoon, Canada, another locale reportedly gunning for an NHL club.

"The city should do everything humanly possible to keep the Islanders in our region - and preferably in Queens," Liu said.


The Queens Chamber of Commerce - whose proposal to bring the Isles to the borough was first reported Feb. 10 by The News - also was buoyed by the EDC's receptivity.

"They're a lot more powerful than the chamber of commerce," said the chamber's executive vice president, Jack Friedman. "They own the land. They decide how the land is divided and how it's done."

Chuck Apelian, who heads the Willets Point subcommittee for Community Board 7, envisioned a mighty sports complex anchored by the Mets, the National Tennis Center and the Islanders.

"It's a great opportunity for Queens," he said. "It fills out the area - you have baseball, you have tennis, you have hockey."
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  #37  
Old Posted May 26, 2009, 10:04 PM
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http://irontriangletracker.com/2009/...-council-vote/

City makes first Willets deals since City Council vote

May 26, 2009
by Stephen Stirling

The city made agreements to acquire two new properties at Willets Point, marking the first such deals to take place since the City Council approved a redevelopment plan for the community last year, the city Economic Development Corporation said Tuesday.

___________________________________________________

NYC ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION REACHES NEGOTIATED PROPERTY ACQUISITION AGREEMENTS WITH TWO ADDITIONAL
WILLETS POINT BUSINESSES


City Now Controls Nearly 65% of Property in Willets Point



New York City, May 26, 2009 – New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) today announced it has signed property acquisition agreements with two additional property owners at Willets Point, Queens. The acquisitions announced today total 34,403 square feet, bringing the amount of land now controlled by the City to about 40 acres, or 1,742,400 square feet. The agreements are the ninth and tenth negotiated land acquisitions in Willets Point, also known as the Iron Triangle.

“We are pleased to be making good on our promise to acquire as much land in Willets Point as possible by negotiated acquisition. These two agreements are further proof of the City’s commitment to work with property owners and businesses to reach fair terms of acquisition,” said NYCEDC President Seth Pinsky. “We will continue to work with the remaining land owners and businesses as we move forward with our plans to transform this blighted area into a center of economic opportunity and job creation and a 21st century neighborhood.”

NYCEDC reached acquisition agreements with 126 Willets Point Boulevard LLC and German Diaz Auto Repair. 126 Willets Point Boulevard LLC owns two parcels totaling 30,403 square feet. One parcel is on Willets Point Boulevard, the other is on Roosevelt Avenue. German Diaz Auto Repair owns 4,000 square feet of property at 37th Avenue.

NYCEDC will continue to reach out to business and property owners in Willets Point to negotiate fair acquisition agreements. NYCEDC has also been engaged in active relocation negotiations with many businesses of all sizes since announcing the redevelopment plans.

Under the City’s plan, which completed the public review process in November 2008, the 62 acres at Willets Point will be transformed from a highly contaminated industrial area into an exciting new, mixed-use community that will include housing, restaurants, stores, parks, and a school. The project will also create about 18,000 construction jobs and 5,000 permanent jobs.
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  #38  
Old Posted May 27, 2009, 6:06 AM
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Wow, simply amazing. I had no idea a place like this existed. It really does look like the third world.

That said, my favorite mechanic is in a building that doesn't look much better than that place!
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  #39  
Old Posted May 27, 2009, 11:37 AM
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Wow, simply amazing. I had no idea a place like this existed. It really does look like the third world.
Ironically, it could probably be a tourists destination in its own right...
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  #40  
Old Posted May 28, 2009, 4:27 AM
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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/28/ny...1&ref=nyregion

Preparing Workers for Jobs After the Junkyards Go



By FERNANDA SANTOS
May 27, 2009


It takes a certain humility to head back to school at the age of 52 and learn as a child would, through picture books and basic words sketched on a blackboard.

But Gustavo Zerón, a Honduran immigrant who works nine hours a day at a junkyard, swallowed his pride and signed up for the classes, which the city is offering in an effort to give laborers of soon-to-disappear businesses in Willets Point skills to find new work.

“That’s the only opportunity I have to get out of this place,” Mr. Zerón explained in Spanish as he headed for the No. 7 train to travel the 12 stops to class one recent evening.

He is not the only worker who wants to escape Willets Point, a bedraggled industrial triangle that neighbors the Mets’ new ballpark in Queens. Inside auto shops with names like Stubborn Used Tires and Latin American Mechanic and Muffler, summers are so hot and winters so cold that fingers become deformed with time, making a worker’s hands look like claws. Underground, there are no water or waste pipes. Outside, the landscape of unpaved streets resembles a muddied quilt of rivers and lagoons.

Neglected for many years, Willets Point is now poised for transformation. A $3 billion, 10-year redevelopment plan approved late last year calls for razing all of the businesses — auto shops, scrap yards, an Indian food manufacturer and a few construction companies — and replacing them with a hotel, homes, a conference center and stores.

As part of the deal, the area’s workers are being offered free training to learn to use a computer, wait on tables, keep books, fix cars or simply speak English.
It is a challenging student body, made up primarily of illegal immigrants, who by law are not allowed to work. The city has devoted $2.5 million to the program, known as Willets Point Worker Assistance, and instituted a sort of don’t ask, don’t tell policy: School is open to all, regardless of immigration status.

“We made a decision not to think about this,” Madelyn Wils, executive vice president of the city’s Economic Development Corporation, said in an interview. She added: “Look, they have to support their families, they live here, and we didn’t want them to fall through the cracks.”

The program has faced intense opposition, not from anti-immigrant groups, but from some of Willets Point’s small-business owners and their workers, who said the money would be better used to help them relocate.

When a team of instructors from LaGuardia Community College, which is carrying out the program, brought a mobile classroom to Willets Point in October, protesters surrounded the vehicle. When the team returned on foot in February, some business owners refused to let the instructors speak to their workers.

“I don’t see the point in training people who can’t work if there’s no guarantee they’ll ever find jobs,” said Marcos Neira, a Colombian immigrant who owns Master Express Deli and Restaurant on Willets Point Boulevard.

Protesters also gathered in March outside a community center in Corona, Queens, where the college was holding an open house, heckling the workers who filed past them on their way inside.

“That’s when we realized we had broken through,” said Linda Barlow, the program’s director.

The program has 183 students, just a fraction of the estimated 2,000 people who work in Willets Point. There are some workers who oppose the program and have refused to join it. But most who have not signed up fear that by registering, they might end up being deported, Ms. Barlow said.

The first class was held on April 2, at LaGuardia’s Long Island City campus, about 20 minutes from Willets Point on the Manhattan-bound No. 7 train. There have been a few snags, like the constant changes in classrooms that Ms. Barlow blamed on the college’s growing enrollment, which has made it hard to manage the available space. The program will have its own dedicated space starting next month, she said.

The students are a microcosm of the Willets Point work force: 145 are men, 115 are illegal immigrants and most know little or no English, she said. Ages vary, as do the workers’ education levels.

There are those who want to learn English. Others have bigger ambitions, like Mr. Zerón, who spends his days climbing in and out of the piles of cars in the junkyard, fetching mufflers, radiators, bumpers and other used parts that customers want.

He came here from his country’s capital of Tegucigalpa in 1999, after a hurricane left him unemployed and destitute. He has made a living at Willets Point since then, and with the money he has earned, he put his four children through school, paid for the youngest to spend a year in Denmark as an exchange student and is building a house for his family back home.

He said he had a degree in mechanics from a Honduran technical school and worked as a contractor for the American Embassy in Tegucigalpa before the hurricane, fixing typewriters. His goal is to return there and open his own business, this time fixing computers. The problem is that he knows nothing about computers, so in addition to English classes, he is taking a Spanish-language course called Aprenda Microsoft Windows y la Internet, or Learn Microsoft Windows and the Internet.

“I want to update my knowledge,” Mr. Zerón said.

In his English as a second language class on May 7, 21 students convened around large wooden desks, rehearsing the words in a dialogue between a factory foreman and his apprentice: supply closet, log book, conveyor belt.

The students seemed to share similar goals. Jary Alvarez, 27, of Washington Heights, who had two years of college in Honduras and works fixing flat tires in Willets Point, is learning English because “it could help me for the rest of my life, wherever I am,” he said.

Daniel Maldonado, 45, of Corona, who had no more than an elementary school education in Ecuador, said he was tired of losing clients to other mechanics who were able to speak the language.

Victor Espinoza, 59, a Peruvian who now lives in Elmhurst, Queens, fell short of receiving a bachelor’s degree in economics back home because he failed to complete his final project. He is now learning English “because I don’t want to be an island in this country,” he said. Mr. Espinoza, who works at a junkyard, said that he hoped to be a bell captain or a receptionist at a hotel.

“Of course, we would rather know that our jobs will be there, that the businesses in Willets Point aren’t going anywhere,” he said. “We couldn’t win the fight against the city, so we should take advantage of what the city is giving us.”
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