So Where Does the Mayor Stand on 2nd Avenue Relief?

July 17, 2009



Looking south from corner of East 94th St. and Second Ave. Photo courtesy of The Launch Box.

Does the Mayor care about Second Avenue’s small businesses or doesn’t he?

Back in February, at a press conference to mark the beginning of construction on the MTA’s Number 7 train extension project, Mayor Bloomberg made a point of talking about the suffering of small business owners in the Second Avenue Subway construction zone:

“[The construction] is literally destroying every business on Second Avenue,” the mayor said at a press conference intended to show off a 100-ton cutting head that was to begin churning out the West Side extension for the 7 train.

“It is an economic disaster for the people who have stores and restaurants on Second Avenue and we have to find something to do for them.”

I am all too familiar with the disaster facing small business owners in the Second Avenue Subway project area. The new subway line will be great for New York in the long run, but the construction process is devastating the neighborhood. These small business owners are being asked to sacrifice on behalf of the public interest, and we owe it to them to find a way to help weather the storm.

This is why I sponsor legislation (A.3949/S.1393-Serrano) to provide targeted relief to small business owners, by giving their landlords an incentive to lower their rents. My bill gives property tax breaks to building owners in the construction zone if they renegotiate leases at lower rates for small business tenants. This bill gives Second Avenue’s businesses a a fighting chance, and in tough economic times it will help preserve the city’s tax base by working to prevent the shuttering of a once-dynamic commercial neighborhood.

The relief bill passed the Assembly last month, and for the second time in two years. But yesterday, Mayor Bloomberg instructed Republican State Senators to oppose the legislation, and without any GOP support, the measure could not come to a vote.

If the Mayor recognizes that the construction is an “economic disaster” for Second Avenue, and says that “something” should be done to aid the suffering businesses, why is he standing in the way of actual efforts to help?

Comments

2 Responses to “So Where Does the Mayor Stand on 2nd Avenue Relief?”

  1. From the Blogroll XVI: Time for a Commerical-Theater Break « Clyde Fitch Report on July 20th, 2009 6:22 am

    […] the blog of New York State Assembly Member Micah Kellner, Micah Kellner asks why Mayor Bloomberg says he wants to provide fiscal relief to shopowners along […]

  2. Under Bloomberg’s thumb, Senate GOP kills Second Ave. tax abatement :: Second Ave. Sagas | A New York City Subway Blog on July 22nd, 2009 12:01 pm

    […] on the fallout from the bill’s failure. Kellner and the Upper East Side business owners are angry at the Mayor. Meanwhile, the State GOP and Bloomberg claim they still support businesses impacted by the […]

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