Friday, 14 October 2011

Public Space, Private Rules: The Legal Netherworld of Occupy Wall Street

The New York Police Department's announcement that officers will remove Occupy Wall Street protesters from Zuccotti Park at 7 a.m. tomorrow is a reminder that the movement was lucky to stumble into that location. Had the protest begun almost anywhere else in New York City, it almost certainly would have been shut down far sooner.
The three-plus-week-old protest has allowed New York to make use one of its least effective policies. Zuccotti Park is one of New York’s 500-plus “privately owned public spaces,” but most are so useless and unattractive that no one even thinks of them as parks at all.
The POPS program was creating in 1961 to add much-needed park space to Manhattan’s unrelenting street grid. The city offered a deal to real estate developers: create a public space on your property, and earn the ability to extend the building 20 percent higher. Zuccotti Park—originally known as Liberty Park before it was renamed after the CEO of its corporate owner—was built in 1968 under such an agreement.
Developers were quick to jump on the opportunity to squeeze more space (and thus profit) into Manhattan’s expensive, narrow land plots. Some buildings created two spaces: Zuccotti Park, for example, was built as part of the deal to construct 1 Liberty Plaza, across Liberty Street. That building got its height bonus for putting a typically useless and unattractive “plaza,” ringed with concrete pillars, around the structure itself. But in exchange for further special zoning permits, such as an exemption from a requirement that the building be set back for light and air, the company also built the park across the street.
For many years, the city government imposed no requirements on how the spaces were to be designed and decorated. Unsurprisingly, developers took that as license to do as little as possible. Thus, many POPS are nothing more than an empty swath of concrete in front of an office tower, breaking up an aesthetically consistent row of buildings. For examples of POPS at their worst, check out Park Avenue in Midtown or the building across Broadway from Zuccotti Park. A 2007 study by the New York City Department of City Planning, the Municipal Art Society and Jerold Kayden, a professor of urban planning at Harvard, found that 41 percent of POPS "are of marginal utility." At the other end of the spectrum, only "16 percent of the spaces are actively used as regional destinations or neighborhood gathering spaces..."
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Ben Adler @'GOOD'

Facing Eviction, Protesters Begin Park Cleanup

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka On Occupy Wall Street and Mayor Bloomberg

The following is a statement by AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka on October 13, 2011
Mayor Bloomberg runs the risk of standing on the wrong side of history tomorrow. It is clear that what is being threatened in Zuccotti Park is nothing but silencing the voices and stomping out the rights of Americans. Participants in Occupy Wall Street are now in their fourth week of declaring that “we are the 99 percent” because our system is desperately, decisively out of whack—the top one percent is pocketing massive profits and dominating our politics while everyone else struggles to make ends meet. It is shocking that Mayor Bloomberg feels like that’s a message that needs to be silenced. The AFL-CIO stands with Occupy Wall Street and the 99 percent of Americans just trying to level the massively unequal playing field.
Via
MoveOn.org 
BREAKING: "The park is clean. If the mayor wants to do something for America, he should clean up Wall St." -.

Ex-NYPD cop sued for allegedly acting as pimp to a 13 year old

A teenage girl is suing a former New York City police detective who allegedly forced her to work as a prostitute. The lawsuit says Wayne Taylor, a former narcotics detective, forced the young runaway to work as a prostitute from the age of 13. The New York Post reported. She is suing Taylor and the New York Police Department for $25 million.
Taylor, who pleaded guilty to attempted kidnapping, served 3 1/2 years in prison before he was released in January, the newspaper said.

Meet Rick 'the Hipster Cop'

Via
Via
Chatting w/ Tom Morello @ #OWS
Via


Aaron Stewart-Ahn 
goddamn let's pitch this to CBS as a procedural
Aaron Stewart-Ahn 
episode 2, he goes undercover in fixie bicycle gang. Episode 3, special guest appearance by Vampire Weekend.
(Thanx to Adrian Chen!)
More with a twist in the tale!!!

Fight War Not Wars

The night before the burial of her husband 2nd Lt. James Cathey of the United States Marine Corps, killed in Iraq, Katherine Cathey refused to leave the casket, asking to sleep next to his body for the last time. The Marines made a bed for her, tucking in the sheets below the flag. Before she fell asleep, she opened her laptop computer and played songs that reminded her of "Cat", and one of the Marines asked if she wanted them to continue standing watch as she slept.
"I think it would be kind of nice if you kept doing it" she said.
"I think that's what he would have wanted".
- Bring our troops home
Via
(Thanx Chris!)

Black Cab

Black Cab (band)
Next Cab show with Sand Pebbles at Phoenix Public House (Sydney Road) Sat Oct 22nd. . New cuts plus old cuts revisited
Image: Black Cab's setlist from the gig at Cherry a week ago
(Photo:TimN)
I'll be there, will you?

Sir Richard Branson: The truth about my secret plan to get rid of Mugabe

Beth Orton - Live PA, Södra Teatern, Stockholm, SE: P3 Live - SR 1999-09-19


Performers:
Howard Gott: Violin
Sarah Willson: Cello
Ted Barnes: Guitars
Sean Read: Keyboards
Sebastian Steinburg: Bass
Matt Johnson: Drums
Tracklist:
01 [00:00] "Love Like Laughter" (3:15)
02 [03:15] "Stars All Seem To Weep" (4:32)
03 [07:47] "Best Bit" (4:32)
04 [12:19] "Pass In Time" (7:40)
05 [19:49] "She Cries Your Name" (4:56)
06 [24:45] "Sugar Boy" (4:17)
07 [29:02] "Sweetest Decline" (4:46)
08 [33:48] "Stolen Car" (4:19)
09 [38:07] "Central Reservation" (5:30)
10 [43:37] "Touch Me With Your Love" (5:58)
11 [49:35] "I Wish I Never Saw The Sunshine" (5:09)
Via
Naomi Klein 
After cops raided and tossed their stuff in the dump, garbage workers returned it to the protesters, saying "we r 99 % too"

Magazine Is an iPad That Does Not Work

Bear in mind that an iPad is a magazine that doesn't fold (and isn't there something a little sad that the kid doesn't seem to enjoy the cheaper things in life?) Spaceboy at that age loved playing with cardboard tubes and the like...

#OccupyMelbourne (15-10-11 City Square 10AM)

Info

#OccupyWallStreet (Planned Service Changes)

From afar looks like an ordinary MTA service announcement, but look closer: #OccupyWallStreet
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Occupy Wall Street's Liberty Plaza Technically A 'Bonus Plaza', Not Private Property

Photo: Mat McDermott
In case your wondering how a private company, Brookfield, can claim authority to kick out Occupy Wall Street from Liberty Plaza (Zuccotti Park) so that it can be cleaned, it's important to understand the legal status of the space. Benjamin Shepard, an Assistant Professor at the City University of New York, tells us that Liberty Plaza is technically a "bonus plaza"--a green space required under the zoning regulations governing the nearby 1 Liberty Plaza building.
In a piece from September 28th on his blog, Shepard quotes Anne Schwartz:

There are 503 such privately-owned "public spaces" in 320 buildings in New York...They owe their existence to zoning laws, passed in 1962 and amended numerous times since, that allowed developers to build taller structures, in exchange for creating and maintaining plazas, atriums, passageways, and other spaces, all supposedly open to the public. Together, they amount to 82 acres, one-tenth the size of Central Park. In exchange, developers were permitted to add on an extra 16 million square feet of floor space.
The piece goes on to say, because these spaces were essentially given to the public in exchange for zoning concessions, they should be treated as public space. Shepard sums up:

If the city chooses to push occupants out of the space on the grounds that it is privately owned, they will not be steady ground. Zuccotti Park was created in exchange for increased height for 1 Liberty Plaza the building just to the north of the Park. Of course, the tenants of 1 Liberty Plaza do not want us to know the public helped pay for their digs. They include Goldman Sachs, Royal Bank of Canada, as well as NASDQ Headquarters, among others. There is a reason Occupy Wall Street chose this location. Few of these corporations are interested in an extended discussion of democracy in New York City, such as those taking shape in the public space known as Zuccotti Park.  But it is just what they will have if they work with the NYPD to evict the members of Occupy Wall Street from the bonus plaza known as Zuccotti Park.
All which shifts the burden back onto the city itself, in claiming responsibility for the cleaning/eviction coming tomorrow morning.
And judging by the long list of rules about what's prohibited in NYC parks--which includes many of the same things as in Brookfield's list (including camping, obstruction of sitting areas, etc, etc)--there's many a regulation that could be used to kick protestors out of spaces whose public status is not in doubt.
Matthew McDermott @'treehugger' 

Occupy Wall Street: Protesters anger at 'eviction' move