City and State - December 19, 2011

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Vol. 1, No. 2 www.cityandstateny.com December 19, 2011 Congratulations to the Class of 2011! Favorite holiday recipes, straight from the state Assembly. Page 4 Why construction is so expensive in New York City. Page 16 The state’s Industrial Development Agencies are getting an overhaul. Page 22 Oneida leader Ray Halbritter wants to bust New York’s casino plan. Page 27 ALL THE FIGHTS, FOLLIES, LAUGHTER AND TEARS YOU REMEMBER—AND SOME YOU DON’T!—IN YOUR NEW YORK POLITICAL YEARBOOK Page 6

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The December 19, 2011 issue of City and State . Targeting the politicians, lobbyists, unions, staffers and issues which shape New York City and State. Coupled with its regularly-updated companion website, cityhallnews.com, City Hall and Capitol provides the substantive analysis of policy and politics often missing in other coverage. The paper also covers the lighter side of political life, with articles about lifestyles, fashion and celebrities of interest to those involved in the New York political world, including a monthly poll of Council members.

Transcript of City and State - December 19, 2011

Page 1: City  and State - December 19, 2011

Vol. 1, No. 2 www.cityandstateny.com December 19, 2011Vol. 1, No. 2 www.cityandstateny.com December 19, 2011

Congratulations to the Class of 2011!

Favorite holiday recipes, straight from the state Assembly. Page 4

Why construction is so expensive in New York City. Page 16

The state’s Industrial Development Agencies are getting an overhaul. Page 22

Oneida leader Ray Halbritter wants to bust New York’s casino plan. Page 27

ALL THE FIGHTS, FOLLIES, LAUGHTER AND TEARS YOU REMEMBER—AND SOME YOU DON’T!—IN YOUR NEW YORK POLITICAL YEARBOOK Page 6

Page 2: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com2 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

Something strange is happening to the legislators of New York.

In Albany—where party lines split the Senate and Assembly, and gridlock has long been a way of life—Gov. Andrew Cuomo shot his tax plan through the Capitol this month with Putinesque

votes of 132–8 and 55–0.Yet the very next day in New

York City, a once-supine City Council overrode Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s veto of a bill imposing tough scru-tiny on outside contracts in a response to the CityTime payroll boondoggle.

Ten years into Bloomberg era, the

City Council is discovering its strength. One year into the Cuomo era, the Legisla-ture has no stomach for a fi ght.

Perhaps the Legislature is tired of what its past fi ghting has accomplished. Plenty of Albany lawmakers detest their own incom-petence and are happy to line up with a governor who is able to get things done; it’s a sign of progress that they let a train leave the station without derailing it for kicks.

Meanwhile, the New York City charter tilts power to the mayor, and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn has always found it better to hash out deals with him in private than to confront him pointlessly in public.

That dynamic seems to be changing,

however, as he quacks more lamely, she posi-tions herself as a leader for 2013, and the costs of not keeping a closer eye on basics like snow-storms and technology contracts add up. Bloom-berg’s advisors have quietly realized they need to pay more attention to the City Council for the next two years—which, however imperfectly, means paying more attention to New Yorkers.

Of course, there is little risk Jeffersonian democracy will suddenly erupt in either body. Contrary to everything we learned in civics class, the fi ght over a living-wage bill in New York City hangs not on a vote but on

whether Quinn will allow a vote in the fi rst place. And Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos have spent years burrowed in the same blankets of secrecy that Cuomo now wraps himself in.

There is merit in legislators doing what we elect them to do—talking, listening and amending before turning anybody’s idea into law. Yes, plenty have set a bad example by using the process for extortion, not policy-making. Yes, Albany is a worst-case example of legislating, which is why Cuomo is refreshing and effective. Yes, democracy is messy.

But over the long haul, democracy is always better than dictatorship.

[email protected]

AROUND NEW YORK

EDITORIALEditor: Adam [email protected] Editor: Andrew J. [email protected]: Chris Bragg [email protected] Nahmias [email protected] Lentz [email protected] Editor: Helen EisenbachPhotography Editor: Andrew Schwartz

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City & State is published twice monthly.Copyright © 2011, Manhattan Media, LLC

UPFRONT

Looking For Democracy

Adam LisbergEditor

votes of 132

York City, a once-supine City

CITY HALL THE CAPITOLCI

The best items from the City & State First Read morning emailCity & State First Read delivers every day’s headlines, schedules, birthdays and

“Heard Around Town” news nuggets like these into your inbox before 7 a.m. Not getting City & State First Read? Sign up for free at www.cityandstateny.com/fi rst-read.

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

300,000

290,000

280,000

270,000

260,000

250,000

240,000

230,000

220,000

210,000

200,000

228,830223,093

225,050

239,717239,715234,485

229,857226,725

223,749

Source: Citizens Budget CommissionState fi scal years end March 31; city fi scal years end June 30.

NEW YORK STATE

NEW YORK CITY

New York City and state employeesRecent cutbacks have left New York state government employment almost identical to a decade ago, but New York City’s is up more than 7 percent

228,257

236,447

249,824 247,681

239,616

270,839

265,922

264,061262,206

280,649 280,614

274,061

268,308

ALBANY COUNTYWhatever’s going on with the livery cab street-hail bill, don’t think Gov. Andrew Cuomo doesn’t care. Two sources on opposite sides of the issue were equally impressed by how he handled a recent meeting about it at his Capitol offi ce—running an almost two hour meeting with an absolute command of every nuance.

“I thought he’d pop in for 15 minutes and hand it over to staff, but he really worked on it,” said one source. “People who thought this was just about politics would be surprised how much he’s involved,” said another.

ROCKLAND COUNTYFormer New York City deputy mayor Stephen Goldsmith, who lost his city job after a domestic dispute led to his arrest, praised Gov. Andrew Cuomo at a recent conference for targeting the Tappan Zee Bridge for alternative fi nancing, and said the project is generating “a huge amount of interest.” Goldsmith, who is now a consultant for McKenna Long & Aldridge, told attendees at the 2011 Infrastructure Investor: Americas conference that the U.S. has been slow to pick up

the public-private models. “There should be enormous effi ciencies to doing the Tappan Zee the way the governor plans to do it,” Goldsmith said.

SENECA COUNTYWho is really the most popular member of the New York Senate on Facebook? Senate staff ranked 25 of its members based on Web analytics several weeks ago, but when most of the other 37 are added, the result is…a tie. Almost all of the members have either their own personal page or an offi cial page to represent them on the popular social networking site. Some senators, such as Michael F. Nozzolio of Seneca Falls, couldn’t accept a friending request because he had reached 5,000—the maximum number allowed. We were hurt.

STATEN ISLANDWoe to the lawmaker who speaks her mind about anything involving Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as Sen. Diane Savino just learned—the hard way. “All the Republicans in the Senate signed Ed Koch’s dopey pledge,” she told The Brooklyn Politics’ Colin Campbell. “Nobody in Albany wants

to do independent redistricting, and that includes the governor—and you can write that down, Colin.” So he did, and told us. At 1:54 p.m., we asked Cuomo’s spokesman Josh Vlasto about it. “The governor’s position is absolutely clear,” he replied at 3:24. And 41 minutes later, Savino called us to retract her comments. “I’ve never had a conversation with him about redistricting,” she said. “I shouldn’t assume that he has the same motivations that the rest of us do.”

Page 3: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE DECEMBER 19, 2011 3

GOVERNOR CUOMO AND LEGISLATIVE LEADERS APPOINT MEMBERS

TO THE JOINT COMMISSION ON PUBLIC ETHICS

Independent Commission Has Broad New Enforcement Powers to

Investigate Legis lat ive and Executive Branches

Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore to Chai r JCOPE

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and legislative leaders today announced their appointments to the new Joint

Commission on Public Ethics (JCOPE).

JCOPE is an independent enforcement unit with broad oversight o f New York State government. The

Commission has robust enforcement powers to investigate violations of law and financial disclosure

requirements for all elected of ficials and their employees in both the executive and legislative branches.

JCOPE also has expanded powers to oversee lobbyists due to newly expanded disclosure rules and a broader

definition of lobbyingÉ

Senate Majority Leader Dean G. Skelos said, "Today's creation of the Joint Commission on Public Ethics is

another step forward in restoring the public's trust in state governmentÉ I am confident that former Senator

Rath, Justice Covello and George Weismann will do outstanding work alongside Chairwoman DiFiore and the

other representatives of this commission."

Senate Minority Leader John Sampson said, " É I salute Governor Cuomo for his leadership and perseverance

in the fight for true ethics reforms. I am confident that that my appointment, Mr. Ravi Batra, will help bring

integrity back to the halls o f our Capitol."

Assembly Minority Leader Brian M. Kolb said, "É With over 15 years of legal experience, including serving in

the Jef ferson County District Attorney and Public Defender's Of fices, and as an attorney in private practice,

David Renzi is highly qualified and capable of serving as our Assembly Minority Conference's appointment to

the Joint Commission on Public EthicsÉ

The bipartisan Commission consists o f six members appointed by the Governor, at least three of whom must be

enrolled members of the major political party that is not that of the GovernorÉ

Governor Cuomo's appointments are:

• Janet DiFiore, Chai r . Elected in 2005 and reelected in 2009, District Attorney DiFiore is the chief law

enforcement o f ficer of Westchester CountyÉ

• Vincent A. DeIor io . Mr. DeIorio is the Chair of the New York State Energy Research and Development

Authority (NYSERDA) Board of DirectorsÉ

• Mitra Hormozi . Ms. Hormozi has served as the Chairperson of the New York State Commission on Public

Integrity since her appointment earlier this year.

• Danie l J. Horwitz. Mr. Horwitz is currently a partner at Lanker & Carragher, LLP.

• Gary J. Lavine . Mr. Lavine is associated as counsel with Green & Seifter, Attorneys, PLLC.

• Seymour Knox IV. Mr. Knox is the CEO of Knox International, LLC, a New York based private equity firm. For

twenty years, Mr. Knox served as Vice President o f Corporate Relations for the Buf falo Sabres. Mr. Knox is a

graduate of Lake Forest College.

The Public Integrity Reform Act o f 2011 contained some of the most comprehensive ethics enhancements in

modern history, including re forms that create unprecedented transparency, require strict disclosure, and increase

penalties for ethics violations.

Nicole Gelinas walks to work most days from her Hell’s Kitchen apartment, but she never stops thinking about the subway.

“When I lived in Brooklyn all the way out by Coney Island, I had a long commute on the F train, like an hour both ways,” the Manhattan Institute fi nancial analyst said. “I would just sit there and think, ‘There are ways to fi x this.’ So that’s how I got interested in transit. If they ever fi x the F train, I’ll move back to Brooklyn.”

Gelinas, 36, is one of New York’s most prominent voices of fi scal conservatism, spending the last six years thoughtfully detailing problems she sees in the city and state budgets, pension plans, union contracts and transit infrastructure.

And like many of Gelinas’ other deci-sions in life, her career was sparked by simple observation.

The Massachusetts native decided to attend Tulane University after riding by the campus on a streetcar during a high

school trip to New Orleans. She majored in English literature, but on a summer job answering phones at a brokerage fi rm she began to be fascinated by the

customers’ questions. Soon she was reading the business pages along with her T.S. Eliot.

Another New Orleans experience left a mark on her as well: A co-worker at her part-time job at Tower Records was shot and killed. The experience made her a conservative, she said, and made her sympathetic to former Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s approach to bringing down crime in New York City.

When Gelinas graduated in 1999, she headed to New York for a reporting job at Thomson Financial, which allowed her to combine fi nance and writing.

“It just so happened Thomson was right on 195 Broadway around September 11,” she said. “I saw the whole experience of the cleanup, the lack of a rebuilding process for a long time, right outside the window. So I started writing articles for the New York Post chronicling the fi scal issues of the rebuilding.”

The conservative Manhattan Institute took notice, and hired her full-time in 2005—and in that time, she said, positions

that were once called fi scally conservative came to be seen as moderate.

“When I got here, you could see from the numbers that pension costs, health-care costs, all of these things were going up and up and up,” she said. “A few years ago, you were considered a conservative to even bring these things up.”

At night, with her husband, Matthew Civello (“We got married the day Lehman Brothers collapsed”), Gelinas reads the Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal cover to cover in print. This year she’s also read The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens and Babbittby Sinclair Lewis, both dystopic novels about morally bankrupt metropolises—perhaps not coincidentally written by

writers who were once reporters.“Ever since I’ve gotten here, the

problem is trying to decide what to do out of all the things there are to do,” she said. “The housing bubble burst, the credit bubble burst, there’s talk of how changing Wall Street would affect New York City, there’s always an election to follow—and then of course, there’s always the MTA.”

—Laura [email protected]

NICOLE GELINAS

IN THE

THE FOOTNOTE: A real press release, annotatedSent 5:09 p.m., Monday, Dec. 12, 2011, from Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s press offi ce

The new ethics bill enshrines permanent majorities for the Senate Republicans and Assembly Democrats on JCOPE—even if they lose their legislative majorities.

UPFRONT

How the Manhattan Institute’s go-to analystbecame a conservative

attend Tulane University after riding by

literature, but on a summer job answering phones at a

that were once called fi scally conservative came to be seen as moderate.

the numbers that pension costs, health-care costs, all of these things were going up and up and up,” she said. “A few years ago, you were considered a conservative to even bring these things up.”

Civello (“We got married the day Lehman Brothers collapsed”), Gelinas reads the Financial TimesJournalyear she’s also read Shopby Sinclair Lewis, both dystopic novels about morally bankrupt metropolises—perhaps not coincidentally written by

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and legislative leaders today announced their appointments to the new Joint

JCOPE’s predecessor, the Commis-sion on Public Integrity, was seen as lacking independence. The former chairman was forced out after it was revealed he shared secret details of the Troopergate investigation with the Spitzer administration.

In May, Covello issued a redistricting ruling seen as highly favorable to Nassau County Republicans.

Leader John Sampson said, " É I salute Governor Cuomo for his leadership and perseverance

the Jef ferson County District Attorney and Public Defender's Of fices, and as an attorney in private practice,

Sampson has come under fi re for selecting Batra, who has close ties to the Brooklyn Democratic machine—and was former law partners with jailed ex-Assemblyman Clarence Norman.

Renzi, a Watertown attorney who ran for State Senate in 2008, is married to a staffer for Republican Sen. Patty Ritchie, and will have to recuse himself from any Ritchie-related matter.

DiFiore is a Republican recently turned Democrat who succeeded Jeanine Pirro as Westchester DA. Pirro ran against Cuomo for AG in 2006.

Only two of Cuomo’s three Democratic appoin-tees would be needed to block an investigation of a statewide offi cial or executive-branch appointee.

. Ms. Hormozi has served as the Chairperson of the New York State Commission on Public

For now, Commission on Public Integrity Executive Director Barry Ginsberg is staying on with JCOPE, though a dozen of his former commission staffers have been laid off.

Horwitz was part of Bernie Madoff’s legal defense team.

. Mr. Knox is the CEO of Knox International, LLC, a New York based private equity firm. For

Attorneys in the Legislature will now have to begin disclos-ing the names of their clients, but will only have to reveal new ones retained after July 2012, or old clients with new business before the state.

Page 4: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com4 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

UPFRONT

A City & State Holiday FeastHoliday Recipes From the State Assembly

Assemblywoman Grace Meng’s

Asian-Inspired Paella

“Here is a traditional Meng family recipe. We actually really love

paella but add an Asian twist to preserve traditions. We actually also

celebrate Christmas. Happy holidays to you all!”

Preparation:Finely dice the green onion.

Lightly beat the eggs with a little salt in a small bowl.

Heat up a wok or big frying pan and add 2 tablespoons oil.

When the oil is hot, add the eggs. Stir like you scramble

an egg. Remove the eggs and clean out the pan.

Add a little oil and your desired seafood. Add salt to

taste. Fully cook. Clean out the pan again.

Add a little oil. Stir in the diced green onion. After 1

minute, add the cold rice. Stir-fry using chopsticks or

a wooden spatula-type tool to break it apart. (Stir in a

little bit of soy sauce or oyster sauce if desired.)

When the rice is heated through, add the scrambled egg and your cooked

seafood back into the frying pan. Mix thoroughly. (Add some hot sauce if

desired.) Ready to eat!

Ingredients:1 green onion/scallion

2–3 eggsSeafood (i.e., shrimp, scallops, squid,

fi sh fi llets/small slices)

Salt

Olive oil for stir-frying, or as needed

3 cups rice—already cooked and then

chilled/refrigerated overnight

OPTIONAL: light soy sauce, oyster

sauce or hot sauce

Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis’ Honey Eggplant Fritters“I make it when I have friends over, and it’s a great appetizer to go with any dish. I just think it’s a great side dish or appetizer for the holidays. I thought I’d share it with my constituents.”

Preparation:Place the eggplant in a large bowl. Add 4 cups water and 2 teaspoons salt. Briefl y rinse in a bowl of water to eliminate the majority of seeds.Mix fl our, baking powder, and remaining 1/4 teaspoon of salt in a medium bowl. Whisk in milk and eggs.In a pan or large skillet, heat oil. Dip eggplant rounds in batter, then fry on each side for 30 seconds until golden. Let sit on paper towels to drain the oil.In a separate saucepan, heat honey to a light boil and drizzle warm honey over fried eggplant. Sprinkle with sesame seeds.

Ingredients:1 pound eggplant, peeled, cut into 1/8 inch thick roundsOlive oil4 cups water2 1/4 teaspoons salt

2/3 cup fl our1 teaspoon baking powder1 cup milk2 large eggs1/4 cup honey3 tablespoons sesame seeds

www.cityandstateny.com CITY

sesame seeds.

Assemblyman Rory Lancman’s

Box Latkes cooked to order

“I make a mean latke. I don’t go homemade—I go to the kosher

supermarket and get latke mix. I don’t make my own applesauce.

What am I, a farmer? But the applesauce I try to get is the Mott’s

sweetened applesauce. That’s good stuff. The unsweetened apple-

sauce is what my wife gets.

“I just want to emphasize that the latke has to be thin. Then, depending

on how people like it, you have the liberty to make it crispier.”

Preparation:

Lightly beat eggs in a medium bowl. Stir in water. Add

Manischewitz mix, onion powder, garlic powder, and white

pepper. Stir until blended. Set aside 3–4 minutes to thicken.

While batter thickens, pour 1/3 of the oil into a large skillet

and heat over a medium-high heat. Add chopped vegetables

to the thickened batter and blend thoroughly.

Gently drop tablespoons of batter into 1/8 inch of hot oil in

the large skillet and brown on both sides.

Ingredients:

2 eggs3/4 cup cold water

1 (3 oz) package of Manischewitz

potato pancake mix

1/8 teaspoon garlic powder

1/8 teaspoon white pepper

3/4 teaspoon onion powder

2 tablespoons fi nely chopped red

pepper1 tablespoon of each of these

vegetables, fi nely chopped: green

pepper, yellow pepper, carrot,

parsley, onion

Vegetable oil for frying

Large skillet

Heat up a wok or big frying pan and add 2 tablespoons oil.

minute, add the cold rice. Stir-fry using chopsticks or

a wooden spatula-type tool to break it apart. (Stir in a

sauce or hot sauce

salt in a medium bowl. Whisk in milk and eggs.In a pan or large skillet, heat oil. Dip eggplant rounds in batter, then fry on each side for 30 seconds until golden. Let sit on paper towels to drain the oil.In a separate saucepan, heat honey to a light boil and drizzle warm honey over fried eggplant. Sprinkle with sesame seeds.sesame seeds.

The BTEA held its Annual Safety Conference on November 22,

2011 with more than 300 contractor, labor and public offi cials

in attendance. The keynote address was delivered by Caswell

Holloway, New York City Deputy Mayor for Operations, and

opening remarks on “Worker, Public and Fire Safety” were

delivered by Robert Kulick, Regional Administrator for OSHA,

Robert LiMandri, Commissioner of the New York City Department

of Buildings and Salvatore Cassano, Commissioner of the New

York City Fire Department. Seminar sessions covered topics

such as Criminal Liability in Construction Safety and FDNY CDA

Inspections and FDNY Special Operations and Emergencies.

BTEA HOSTS ANNUAL SAFETY CONFERENCE

www.bteany.com

Lou Coletti, BTEA President & CEO with Robert Kulick, Regional Administator, OSHA, Robert LiMandri, Commissioner, New York City Department of Buildings and Salvatore Cassano, Commissioner, New York City Fire Department,

Back Row L to R: Chief Thomas Jensen, FDNY, Peter Langanhan, Jeff Hutchens, Turner Construction Co., Commissioner Salvatore Cassano, FDNY, Mike Bielawa, Lend Lease, Battalion Chief Eugene Carty, FDNYFront Row L to R: Steve Ertrachter, FDNY, Joel Pickering, Lend Lease, Carol Karlin, New York Fire Safety Academy, Elsa Araya, FDNY, Miguel Padin, Tishman Construction Corp.

Caswell Holloway, New York City Deputy Mayor for Operations

Back Row L to R: Jeff Hutchens, Turner Construction Co., Ken Durr, Durr Mechanical Construction, Richard Mendelson, OSHA, Caswell Holloway NYC Deputy Mayor for Operations, Pat Di Filippo, Turner Construction Co., Lou Coletti, BTEA Front Row L to R: Kay Gee, OSHA, Robert Kulick, OSHA, Laura Kenny, OSHA

Robert Peckar and Thomas Curran, Peckar & Abramson

Building TradesEmployers’ AssociationThe Alliance of

Union Contractors

Vegetable oil for frying

Page 5: City  and State - December 19, 2011

developments large and small. There is an old-fashioned pride in our workmanship that is evident in our

of bringing high quality work to every project.

“DEVELOPER AND BUILDERS OF HIGH QUALITY AFFORDABLE HOUSING”

We are proud to have worked with such government agencies as: New York State Housing Finance Agency (HFA)

New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR)

Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY)U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)

H.J. Kalikow and CompanyTony Mae GroupTom WolfeBrooke ShieldsDiana Ross

Phipps HousesJonathan Rose CompaniesL&M Development PartnersHudson Companies Inc.Fortune Society

Heritage Health and Housing, INC

Project Renewal

for Community Improvement

Nos QuedamosAlbert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva UniversityWesthab, INCLower Eastside People’s

David and Joyce Dinkins Gardens Via Verde/The Green Way TapestrySelected AwardsMultifamily Executive, Projectof the Year: Mixed Income, Grand Award, 2011Jack Kemp Workforce HousingModels of Excellence Award, 2011

Selected AwardsNYC Small Business Services,Neighborhood AchievementAwards for Development, 2008

Via Verde is designed to exceed LEED Gold standards for environmentally responsible and energy-efficient design.

Page 6: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com6 DEcEmbEr 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

Congratulations to the Class of 2011!All the fights, follies, laughter and tears you remember—

and some you don’t!—in your New York political yearbook

As we prepared for school 12 months ago, who could have imagined a year like this one? We saw new leaders and old grudges, indictments and acquittals, serious moments and crazy times. And we hope our yearbook brings back all the memories that made this year so special!

Sincerely, your yearbook editors—Chris Bragg, andrew J. hawkins, Jon Lentz, adam LisBerg and Laura nahmias

Page 7: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE DECEMBER 19, 2011 7

Prom King Andrew CuomoWhat is there to say about our prom king that he hasn’t heard already? Well, go

ahead and say it again—he won’t mind!Andrew Cuomo is our quarterback, class president, homecoming king, head

of the Auto Club, valedictorian, National Honor Society president and all-around big-man-on-campus. Nobody even challenged him when he said, “I am the school”!

His list of accomplishments is daunting: straight A’s, winning touchdowns in all regulation games, a star turn in the spring musical, “Man of La Mancha,” a property tax cap, same-sex marriage, an on-time budget, a revamped tax code, an ethics bill, and a successful campaign to serve real Italian lasagna in the cafeteria!

But it’s not just all those things he did. Andrew excelled this year because he set a new tone for our school. He brought order and respect to our normally chaotic halls, got all the student groups to work together, and made sure everyone cheered at the pep rallies no matter what they were really thinking. That’s leadership!

Sure, Andrew stepped on some toes. The kids on the school newspaper can’t stand his standoffi shness and his habit of passing secret notes in class.

You’ve probably heard the rumors about what happens when he and his buddies, like Howard Glaser, Larry Schwartz and Steve Cohen, are hanging around the lockers at the end of the day waiting for somebody to walk by. Is he being a bully or a leader? We don’t know—we’ve never dared to stick around to fi nd out!

But with great popularity comes great responsibility. Will he keep his promise to shake up the way the school doles out homeroom assignments? And what about his controversial plan to legalize poker as an offi cial after-school activity? How will he keep everybody in the Environmental Club happy about his no-nukes pledge if he’s also helping the Geology Club drill for natural gas?

Everybody’s watching, Andy, and there’s nowhere to go but down. Unless you go up!

His court:Mike Bloomberg used to rule the school, but after bungling that epic snow day

and getting caught up in a pretty pointless fi ght with the teachers over layoffs, he’s been knocked down a peg. But he’s got two more years until he graduates—if he starts hitting the books and working hard again, there’s plenty of time to stir things up!

Eric Schneiderman had some big shoes to fi ll, stepping into the role once held by the prom king himself, but even though his rivals said he was too much of a hippie to be an effective hall monitor (we hear he does yoga!), Eric surprised us all by going after the rich kids—and even some of his fellow students. Not a bad start.

Preet Bharara has had a roller coaster of a year: dizzying highs, like catching other students trying to cheat on their homework; and disappointing lows, like watching some of those same students avoid punishment. We don’t know how he stays popular, because every time he wants to say hi to a student or two, they panic and ask for a lawyer. But maybe that’s what it takes to make sure nobody says anything bad about you!

Bob Turner went from being a nobody to one of the most popular kids in school. Suffi ce to say, he picked the right friends, like Ed Koch. We thought Bob was going to get kicked out of school anyway, but now it looks like the faculty wants to keep him around. Lucky kid!

Prom King Andrew CuomoWhat is there to say about our prom king that he hasn’t heard already? Well, go

is our quarterback, class president, homecoming king, head of the Auto Club, valedictorian, National Honor Society president and all-around big-man-on-campus. Nobody even challenged him when he said, “I am the school”!

His list of accomplishments is daunting: straight A’s, winning touchdowns in all regulation games, a star turn in the spring musical, “Man of La Mancha,” a property tax cap, same-sex marriage, an on-time budget, a revamped tax code, an ethics bill, and a successful campaign to serve real Italian lasagna in the cafeteria!

But it’s not just all those things he did. Andrew excelled this year because he set a new tone for our school. He brought order and respect to our normally chaotic halls, got all the student groups to work together, and made sure everyone cheered at the pep rallies no matter what they were really thinking. That’s

Sure, Andrew stepped on some toes. The kids on the school newspaper can’t stand his standoffi shness and his habit of passing secret notes in class.

You’ve probably heard the rumors about what happens when he and Steve Cohen, are

hanging around the lockers at the end of the day waiting for somebody to walk by. Is he being a bully or a leader? We don’t know—we’ve never dared to

But with great popularity comes great responsibility. Will he keep his promise to shake up the way the school doles out homeroom assignments? And what about his controversial plan to legalize poker as an offi cial after-school activity? How will he keep everybody in the Environmental Club happy about his no-nukes

Everybody’s watching, Andy, and there’s nowhere to go but down. Unless you

used to rule the school, but after bungling that epic snow day and getting caught up in a pretty pointless fi ght with the teachers over layoffs, he’s been knocked down a peg. But he’s got two more years until he graduates—if he starts hitting the books and working hard again, there’s plenty of time to stir things up!

had some big shoes to fi ll, stepping into the role once held by the prom king himself, but even though his rivals said he was too much of a hippie to be an effective hall monitor (we hear he does yoga!), Eric surprised us all by going after the rich kids—and even some of his fellow students. Not a bad start.

has had a roller coaster of a year: dizzying highs, like catching other students trying to cheat on their homework; and disappointing lows, like

Prom Queen Christine QuinnEverybody knows our Prom Queen Christine Quinn is the one to watch—because

so much has gone well for her this year, and next year could be even better!She’s planning to get married to the lucky Kim Catullo this year, after working really

hard with her Prom King, Andrew Cuomo, to make it possible. She’s BFF with Mike Bloomberg even though she’s starting to stand up to him a little bit. Maybe that makes him respect her more? Lots of kids like her, and the ones who don’t like her still respect her. Even Ed Koch can’t shut up about her!

Getting to be such a popular girl isn’t easy. We all remember how we fi rst got to know Chris—she was loud and kind of an outsider, always protesting about something or other.

And now? Well, she’s still loud! Just kidding! But she’s so much different from when she fi rst came to school as a freshman, and she’s made so many new friends. Who knew that someday she’d get all palsy-walsy with the rich kids and shut down that idea to give everybody free time in the nurse’s offi ce? But she still likes to stand on the front steps with every student and every club and every cause that ever gets put down, no matter how small. She cares.

That’s one of the nice things about Chris—she tries hard not to rock the boat. She doesn’t like to take really harsh stands on some of those tough questions that a prom queen faces, like whether the kids whose after-school jobs are sponsored by the school should make more than minimum wage. And if she doesn’t say anything, nobody will

know what she thinks, right?But if confrontation isn’t her style in the hallways, don’t underestimate her. Chris

would rather talk to students quietly and try to make everybody happy, but that doesn’t mean a sit-down with her is easy. Of course, it helps that she controls the activity fee budgets for all the other clubs. Just kidding, Chris! All of us at Yearbook Club love you and really need our budget!

So what comes next for our Chris? Sure, we all know what she wants to do next, even if she has to pretend like she doesn’t know what Mike and Ed are telling everybody about her. Could she be like them? She’s polishing her résumé for the admissions offi ce, but it has to be superfrustrating to her that some of it is out of her hands. Between Josh Isay and Bill Thompson and Bill de Blasio, who knows?

Her Court:Don’t call her the new kid anymore! Kirsten Gillibrand got svelte, got trendy and

got tight with the Gay-Straight Alliance kids this year. Remember when she used to wear farm-girl fl annel and talk about her guns? Now she’s one of the most stylish girls in school. The haters like to whisper that she’s not serious, but she has a simple message for them: Put up or shut up!

Kathy Wylde remains the go-to gal for everyone at school who needs to talk to the rich kids. That’s why it’s nice Kathy can speak for them, because they’re not always so nice to talk to, themselves. Just kidding! She knows everybody and she knows what she wants, but she doesn’t carry a grudge—she’d rather get something done.

Janette Sadik-Kahn makes the court, even though she’s more popular outside the school than in it! She made special paths for our bikes, set up more bike racks and closed off whole sections of the parking lot to make places for people to sit at lunchtime. Not everybody likes it—the kids who drive to school think she’s hell on wheels—but she might get more popular once she starts sharing bikes with the whole school next year.

Kathy Hochul came out of nowhere and impressed everyone when she beat Jane Corwin to become head of their homeroom in the west corridor. Everybody loves the new girl! And who knows—after homeroom assignments get shuffl ed next year, maybe they’ll get to go through it all again!

Matt Collins

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www.cityandstateny.com8 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

School NewspaperIt wasn’t easy for the school-newspaper classes to

cover all the news that kept happening in New York this year—who knew that Political Reporting 101 would mean fi guring out who Anthony Weiner was chatting with on Twitter? (Figures that Andrew Breit-bart was the best student at it this year—he’s not in a newspaper class at all!)

But even with everybody excited about computers, Mr. Seifman sure showed his class how to dig through old paper records, by putting John Haggerty in jail, while Mr. Dicker’s class learned all about anonymous quotes.

Student Danny Hakim was defi nitely a proud grad-uate of the Seifman class, and while we all thought it was a little funny the way he buried himself in his books, he impressed the whole school with his stories about the developmentally disabled. He may have skipped those CPR classes, but he saved some lives anyway!

Josh Vlasto and Stu Loeser taught our journalism students how to fi ght like reporters. And we all learned a valuable lesson about the usefulness of an NYPD-issued press pass—they ain’t worth the plastic they’re printed on. Free-for-all!

SUPERLATIVESCUTEST COUPLEJeff Klein and Diane SavinoKlavino may come from different sides of the tracks, but a love for stir-ring up trouble keeps them together.

MOST HONESTKevin ParkerHe asked for money by saying, “I help you. You help me.” Refreshing!

MOST DRASTICALLY REDUCED PHONE BILLRichard LipskyWe feel sorry for the people who had to listen to his wiretaps.

THE GEORGE ORWELL AWARD FOR DOUBLESPEAKJosh VlastoIf he says “baseless speculation,” you know it’s true.

STUDENT

COUNCIL It was supposed to be a quiet year on the Student Council, but that was before that big fi ght between David Weprin and Bob Turner! All those signs went up in the cafeteria and got everyone all excited about their election. Everyone was sure David would get elected—his brother is a big shot on the Student Council, just like their dad was—but boy, were they wrong!

Maybe David should have gone to the debate that night, even though it was raining. Or maybe David should have checked his math before making that $10 trillion mistake. Oops! But Bob worked hard—between his knowledge of trashy TV shows and his time spent hanging around with the Jewish students, he impressed many and won the race.

That was really the most exciting contest, but let’s give a big cheer for everyone else

who tried this year. There was MarkPoloncarz’s smackdown of Chris Collins (one less rival for the prom king, Andrew Cuomo!) and SteveBellone’s victory over Angie Carpenter. Kathy Hochulsurprised a lot of students by winning as a Democrat in a pretty Republican classroom.

But the most exciting races will be next semester—after everyone’s homeroom assignments are switched around. We’ll see who’s running and who’s taking the bus home!

STUDENT

COUNCIL It was supposed to be a quiet year on the Student Council, but that was before that big fi ght between David Weprin and Bob Turnerin the cafeteria and got everyone all excited about their election. Everyone was sure David would get elected—his brother is a big shot on the Student Council, just like their dad was—but boy, were they wrong!

Maybe David should have gone to the debate that night, even though it was raining. Or maybe David should have checked his math before making that $10 trillion mistake. Oops! But Bob worked hard—between his knowledge of trashy TV shows and his time spent hanging around with the Jewish students, he impressed many and won the race.

That was really the most exciting contest, but let’s give a big cheer for everyone else

who tried this year. There was PoloncarzCollinsking, BelloneCarpentersurprised a lot of students by winning as a

Parade CommitteeEverybody loves a parade—except the NYPD! That’s what Jumaane Williams and Kirsten John Foy

from the Parade Committee said after that whole thing happened in Brooklyn over Labor Day weekend. Even Gale Brewer said she had trouble being let into a parade in her neighborhood, and Ydanis Rodri-guez got arrested when he tried doing the same thing. Hey, guys, it’s not called the First Amendment parade! Did you really think anybody is allowed to peaceably assemble in a public place? Just kidding!

It was kind of a tough year for the Parade Committee, actually. Mike Bloomberg even got kicked off the committee for making fun of all the Irish students, until they let him back into their clubhouse. Up in Albany, David Soares and Jerry Jennings decided to let anybody who wanted to assemble in the park, but that made You-Know-Who all upset.

So we’ll see what the Parade Committee has in store for next semester. Maybe more of all that back-and-forth shouting? The kids who were hanging around Zuccotti Park last fall promised a bunch more parades and rallies—we can’t wait to see how they plan to top this year!

Andrew Schwartz

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Future Farmers Of AmericaOur young farmers got the respect of the whole school this year with their exciting

debate about picking an offi cial vegetable. New member David Carlucci jumped right in by suggesting the onion, but upperclassman Michael Nozzolio quickly shot back with a nomi-nation of sweet corn instead. The debate was on!

The back-and-forth riveted the student body and even the school newspaper, and in the end the fi nal vote came down in favor of sweet corn. But Carlucci didn’t cry over his beloved onion—even he was swayed to vote for the succulent yellow fi eld crop too!

The club also overcame this summer’s freak storm, which fl ooded the club’s community vegetable garden and fl attened its student-run farms. Thankfully, Prom King Andrew Cuomo stepped in and again saved the day, leading an effort to raise funds for the club and personally helping rebuild the club’s pigpens and chicken coops.

NICEST HOUSEGreg Meeks, Vincent Leibell,John Haggerty and Carl Kruger It’s a tie—but let’s see if they all keep them.

MOST AFRAID OF PREET BHARARAJohn LiuHe has plenty of company, but the target on his back is biggest.

MOST UNLIKELY GAY ICONDean SkelosHe played an even bigger role in gay rights than anyone on Glee.

BEST SPINMEISTERBill O’ReillyThe fl ack behind Bob Turner made it all look natural.

Computer ClubMembership of the Computer Club exploded this year! It’s always had stalwarts like Gale

Brewer and Bill Mahoney playing with keyboards and spreadsheets, but this was fi nally the year when everybody else got into the Internet.

A lot of it is because of that rich kid Mike Bloomberg. He was waving his checkbook at every pocket protector and every pair of suspenders in the hallways. (Let’s hope it turns out better than when he did that with those bad kids in the CityTime club. Just kidding!) Mike wants to be the nerds’ best friend, and even got the school to build a new annex for the Computer Club on the empty lot behind the gym. He says it was Bob Steel’s idea—unless it was really Seth Pinksy’s—but all of a sudden all the nerds want to come here. We’ll all click the “Like” button for that! Watch out, jocks!

Another big Computer Club star was Zach Hutchins, who became the year’s Twitter king by sending all those even handed tweets about the big argument between the Gay-Straight Alliance and the Bible Club. And we thought Shelly Silver was a big man on Twitter too, until we realized that his account is really a fake! Too bad, because all those jokes about taking away parking permits from students are really funny.

But some of our students should steer clear of the social networks, because they may turn out to be more like a social trap! Like William Boyland Jr. All he did was keep plug-ging away at his phone and his computer, but maybe he didn’t know that if you’re skipping class, you shouldn’t post on Facebook about it. Oh, Bill, what are we going to do with you? Just kidding!

Membership of the Computer Club exploded this year! It’s always had stalwarts like Gale playing with keyboards and spreadsheets, but this was fi nally the

. He was waving his checkbook at every pocket protector and every pair of suspenders in the hallways. (Let’s hope it turns out better than when he did that with those bad kids in the CityTime club. Just kidding!) Mike wants to be the nerds’ best friend, and even got the school to build a new annex for the Computer Club on the empty lot

Seth Pinksy’s—but all of a sudden all the nerds want to come here. We’ll all click the “Like” button for that! Watch out, jocks!

, who became the year’s Twitter king by sending all those even handed tweets about the big argument between the Gay-Straight Alliance

was a big man on Twitter too, until we realized that his account is really a fake! Too bad, because all those jokes about taking away parking

But some of our students should steer clear of the social networks, because they may All he did was keep plug-

ging away at his phone and his computer, but maybe he didn’t know that if you’re skipping class, you shouldn’t post on Facebook about it. Oh, Bill, what are we going to do with

Mock TrialNo matter what else happens in school, the Mock Trial Club is always superpopular.

Who knew so many people would want to line up to see the inside of a courtroom? Five of our students have already—and the year’s not even over yet!

William Boyland Jr. stands head and shoulders above his classmates for landing in hot water not once but twice, facing off with two different students! Just when he beat Preet Bharara’s case about how he raised money, along came Loretta Lynch with another case—this time with wiretaps. This Brooklyn kid might end up in detention for up to 30 years, or he might walk free. Follow the latest updates on Bill’s surprisingly revealing Facebook page.

Larry Seabrook managed to “pull a Boyland” too after he wiggled out of Preet’s case for a bunch of money things. All anybody remembered was the $177 bagel, but after a jury of 12 peers couldn’t agree on what he did, Larry walked free. Great track record, Preet! Just kidding! Good luck trying again!

Other students managed to lose their cases, though. Remember when John Haggerty said all of Mike Bloomberg’s money that ended up in his house was really a present? Yeah, not so much! The jury agreed with Cy Vance Jr., who really needed a win, even if Mike wanted nothing to do with Mock Trial.

Let’s not forget Ruben Wills, who ’fessed up and settled his 15-year-old larceny case, or alumnus Joe Bruno from the class of 2009, who thought he was in the clear until he got threatened with another indictment.

It won’t be easy for Mock Trial to make next year even more interesting than this one. But we can’t wait to see Carl Kruger and Pedro Espada Jr. try when they walk into courtrooms next month!

Model U.N.Our Model U.N. tries to give us a taste of diplomacy from all over

the globe, and nobody does that better than club president Marty Markowitz! In the past few years he’s represented the People’s Republic of Brooklyn from Turkey to the Netherlands to China, meeting dignitaries and learning about other cultures. Too bad he got detention for bringing along his sweetheart, Jamie Markowitz, but he did it for love!

Greg Meeks may also face trouble in the principal’s offi ce with all the details that keep spilling out about his trips to the Caribbean for fund-raising. Remember what happened to Charlie Rangel, Greg? But there’s no better way to expand your horizons far beyond school!

Maybe they should take a lesson from the Model U.N. club’s fi nance chairman Mike Bloomberg, who knows how to stay out of trouble—he travels with his own money and his own planes. That’s the right way to go to Bermuda!

Next year the club hopes to get Andrew Cuomo involved. He started the year vowing to keep his feet fi rmly printed on school prop-erty, but by November he was jetting down to Puerto Rico and then out to California. Who knows where he’ll go next? Just kidding!

Matt Collins

Page 11: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE DECEMBER 19, 2011 11

“I am the government.” —Andrew Cuomo

“I’ve been a big pushy broad my whole life.”

—Christine Quinn

“I want to put a shot across Obama’s bow.”

—Ed Koch on Bob Turner

“She was not incapacitated. She said she was not inebri-ated. She is not familiar with the driveway.”

—Cathie Black’s spokesman

“The governor does not have a proposal that has been discussed with anyone.”

—Josh Vlasto, fi ve days before the governor unveiled his tax

proposal

“Tivo shot. FB hacked. Is my blender gonna attack me next?”

—Anthony Weiner on Twitter

“Apparently what we’ve got here is a failure to commu-nicate.”

—Preet Bharara, announcing charges against William

Boyland, Carl Kruger and Richard Lipsky

“In the past 30 days, as I have prepared the state’s budget, I was shocked to learn that the state’s budget process is a sham.”

—Andrew Cuomo

“I have my own army in the NYPD, which is the seventh-largest army in the world.”

—Michael Bloomberg

“A small-caliber weapon could be hidden inside a jewelry box.”

—Eric Adams on illegal handguns

I really enjoy

helping people!

“ It’s in my blood to get out there and help my community. We’re up, we’re there, and we all are very dedicated to what we do — or we wouldn’t be doing it!

“ Whether it’s garbage pick up or the streets being plowed, road maintenance, drainage maintenance — people really benefit from it.

“ Knowing that someone needs something done in the community, and I’m there to help them, it makes me feel really good!”

On the line every day.People working together to make a better New York for all.

smart | DYNamIC | CarING | DEDICatED

really good!”Meet Brian Cummins

LOCAL 1000 AFSCME, AFL-CIODANNY DONOHUE, PRESIDENT

8672_Brian 7.5x10 Clr_Capitol.indd 1 11/28/11 11:04 AM

Say What?

Remembering the very best things our class-mates said all year:

“At this point, I am voting from the heart.” —Jim Alesi on his vote for same-sex marriage

Page 12: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com12 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

BEST BIKE LANE SPOKESPERSONHoward WolfsonHe practiced what he preached—and lost 25 pounds.

WORST BIKE LANE SPOKESPERSONJanette Sadik-KhanKeeping her under wraps helped her cause.

BEST JOB SWITCHMatt WingIt’s a big leap from Bill de Blasio to Andrew Cuomo.

WORST JOB SWITCHJoel KleinBet he’s getting another kind of education.

It was a great year for drama at our school, with plenty of political theater and a few big actors looking for their breakout roles. Remember watching Ruben Diaz Sr. in the spotlight before the same-sex marriage vote? Remember Kevin Parker’s tantrum when he didn’t get the spotlight?

But the State Senate chamber wasn’t the only stage. There was also the City Council, where the cameras loved Tish James’ dance with a tire chain. And in Preet Bharara’s conference room, where he put that slow-burning charm on display—he’s one to watch. So was every podium that Bob Duffy touched, where he almost worked himself to tears praising the prom king, Andrew Cuomo.

And what a play Ed Koch put on this year! We thought he’d stick to his TV show on NY1—and occasionally putting on that same old song-and-dance about independent redis-tricting. But boy, were we surprised when he started that production about the Ninth Congressional District. He showed why he’s such a master at creating drama—giving David Weprin the tragic fl aw we learned about in literature class and casting Bob Turner as the unlikely winner. But when he went all Hamlet-like on Barack Obama by opposing and then supporting him on Israel, it became pretty clear who the biggest star of a Koch production is—Koch!

DRAMA CLUB

Environmental ClubThe Environmental Club worked hard this year to make the school a greener

place, and to teach their classmates how to fi ght pollution.Bill de Blasio learned how wasteful it is to post campaign signs all over school

for the student council elections, which makes a big mess for the school’s jani-tors. Good job, Bill, for cleaning up your act! We hope

Bill Thompson and John Liu will learn from his example and pay their fi nes for campaign signs too.

And club member Jim Tedisco really tried to stop wasting paper too, asking the school to put more of its homework assignments online and fewer on paper. It got plenty of support, but old habits die hard. Let’s hope the student council gives it a better shot next year.

Banning paper is the easy part, though. Some of the most popular kids in school got a mixed reaction for their environmental efforts. Andrew Cuomo’s big no-nukes campaign to shut down Indian Point won him a lot of friends in the Envi-

ronmental Club, but then they changed their minds when he insisted on getting

power from hydrofracking instead. And Mike Bloomberg’s big

PlaNYC ideas sounded great, but we sure wish he could have found the money to put up those solar panels on the roof after all.

for the student council elections, which makes a big mess for the school’s jani-tors. Good job, Bill, for cleaning up your act! We hope

Bill Thompson and John Liu example and pay their fi nes for campaign signs too.

And club member Jim Tediscowasting paper too, asking the school to put more of its homework assignments online and fewer on paper. It got plenty of support, but old habits die hard. Let’s hope the student council gives it a better shot next year.

Banning paper is the easy part, though. Some of the most popular kids in school got a mixed reaction for their environmental efforts. Cuomo’s big no-nukes campaign to shut down Indian Point won him a lot of friends in the Envi-

ronmental Club, but then they changed their minds when he insisted on getting

power from hydrofracking instead. And

PlaNYC ideas sounded great, but we sure wish he could have found the money to put up those solar panels on the roof after all.

Andrew Schwartz

Daniel S. Burnstein

Poker ClubOkay, so it’s not much of a club yet if it can’t play for real money. But

poker is so popular, and everybody at the other schools is doing it, and if they can rent out the gym for bingo games, why can’t the poker club do it too?

John Bonacic has been way ahead of the pack saying the poker club could set up tournaments as fund-raisers for the school. If the school board can’t afford to pay for teachers and books and nurses and uniforms, then why shouldn’t they be allowed to raise money that way?

It was a big help when Andrew Cuomo came out in favor of it, along with Shelly Silver and Dean Skelos, but it won’t be easy. The whole student body has to vote for it—twice!—and some of them aren’t so sure it’s a good idea for everyone to gamble at cards with their lunch money. And just wait till the Bible Club gets involved!

Other students, including Robert Odawi Porter from the Seneca Indian Club and Ray Halbritter from the Oneidas, are upset the poker club would make their own card games outside of school less popular.

Let the chips fall where they may!

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www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE december 19, 2011 13

Let’s be serious for a minute. Drunk driving is really, really bad. So we’re glad our school got a couple of important

new members of Students Against Drunk Driving this year to help drive that message home.

Our friend Darryl Towns had to take the bus after he had a little drunken-driving thing happen to him when he crashed his car July 3. He sure learned a lesson, though! His license was revoked for six months, and he had to pay $895, and Andrew Cuomo forced him to…well…actually, that was about it. But he’s really, really sorry, and it will never happen again!

In fact, we’ve heard Darryl helped another student learn how to always drive carefully. Cathie Black says she wasn’t drunk

when she hit a tree in the Hamptons in July, but it sure sounds like she’d been drinking, so she can sure use lessons from Darryl. We’re not sure how much of a role she’ll take in our meetings, though—remember when she was in charge of the younger students and started yelling at their parents? We don’t think she was drunk then, either.

But we’re glad nobody got hurt, and now that students see the examples of what happened to Darryl and Cathie, nobody will ever drive drunk again. Just like they didn’t

after Vito Fossella got arrested. And John Sweeney. And John Sabini. And Randy Kuhl. And Adam Clayton

Powell IV. Did we forget anyone?

StudentS AgAinSt

drunk driving

gay-Straight Alliance

Remember when the Gay-Straight Alliance was a popular club that threw fun parties but wasn’t really taken seriously? Not any more!

A lot of it happened because Andrew Cuomo joined—and of course became the president. Any club he’s in, everybody else pretty much wants to join. If Ross Levi and Brian Ellner and Tim Gill minded being pushed down to vice presidents, they kept quiet about it. (Isn’t that always the best way to be around Andrew? Just kidding!) With new sergeants at arms Steve Cohen and Jennifer Cunningham keeping the peace, and supporters like prom queen Christine Quinn working hard, the club was ready to make a difference.

But they couldn’t do anything without a majority of the students on their side. So it was a big deal when Shirley Huntley, Joseph Addabbo and Carl Kruger joined in. How hard did Andrew twist their arms? Who knows, but they’re not complaining!

Then came James Alesi. He’d been thinking of joining the Gay-Straight Alliance for a while, but it was like crossing to the other side of the cafeteria at lunchtime alone. So hard! But when he did, he was the happiest kid in school. And then came Roy McDonald and Steve Saland and Mark Grisanti behind him.

So what do they do now? Well, some of those new members may have to fight hard to stay in school. Let’s see if the rest of the club is there to help them stay!

MathletesNothing plus nothing equals something, right? Just kidding! But that’s the kind of arithmetic magic that our Math-

letes were able to pull off all year long, even if we still don’t understand how they did it.The biggest winner was of course the “Bearded One,” Bob Megna. How did he get rid of $10 billion? Well, appar-

ently most of that budget deficit wasn’t really a budget deficit, just some numbers stuff. So he did something on his calculator and made $8 billion or $9 billion just go away.

Of course, something had to get cut to make the rest of the deficit vanish, and Mark Page said it came out of his budget instead! We don’t know who’s right, because when those two wonks start arguing, we just smile and try to figure out whose boss is more popular at the moment.

Page had his own magic moment this year, when he turned his pockets inside out to show they were empty—then suddenly found the cash so he didn’t have to lay off a whole bunch of teachers. We would have been so sad. Maybe he did it by finding all the money that got siphoned off in City-Time when he wasn’t paying atten-tion? Just kidding!

Tom DiNapoli is growing into a Mathlete contender too, and who’s going to argue with him when he’s sitting on a $133 billion pile of money? But he ought to offer a few free comptrolling lessons to John Liu, who clearly can use the help—he’s not actually sure if all the kids giving him money even go to our school!

Mat

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www.cityandstateny.com14 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

CLUMSIESTJim AlesiSlipped on a ladder, then slipped by suing the homeowner.

BEST REBOUNDDavid PatersonHe should have been on the radio all along.

WORST REBOUNDEliot SpitzerHe’s still talking, and just needs someone to listen!

Bible ClubNobody loves God more than Bible Club President Ruben Diaz

Sr. Well, maybe that’s debatable, but he really is a reverend and lets the whole school know it! Ruben was sure fi red up this year, and he brought a lot of friends to fl ood the hallways in May, when the Gay-Straight Alliance went on the offensive to legalize same-sex marriage.

But it wasn’t just about Jesus—they were joined by lots of their Jewish and Catholic friends, though we never fi gured out where Timothy Dolan was. Maybe he was busy turning the other cheek? Just kidding! The Bible Club lost in the end, but they sure got their message heard.

Michael Long also played a helpful role for the Bible Club this year, since his Conser-vative Party sticks up for all the same things they like—and they open their meetings with prayer, to boot.

We always thought Dan Halloran wouldn’t quite fi t in with the Bible Club kids. But maybe that’s changing after The Village Voice wrote that his old pagan friends think he’s given up heathenism to push his Catholic roots with voters. Bible Club is open to every-body, Dan!

And let’s not forget all the presentations the club heard from students who belong to different religions and wanted to explain their beliefs. Remember when Bob Turner came and told us all about Judaism and Israel? Sure, maybe he’s Irish Catholic, but he sure taught us all a thing or two. Live and learn!

Bible ClubNobody loves God more than Bible Club President Ruben Diaz Well, maybe that’s debatable, but he really is a reverend and lets

the whole school know it! Ruben was sure fi red up this year, and he

Junior ROTCThe Junior Reserve Offi cer Training Corps had a big year in

2011, teaching their classmates all about patriotism and American citizenship—but there sure was a lot of fuss about it.

Newly elected club president Peter King held high-profi le meet-ings to discuss what to do about some of the school’s less Ameri-canized Muslim students. He really really thinks it’s a brewing problem, but not everyone agrees. Plenty of other students didn’t even want to take sides!

Another club member, Ray Kelly, also had his eye on his Muslim classmates, eavesdrop-ping on them and following them around after school. He said everybody else ought to thank him for it—and Peter Vallone Jr. was always there to stick up for him.

And remember when rich kid Mike Bloom-berg bragged about having his own army? That was funny, until Ray and his boys in blue started knocking the journalism kids around, stopping them from doing their jobs. So not cool!

Say cheese! What is it about the Photog-raphy Club that turns smart kids dumb? Two club members got in hot water this year after they turned their lenses on them-selves—and ended up expelled!

The founding member was Chris Lee, who fi gured his camera phone would be a good way to share pictures of his pecs and meet interesting people down at the satellite campus in Wash-ington. Who knows if he met those people, but he has plenty more time on his hands to do it now!

Well, we fi gured everybody learned from what happened to Chris, but appar-ently not Anthony Weiner! Do you need to hear again all about what happened with him and his Twitter pictures and those girls from all those other schools? Let’s just say NSFW! He loved his Twitter more than he loved his place in school…and now he doesn’t have either.

Careful with those cameras, guys. Objects in the viewfi nder are not always larger than they appear.

Matt Collins

PHOTOGRAPHY

CLUB

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www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE DECEMBER 19, 2011 15

In MemoriamOur year was not without sadness. We lost 10 of our fellows, who left us with indelible memories of their

accomplishments and their personalities. We lost a little of ourselves with their passing, but we are proud to remember them here.

Hugh Carey, 92Died Aug. 7

The 51st governor of New York famously warned, “The days of wine and roses are over” in 1975, and led the effort that saved New York City from fi nancial collapse.

Richard Daines, 60Died Feb. 26

The former state health commissioner fought unabashedly for science over politics, becoming a YouTube star in his crusade for a tax on soda to encourage kids to drink milk.

Pat Dolan, 72Died Nov. 15

The longtime Queens civic activist was struck and killed while crossing Hillside Avenue on her way to a meeting of her commu-nity board’s transporta-tion committee.

Geraldine Ferraro, 75Died March 26

The Queens congress-woman made national history in 1984 as the fi rst woman nominated by a major party to be vice president.

Tom Kirwan, 78Died Nov. 28

The straight-shooting Newburgh assem-blyman lost his seat in 2010 and won it right back two years later, shaking off his health problems to return to the Legislature.

Sisa Moyo, 47Died July 10

The director of media services for the Assembly and spokes-woman for Speaker Sheldon Silver was known for her pleasant demeanor and gracious-ness, and was beloved by everyone who worked with her.

Hope Reichbach, 22Died April 28

The daughter of a judge and aide to Coun-cilman Steve Levin was a rising star in Brooklyn politics whose ambi-tions stretched far beyond the borough.

Matthew Sapolin, 41Died Nov. 29

The head of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Offi ce for People With Disabilities was blind since childhood, but inspired everyone with his high-energy life as an accomplished wres-tler, musician, chess player and skier.

Anthony Seminerio, 75Died Jan. 6

The long-serving Queens assemblyman spent his last days in prison after pleading guilty in 2009 to taking bribes from hospitals, the repercussions of which are still being felt in Albany today.

Guy Velella, 66Died Jan. 27

The Bronx state senator and former head of the county’s Republican Party was jailed for several months in 2002 on bribery and corrup-tion charges, but was remembered for the state funds he delivered to his district.

Page 16: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com16 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

SPOTLIGHT: CONSTRUCTION & DEVELOPMENT

SKY-HIGH COSTSNew York City’s construction costs are among the country’s highest—but does it matter?

“That’s the big fear: Have we reached the

threshold, or when will we reach the threshold, that people will chose not to build here and

build somewhere else instead?”

Burj KhalifaCost: $1.5 billion

8 Spruce Street(a.k.a. Beekman Tower)

Cost: $876 million

15 Penn PlazaCost: $2 billion New York Times Building

Cost: $850 million

One World Trade CenterCost: $3.1 billion

The Burj Khalifa was built in Dubai for $1.5 billion. What would the money spent on the world’s tallest building get you in New York City?

Joey Carolino

By JON LENTZ

In the new Mission: Impossible fi lm, Tom Cruise’s secret-agent character leaps out of the Burj Khalifa, the tallest

building on the planet, and scrambles along its glassy exterior—a stunt that is apparently critical to saving the world.

Yet as far-fetched as the scene is, the paltry $1.5 billion spent to build the 162-story Dubai skyscraper may seem just as fantas-tical—at least compared with the sky-high cost of construction in New York City.

To put that $1.5 billion price tag into perspective, it’s less than half the cost of One World Trade Center, which is nearing completion, and wouldn’t be enough to construct a mile of the Second Avenue Subway inching along below Manhattan.

Just retrofi tting the Empire State Building took more than a third of the money spent to build the sleek Dubai skyscraper.

Of course, the comparison is not exactly one of apples and oranges. Unlike Dubai, New York City has one of the oldest, most densely developed urban environments in the world, where almost every inch is already spoken for. Construction compa-nies dig foundations and build skyscrapers while navigating around subway and utility lines, being sure not to crush the older buildings at the edge of their lot lines, and coordinating every truckload of material through some of the nation’s worst traffi c.

“The logistics are more complicated, and it has a greater impact on the public,” said Lou Coletti, the president and CEO of the Building Trades Employers’ Association. “That costs money, but it’s absolutely necessary to do to protect worker and public safety. I doubt very seriously that in a place like Dubai they’re under the same stringent safety requirements that contractors are in New York City.”

Yet some worry that New York City’s construction costs, which are among the highest in the nation, could discourage investment and push developers to build elsewhere.

“That’s the big fear: Have we reached the threshold, or when will we reach the threshold, that people will chose not to build here and build somewhere else instead?” said Hope Cohen, the associate director of the Regional Plan Asso-ciation’s Center for Urban Innovation. “And that goes directly to a question of New York’s competitiveness, within the nation and also globally.”

The cost of construction in New York City, recently pegged at $505 per square foot for Class A offi ce space, is higher than many other major U.S. cities, including Los Angeles, Boston and Washington, according to a recent New York Building Congress report. A few cities, including San Francisco and Honolulu, have higher costs, largely due to their unique geography.

“The reasons are many,” said Richard Anderson, president of the Building Congress. “We generally pay union skilled tradespeople more. We have some ineffi -cient work rules. The cost of government and review and regulation is much higher in New York City. And then the general logis-tics of building in a dense urban environ-ment are more complicated.”

Besides labor and regulatory costs, other factors include traffi c congestion that slows down deliveries, high land costs and more expensive designs, espe-cially for high-profi le projects.

Many of the factors can be addressed, but some are harder to change than others. The cost of supplies like steel and

concrete, which has started rising again, is determined on a global scale, and little can be done to offset that expense other than setting up suppliers closer to the city or reducing delivery costs.

One of the largest costs is often land, which in the long-term can be addressed by rezoning, cleaning up brownfi elds or even extending the city’s landmass by

fi lling in areas along the waterfront.

But the long-term nature and infeasibility of many of those solu-tions has prompted many to focus instead on easing labor and regulatory costs.

Developers and designers complain about the multitude of city agencies, often with different stan-dards and priorities, that have to sign off on their plans, a bureaucratic assembly line that can add costs by signifi cantly delaying a project’s ground-breaking.

“From a design point of view…time is money,” said Rick Bell, president of the New York chapter of the American Institute of Architects, who said he is heartened by recent moves the city has taken to use digital technology to accept architectural plans. Still, he argued, “it takes a longer time for projects to get approved in New York than in any other city in the U.S.”

Efforts have also been made in a round of labor negotiations earlier this year to cut costs by making work rules for unionized labor more effi cient, though it is still unclear how much impact they will have.

“I think there’s a coordinated effort between labor and contractors and devel-opers to become more productive, and to do it through work-rule changes where

you don’t hurt people’s paychecks to try to become more effective,” Coletti said.“Was progress made? I would say yes. Do we need to do more? Yes. That’s the economic reality of it.”

What’s unclear is whether high costs are driving construction business else-where, and that’s a question that will be hard to answer while the industry is still struggling to recover from the reces-sion. Some argue New York City still has the advantage of being an attractive and lucrative destination for many people and companies.

“It’s a place where it costs a little more to build, but you also make a lot more money when you build here,” said City Councilman Mark Weprin, who chairs the zoning subcommittee. “It’s still the greatest city in the world, a draw for businesses and people who want to live here. That comes with the territory.”

On a global scale, New York City still is not completely off the charts. London, Tokyo and Sydney currently are more expensive places to build, while Beijing, Hong Kong and Dubai are cheaper, according to data from the Building Congress.

And for now, the city doesn’t appear to be losing its competitive edge, Cohen acknowledged, noting that new Class A offi ce-space development is being planned here on a scale that isn’t being done elsewhere in the country. But she warned that simply expecting New York to stay competitive just because it’s New York would be a dangerous mistake.

“We don’t want to let Houston overtake us or Chicago overtake us and, globally, London overtake us, or Shanghai over-take us,” Cohen said. “We’re not going to always be able to rest on the laurels of ‘We’re New York and everybody wants to be here.’ ”

Page 17: City  and State - December 19, 2011

SMConcrete Alliance, Inc.

A MEMBER OF THE

“On my projects, I need a workforce that is well trained, safety-oriented, and productive. I am proud to have the Local 46 Metallic Lathers and Reinforcing Iron Workers as my partners on the World Trade Center and many other projects. Together, we are building the future of New York City.”

Larry SilversteinPresident & CEO, Silverstein Properties, Inc.

REINFORCING STEEL

CAST-IN-PLACE CONCRETE

A SAFER NEW YORK FOR ALL OF US Local 46’s skilled craftsmen perform a major role inprotecting the safety of its members and…your job site.

1322 Third Avenue @ East 76th Street New York, NY 10021 Tel: 212-737-0500Fax: 212-249-1226 Email: [email protected]

STRONG • SAFE • SUSTAINABLE

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& REINFORCING IRON WORKERS

LOCAL

46

MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Page 18: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com18 DEcEmbEr 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

SPOTLIGHT:

Darryl TownsCommissioner, New York Division of Homes

and Community Renewal

Q: What is the Cuomo administra-tion doing to boost construction?DT: I think that Governor Cuomo has a sense of the tough economic times that we’re in, and has come up with this concept of regional councils to really help deliver economic develop-ment, even during difficult times, by connecting resources with transforma-tive projects and regional priorities, and this concept is allowing us to get the most value out of these projects. These projects are tied in to other activities, so it’s the region’s priorities. These are projects that can be transformative, and that of course puts people to work.

Q: How is the construction industry doing in the state?DT: There are absolutely signs of recovery. We have assured ourselves of having another tremendous building season by going through the [consoli-dated funding application] process. The whole New York Works package will also be a game changer in regards to putting together a billion dollars’ worth of funds focused on short-term improvements, which will help us in the long run in regard to attracting business investments back to New York’s various regions.

Q: Has HCR had to scale back?DT: I think the same way the state is doing—and certainly because of the leadership of the governor, that we are all being smarter. We have to be efficient. We have to make sure that the projects that we’re selecting are of a high caliber, that they’re passing this regional test. So even during tough times, it gives an opportunity to broaden our partner-ships to make sure we’re continuing to be successful in all of our missions, whether it’s creating additional afford-able housing or preserving the housing that we have. But we have been able to weather some difficult times and are excited about New York Works’ oppor-tunity to continue this mission, not only in regard to other public works but also in regard to affordable housing.

CaTharine youngChair, Senate Committee on Housing,

Construction and Community Development

Q: How is the construction industry doing?Cy: I think there may be pockets around the state where construction is going on, but my concern is to get the economy moving again, and I think we need to do everything we can on a state level to encourage construction projects.

Q: What can the state do to boost construction?Cy: We’re in the process of holding a series of roundtables to garner academic and industry ideas about how to best target affordable housing, especially in this era of shrinking governmental reve-nues. We’re very concerned about what’s happening on the federal level, because that will trickle down to the state, and it could impede our ability to be able to build more affordable housing. I hope to take those ideas and translate them into legislation that we can pass in 2012.

Q: What has been done already?Cy: We got the 421a property tax exemp-tion renewed, and that will provide tax incentives for people to invest in new construction. And I was able to get a similar bill for upstate, called 421m, and it could go far in helping to revitalize downtowns. The low-income-housing tax credits right now are coupled together for investors, and a way to really stimulate and open up the market to new investors is to bifurcate the state from the federal low-income-housing tax credits, which would make them more appealing, and hopefully get more people interested.

Q: Could a decline in public spending dampen the recovery in private construction in coming years?Cy: It’s tough to say, because we’re so impacted by the national economy. For example, in my district we have people who are wood manufacturers, who have been seriously affected by the fall in the housing market. So you see it all over the state. That’s why we have to be innova-tive about ideas, and that’s why I’m having these roundtables and I’m trying to get into the minds of the people who think about these issues every single day.

eXPerT rounDTaBle

The skyline of New York City can take your breath away. The buildings, tall and strong, scraping the sky, are magnifi cent to behold. So too are the miles of roads, bridges and mass transit that span across our metropolis and function as the veins for city’s heart of commerce.

Those buildings, roads and mass transit projects were built by BTEA contractors and with the hands of building trade union workers. It is a testament to BTEA construction companies, their exceptional project management staff and building trade union workers they supervise.

The New York City union construction industry – both the BTEA contractors and building trade unions – are the most sophisticated builders in the world. The only organization that represents union contractors, the BTEA is confi dent that we produce a superior product, in terms of project management skill, quality, safety and reliability.

Our track record speaks for itself. Just look at the incredible projects we have worked on in the last several years that have brought pride and acclaim to our city: Yankee Stadium, Citi Field, Madison Square Garden and the World Trade Center, just to name a few.

In addition to the quality of construction, our importance to the economic fabric of New York is unparalleled. The good jobs that we create provide the fi nancial support that allows a middle class to fl ourish in New York City. The middle class serves as an engine that drives the economy as a whole and makes this city a more prosperous place to live and work.

Moreover, our industry has always embraced new immigrant communities – bringing them into that middle class – and continues to do so. BTEA contractors keep encouraging minorities and women to enter the construction business to keep that tradition alive.

With that said, as times change we must continue to be productive and cost effective to maintain the jobs that will sustain New York as a 21st Century world-class City. The only way to do that is for contractors and labor to adjust to marketplace realities in order to generate the projects that will provide for the next generation of workers.

Taken together, BTEA contractors and their building trade unions can be seen as building both the physical and human infrastructure that make this town what it is. So the next time you look at the skyline, keep in mind not only the physical infrastructure, but the construction managers, general contractors, specialty trade contractors and building trade men and women who put them there.

BUILDING A STRONGER NEW YORK, ONE JOB AT A TIME

A Message from Louis J. ColettiPresident & CEO, Building Trades Employers’ Association (BTEA)

Building TradesEmployers’Association

www.bteany.com

Page 19: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE DECEMBER 19, 2011 19

LEROY COMRIEChair, New York City Council

Land Use Committee

Q: What can the city do to boost construction?LC: Right now in this negative economy, the main thing that could happen that would be helpful is to streamline the process so that developers and contrac-tors and builders can get their projects ready to ground-breaking as quickly as possible. The more we can do as a city to streamline the process, and expedite the layers of the process, and create more opportunity for building would be better. I’ve had developers tell me that projects, even with complete community support, still take six or seven years to get through the precertifi cation process. That just takes entirely too long.

Q: Have you seen any improvement by the city?LC: I’ve been asking both the Build-ings Department and the mayor’s offi ce of city planning to do more to stream-line their process so we can get more economic development done, which would generate revenue from construc-tion work. The mayor came out with an announcement recently about expe-diting thing with the Buildings Depart-ment. City Planning is computerizing more applications, and in the zoning process they’re looking at the precerti-fi cation process a little better, to come up with some clearer standards to make things faster for people, and more trans-parent. There are other communities that have full online processing for their applications. The city has adopted some of it. They haven’t adopted all of it.

Q: What are the risks if the city doesn’t do enough?LC: We have to do everything we can to encourage the development and rede-velopment of the city. It’s an economic engine that creates jobs, and every-thing we can do to keep that moving helps. We can’t be a stagnant city. We’re competing with major cities all over the world: Dubai, London, Hong Kong, China—even Australia is trying to develop a fi nancial sector. We have to do everything we can to stay a world-class city and compete with other cities.

ROBERT LIMANDRICommissioner, New York City

Department of Buildings

Q: How is the construction industry doing in New York City? RL: Things are looking up. Permits are up 6.7 percent year over year. New buildings are up almost 3.5 percent. Signifi cant alterations are up almost 6 percent. Demolitions are a precursor to large development or new devel-opment, and those are up by almost 10 percent. Those are all good signs. The other is stalled sites. Month over month we continue to see that number fall, and that number falling indicates to me that lenders and developers and foreclosures are getting worked out, and people are taking those jobs back on.

Q: What progress has your department made to reduce the bureaucracy?RL: We launched the Hub: No more lines, virtual reviews—and it is the fi rst time in the city’s history where we are accepting digital plans, which allows for lots of really great things to happen.

Q: How many people are using it?RL: We’ve had over 100 different projects come into the Hub. We have another 50 that are perched to show up at our door with their digital plans. The other piece is working on letting people digitally get a permit without ever showing up. We launched limited altera-tion permits for things like plumbing or fi xing a bathroom. You can now go online as a plumber, log in, answer, like, 10 questions, put in your credit card, and get your permit, and never show up at the department. Things being fi led digitally can lead to lots of effi ciencies on our side, but also effi ciencies with other city agencies. For example, there will come a time when you can submit it in one place and I can share with the two other agencies that need to see it. And you don’t need to go there and talk to them. This is a precursor of what I expect to see happening.

EXPERT ROUNDTABLE

CONSTRUCTION & DEVELOPMENT

For over 100 years, long before Occupy Wall Street pointed out the problems of income inequality and the disastrous results of a “race-to-the-bottom” economy, NY State’s Prevailing Rate Law (currently, NY Labor Law, Article 8, Section 220) has existed as bi-partisan, progressive, public policy that addresses the unique dangers posed when employers in the construction industry are left entirely to their own devices. Prevailing rate requires that construction workers on public projects are paid at a wage and benefit rate for their trade that usually matches the local union’s collectively bargained rates. However, bit-by-bit the Courts have emasculated prevail-ing rate requirements with a series of gaping loopholes. Currently, the construction work associated with items such as affordable housing, charter schools and industrial development escapes prevailing rate coverage while allowing owners, builders and contractors to reap the benefits of significant government subsidies. These loopholes need to be closed before the exceptions entirely subsume the rule.

The Construction Industry’s Race-to-the-BottomConstruction is a uniquely risky business for several reasons. First, many construc-tion businesses are merely empty shells designed to shield owners from liability but with little or no capital at risk. With respect to workers, the industry can be less than kind: a hyper-competitive, lowest bid, mentality creates a constant downward pressure on wages, benefits, training, safety, and, ultimately, quality. In addition, the casual labor pool is almost always filled to overflowing with hungry workers who possess uneven skill sets and education levels. Because individual workers lack any meaningful bargaining power, non-union employers hold ALL the cards. Even in the unionized sector, employers have extensive control over shaping their workforce since nearly all construction workers are employed “at-will.” These circumstances combine to fuel the industry’s race-to-the-bottom and are especially detrimental to workers and the public -- many of the tasks and tools associated with construction are inherently dangerous and cutting corners can be deadly.

Prevailing Rate is the Industry BackstopBy setting local wage and benefit floors in the public sector at the collectively bar-gained rates, prevailing rate helps stabilize the entire construction workforce and ensures that the public receives quality and value for their investment. Prevailing rate makes contractors compete on creativity, efficiency, quality and safety – and not on how little they can pay their workers. Conversely, contractors competing in the public sector are thus incentivized to invest in a highly skilled, safe and ef-ficient workforce. Prevailing rate even rewards those contractors who train their workforce through formal apprenticeship programs. These programs instill the value of hard work and have provided an indispensible pathway out of poverty for generations of workers.

On the other hand, the loopholes in prevailing rate have enriched many non-union shops working on government subsidized construction while their construction workforce earns poverty wages with no benefits and no formal training. Gov-ernment subsidies help insulate builders, developers and their trade contractors from market risk. Regardless of the merits of the government program (housing, schools, etc.), the leverage created by the government subsidies shouldn’t be used to drag down the entire construction market and turn decent, middle class construc-tion careers into dead-end jobs. Gradually, these exceptions to the prevailing rate law are consuming the rule in an industry with almost no market-driven backstops that can help protect both workers and the public. If we want to address the justifi-able concerns expressed by Occupy Wall Street over the economic disparity created by unbridled capitalism, we need look no further than simply closing the loopholes and putting some teeth back in New York’s prevailing rate statute in 2012.

Brought to you by:Bricklayers & Allied Craftworkers Local 1,

New York City and Long Island Labor-Management Committee.

Building a Better Prevailing Rate for Construction Workers

INTERNATIO

NAL

UNIO

N OF BRICKLAYERS AND ALLIED CRAFTWORKERS

LOCAL #1

NEW YORK

Page 20: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com20 DECEMBER 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

KEY PLAYERS

GOVERNMENT The MTA and the Port Authority have kept much of the New York City

region’s construction industry moving since the recession slammed private development. The MTA has $24 billion worth of projects in its fi ve-year capital plan, including the Second Avenue Subway and East Side Access, while the Port Authority has employed thousands of workers in rebuilding the World Trade Center site and its $3.1 billion main tower. In the Bloom-berg administration, Deputy Mayor Robert Steel and Economic Develop-ment Corporation President Seth Pinsky are major players in shaping the construction landscape, spurring development with projects like Hunter’s Point South and the competition for a new tech campus in the city. Other infl uential fi gures include Amanda Burden, chair of the New York City Planning Commission, and Deputy Mayor Howard Wolfson.

UNIONS Louis Coletti, the president and CEO of the Building Trades Employers’

Association of New York, represents 26 union trade contractors and is the go-to guy for negotiating contracts for contractors and the devel-opers. Gary LaBarbera, the president of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York, represents more than 100,000 union workers. Other key fi gures include Vincent Alvarez, president of the New York City Central Labor Council, and the AFL-CIO, the largest regional federation of public, private and building trade unions. The powerful union 32BJ is frequently involved in large development contracts.

ASSOCIATIONSThe New York Building Congress and its president, Richard Anderson,

play a visible role in advocating for the construction industry at the city level. The General Contractors Association of New York, headed by Denise Richardson, works to promote infrastructure investment statewide. The Real Estate Board of New York, the city-based group representing the real estate industry, also works closely with the construction industry.

THE ISSUES

PUBLIC SPENDING The biggest question going forward is public spending on construction and development.

Public work on major projects like the World Trade Center and the Second Avenue Subway has helped prop up the industry, making up more than 60 percent of the market in recent years, according to the New York Building Congress. But the level of spending may fall due to pressure on state and city capital budgets. In particular, funding for the MTA capital plan is in doubt, and any reductions in transit investment would be painful for the construction industry.

PRIVATE SPENDING If public spending declines, private work will become even more critical. Private construction

work has been on the rise, but not as fast as the industry had hoped. The forecast for the next few years is manageable, but the outlook for 2013 is a sharp decline, which could result in as few as 90,000 construction jobs in New York City, down from a high of 138,000, according to the New York Building Congress. Other spending by nonprofi t institutions like hospitals and universities has been fairly steady and could help buoy the industry.

LABOR COSTS One of the myriad factors behind New York City’s high cost of construction is labor. Union

leaders say higher wages for their skilled tradespeople are justifi ed by their higher productivity and robust safety record. Developers say those costs are infl ated by outdated and ineffi cient work rules. Project labor agreements, which standardize rules across a large development in exchange for moving forward without strikes, have cut costs somewhat, but unions and their employers disagree on how important they have been. The two sides were able to prevent a threatened strike by many trades this summer with last-minute concessions, but the tensions remain.

TOP STATE CONTRACTORS

1 Skanska USA

$1.96 BILLION2010 regional revenue

2 Turner Construction Co.

$1.91 BILLION2010 regional revenue

3 Structure Tone Organization

$1.35 BILLION2010 regional revenue

4 Lend Lease

$813 MILLION2010 regional revenue

5 Hunter Roberts Construction Group

$536 MILLION2010 regional revenue

Andrew Schwartz

SPOTLIGHT: CONSTRUCTION & DEVELOPMENT

Source: ENR New York

01/01 01/02 01/03 01/04 01/05 01/06 01/07 01/08 01/09 01/10 01/11

360

340

320

300

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STATE CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYMENT

HOURLY UNION PAY SCALES FOR SELECTED TRADES (SEPTEMBER 2010)

New York Boston ChicagoLos

Angeles PhiladelphiaSan

FranciscoWashington,

D.C.Carpenter $74.81 $61.97 $63.42 $49.47 $61.45 $60.83 $33.38CraneOperator $82.15 $61.10 $66.38 $57.23 $65.00 $60.67 $38.50Electrician $79.16 $66.25 $65.78 $59.63 $74.19 $75.06 $49.99Elevator Constructor $66.43 $68.47 $66.40 $69.00 $66.94 $79.34 $60.58Laborer $59.81 $49.60 $53.37 $41.42 $46.40 $41.95 $25.47Plumber $73.45 $68.20 $64.25 $57.18 $67.29 $83.44 $52.49

$77.32 $69.96 $67.23 $57.18 $71.06 $53.12 $52.38Structural Ironworker $85.11 $60.93 $71.45 $60.06 $72.85 $60.06 $42.13

Steamfitter

Source: 2010 3rd Quarterly Cost Report, Engineering News-Record, September 27, 2010(Note: Includes base rate plus unspecified fringe benefits.)

Sou

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via Regional Plan Association

Page 21: City  and State - December 19, 2011

Thank You Governor Cuomoand The new York STaTe LeGiSLaTurefor Your Public/Private Infrastructure Repair Fund and Your

Continued Recognition of the Value that Infrastructure

Development Projects Provide for New Yorkers.

District Council 9, IUPAT45 West 14th Street • New York, NY 10011Phone: 212.255.2950 • Fax: 212.255.1151www.dc9.net

Association of Master Painters and Decorators of New York, Inc.370 7th Avenue, Suite 418 • New York, NY 10001Phone: 212.697.4790 • Fax: 212.687.4401www.masterpaintersny.com

Page 22: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com22 DEcEmbEr 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

By Jon Lentz

A stalled effort to let industrial development agencies provide cheap financing for nonprofits

may soon be back on track, paving the way for them to provide a much-needed boost for construction across the state.

Legislation in the works in Albany aims to avoid the hurdles that stymied similar measures in recent years, freeing the IDAs

to help large nonprofits like hospitals and universities across New York—something they haven’t been able to do since 2008.

“Getting these projects unwound and online would certainly create a lot of construction jobs,” said Brian McMahon, executive director of the New York State Economic Development Council, which represents IDAs. “Many of those would be union construction jobs, and it would generate significant capital investment.”

Assemblyman William Magnarelli, who chairs the Standing Committee on Local

Governments, said his legislation would reauthorize IDAs to provide tax-exempt financing for nonprofits, and also require them to be more transparent.

But a set of controversial prevailing-wage requirements for IDA-financed proj-ects is likely to be discarded or scaled back. Unions have pushed to expand prevailing wages to some workers, such as janitors and cleaners, at employers located in those projects. The business

community has said that would raise costs and stall projects—and so far they have stalled broader reform efforts as well.

Those requirements, backed by orga-nized labor, were included in earlier legis-lation and were blamed for bogging down broader efforts at reform.

“What I’d like to do is at least get the ball rolling, and to take care of not-for-profits and allow them to use the IDAs as well, but also get into things about trans-parency and openness,” Magnarelli said.

New York has an estimated 114 IDAs,

which provide tax incentives to businesses to spur local economic development. Counties or municipalities set them up as public benefit corporations, many with only a few staffers. Some have overlap in staffing with the local government, but each IDA has its own board of directors and is intended to be independent.

Over the years IDAs have come under scrutiny for incomplete reporting, lack of transparency and questionable effective-ness. But efforts to reform the system and renew nonprofit financing have been tied up with the wage question.

“What we’re looking for is a system that’s more transparent—and that compa-nies are held accountable for creating good jobs,” said Matthew Nerzig, a spokesman for the building workers union 32BJ, which pushed for prevailing wages in past legis-lation. “Implicit with the notion that they shouldn’t be creating poverty jobs is some kind of wage higher than minimum wage.”

IDAs counter that wage requirements would drive up the cost of projects beyond the value of their incentives. Yet even without wage rules, IDAs may balk at further legislation to increase oversight, especially after the Public Authorities

Accountability Act of 2005 and the Public Authorities Reform Act of 2009 already instituted some stricter standards.

For McMahon, the main goal is renewing financing for nonprofits. When IDAs lost that authority in 2008, nearly $2.5 billion in nonprofit construction and expansion projects were put on hold, he said. Some of those projects have since found other financing, many through local development corporations created to fill the gap, but other projects have been unable to break ground.

Last week New York City took matters into its own hands and launched Build NYC, a new entity to offer tax-exempt financing for nonprofits. Earlier this year, the city said about 20 nonprofit capital projects totaling more than $400 million were on hold because they failed to secure financing.

But Magnarelli said his legislation would offer the best way forward.

“I would rather see it done through organizations that have a track record, that know what they’re doing, and that will be able to be monitored with proper legislation,” he said.

[email protected]

CALL TODAY! Free two week TRIAL-ID! (800) 356-6566 or (518) 455-7677

http://nyslrs.state.ny.us1450 Western Ave., Suite 310, Albany, NY 12203

Hi Frank, the final design has been approved!

Please send me the vectorized files of the logo,

including:

* With the grey text banner

* Without the banner (just the LRS)

* Black and white version

* Grayscale

* Inverse with box around it (for printing on dark

background)

Please send me an invoice for the $400 total payment

we owe you (it can be emailed to me). I have also

asked about you doing the lettering on our office

doors, and will let you know if that is a possibility.

Thanks again for all your help!

...Track Confidently!

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LRS not only saves you time...LRS makes the time to help YOU!

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SPOTLIGHT: CONSTRUCTION & DEVELOPMENT

ArreSTed deveLOPmenTA proposal to renew IDA financing for nonprofits could boost construction statewide

“Getting these projects unwound and online would certainly create a

lot of construction jobs.”

Andrew Schwartz

Page 23: City  and State - December 19, 2011

Made in America.

Making America for 50 years.

w w w . h a l m a r i n t e r n a t i o n a l . c o m

Design/Build • Highways • Airports • Mass Transit • Water & Power

Alexander Hamilton BridgeLargest Project in NYSDOT History

Halmar…building New York

for 50 years.for 50 years.on-schedule and under budgeT

Page 24: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.com24 DEcEmbEr 19, 2011 CITY&STATE

SPOTLIGHT: CONSTRUCTION & DEVELOPMENT

DESIgNINg AND BUILDINgNew legislation could spark more infrastructure construction across New YorkBy Jon Lentz

Thanks to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, contractors in New York are now allowed to both design

and build state construction projects, which supporters say could spur more construction and help fix up the state’s aging infrastructure.

The design-build clause was approved as part of Cuomo’s grand tax-reform bargain, but was lost in the shadows of larger reform of the state’s tax code. Unlike the current bidding process, in which a state agency designs a project and bids it out to contractors, the new design-build procurement authority will allow the state to bid out the Tappan Zee Bridge restora-tion and other megaprojects with only the general outlines, and award both the design and building to a single contractor.

Supporters say the new legislation will finally bring the state up to speed with modern procurement practices across the country, and cut costs by having a single entity carry out both roles more efficiently while avoiding costly design changes once projects have already broken ground.

“It’s a tool that they need to have that will help to advance the Tappan Zee Bridge, and there are lots of other places that it can be used,” said Felice Farber, director of external affairs for the General Contractors Association of New York. “With the cutback in state revenues and state in-house staff and state consulting work, there’s virtually no design work happening. So when we finally have the

money to build something, we’ll have nothing designed, and nothing sitting on the shelf.”

Public-employee unions have been leery of the change, since design-build procurement could take away construc-tion design jobs within state government. But Farber argued that the new legisla-tion would only create more private jobs.

“There should be a strong and healthy

state workforce that has design skills and the ability to do work in-house and to oversee design-build programs,” Farber said. “So it should not be something that takes away from in-house work.”

The procurement method is not ideal for every project, experts said, though it could boost construction across the state in some circumstances. But others said the advantages of using design-build procurement are more mixed.

Former Assemblyman Richard Brodsky said Albany will continue to be responsible for scoping projects, or setting out the initial framework for a project and finding a location. He warned that any efficiencies gained by having a state entity do both the scoping and design work would be lost, offsetting the gains from having a private party do both the design and the construction.

“Whatever efficiencies might exist by separating those two out, you lose the connection between the scoping people and the designing people,” he said. “On balance there’s no reason in the world not to try it. But it is by no means a magic bullet.”

[email protected]

Daniel S. Burnstein

Page 25: City  and State - December 19, 2011

Quality • Safety • Opportunity

BUILDITUNION.COM

A Culture of Corruption

HPD’s assistant commissioner for new construction was indicted and that’s only the beginning…

Workers are still being asked to kick back wages and HPD contractors have again been caught red-handed!

Just look at the list…how much longer can New Yorkers allow HPD to operate with corruption and

cheating as a mission statement?

Page 26: City  and State - December 19, 2011

Working With:• NY City Department of Transportation• NY City Metropolitan Transit Authority• Triboro Bridge and Tunnel Authority

Kieran Ahern • President • Dan O’Connell • General Counsel

• NY State Department of Transportation• The Port Authority of NY/NJ• NY State Bridge Authority

Page 27: City  and State - December 19, 2011

www.cityandstateny.comCITY&STATE december 19, 2011 27

BACK&FORTH

City & State: The governor is exploring legalization of full-scale casino gambling. Is that a good idea? Ray Halbritter: I think that New Yorkers are wise not to look any further than Atlantic City to remember what happens to cities that pin their hopes on the commercialized gambling industry, which is different than Indian gaming. It’s funda-mentally different because we are govern-ments that are obligated to invest our revenues and resources into our ancestral homelands and our surrounding commu-nities right here in New York, and that’s the real story about Indian gaming economi-cally. Other commercialized gambling companies will be siphoning their profits to far-flung shareholders, whereas Indian nations have a commitment and loyalty to our land, our people and our communities. We’re not going to outsource our jobs, nor will we relocate anywhere else. So that’s a fundamentally important difference.

CS: But the state’s nine racetrack casinos, which want expanded gaming, say half of their profits already go to funding public educa-tion, whereas Native American casinos do not contribute any money directly to the state.RH: These commercialized gambling interests have shareholders all around the world, and their money goes all over. Indian communities, their profits are 100 percent into the local business opportunity. For example, we have a payroll that exceeds $125 million a year; we spend more than $285 million in goods and services, and we’re not going to leave. We’re here for the long-term. This state has seen many companies leave when the economic climate changes, and these companies go wherever they can make the most profit. Indian governments are different than that. All of those revenues are spent in the local communities with our nation. Certainly we contract with companies that are outside the state, but that is our commitment.

CS: Can you summarize the Oneidas’ compact with the state that allows for gaming?RH: The compact, as it was negotiated and

agreed to, allows us to do gaming here. We pay millions of dollars toward the New York State Racing and Wagering Board to come and be on site 24 hours a day, as well as the state police to be on site 24 hours a day, as well. There’s an allocation to inves-tigate and license vendors and employees, and those obligations are something we agreed to and contracted for in our agreement. I’m sure some of the other agree-ments are very similar.

CS: Is there an exclusivity clause that prevents other casinos in the region?RH: We don’t have an exclu-sivity clause in our compact.

CS: How profitable is the Turning Stone casino? RH: I report our information to my people and my council, but it’s proprietary. We use our money as a government, so all of the money doesn’t go to individuals as they do in commercialized gambling. They go to our nation as a whole, and we pay for services for our members, for housing, health care, legal services for those that need it. We pay for our own court system, law enforcement, a police force. We take care of our own roads and our members and our children and elders, and just numerous responsibilities that governments do, as well as the fact that it alleviates that burden from local commu-nity organizations that need to take care of services like that for people that need. But we’re able to now fund those ourselves.

CS: How have you improved the economic status of the Oneidas?RH: We’ve been able to establish an educational fund that has helped our people, and a great [number] go back to college, go back to school and get degrees and advanced degrees. We’ve been able to provide housing for our members and for jobs for our members, and we’ve built a children’s and elders’ center that are housed in the same building so they’re

able to live and be with one another. We have existed here since time immemo-rial, and we are taught by our culture since time immemorial that when we are making decisions, to think in terms of the seventh generation in the future. That’s why our commitment here is that we will always be here. We won’t leave when the grass gets greener economically some-place else. All of our revenues are spent to look forward to future generations.

CS: Have you been in communication with the state or done any lobbying on this issue?RH: We haven’t. The commercialized gambling industry doesn’t have those commitments to our state. It’s a short vision to think about pinning your solutions on commercialized gambling. We don’t have to look any farther than Atlantic City to see what happens when we look to the commercial gambling industry as a solu-tion to economic problems. The commu-nity in Atlantic City has been victimized for decades by the gambling industry, that

depleted revenues from the city, leaving it crime-ridden, blighted and with an uncer-tain future. That industry is not obligated to care about the long-term future of communities where they locate. Their only operational concern is to exploit opportu-nities that promise the greatest immediate returns wherever they find them.

CS: Is nearby Vernon Downs a strong competitor to your casino?RH: It’s a harness racetrack, and they have VLT machines there. I think there’s enough base here for the guests here to work. We’re positioned differently.

They’re a racetrack. We’re a destina-tion resort with a spa and hotel, and we have a golf destination, we have championship courses, so we’re a destination resort. They’re basically a harness track with some VLTs. We’re positioned, really, as a prop-erty quite a bit differently.

CS: The state’s racinos, which want expanded gaming, have also criticized Atlantic City, but their argument is that the problem is the cluster of casinos in one location.RH: I don’t think that’s the issue. The issue isn’t that; it’s that commercial-ized gambling simply exploits the revenues wherever they can find them. They don’t invest in those communi-ties the way other businesses do. They don’t have that long-term commit-ment. That’s the false choice that New Yorkers are being asked to consider.

CS: Is there any possibility of a compromise?RH: Was there any middle ground reached in Atlantic City? There’s no middle ground. That’s how the industry works. Certainly the economy causes us to consider making a number of

choices, but New Yorkers don’t want to make a choice. If you’re going to make a choice, understand what exactly it is you’re getting into, and the realities—and I think when they understand that, I think they will make a different choice.

CS: How is your investment in film production going?RH: Some years ago we started a film-production company, and we’ve produced two animated features based on legends of our people that teach lessons to our chil-dren. So we animated these on film. We have now been involved in a film that is based on a book written about our Oneida Nation’s contributions in the Revolutionary War. Some of our people saved Marquis de Lafayette’s life during that campaign—and many other stories that have heretofore been unknown to the general public—but we are hoping to bring that feature to the general public some time in the future.

—Jon [email protected]

Native GamiNGRay Halbritter has spent decades investing in the Oneida Indian Nation, whose most prominent

business is the Turning Stone, the first legal casino in the state.Halbritter has been a representative of the Oneida Nation since 1975 and, since 1990, chief executive

officer of Nation Enterprises, which employs nearly 5,000 people, running the casino and its 285-room luxury hotel, a convention center and a championship-level golf course.

But the casino’s profits could be threatened in coming years as Gov. Andrew Cuomo builds support for full-scale gaming across New York. Halbritter argues that Native American establishments should continue to be the only option for Vegas-style gambling, since their profits are spent and reinvested in the state. And in keeping with the Oneida’s tradition of looking forward to the seventh generation in making decisions today, Halbritter tells City & State that Indians living on their own land will stay and keep their casinos open even in hard times, whereas other casinos would have no obligation to stay.

What follows is an edited transcript.

Photo courtesy of the Oneida Indian Nation

Page 28: City  and State - December 19, 2011

Some footprints are bigger than others

Each year, Americans recycle approximately 110 million tons of waste, but still

landfill 250 million tons more. Take that landfilled waste and turn it into energy

and you could power more than 11 million homes and offset 250 million tons

of greenhouse gases, the equivalent of pulling 41 million cars off the road.

Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. Recover Energy-from-Waste.

www.covantaenergy.com