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detroitography · 2 years
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Map: Detroit Vacant School Building Risk Index 2020
Map: Detroit Vacant School Building Risk Index 2020
In 2020, the City of Detroit conducted a one-year study of vacant school buildings in collaboration with Interboro Partners, WJE, and BJH Advisors. In all 39 school buildings owned by the City were assessed along with 24 other buildings owned by DPSCD. The project was dubbed, “After School Detroit” not to be confused with actual after-school programming for children: “The team observed the…
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Hyperallergic: How NYC’s New Cultural Plan and the “People’s Plan” Can Work Together
Mayor Bill de Blasio announces CreateNYC at Materials for the Arts, Long Island City on Wednesday, July 19, 2017. (image courtesy Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office)
After a one-and-a-half-year process, the Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) has released its “cultural plan” for New York City. CreateNYC is a sprawling, 175-page document that is simultaneously thorough and vague, though committed to the frame of culture. Fittingly, a coalition of community organizations, artists, activists, and labor groups has responded with its own version of a cultural plan — the People’s Cultural Plan — a concise, 17-page document that is relentless in its specificity and commitment to the frame of community, particularly the communities of color that have and continue to be underfunded and dispossessed in our city, often in the guise of culture.
For the past one-and-a-half-years I have had two conflicting positions. I am a member of the Citizens’ Advisory Committee for CreateNYC, after being appointed by Council member Jimmy Van Bramer, who represents the district of Queens I have lived in for 11 years and is one of the authors of the legislation. But I am also an artist in the activist community of New York City with many colleagues involved in the People’s Cultural Plan.
I am writing from these two vantage points to suggest that the documents should not be read as antagonistic. Each contains something the other lacks to be effective: authenticity and resources; the People’s Cultural Plan is authentic in its demands and process, while the city’s cultural plan has the capacity for affecting budgets and legislation. Their deepest agonism is that they see the intersection of culture and community differently — they do not share a politics. CreateNYC is squarely positioned in the logic of incrementalism and negotiation, believing in the power of the legislative process to uphold culture and that culture is an effective way to serve communities. The People’s Cultural Plan is firmly positioned in the logic of radical equity and organizing, believing the city’s cultural plan is a threat to communities and that culture is a distant second to the needs of community members, artists, and beyond. While the two plans’ oppositional positions should be acknowledged, considering both as parallel proposals is the best way to fight for the citizens of our city and turn aspirations into realities.
To be clear, I have no shortage of criticisms of CreateNYC. Below are some of the more extreme shortfalls of the recently released “cultural plan”:
This plan lacks genuine context. Nothing in this plan acknowledges the simple fact that city policies and officials are responsible for the extraction and displacement of local communities through decades of redlining, blockbusting, underfunding, over policing, speculating, and rezoning.
This plan does little to repair the distrust in communities produced through decades of the systems described above.
This distrust was reinforced when the Department of Cultural Affairs granted the development contract of the cultural plan to Hester Street Collaborative, which worked with real estate partners James Lima Planning + Development and BJH Advisors LLC to craft its recommendations.  
This plan does nothing to address the financial collusion between city government and real estate developers that has plagued this city for decades, leading to the current affordability/dispossession crisis where a glut of private luxury development shortchanges the public.
This plan does nothing to address the fact much of the cycle referenced above uses culture as a vehicle for soft entry and speculation.
This plan does little to support and incorporate the community organizations that have known these realities for decades and have worked without, and often against, the city to provide what the city would not.
Infographic in the CreateNYC Cultural Plan (image courtesy the Department of Cultural Affairs)
This is difficult to say, but these are points we must partially let go of. Not because they aren’t true but because CreateNYC is ultimately in the voice of the City Council and the Mayor. Structures of extraction and dominance will not change overnight or in one document, no matter their intentions. The radicality that this moment demands, a true equity that ends dispossession, cannot be expressed in their voice. To expect otherwise sets us up with unrealistic expectations and does not allow us to work with what this document does well or organize to hold it accountable.
I will discuss what CreateNYC does well further in this letter. For now, let’s consider the People’s Cultural Plan, a document that is deep and ambitious in its analysis of dispossession and is a true example of authentic engagement with the activists and communities of color that have dealt firsthand with these realities for decades, allowing them to lead the way on what should be in a cultural plan. This plan is not only concerned with cultural equity but with justice and sustainability in New York City. To be clear, I have no shortage of praise for the People’s Cultural Plan. Ultimately, however, it exists in the language of public policy, and doing so attaches its ambitions to the complexities of the legislative process. Its demands include:
The repeal of the 421-a tax exemption, a benefit that has given the city its luxury development boom that has heightened the displacement and affordability crisis.
Immediate city-wide rent freezes and reversal of the 1971 Urstadt Law, which gives Albany control of New York City rent regulations.
Increase general operating support for all recipients of DCLA grants and specifically increase funds dispersed to smaller, local organizations. (Of the nearly 1,000 organizations the DCLA supports, 33 “CIG” (Cultural Institutions Group) organizations receive 77% of DCLA funding dollars.)
Implementing community review committees for development approval of public land.
Legislation restricting free labor and underpaid labor in the cultural sphere.
Passing the Housing Not Warehousing Act, which would limit and utilize vacant properties in the city.
Permanent affordable housing for the homeless and endorsing the plans of partner activist groups ‘Picture The Homeless’ and ‘Decolonize This Place.’
Expand Community Land Trusts (CLTs), which can grant permanent affordable housing and community control of development with government support.
Tax increase on the wealthiest residents of New York to end the competition model of DCLA grants and truly return to the city what has been funneled to private hands: immense financial and cultural wealth.
(image courtesy the People’s Cultural Plan)
The People’s Cultural Plan, a list of bold and specific demands, exists in three planks: Equitable Housing, Land & Development Policies; Labor Equity; and Public Funding Equity. These demands get to the heart of the relationship between policy and dispossession in a way that a city agency simply can’t. The reality is that the process of passing legislation is long and incremental and the Department of Cultural Affairs is not a legislative body. Most of the demands of the People’s Cultural Plan do not land at the desk of the department, though it does have the resources to reach the powers that be. In that regard, achieving the goals of the People’s Cultural Plan requires both community leverage and the resources of CreateNYC. To put it clearly, the demands of the People’s Cultural Plan must work with the resources of CreateNYC.
This bring us back to the question: What are the resources of CreateNYC? To understand this, we have to break down its structure and its origin story.
In 2015, the City Council and Mayor Bill de Blasio passed legislation requiring the department to draft a cultural plan. You can read the legislation here.
This mandate instructs the department to develop, implement, and oversee recommendations to the City Council. The key word is recommendations.
The plan is not a single document. It is a multi-year process requiring biannual updates to clarify progress and the specifics each recommendation will take.  
The law stipulates the creation of a Citizens’ Advisory Committee that will report to the department semi-annually to provide feedback, suggestions, and oversight.
Again, it is important to remember that this is not a budgetary document or a legislative document. It is an aspirational one. The DCLA does not have the power to draft budgets or legislation directly. So the form these recommendations will take ultimately depends on the City Council, the budget, and the participation of other city agencies. With that in mind, let us now look at the document itself.
CreateNYC is broken down into 94 recommendations across eight categories: Equity and Inclusion; Social and Economic Impact; Affordability; Neighborhood Character; Arts, Culture and Science Education; Arts and Culture In Public Space; Citywide Coordination; and the Health of the Cultural Sector.
These recommendations have been developed through a public outreach process to gather information on cultural life in the city, its successes and failures.
Within each section outlined above is a set of recommendations. Each is rated in two ways: by action priority/capacity (Implement, Promote, Explore) and by timeframe (Immediate, Short, Medium, Long).
Each recommendation lists the partner agencies that would have to be included in order to achieve a recommendation. The department has coordinated with 17 city agencies in its network of partnerships for the plan.
This lists what the plan does. Now let’s consider what it does well. CreateNYC treads lightly in its details, aware that it needs buy-in from vested interests and that a push too far will instigate reprisal from players they have little control over: goliath institutions and their boards, state government, developers, real estate lobbyists, and so forth. If any of these groups withhold their support, it could make it that much more difficult for the DCLA to collaborate with partner departments and the City Council. This is ultimately a political document, balancing the considerations that control budgets and how inter-agency collaboration works. It is intelligent in this way, though activists will read this as slippery and a way to avoid accountability. That said, its successes include:
A deep partnership with the disability community in its understandings of inclusion, equity, and access.
An acknowledgement of the imbalance in cultural institution funding, with a core objective of increasing support for communities outside of Manhattan.  
A commitment to making audiences, artists, cultural workers, opportunities, and institutions more diverse.
Leverage for increased resources from the city to accomplish the recommendations it has set.
A roadmap for understanding the cross-agency collaborations — including partnerships with the NYC Housing Authority, Department of Energy, New York Police Department, and many others — that can be made to achieve goals around housing, affordability, access, inclusion, funding, and resource expansion.
Data, published in the cultural plan, that can be used by citizens and groups to confirm cultural barriers and underserved communities. This data is an asset in framing demands to the city government, and defending local community funding, resources, and organizations.
Most of these assets are relatively vague and will depend on interpretation and political will. Further, the shape these commitments and recommendations will take is still unknown. For example, one broad recommendation — to “[b]egin new efforts to support the professional development and career advancement of cultural workers from underrepresented groups” — does not explain “how” these new efforts will reach the community. This is true of CreateNYC at large.
(image courtesy the People’s Cultural Plan)
This is where the People’s Cultural Plan comes in. The authenticity of its demands gives the community something to organize around that CreateNYC does not — not only a belief in radical change but what that change should look like. The department has already given the People’s Cultural Plan a huge boost (intentionally or not) in announcing it will now require diversity reports and equity plans from all of its grant recipients — something previously kept off the table and a core demand of the People’s Cultural Plan. From my position, we must take these signals and run with them, using CreateNYC as a tool to accomplish the ambitions of the People’s Cultural Plan. And let us not forget, this is an election year. The time to mobilize and pressure officials is now.
The danger in this process is that if our aim is to argue one document as right and one as wrong, one genuine and one insincere — if we stay in the conversation of what should be done versus what can be done — we will never move the moral position of “should” to the structural position of “can.” We do actually want things to happen and reading these documents as parallel positions, each creating leverage in different spheres, will present the best strategy.
This is not an argument to overlook the history of policy in this city and its current effects on our communities. This is not an argument to dilute the call for radical equity from communities of color, the indigenous, the elderly, and the dispossessed. That call should be central and heard at every turn. This is an argument to use the assets of both plans to move beyond the aspirational to the effective. CreateNYC gives us a five-year window and the People’s Cultural Plan gives us the demands to work towards.
You can read the CreateNYC plan here and the People’s Cultural Plan here. A Solidarity Mixer for Equity in NYC’s Cultural Plan is being held at the CUE Art Foundation (137 W 25th St, Chelsea, Manhattan) on Wednesday, July 26, 6:30–8:30pm. 
The post How NYC’s New Cultural Plan and the “People’s Plan” Can Work Together appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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emilyvsanto12-blog · 7 years
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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kenneth18neal-blog · 7 years
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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jodykrissnyc · 7 years
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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jodykrissnewyork · 7 years
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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jodykrissorg · 7 years
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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jody-kriss1 · 7 years
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Archived From the Jody Kriss Blog: Study Shows Airbnb Still Hurting NYC
Jody Kriss and East River Partners often choose to restore buildings throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, simply because there is a huge need for housing in the area. With a bit of TLC from Jody Kriss and East River Partners, the older buildings can be brought back to life and modernized, so that they suit the needs of people today. A study that was just put out by the Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC), a tenant advocacy group, as well as MFY Legal Services and BJH Advisors has just uncovered another reason why its so difficult for people to find decent housing in the prime boroughs- Airbnb. Read more from www.aboutjodykriss.com
For more updates on real estate news you can follo Jody Kriss's profiles: Twitter:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://twitter.com/jodykriss Linkedin:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodykriss Get to read about East River Partners' high end development in Manhattan here: Downtown Mag:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.downtownmagazinenyc.com/the-real-new-york-jody-kriss-east-river-partners/ NY Times:<!--td border: 1px solid #ccc;br mso-data-placement:same-cell;-->http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/09/realestate/commercial/jody-l-kriss.html
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realestate63141 · 8 years
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Drawing A Line In The Sand: Fighting or Accepting Gentrification
It's not everyday that a city official sounds the alarm by claiming a city plan could "inadvertently displace tens of thousands" of New Yorkers from one neighborhood alone. That's what a report from City Comptroller Scott Stringer spelled out last month, undermining the promises of Mayor Bill de Blasio, who insists his 'affordable' housing plan will help protect from, not fuel, gentrification. This sort of displacement, driven by developers and embraced by the mayor, should be fought at every turn. However, when longtime neighborhood groups back city hall and development firms are asked to capture the cultural spirit of the city, eyebrows are raised. So who's in favor of the mayor's plan, which includes the rezoning of key neighborhoods like East New York (the subject of Stringer's report), East Harlem and some areas of the Bronx? In El Barrio (East Harlem), there have been some contentious debates around rezoning. Some neighborhood groups, like immigrant-led Movimiento Por Justicia en El Barrio, have been fighting the rezoning for some time. Last month, during a city-hosted "scoping" hearing at Hunter's School of Social Work on East 119th street, dozens of Movimiento members showed up to protest moments after City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito had arrived to plug her East Harlem Neighborhood Plan, an alternate plan which asks for a few concessions but still accepts rezoning. Members of Movimiento Por Justicia en El Barrio protest outside Gracie Mansion with an honorary 'Turkey of the Year Award' for Mayor Bill de Blasio (Photo: Andy Mai/Daily News) In a statement read by some of its members, Movimiento said, in part:
"We are 100% against the Mayor's luxury housing plan because it's a plan that favors big developers and rich landlords. That is why REBNY (the Real Estate Board of New York) supports the Mayor's luxury housing plan. His plan in no way favors the simple and humble people that live in our beloved Barrio. Quite the opposite, the result of his plan will be the displacement of our community from East Harlem."
Key local groups support the rezoning of El Barrio, whether by the city's plan or Viverito's 'community' plan (which is really her plan): Community Voices Heard, Union Settlement, El Museo del Barrio, etc. El Barrio Unite, a group that opposes rezoning, recently put one of those groups, El Barrio's Operation Fightback, on blast with an open letter. In it, El Barrio Unite's Roger Hernandez asks why the group backs a proposal that will "gentrify and displace our poorest families."
"Why do you support this plan to rezone El Barrio? You do realize that very few units of this Mandatory Inclusionary Housing Rezoning Program will be allocated for families making less than $ 32,000. You do realize that community nonprofit organizations are being iced out of the action by the big private developers who will be taking advantage of these $ 48 Billion public monies directed at households making greater than $ 45,000. You do realize how this will entirely change the make-up of El Barrio--our people, our clubs, our neighborhood. What is it about this rezoning plan that appeals to El Barrio's Operation Fight Back and why?"
Operation Fightback, some may remember, co-developed an artist residency space located in an old school building, now known as El Barrio's Artspace PS 109. The controversial project, which had the support of key local politicians, like Viverito, was initially billed as an effort to create affordable housing for artists but has been criticized for not providing space to enough local artists and for potentially adding in another layer of gentrification--that of outside artists. The intersection of art and gentrification has also come up with a group of artists who've called out a city "cultural plan" that aims to define and harness the power of the arts without talking about displacement. They point out that two out the four partners for CreateNYC are real estate development firms: James Lima Planning + Development, who they say worked on and stand to benefit from the city's rezonings, and BJH Advisors, who helped plan the controversial BQX connector streetcar (which was supported by developers who're throwing cash at the mayor). They sent me a statement, which reads, in part:
"As working artists and community activists, we are concerned that this plan doesn't address the multiple crises facing the arts community in our rapidly gentrifying city, and we are also disappointed that actual artists, makers, and cultural workers were not the original shapers of this plan."
On the BQX streetcar, the rezonings and Mandatory Inclusionary Housing plans of the city (the mayor's 'affordable' housing plan):
"Each of these projects spell displacement: the MIH rezonings will raise the average rents to unaffordable levels in poor communities, and the BQX trolley car will destroy the working waterfront in Brooklyn and Queens, which will cause mass displacement, ironically, of working artists' studios. In NYC, there is a problematic relationship between real estate and art (for example, the Brooklyn Museum hosted a real estate conference in 2015, and real estate developers invented the "piano district" in order to rebrand the South Bronx as a high-rent "artsy" neighborhood)."
One of the artists who signed on to that statement was Jenny Dubnau, an artist who grew up in Washington Heights and is now based in Queens. Dubnau says that displacement is partly "fueled by the appropriation of 'artiness' by the real estate industry... it's upsetting to see that two real estate development firms are consultants on the plan." She contends that "we should be questioning the connection between art and gentrification, not furthering it." Another signatory is Alicia Grullon, a visual artist based in the Bronx. Grullon says that with the incoming developer-in-chief in the White House, any cultural plan should have "foresight and be supportive" of groups that serve communities of color. "Real Estate and economic development has no place in this. They only see profit and use displacement as a tool in continuing inequity." "CreateNYC" is a city-led 'cultural plan' supposedly developed with community participation but with developers as key partners Shellyne Rodriguez, a Bronx-bred artist who led protests against the aforementioned "Piano District", says there's an "overwhelming disdain" for city's housing plan. "Poor and working class communities of color have rejected that facade of a plan which plants unaffordable development in our neighborhoods and it is widely accepted that this is the city's attempt at aiding the gentrification of the city." The night of the scoping hearing in El Barrio, Movimiento also drew a line in the sand. "We, as the community of East Harlem that we are, are unconditionally against the Mayor's rezoning plan," one of their members said. "We do not want any of his displacement plan. We also do not want trees or parks in exchange for his luxury housing plan. We do not want what you call 'beautification plans' because our beloved Barrio is very very beautiful and we want to preserve it exactly the way it currently is." "There are others that are willing to accept crumbs in exchange of the Mayor's luxury housing plan. But we are very different."
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Hyperallergic: Artists and Activists Propose a “People’s Cultural Plan” for New York City
Artist Alicia Grullón speaking at a CreateNYC cultural plan meeting (image courtesy Hester Street Collaborative)
Since October, New York City’s Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) has conducted more than 100 interviews, held dozens of focus groups and dozens more tabling events, and surveyed 10,000 residents. The focus of these inquiries has been the city’s first-ever cultural plan, dubbed CreateNYC. When it’s released in July, the plan will become a blueprint for funding and supporting arts and culture throughout New York City, and the DCLA has been soliciting public input.
“New Yorkers value arts and culture — and they want more of it,” states “What We Heard,” a document compiling the findings from this recently completed phase of the planning process. The DCLA — which, it’s worth noting, is the largest cultural funding agency in the US — released the overview on Monday, an 18-pager filled with infographics and stats outlining what arts and culture–related issues New Yorkers care about most. The document identifies eight key areas, from “Equity” and “Social & Economic Impact” to “Arts, Culture & Science Education” and “Neighborhood Character.” It takes readers through each one, offering lists and sublists of goals within each area. Some, like “Consider Community Land Trusts, fractional ownership, rent to own, deed restrictions, cross subsidization, and mobile studios,” are refreshingly forward-thinking and specific; others, like “Partner with City agencies and community stakeholders to support cultural preservation in neighborhoods across all five boroughs,” sound admirable but uselessly broad.
Graphic from CreateNYC’s “What We Heard” (image via createnyc.org)
The DCLA has made a point of stressing the amount of outreach it’s done and the number of diverse voices it’s solicited — but the cultural plan is not without its critics. In January, three local artists and activists, Jenny Dubnau, Alicia Grullón, and Shellyne Rodriguez, told Hyperallergic of their misgivings about the way the plan is being created. This week, as part of a larger coalition of roughly two dozen artists, activists, and cultural workers, they responded to the official process by releasing their own blueprint for the city, the “People’s Cultural Plan” (PCP).
“Artists, cultural workers, and cultural access in the city are in a huge crisis,” said Dubnau. “If you’re going to have a plan in our time, we felt it had to be a powerful, strongly worded, tough, courageous plan. If you’re not going to talk about actual policy that’s making artists leave the city, displacing communities of color, where the funding is so lopsided in terms of equity — if you’re not going to radically approach those issues, it’s not going to be a relevant enough plan.”
Dubnau’s comments echo the three core issues of the PCP: “Equitable Housing, Land, & Development Politics,” “Labor Equity,” and “Public Funding Equity.” None of those headers would look out of place in the DCLA’s “What We Heard” document, but the tone and scope of the PCP are vastly different, beginning with its opening paragraph:
Inequity in arts and culture is a persistent problem in New York City. The worsening climate of fear, intolerance, and fascism, especially affecting immigrants, all people of color, and LGBTQ individuals, must be countered with more than lip service in support of “diversity”: Only by implementing true equity in all city policies will the most vulnerable be protected from the multiple crises facing our communities. As a sanctuary city, any cultural plan for New York must be supportive of the lives and contributions of All People of Color, including tribally-enrolled indigenous people, Black, Asian, Latinx, and Arab peoples, and the LGBTQ, disabled, and elder members of our communities.
The 17-page plan goes on to make a host of detailed policy recommendations, from, in the housing section, calling for a citywide rent freeze on stabilized apartments and the overturning of the Urstadt Law; to, in the labor section, demanding mandatory artist compensation, salary caps or maximum ratios within institutions, and the passage of the state-level New York Health Act; and, in the funding section, the implementation of language access plans and mandating that DCLA budget increases “go first to neighborhoods, districts, organizations and artists that currently receive the lowest allocations, and first to organizations led by and serving communities of color.” It’s a wide-ranging but deeply researched document that seeks to redress structural inequities.
“Why can we not reimagine more for ourselves? Why not begin with the arts?” asked Grullón, who went on to cite a host of academics and “creative thinkers” whose work the group had drawn on in making its plan (some of which are cited within the document). “We’re not reinventing the wheel; we’re trying to fix the vehicle that is on the wheel.”
Graphic by: @fatitaj #WEcreateNYC is a platform to enrich the cultural life and legacy of NYC by centralizing the lived experiences of African-, Arab-, Asian-, Caribbean-, Chicanx-, Latinx-, Native-, and Pacific Islander-American descended people. We celebrate the vitality and vibrancy of these communities with a living cultural plan using their stories past, present, and future. We understand that culture- foods, music, art, and language- hold our desires, stories, and endeavoring to be a people that are braver than the histories that bring us shame. Our living cultural plan prioritizes a multigenerational approach to building a just, inclusive, equitable city – a new ecological system that is not only imagined, but reached. Join the conversation using the #CulturalEquityNYC ! #poc #CulturalEquityNYC #WEcreateNYC #harlem #statenisland #manhattan #brooklyn #queens #bronx #createequity #nyc #forusbyus
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In its introduction, the PCP specifically calls out the contracting of two companies to work on the cultural plan: James Lima Planning + Development, which is focused “on the economics of placemaking,” and BJH Advisors LLC, “a real estate development and advisory firm.” As noted previously by Seph Rodney for Hyperallergic, the activists “argue that these organizations … are already involved in projects (they cite the MIH/ZQA rezonings and the BQX trolley car schemes) that will result in the displacement of long-time residents, mostly through raising the average cost of rent.” When asked about the objection to these firms, a spokesperson for the DCLA noted that CreateNYC’s lead contractor, Hester Street Collaborative, had enlisted them, and told me that both “bring an understanding of planning and development in New York — something that’s incredibly important when the cost of real estate is central to many of the issues and concerns we’ve heard through CreateNYC.”
But to Dubnau and Grullón, the hiring of the firms represents a larger, more problematic ethos embedded in the project: looking at culture in New York City through corporate-colored glasses — that is, as a question of economics. “It just highlights the motivation behind the city, where economics … becomes a much more urgent matter for them rather than the current state that folks are living in,” said Grullón. “Their reasons will be: Arts and culture and creativity are tied to economic vitality. They create new jobs. But new jobs for who? Especially when we bring in questions of the ‘creative class.’ There’s no investment made in the small businesses that are already there. There’s no thinking of how to revitalize economic development in a way that’s sustainable for the future but radically changes our connection to place and still keeps people there. Their initiative is to bring in more tourism. Their view of economic growth and vitality does not have foresight. It is outdated. We can see repeatedly that it only benefits the very few.”
“The city’s plan is making nods towards cultural equity, but in terms of the real estate angle, it becomes a question of, what is culture?” Dubnau added. “Is it this creative tech, real estate–driven appearance of culture, where the rents are skyrocketing and the real culture makers and communities can’t afford to remain in place? Or is it a vital city where immigrants get to stay, working artists get to remain?”
Graphic from CreateNYC’s “What We Heard” (image via createnyc.org)
Members of the PCP group have spoken with representatives of the DCLA, and both sides remarked upon the discussions positively. Since the official cultural plan is still in formation — public polling is happening now, online — the ball is, as the saying goes, in the DCLA’s court.
“I would like to see DCLA implement what we recommend in our plan that they do have direct control over, which is funding,” Dubnau said, acknowledging that a number of proposals in the PCP are out of the department’s control and tied to measures overseen by the city council, mayor, or even the state government. They group also believes the DCLA could start working to guarantee “all artists and workers … a basic wage, benefits, job security.” But most importantly, Dubnau said, “we would love to have the DCLA make concrete policy recommendations. I don’t see why — other than politics and caution — a document like the NYC cultural plan cannot make concrete policy recommendations that go outside the purview of the Department of Cultural Affairs.”
“We’ve seen the People’s Cultural Plan and we’re glad to have this thorough set of proposals in hand, along with the feedback from the more than 185,000 New Yorkers we’ve heard from since last fall,” the DCLA spokesperson commented. “The planning process is still underway, and we will absolutely consider these ideas as we work toward releasing the CreateNYC cultural plan this summer.”
Aerial view of the architect’s rendering of the Shed structure at night (image via Wikipedia)
If it’s hard to believe that a government agency would go out on a limb and adopt something as radical as the PCP, it might make sense to hope for the creation of something that falls in between: A plan that accounts for at least some of the city’s blind spots (such as the DCLA “giving nearly 60% of its funding to Manhattan alone out of the five boroughs, and almost 80% of its funding to only 33 of the 1,000+ organizations funded,” according to the PCP). A plan that balances an awareness of culture’s economic value with an understanding that the impact of the arts is, ultimately, immeasurable. A plan that considers community groups as vital to the future of the city as a high-end Shed.
“When we fund, we have to think of funding for justice,” Grullón said. “We have to start thinking about how that is the driving force behind culture.”
The post Artists and Activists Propose a “People’s Cultural Plan” for New York City appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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archpaper · 8 years
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SOM Chosen to design Detroit’s East Riverfront District
SOM Chosen to design Detroit’s East Riverfront District
The East Riverfront area in downtown Detroit to be master planned. (Detroit RiverFront Conservancy)
Skidmore Owings & Merrill have been selected by the Detroit RiverFront Conservancy and the City of Detroit Planning Department to develop a comprehensive plan for the city’s East Riverfront District.
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nofomoartworld · 8 years
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Hyperallergic: A New Cultural Plan for NYC Runs into Objections from Artists
DCA Brooklyn Cultural Plan Workshop (all photos courtesy Hester Street Collaborative unless otherwise noted)
Last year, the City Council of New York passed a law mandating the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA) to devise a plan that would manage and organize the city’s resources for arts and culture. In pushing for its creation in 2015, Mayor Bill de Blasio cited the fact that the city had never produced a comprehensive organizational scheme before, while other major American cities have. Pursuant to legislation, this cultural plan branded Create NYC has to be submitted to the council by June 30 of this year. It is now in its second phase of development, the “Public Engagement” stage, after the DCA conducted research on how other cities (which include Chicago and Boston) have implemented similar initiatives.
The DCA hired Hester Street Collaborative (HSC) as the contractor, or lead organizer, for the cultural plan for $360,450 (just $150 under the budget allocated for this project). Hester Street, an organization that describes its mission as, “empower[ing] residents of underserved communities by providing them with the tools and resources necessary to have a direct impact on shaping their built environment,” has partnered with what it calls “local experts” to fulfill the obligations of Create NYC. The other organizations include the Natural Occurring Cultural Districts NY (NOCD-NY), a neighborhood revitalization group; James Lima Planning + Development, which provides planning, policy, real estate, and economic advisory services; BJH Advisors LLC,  a real estate development firm; and HOUSEOFCAKES Design, a strategic branding and design business.
Artist Alicia Grullón at a Manhattan cultural plan meeting
In January, local artists and activists Alicia Grullón, Shellyne Rodriguez, and Jenny Dubnau, who strongly advocate for public policy that benefits community-based groups and working artists, contacted me to express their distress over the ways they believe the cultural plan is being implemented. They have questioned the involvement of the real estate development firms, which are helping to develop the plan. Grullón, Rodriguez, and Dubnau argue that these organizations, James Lima Planning and BJH Advisors, are already involved in projects (they cite the MIH/ZQA rezonings and the BQX trolley car schemes) that will result in the displacement of long-time residents, mostly through raising the average cost of rent. Essentially, they contend via email that this cultural plan fails in two key ways: It does not address the “multiple crises facing the arts community in our rapidly gentrifying city,” and “actual artists, makers, and cultural workers were not the original shapers of the plan.”
Create NYC’s process page showing initial phases of the culture plan (screenshot by the author for Hyperallergic)
The issues that are believed to impact Create NYC (screenshot by the author for Hyperallergic)
I wanted to find out how valid their contentions are and whether their concerns were shared by the DCA, and so spoke to the Cultural Affairs Commissioner, Tom Finkelpearl, about how the plan originated and what it intends to accomplish. I was curious as to how the issues of gentrification, rising rents, and the affordability of housing for the working class are being addressed. Finkelpearl said that in this second phase of the plan’s evolution, the DCA has held 115 public meetings so far, on various topics such as public space and public arts, the aging creative community, and school education, with the goal of finding patterns in issues that are repeatedly brought up. A draft of the plan should compile all these discussions, and be issued in April or May, with the final copy given to the City Council by June 30.
Participants at a Create NYC Manhattan meeting
When I tell Finkelpearl about the objections that artists and activists have raised, he responded by recognizing the complexity of even one of these issues. Take the situation with artists being displaced: “When you talk about artists,” he asked, “which artists are you talking about? Are you talking about artists coming into the city with degrees from RISD or Cal Arts? Or are you talking about people [artists] who grew up in New York City and want to be able to remain in those communities?” Finkelpearl acknowledges that both groups are desired and both are important to the cultural life of the city.
He similarly considers the many sides of the issue of institutional funding. He said, “There has been this very successfully made argument that it’s important to support big institutions that are going to drive tourism to New York.” It is true that the Metropolitan Opera, Carnegie Hall, and the museums on museum mile do draw tourists in droves (the mayor’s office estimates 60 million per year). On the other hand, he believes “there are a lot of important things that the arts and culture do for communities that are not measured in those economic development or tourism surveys.” “Looking at the city from an economic development perspective [is] important, but that’s absolutely not the only way we are looking at it,” Finkelpearl said.
He also pointed out the one question that’s brought up consistently, in “every one of these meetings”: “How can arts policies and programs preserve neighborhood character and prevent displacement?” However, he told me that the DCA and Hester Street are not yet talking about answers and solutions. Right now, they are focusing on understanding what the pertinent questions are.
Participants at a Create NYC meeting in Brooklyn
In speaking to another source who wishes to remain anonymous given the sensitivity of her position at a major cultural organization in the city, I am told that though there have been many meetings held in this listening phase, in a few of those she or her colleagues have attended, the only attendees were employees of prominent institutions and Finkelpearl himself. Though DCA claims to want the input of all New Yorkers, its outreach efforts, she contends, particularly to small, local organizations have not been nearly as effective as its outreach to institutions that are already well known.
Grullón also takes issue with how the meetings have been conducted, saying that “most residents in POC communities and housing activists have not heard of this plan,” and that “these sessions seem to be aimed at organizations and college-educated, working professionals.” She asked, “Isn’t arts and culture collectively owned by the people?” When economic development has played a role in organizing arts and culture in the city, people have been displaced, Grullón observed, citing the building of Lincoln Center and Central Park. “The value is in the people, not the price of the land,” she said.
Rodriguez counters Finkelpearl’s claims as well, citing the makeup of Hester Street’s board of directors as likely allowing the interests of members to bleed over into Hester Street’s structuring of Create NYC. In particular, Rodriguez points at Joe Weisbord, the director of credit and housing access for Fannie Mae, which has been accused of being one of the firms responsible for the housing crisis and recession of 2008. More, Rodriguez cited Morgan Hare, the co-founder of Hester Street Collective, and his being partner at Leroy Street Studio Architecture. “One might speculate stands to get some big city contracts to build right on top of us all,” she said.
Finally, she cited Timothy Johnson, the Hester Street board president, who is also the head of the global investment management firm Fischer Francis Trees and Watts, which Rodriguez describes succinctly as, “Wall Street.”
It is not entirely clear to me how such an ambitious plan would be carried out without the expertise and management of large firms and organizations that have, like Hester Street, been engaged in urban planning and community renewal initiatives for a considerable time. Hester Street has been operating for the past 14 years and, I think, must be assessed on the basis of its track record of completing projects undertaken and how it has behaved with its partners and constituents. The makeup of Hester Street’s board is a legitimate issue, but not as key, I believe, as its past performance, which doesn’t seem to have been considered or evaluated by the opposing activists. But I do think Grullón, Rodriguez, and Dubnau have clearly valid claims when they fault the Department of Cultural Affairs for not effectively reaching out to those small organizations and members of local communities who don’t yet appreciate how much the cultural plan may benefit them in the future, or alternatively leave them on the periphery of arts and cultural development plans. Perhaps undue attention is being given to prominent institutions that have always had a prime seat at the table.
It continues to be the case that art is used to justify the gentrification of neighborhoods and that poor and working class populations have been regarded as expendable when city agencies or private entities have undertaken structural improvements. I know because this is happening in my own neighborhood in the South Bronx. The fight continues to be not only about housing and arts and culture, but about what kind of city New York will be. The question I pose is: Can we have both the people and the price of land be part of how this city is defined? How this plan plays out may give us part of the answer.
The Create NYC  cultural plan is in the process of being drafted and should be submitted to the City Council by June 30 of this year.
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