Hits: 137
WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. April 18, 2018:
Dear John:
Hits: 137
WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. April 18, 2018:
Dear John:
Hits: 162
WPCNR Main Street Journal. News and Comment by John Bailey. April 18, 2018 UPDATED April 19, 2018 11:15 A.M. EDT:
The Journal News reported yesterday White Plains Planning Commissioner Chris Gomez is proposing a zoning change from 4 to 6 stories, allowing residential apartments in the area around the North White Plains Train Station. The aim, reporter Richard Liebson writes is to open up the area around that train station to more apartments, and stymie commercial/industrial development.
This is interesting because Wednesday morning The Continuum, 55 Bank Street, 12 years in the making, with an unprecedented 20% of its units set aside for those eligible for affordable housing (about $80,000 in salary) staged its grand opening.
The Continuum, first proposed about 12 years ago in the Joseph Delfino administration, where the 20% component of affordable housing was championed by then Planning Commissioner Susan Habel.
The zoning proposal of allowing housing up to 6 stories by Gomez is a continued effort to build up the concentration of apartments, street retail, and pedestrian traffic in the transit hubs in White Plains New York USA.
The White Plains Metro North Train Station, is the first attempt by the city to revitalize its transit district. At that station, with four city parcels up for development there is no detailed information on exactly what the city is looking at for the parcels or what they do not want, and no disclosure what development firms have applied to be considered for proposals ( heretofore loosely defined by the City of White Plains as mixed use, residential, retail and open space)
The North White Plains Station has limited parking and any apartments built alongside it would have to have onsite parking for any such apartments, one would think.
Planning Commissioner Gomez, in Liebson’s article, did not indicate how many residential apartments the area around the North White Plains Train Station area might sustain. Liebson reported Gomez did say there were no proposals as yet.
It also remains to be seen if an attempt will be made to build apartments on the western side of the tracks taking some of the green space away from the Bronx River Parkway, but I may just be alarmist with that supposition.
Councilwoman Nadine Hunt-Robinson told WPCNR the proposed zoning for mixed use of the North White Plains Train Station came up approximately 5 years ago when the city was considering rezoning Westmoreland Avenue for mixed use to attract residential projects to make it less industrial. She said it was decided to attempt the rezoning on Westmoreland first, do it “piecemeal” and tackle the North White Plains Station area second. Now that proposal is being brought back. She said she was pleased at the progress the transformation of the WARC building was making, being turned into apartments. She said the Brew-Pub planned for a vacant lot on Westmoreland was proceeding. That Brew-Pub development is planned to include 62 units of market rate housing.
Ginsberg Development has already bought and announced acquisition of the Finance Center on Martine Avenue which they propose to renovate to attract upscale millennials from Manhattan.
The concentration on adding residents who can revive the downtown by their money, by clustering residential around train stations that do not have any commercial complexes appears to missing one big thing: a money-maker- for-the-city enhancement long term.
A money-making enhancement could be a state of the art convention hotel atop the train station (s), in the financial center, a sports arena/hotel, theatres, and restaurants that could take advantage of a train access to and from New York City. That the city, the county and metro North are not thinking this way seems a lack of vision on their parts and their consultants.
I mean Metro North is dropping $92 Million on aesthetics to the train station. You could build a hotel/ convention center/residence for just a tad more. (White Plains does not have a New York City-type Convention Center)
Instead of over the train station, the County Center above could be razed and a modern sports arena, convention center, hotel could be built.
How fast the Continuum fills up will be the first test of the city’s planning dreams.
However, the whole train station development at Hamilton and Main and residential development at North White Plains Train Station will need parking capacity increased substantially. Or, at least a whole lot of Uber, Lyft and Zip Car availability.
If the present scale of residential vision is fulfilled, it will also be very crowded with people and route 119, Main Street, Hamilton, South Lex very crowded. It is very congested now, with lots of promises from task forces on Bus Rapid Transit, Complete Streets advocates fixated on cutting back lanes, adding bus rapid transit lanes, putting in new bus stations, ordering buses. And, those bus rapid transit assets were supposed to running now, coinciding with the opening of the New New York Bridge.
Decisions and locations and plans have to be decided upon and stated clearly to all the villages and cities along Route 119. The County has to approve them. The buses have to be made.
Where are those decisions? Who is making them? Where are our leaders on this massive task force failure to deliver on time and be transparent on where, what, when and how route 119 and the ramp sequencing will be constructed on I-287?
Hits: 118
WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. April 18, 2018:
Dear Route 119 Friends:
We have some ideas to make Route 119 better. Come tell us what you
think!
Flyers for our outreach events have been posted to our website:
https://rt119complete.org/ One flyer in English, another in Spanish.
Please come. And bring your friends and family!
* Thu, 4/26, 6 – 8 pm, Elmsford Village Hall. Public meeting.
* Sun, 5/6. Mobile discussions:
* 8:30 – 10:30 am @ Bagel Emporium, Rt 119 at Rt 9, Tarrytown
* 11:45 – 1:45 @ Bicycle Sundays, in front of County Center
* 3 – 4 @ Greenburgh Public Library
Please feel free to forward this, post it to Facebook, etc, and/or
retweet these:
English: https://twitter.com/rt119complete/status/986278359721226241
Spanish: https://twitter.com/rt119complete/status/986420557754306560
See you there.
—
Route 119 Complete Street Design Plan
https://rt119complete.org/
https://twitter.com/rt119complete
Hits: 125
|
|
Concert This Sunday!
THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY EVENT
Festival Concert
Three Concertos and a World Premiere Join us as several members of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra gather to play concertos with Downtown Sinfonietta, our resident chamber orchestra. A world premiere of a work for orchestra and narrator, commissioned and narrated by Robert Sherman, caps this anniversary celebration. A gala reception follows.
Concerto for Four Violins in B minor, from L’estro Armonico by Antonio Vivaldi
Concerto for Organ Opus 7, No. 1 in B-Flat Major by G.F. Handel
Concerto for Flute and Harp in C major K. 299/297c by W.A. Mozart
Why the Aspen Tree is White for narrator and Chamber Orchestra by Grigory Smirnov (World Premiere)
Downtown Sinfonietta
Vincent Lionti, Conductor
Robert Sherman, Narrator Timothy Lewis, Organ Adults $25
Seniors (65+) $20
Students (age 25 and under, with valid ID) $15
|
Hits: 0
The full address can be viewed by clicking on HERE.
The full address can be read HERE.
WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Department of Communications. (Edited) April 18, 2018:
Westchester County Executive George Latimer delivered his first State of the County address to a capacity crowd in the Legislative Chambers of the Board of Legislators.
Latimer said: “What I am here to deliver tonight is news that it is a new day in Westchester County. A day of new opportunity, a day of new ideas and approaches and a day of new growth. And friends – the State of our County is moving forward.”
The address included various announcements and initiatives that Latimer and his team are eager to get to work on, including:
Latimer also made note of the current status of Westchester’s finances. Latimer, whose first budget will not be voted on until November of 2018 said: “…to move the State of our County forward together – we must understand where our fiscal house stands. And much to my disappointment – the numbers right now do not look pretty. Our County’s finances have fallen victim to ‘sweep it under the rug’ economics for too long.”
Editor’s Note: Latimer noted in his address that he was awaiting an audit from the New York State Comptroller’s Office to get a complete picture of the county budget situation. Since the Budget Director Larry Soule who prepared the 2018 budget under the supervision of Mr. Astorino, and the Democrat-controlled Board of Legislators approved the budget now being questioned, Mr. Soule is still the Budget Director reappointed by Mr. Latimer. Perhaps Mr. Soule can be counted on to help the Comptroller sort out what was “swept under the rug.”
In the address, Latimer also individually recognized all 16 members of the Board of Legislators, highlighting the importance of ‘building bridges’ – a theme of the address.
Latimer said: “Right now in this Country we are divided, but here in Westchester County we are committed to building bridges. Bridges between people, cultures, political parties, different ages, time and beliefs.”
Editor’s Note: The County Executive said that John Nonna, the county attorney and his Operations Director, Joan MacDonald were finishing up a report on Playland and he would review that with the legislature before the decision on Playland (to keep Standard Amusements, renegotiate, or junk the privatization). The Playland matter is currently being tied up in the court, awaiting the decision on the City of Rye appeal of the tossout of their suit by the New York Supreme Court, demanding the City of Rye have the right of final approval of any Playland redesign and construction.
The County Executive said the airport is on hold also awaiting review which he will discuss with the Board of Legislators.
Mr. Latimer again promised a review of affordable housing needs in the county which would highlight where more affordable housing was needed in the county.
Editor’s Note: Absent from Mr. Latimer’s address was any comment on the status and secrecy of the Bus Rapid Transit link system that is late getting established to speed traffic from Tarrytown to Port Chester, where the station stops will be, and what fixes will be made to the Cross Westchester Expressway.
The full address can be read HERE.
The introductory “#MyWestchester” video can be viewed HERE.
The full address can be viewed HERE.
Hits: 171
RIDGEWAY FAIRWAY TODAY. 1:30 P.M. The strip of white below the abandoned country club buildings is standing water (“The Phantom Pond” that accumulated today (Wednesday) and flowed over to the tennis courts. A recurring condition as can be seen from the 2011 photo below.
RIDGEWAY FAIRWAY 7 YEARS AGO.
WPCNR DRACULA DAY. From White Plains CitizeNetReporters. April 16, 2018:
Rain made lawns and basements quite wet today, pounding on the windows dancing on concrete and making trees sway in relentless howling wind. White Plains Westchester Airport reported 2 and 3/4 inches fell by 3:30 P.M. today.
The former Ridgeway former country club property showed that it floods again today in any saturating rain.
If it the FASNY-Gedney Association matter ever gets out of court, and gets built, the matter of flooding effects could be considerably more devastating.
Today showed that when you get a heavy rain, it creates flooding despite six years of contention by it owners (the French American School of New York) that flooding is not a condition that should prevent adding to impervious surfaces with a 5 building campus and impervious concrete parking lots.
As of 1:30 P.M., A video shot today shows what a lingering soaking rain can do to this controversial property. The photo at the top of this article is a video capture from that video showing the flooding matches that of a previous storm 7 years ago in the same location as today.
Dan Seidel who lives off Hotel Drive, wrote me:
” 4.5 hours, and Ridgeway (club fairway)flooded again – going down now – but it looks like the ‘duck’ pond formed again (by the tennis courts)I had about 2 inches in my basement, draining now. Very high water table here.”
Mr. Seidel forwarded this picture from a previous time when the “duck pond” formed. It is a phantom pond that forms whenever a 2 inch rain falls and the club grounds saturates.
Hits: 111
WPCNR VIDEO RANGER. April 16, 2018:
The following videos show case the authorative winds that made you soaking wet just going out to your car to drive to work. The winds were so variable the birds were taking cover in shrubs to avoid being carried back down south This videoer could here birds chirping very indignantly in shrubs that swung and swayed and huffed and puffed like they were in a blender.
Hits: 181
WPCNR MILESTONES. By John F. Bailey. April 15, 2018.
She began her voyage, four days ago, 106 years ago, April 10, 1912.
She carried over 2,200 passengers and crew and was the largest ocean liner of her time ever built.
They were the rich and famous, the poor and hopeful.
She was guaranteed unsinkable.
Her owners the White Star Line wanted to set a new speed record for crossing the Atlantic.
Her captain had been warned their northerly course would take it through an iceberg field.
Saturday evening, 106 years ago, sailing under a crisp clear starlit sky at 11:40 PM after an evening of partying aboard ship, prior to arrival in New York on today, Sunday the ship sideswiped an iceberg.
She was the Titanic.
She was the ship of dreams.
Today, she is the ship of nightmares as her hundreds of passengers from all walks of life perished together in the sea. The cold fateful, unforgiving frigid indifferent eternity of the sea.
The Titanic’s fate was a lesson that changed maritime laws.
Two and a half hours after the iceberg collision the Titantic sank at 2:20 A.M., this morning on that night to remember.
This is an excerpt from the testimony of a survivor, Emily Maria Borie Ryerson watching from a lifeboat desperately trying to row away from the suction of the sinking ship, at the 1912 U.S. Senate SubCommittee Hearing on the Titanic sinking:
“The order was given to pull away. Then they rowed off—the sailors, the women, anyone – but made little progress; there was a confusion of orders; we rowed toward the stern, someone shouted something about a gangway, and no one seemed to know what to do. Barrels and (deck) chairs were being thrown overboard.
“Then suddenly, when we (in the lifeboat) still seemed very near, we saw the ship was sinking rapidly. I was still in the bow of the boat with my daughter and turned to see the great ship take a plunge toward the bow, the two forward funnels seemed to lean and then she seemed to break in half as if cut with a knife, and as the bow went under, the lights went out; the stern stood up for several minutes, black against the stars, and then that, too, plunged down and there was no sound for what seemed like hours, and then began the cries for help of people drowning all around us, which seemed to go on forever.”
Dorothy Gibson, the silent screen actress and survivor – from her testimony before the committee—observed from a lifeboat– in an excerpt from her testimony before the same committee, said::
“Suddenly there was a wild coming together of voices from the direction of the ship of the ship and we noticed an unusual commotion among the people huddled about the railing. Then the awful thing happened, the thing that will remain in my memory until the day I die.
The Titanic seemed to lurch slightly more to the side and then the fore. A minute, or probably two minutes, later she sank her nose into the ocean, swayed for a few minutes and disappeared, leaving nothing behind her on the face of the sea but a swirl of water, bobbing heads and lifeboats that were threatened by the suction of the waters.”
The Titanic’s fate was traced to the negligence and reckless disregard of the risk of sailing at 22 knots through an icefield, insufficient number of lifeboats. And in recent years, analysis of the hull plates recovered from the wreck of the ship on the ocean floor indicated a faulty, economical bolt selection in constructing the hull.
The White Star Line owner J. Bruce Ismay, onboard that night, callously saved his own life by slipping into a lifeboat.
Ismay in a statement, denied telling the Captain of the Titanic to set a new speed record and denied telling the Captain to increase the ship speed in the ice field region. Also said he just happened to be near a lifeboat about to be lowered and no more women and children around to board, and that was why he got into the lifeboat.
So much for corporate responsibility and guilt of any kind, even then.
Not much has changed in corporate world over the decades since this night ad morning to remember.
Hits: 130