Complaint Box | Powerless in Brooklyn

Marty Markowitz, Brooklyn’s borough’s president and champion of his home turf. Diane Bondareff for The New York Times Marty Markowitz, Brooklyn’s borough president and champion of his home turf.
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Of the boroughs outside Manhattan, Brooklyn gets the most buzz — as a tourist attraction, a “hipster brand” and an incubator of art and artisanal products. That has provoked a backlash from longtime Brooklynites and others wary of smugness from the borough’s Brownstone Belt.

However entertaining these debates, Brooklynites — and, I dare say, all of us in the non-Manhattan boroughs — share one common problem: we’re essentially powerless. We lack meaningful local government, as well as broad-based media and civic organizations.

Marty Markowitz, the borough’s president and its relentless cheerleader, says that Brooklyn has nearly everything a city needs and that fulfillment will arrive when a professional sports team, the Nets, finally moves to an arena here in 2012 or 2013.

If only that were true. While Brooklyn, if independent, would be the country’s fourth-largest city by population, it has lacked a boroughwide daily newspaper since The Brooklyn Eagle shut down in 1955, the victim of a strike and the changing economy.

It is tough for a daily to serve Brooklyn’s fragmented neighborhoods and economy successfully or profitably. Moreover, the city’s three Manhattan-based daily newspapers have tiny Brooklyn bureaus, so the lament of Paul Moses, a former New York Newsday columnist and now a professor at Brooklyn College, remains true: “Nowhere in the country do so many people get so little local coverage.

Thus, Brooklyn’s powerful developers, institutions and politicians often evade scrutiny. While local blogs and community weeklies do their part, the latter have been diminished. After Rupert Murdoch bought the independent weekly Courier-Life chain in 2006, its rival, The Brooklyn Paper, trumpeted its independence, only to suffer the same fate — a Murdoch takeover — three years later. The papers have since moved into the same building, cut the staff and published many of the same articles. In my blog, AtlanticYardsReport.com, I’ve observed how The Brooklyn Paper has muted once-tough coverage and editorial criticism of Mr. Markowitz’s beloved arena project, Atlantic Yards, which is being developed by the newspapers’ landlord, Forest City Ratner.

During a little-noticed hearing of the city’s Charter Revision Commission in June, Gerald Benjamin, a professor at the State University of New York at New Paltz, made a trenchant observation: “The fundamental principle in this city is that there’s no real local government.”

Not only are city agencies mostly centered in Manhattan, but community boards, the purported voices on local planning issues, have tiny budgets and only advisory votes, though they serve areas larger than some upstate cities. Some at the charter hearings have suggested that community boards deserve larger budgets and professional planners, with the City Planning Commission giving greater weight to their advisory votes. The charter commission chose not to take a deeper look.

Brooklyn has a few academic research groups, but they’re quiet, or focused on specific issues. While established neighborhood organizations and new groups do address local controversies like bike lanes, and labor and religious groups sometimes flex their muscles, they haven’t meshed into a boroughwide network.

Citywide good-government organizations, meanwhile, like the Municipal Art Society and the Citizens Union, do not — or cannot — pay too much attention to Brooklyn.

The upshot? While Brooklyn may make a neat T-shirt slogan and be shorthand for culinary innovation, such a focus on consumption and authenticity gives a pass to the powers that be.


Norman Oder, a resident of Park Slope, Brooklyn, writes the Atlantic Yards Report blog and recently left Library Journal to work on a book about the project.

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Thank you for this piece, it is so true. It’s like some kind of backwater where things get done with little scrutiny. Take for instance the way judges are selected in Kings County: up until five years ago, you could buy a seat on the bench for $75,000.

Dyker Park Truthsayer January 21, 2011 · 9:19 am

Perhaps to Mr. Oder Brooklyn “may make a nice T- Shirt slogan” but for hundreds of thousands of its’ best and brightest, who for the most part, did not grow up in Brownstone Brooklyn, but actually were reared, and got their values in places like Bensonhurst, Borough Park
( prior to the Hasidic takeover of it ), and Flatbush, there is probably no better place on this planet to come from! To the naysayers, just look at the record?!

In no way can the local Community Boards in Brooklyn be counted upon to represent the local citizenry.

Community Boards in Brooklyn differ from their Manhattan counterparts in composition. Ours are wholly owned subsidiaries of the people who appoint them. No politician in the Center of the Universe, (Manhattan) would dare refuse to renew the appointment of a Community Board member who disagreed with his or her position.

Here in Brooklyn the Borough President and the individual Council Members brook no opposition. Should a Community Board member express a contrary opinion — no matter how slight – he or she will not be reappointed.

A gentle reminder to all the commenters who are saying “Yes, I agree!” to this post —

Bear this in mind next time Marty Markowitz is up for re-election. He’s only there because he keeps getting re-elected; as powerless as we feel now, we at least have the power to vote him out.

Very good points. And sadly true.

“It is tough for a daily to serve Brooklyn’s fragmented neighborhoods and economy successfully or profitably.”

“While established neighborhood organizations and new groups do address local controversies like bike lanes, and labor and religious groups sometimes flex their muscles, they haven’t meshed into a boroughwide network.”

Well there you have it.

“Nowhere in the country do so many people get so little local coverage.”

They still get more coverage that NJ. Where else do you have a population of almost 9 million people and yet all of your media is basically out-of-state?

Great piece and analysis – and the source of the strong political clubs I remember growing up,
However for those of us “from Brooklyn” Brooklyn is mostly nostalgia and Manhattan continues to be “the City”
The neighborhoods that give Brooklyn its hip-oise are the ones our families couldn’t wait to leave.

Just as Mr. Oder, through his blog, and his cohorts held up the Atlantic Yards project for six-plus years with their protest of the gentrified over working-class Brooklyn, he misses there are other independent papers such as Our Time Press, the 15-year-old weekly out of Bed-Stuy. As a former reporter for Courier-Life, who covered the project since its inception, I’m also writing a book about the project which saterizes the opposition to it.

I’ll say! What a fall from grace at the Brooklyn Paper. They went from the award winning coverage of “It’s not just the Nets” with their analysis of how development ran too rampant to a newspaper that obsesses over Prospect Park geese and wacko, fake-O “trolley king” Bob Diamond. Not much real coverage anymore…

sad, and bad for the borough.

Case in point: Tourist helicopters are turning the harbor into a war zone. We in Brooklyn Heights, Cobble Hill, Dumbo, Williamsburg and Red Hook, complain non stop about the horrendous noise from these helicopters circling the harbor, flying over the new park and destroying the peace and quiet of our neighborhood. The noise of the helicopters idling on their pad on the East River and buzzing the Brooklyn Bridge, can be heard in downtown Brooklyn. We take our kids to the park and can’t have a conversation with them due to the helicopter noise. The city government passes the buck to the EDC. The EDC does not give a rat’s ass about us or about the peaceful enjoyment of watching the sunset from the promenade or the new Brooklyn Bridge Park or the park behind Fairway. They only care about whatever pittance of money these flights bring in. We have a noise ordinance which covers noise from outside, permeating our homes. No one pays any attention to this noise ordinance. If I have a noisy AC unit I can be told to replace it. But we can’t get heard re these totally unnecessary invaders. The helicopters are being protected by our city government. Maybe the Times should look into why. Does the mayor use a helicopter to get from City Hall to his plane in Teeterboro every weekend? It’s certainly conveniently located.

Perhaps this explains the continued failure of our sanitation department to pick up trash on scheduled days, even when there’s no snowstorm, the free reign that developers have had in many neighborhoods, the recent fiasco over unplowed streets, etc. The 311 phone service is hilariously useless in most cases; it increasingly seems to have been created to keep the city from having to deal with any specific issues.

If the headline were simply “Powerless Brooklyn” it would also represent an allusion — to Jonathan Lethem’s great novel “Motherless Brooklyn.”

You’re absolutely right, and congratulations for lifting the tone of this topic from the usual. Unfortunately, though, this is just a microcosm of the national zeitgeist. We’re all being Murdoched.

more “coverage in NJ.”

It’s true that New Jersey, like Brooklyn, gets the short end on television news coverage. But as a former AP reporter in NJ, I saw first-hand that local newspaper coverage there is far more comprehensive than in Brooklyn. Here is one example: car insurance is frequently a campaign issue in NJ because the newspapers, especially the Star-Ledger, insist on it. Brooklyn is known for the highest rates in the country (at least according to a mostly ignored report by the borough president a few years back) but it’s never become much of an issue because it gets little coverage.

I do see a little bit of improvement in the past few years, mainly because so many Times reporters and editors have moved to Brooklyn.

Brooklyn is also very transient with most people not sticking around to see how things shake out.

Of course, Brooklyn–at least the gentrified part of it–can rely on the Times itself for coverage. I noted without surprise that the author hails from Park Slope.

@ lsh “However for those of us “from Brooklyn” Brooklyn is mostly nostalgia and Manhattan continues to be “the City”
The neighborhoods that give Brooklyn its hip-oise are the ones our families couldn’t wait to leave.”

Well said.

No awards for The Brooklyn Paper? That’s simply not true:

//www.brooklynpaper.com/stories/34/3/34_3_snaawards.html

Our consistently high-quality coverage of our neighborhoods speaks for itself. Norman Oder, alas, does not.

GERSH KUNTZMAN
Editor
The Brooklyn Paper

I was just having a conversation about why Brooklyn, as large as it is, isn’t independent of NYC. Why does Brooklyn continue to play 2nd fiddle to Manhattan. Granted with Broadway, Wall St., Harlem, UES, UWS, etc. giving Manhattan its popularity and distinction, there needs to be a campaign underway to attract more tourists and business. There’s already Ikea, Fairway, Lowes, Home Depot and great neighborhoods like Park Slope, Carrol Gardens, Dumbo, Brooklyn Heights, but as more businesses flock to Brooklyn (Whole Foods, maybe Walmart), it stands to reason that Brooklyn should do what it can to attract even more business and industry, taking advantage of its great population. If Marty Markowitz doesn’t want to lead, he should move out of the way. Along with newspapers, Brooklyn needs a powerful website featuring all the attractions, restaurants, shopping opportunities, tourist sites, etc. If we can have our own professional basketball team, why not baseball and football too. I think Brooklyn should stop acting like the ugly step sister and take the reins to be the great city it is meant to be.

I urge you to go to BrooklynPaper.com and click on the margin link that says “Atlantic Yards”. As Gersh Kuntzman says, our coverage speaks for itself.

//www.brooklynpaper.com/sections/news/development/atlantic_yards/

To respond to comments from the Brooklyn Paper, see for example a post on my blog from yesterday:
//atlanticyardsreport.blogspot.com/2011/01/in-brooklyn-hyperlocal-news-gets-boost.html

(In 2008, the Brooklyn Paper thought it was big news that Forest City Ratner lied about Frank Gehry being born in Brooklyn. Now more significant lies regarding Marty Markowitz on EB-5 and KPMG on the AY timetable get ignored.)

Also the only time we see or hear from our Council person or Congressional Rep in Bed- Stuy is election time.

Wow, Stephen Witt, there’s a blast from the past. Mr. Witt distinguished himself by doing, hands down, the worst and most biased “reporting” of any journalist on the Atlantic Yards beat.

And Our Time Press? Well yes, they are among Brooklyn’s small independent papers, has a claimed circulation of 20,000
in a borough that would be America’s fourth-largest city. So, unwittingly, as it were, Mr. Witt reinforces Mr. Oder’s point while attempting to contradict it.

As for “saterizing” the opposition, Mr. Witt always did a very good job of satirizing himself.

I am writng in response to the article Powerless in Brooklyn. The Article offers an insigt into the Broken system called New York City Government and Brooklyn.

New York is dominated by the ultra powerful real estate industry. The positive side of the one industry dominated city, The creation of beautiful neighborhoods across the five boroughs of the city.

However the Negative side this industry is responsible for race baiting, displacement, overdevelopment, corruption or better yet lack of political representation. rising homeless population and foreclosure rates. The Selection process for Judges is a complete joke. Lack of meaningful employment. Corporations leaving midtown because they need a subsidy to pay the citys rents, the ever popular we give a corporation a tax break to hire unqualified workers for a low wage,
the Brooklyn Democratic Party County Leader is a rite of passage for federal charges. The largest contributors to political candidates running in New York State is the Real Estate Industry.

Living in Brooklyn is like riding the prison transport plane in the Movie Con Air. The turnover rates for Brooklyn residents is high because of the overpriced rents, unfortunantly created by young individuals who were willing to pay the overpriced rents. The Bloomberg administration successfully acquired Brooklyn, with the Borough President leading the cheers for Bruce Ratner to build the Nets stadium by any means necessary. There is no coincidense that the administration has tried to get rid of community boards, Brooklyn and Queens residents don’t need to be able to addresss it’s government according to our publicly elected Emperor, aka Iron Mike Bloomberg.

The Industry has deleted the local newspapers in Brooklyn. Intelligent readers have to look online at blogs now as a source of biased and unbiased news reporting. If you are conservative you read the New York Post, which is not half bad covering Washington Politics, If you are liberal you consult the New York Times. Brooklyn has no real representation. Personally I miss the past tough coverage from newspapers of the Old Brooklyn Paper and Star Newspapers.

The Bottom Line is most Brooklyn residents are so busy trying to survive in New Jack City. The Solution requires a wholesale overhaul of the New York State and City Constituion. A daunting task because the Leaders of the Legislative branches of Governmnets, are Kings unto themselves. How can anyone accomplish such a task if they are making $ 7:50 to $10.00 an hour, However Spider Man can get a job in New York

Sincerely

Dan