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June 15, 2020

Welcome Captain Tolson!

The 68th Precinct has new leadership – Captain Andrew Tolson. 

The old captain was sent out to Canarsie.  Ta ta!

 

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 15, 2020

Bay Ridge Rose

 

 

 

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June 14, 2020

Today on Shore Road Bike Path

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 14, 2020

Marko Kepi Pushes for Businesses to Open

 

 

Source

 

Endorsed by Marty Golden, Marko Kepi has a full house at The Salty Dog. Kepi is running for Nicole Malliotakis’ empty Assembly seat.

 

 

Kepi calls out local officials for failing to lead. Senator Andrew Gounardes attended a protest with thousands of people, but isn’t calling for businesses to be opened. Gounardes is not social distancing in the photo.

 

Marko Kepi believes that people are losing their voices in Bay Ridge. Kepi placed a sign at the Pour House on 3rd Avenue and 79th Street.

 

 

 

 

Three hours later, someone stole the sign. 

 

 

 

 

 

Kepi says,”They can protest, but we can’t pray.   They can loot, but we can’t open up.” 

 

Marco Kepi said you won’t have to wait for a meeting with him.

 

 

 

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 14, 2020

White Nationalist Banner in Bay Ridge Again

 

White Nationalists placed a banner made from their mother’s bed sheet over the Belt Parkway again.

A mother in Bay Ridge had to remove the banner.   

Usually the group takes credit and posts pictures here  They haven’t shared anything yet.

The white sheet was painted with red and blue paint to make it look like it was patriotic. My uncles and father-in-law spent the early years of their life kicking Nazi’ butts. Putting up Nazi banners is unpatriotic.

These Nazi’s don’t get that their nonsense will not be tolerated here. 

 

 

 

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 14, 2020

St. A’s Graduation Service

 

 

St. A’s graduating class is very small, so they were able to incorporate them in an outside service with social distancing – so beautiful and thoughtful.

See here

 

 

 

 

 

 

Topics: Brooklyn | No Comments »

June 14, 2020

Government-Issued Bonds May Help Businesses

 

 

Ahmed is a Bay Ridge resident/small business owner and real estate broker. While local governments sit on their hands and wait for the Mayor, small businesses are closing. Soon we are going to see a problem for renter/landlords.  Our Councilman and the rest of NYC Council should be looking for a way to help business owners and not continue to wait on Mayor de Blasio. 

Ahmed shared his writing Facebook and I asked him if I could reprint it. Here it is:

Small business bill proposal, I’m not in politics but maybe worth a politician’s ear.

 

“We all can agree that small business owners are going through some sort of financial burden given the business climate the pandemic has created. It’s life, current events that no small business owner  forecasted.

 

I’m sure complying with new regulations will be something business owners will implement regardless of the resources they have access to. Some will wait until an inspector walks in to cite them for something they had no idea how to execute or knew about, but hoped keeping the doors opened will help allocate funds to make the changes to comply.

 

Safety is first, but what’s second to a business owner is to remain in business!

What’s third is to make sure you have a place to operate the business, which means the landlord is third. The gap between the second and third is a gray area which government shed no real guidance to clear up the lines. No real direction because their is no funding to black and white the disputes.

 

NYC is built off of small businesses, regardless if you choose to support a small business or not – the presence of a small business adds a certain ambiance to each neighborhood. As a real estate professional, I’ve seen residents sway towards a certain place to live because the yoga studio falls right into their lifestyle, or the art supply shop is opened on Sunday or even the doggy daycare is right around the block. It’s just what it is – small businesses do have an effect on everyday life. Even on a corporate business level, chains rely on “shopping districts” which are mostly made up by mom & pops think 3rd or 5th Avenue.

 

I’m not saying that every small business will fail, or every small business will flourish – I’m saying the gap between a tenant and landlord can be resolved by local government, without allocating more federal funds to save local businesses.

The main proposed solution is to issue NY government bonds. Sounds wild, but think about it? NY businesses were built off the hustle and bustle atmosphere, foot traffic, tourism, gatherings, etc. Taking away people by limiting capacity, now you’re running a NY business in a small town atmosphere, but still paying NY rent. The solution is safety – but at whose expense?

It shouldn’t be the landlord that just payed close to $2 mil for a mix use on the Avenue, nor the tenant that is paying a rent to make ends meet for both their living and the property’s capital rate- it should be a cost to the city.

Bonds, makes a good solution because the city can issue them today, recipients can use them to borrow money today, or sit on them for later, and cash them out when NYC is back to the city that doesn’t sleep. Small businesses, and landlords already believed in NYC, I’m confident that they’ll hang on even longer if local government believes better days will come.

 

Problem A: If you’re a tenant behind in rent, and you’re landlord has an outstanding mortgage

 

Proposed Solution: A1: A landlord can comfortably cover the mortgage payment while working out terms with current tenant. In exchange, local government will issue government bonds to that landlord, and those bonds will be cashed out years from today whenever “things are back to normal”. In the event a landlord can’t cover their mortgage, the landlord will now have another asset which is not a clapped out real estate property to use as collateral to pull out funding to keep the property afloat.

 

Solution: A2: The Mortgagor will have to accept payments on the back end of the mortgage where the tenant will do the same with their rent – this seems to be what’s on the table now, but no guidance to tenant if the property owner has accepted this solution. Tenant can still be burdened with a non payment lawsuit if landlord doesn’t extend the offering.

 

No Solution A3: The tenant defaults on the rent, the landlord defaults on mortgage – banks foreclosure on the property. A new owner purchases the property cheaply and  therefore can lease for cheap – a 2008 play.

 

The only federal help local government will need is to make sure the banks forbearance period will be carried out until the end of a tenants lease/mortgage maturity date – whichever comes first.

 

Problem B: If you’re a tenant behind in rent, and you’re landlord has NO outstanding mortgage

 

Solution 1B: Landlord can comfortably or not, cover all other bills while working out terms with current tenant. In exchange, the local government will issue government bonds to that landlord, and those bonds will be cashed out years from today whenever “things are back to normal.”  In the event a landlord can’t cover bills, landlord will now have another asset which is not real estate to use as collateral to pull out funding.

 

Solution 2B: The landlord should receive a property tax break for forgiving a small business’ rent indefinitely.

 

No Solution 3B: The landlord will bankrupt themselves at the expense of a failing business. As the rent paid by the tenant was their only source of income.

 

Problem C:  ou’re a tenant paying your rent during a pandemic although your business is struggling/failing.

 

Solution 1C: Government should issue bonds to the small businesses to be cashed out after “things are back to normal”.

 

Solution 2C: The government should forgive /reduce fines through our bureaucratic system – and offer no penalty compliance guidance to all small businesses.

 

Solution 3C: The Government should put all bureaucratic office representatives in one room, so guidance is a one stop shop for all businesses.

 

Regardless if you’re a tenant or a landlord, our local government needs to realize that we both make up our neighborhoods. We both invested capital, and ideas to beautify our streets, and offer a way of life in each one of our neighborhoods. It can’t be a blame game, it can’t be “you signed a lease” it can’t be “I have a mortgage to pay, you have to leave”.”

 

I’m a small business owner and a real estate broker – I’ve represented both landlords and tenants, one party trying to meet a certain cap rate, and another to find a place to make their dreams/ideas come to life. The grey area needs to be addressed by local government, persevere the ambiance our neighborhood developed, save investments and dreams by coming up with solutions that our local mom & pops can take advantage of.”

 

Ahmed ended with: “You heard it here first, come up with a way to issue government bonds to small businesses, or landlords – and the fear of loosing the New York lifestyle to a small town miles left or right will be saved.”

 

 

 

 

 

Topics: Uncategorized | No Comments »

June 14, 2020

Driving from Dyker Heights to Sunset Park

Someone shared their drive from Dyker Heights to Sunset Park. It’s almost Summer!

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights | No Comments »

June 13, 2020

Graduation Fireworks in Bay Ridge

 

 

 

BOOM!  A lot of fireworks are going off tonight for high school graduations!

Don’t be mad about the June fireworks, this years graduates haven’t had any type of celebrations due to the pandemic.  

Congratulations Class of 2020!

 

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 12, 2020

Andrew Gounardes Thought This is What Graduates Deserved

Andrew Gounardes thought it would be a good idea to hijack the Clap Because We Care for Essential Workers idea and make noise at 6:00 pm.  No one made noise at 6 pm – the neighborhood was quiet.   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 11, 2020

Bklyner Attempts to Change Bay Ridge’s History

Three years ago, Khader El-Yateem and Justin Brannan were both running to for the City Council seat to represent Bay Ridge/Dyker Heights.

El-Yateem gained a lot of media attention when he focused on having a plaque dedicated to Robert E. Lee removed. (See here) Very few people cared about the plague as it was attached to a tree outside of a church that was no longer being used.

El Yateem and Brannan protested for Fort Hamilton Army Base to change the name of some of their street signs. Governor Cuomo also agreed that the signs should be changed. (See hereJustin Brannan won the City Council seat and the statues at the Fort Hamilton Army Base were never mentioned again – not by politicians, civil groups or anyone. 

In 2017 and the start of 2018, NYC still discussed the removal of the Christopher Columbus statue. Brannan didn’t support the removal of the statue. (Source) Eric Ulrich had a bill which would require NYC Council to approval of any removal of statues on NYC property. Brannan joined the bill, but the bill didn’t go anywhere and is no longer active. (See here)

In 2019, Inez Barron had a bill  to create a task force to examine the monuments, statues, public art and historical markers on city-owned property. Justin Brannan did not co-sponsor the bill. The bill passed through City Council and was enacted, but Mayor de Blasio returned the bill unsigned.  (See) If this was important to the Mayor, wouldn’t he have signed it?

Fight Back Bay Ridge, Radio Free Bay Ridge, the socialists and all of the politicians forgot about the statues….because it was never about the statues.     

The Black Lives Matter Movement made people question statues and all of a sudden Councilman Brannan chimed in.

 

If this topic was so important why was it dropped?   Brannan hasn’t pursued it in any way for years!  When something is important, people talk about it. This would be like me not mentioning property taxes for years.

 

 

Surprisingly, Radiofree Bay Ridge knows no one has spoken about the topic for three years and they didn’t say a word about that. 

 

We were surprised to see Bklyner leave out most of the history of this issue. El-Yateem’s name wasn’t even mentioned in the article. The journalist failed to mention that this was a 2017 campaign issued and that no politician has mentioned the issue for years!

 

 

 

 

Why do journalist want to change Bay Ridge’s history with their articles? The history of this community is important to the people who live here. I sent a tweet to Bklyner and there was no response. Swaying articles in favor of politicians, who seek the media’s attention, instead of being committed to doing the work, doesn’t create an accurate picture.

 

 

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | No Comments »

June 10, 2020

Bay Ridge Boost 2

 

Joe Pally and South Brooklyn Food and Drink are bringing you Bay Ridge Boost 2.

These are good people helping out small business owners, who everyone loves and wants them to be able to stay open. Go grab a drink and some snacks……wear a mask when possible and practice social distancing.

 

 

Topics: Bay Ridge | 2 Comments »

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