|
Read
Section 4.1 of The
New York Times and Forest City Ratner's Atlantic Yards
Also
note that there are no government signatories on the CBA
(Even though Mayor
Bloomberg misled the public into believing that he signed
the agreement)
Of the eight signatories to the CBA:
BUILD has been paid $5 million by FCR.
ACORN will receive the housing management conracts.
Four of the groups are unincorporated.
Two were created solely to support the Ratner proposal.
All CBA signers are contractually obliged to promote
and support the Ratner proposal both in the media and at public
hearings/meetings.
Timeline:
December 10, 2003 - Bruce Ratner unveils his Brooklyn
Atlantic Yards (BAY) Development Proposal
January 23, 2004 Ð Assemblyman Roger Green
announces the creation of BUILD
March 4, 2004 Ð BUILD Announces support for
Ratner BAY Project
August, 2004 Ð BUILD begins its "CBA" negotiations
with FCR
December 20, 2004 Ð BUILD files 1023 form for 501c3
status with IRS, indicating $5 million payment from Ratner
June 27, 2005 Ð BUILD, 7 other groups, and Ratner
sign CBA, with Mayor Bloomberg, Assemblyman Green, Public
Advocate Gotbaum, Borough President Markowitz, and other elected
officials as witnesses. (Nine
days before MTA bids were due.)
CBA
is held up as historic The
show "BUILDing
a CBA" airs on Time Warner channel 56 and Cablevision
channel 69
FCR:
"We
do hope to set a new precedent for development in New York
City," said a spokeswoman today for Forest City
Ratner Companies, the project's developer. Inspired by an
agreement related to the development of Staples Center in
downtown Los Angeles, "the Atlantic Yard community
benefits agreement is believed to be the first of its kind
on the East Coast."
BUILD
president: James Caldwell: "Our CBA heralds a
long needed change in the paradigm for how development occurs
in our community. We believe that Mr. Ratner, his company
and this project are gifts from God to our community."
––June 24, 2005, letter of support for FCR,
for bid submitted to the MTA.
CBA signing Attendees:
Bloomberg, Markowitz, Roger Green, FCR, Signatories
Opponents,
members of the community, forbidden from attending:
The agreement
signing ceremoney was hosted underneath the Brooklyn Bridge,
nowhere near the Prospect Heights part of Brooklyn where the
project would be built.
"It
was an effort to keep away the community because the community
is not a party to this agreement," said City Councilwoman
Letitia James. "This is not a community benefits agreement,
this is a private benefits agreement that will benefit a handful
of individuals."
"We
were not able to go to this community benefits agreement,"
added another. "The police were threatening us to walk
over this line onto public property."
Bloomberg
misleadingly claimed to sign the CBA, when he actually
did not sign it.
Photographs and coverage:
Photos
here and here.
Endorsers of the CBA
The CBA
has a large number of community, business and sports organizations
"endorsers."
The existence
of some of these groups are questionable, whether many of
them have even seen the CBA is questionable, and the endorsement
of these groups needs to be questioned in light of the information
that a $5 million bribe was paid to BUILD months before the
CBA was signed.
QUESTION:
Do all the endorsers exist? How many of them have not seen
the CBA? Were any cash incentives given for endorsement? How
many endorsers will withdraw their endorsement in light of
this new information?
The CBA
also has been "endorsed" by 25 elected officials
at the city, state and federal levels.
QUESTION:
Will the elected official withdraw their endorsement of the
CBA in light of this new information that the CBA negotiations
with BUILD were a charade, that there is no real community
involement in the CBA and that it is a hoax?
While
no new information has been obtained on ACORN, will the CBA
endorsers withdraw their support now that the affordable housing
component has been reduced from 50% to 31%? In the CBA it
is written:
VI.b.(1): The Project Developer will make 50% of the residential
units built at the Project affordable" However, the
scoping
document released on September 16, 2005, indicates
that only 2,250 out of 7,300 housing units, or 31% will be
made affordable.
In
particular, the following quotes are noteworthy:
Mayor
Bloomberg: At a
press conference at Fulton Ferry Landing Monday morning
to announce the creation of a community benefits agreement
(CBA) between Ratner's Forest City Ratner Companies and a
handful of community groups, the
mayor interrupted Ratner, who was answering a question
about the enforceability of such a non-governmental document.
"I would add something else...even more importantly,
you have Bruce Ratner's word," he said. "That
should be enough for you and for everybody else in the community."
Borough
President Marty Markowitz: Markowitz
praised the CBA and the project, stating, "Once
again Brooklyn sets the standard for urban America."
"Other
attempts at community benefits agreements have been made in
the past, but this agreement is so comprehensive and far-reaching
that it puts Brooklyn in a class by itself, at the forefront
of the corporate responsibility movement. Since I convened
the very first meeting of the CBA coalition at Borough Hall
last August, the members have worked tirelessly together,
through every disagreement and tough negotiation, keeping
their eyes on the greater good. They have created something
truly wonderful for their communities by keeping every member
at the table to work out their differences."
Public
Advocate Betsy Gotbaum: "The [Community Benefits] agreement is ... unprecedented in
our city"
–– June 24, 2005, letter of support for FCRC,
for bid submitted to the MTA.
(Note: the Public
Advocate also believes that Mr. Ratner will not use eminent
domain at Atlantic Yards.)
City
Comptroller William Thompson: "I also am impressed
by the CBA between FCR and numerous community groups... I
urge your support of FCR's BAY proposal."
-- July 1, 2005, letter of support for FCR, for bid submitted
to the MTA.
Involvement
of community boards and borough president's office
The Brooklyn Borough President's Office played a formative role
in the development of the agreement and local Community Boards
2, 6 and 8 played an advisory role.
There
are also records indicating that FCR
spent hundreds of thousands of dollars lobbying Community
Boards 2, 6 and 8:
|