New York City Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe will be a featured speaker next Tuesday, August 9th at 6:30 p.m. at a discussion “Whose Park is It? Financing and Administering New York’s New Parks” at the Museum of the City of New York.
Instead of spending city money wisely on maintenance and staff at parks, Commissioner Benepe, with the support of Mayor Bloomberg, continues to overspend, overly redesign our public spaces, and then naively act as if the city is left with no choice but to call in private entities to manage them. Clearly, this is not a model that’s working and not the model we need to ensure our parks remain public in every sense of the word.
This event is an opportunity for the Parks Commissioner to promote his platform of privatization of our public parks. Commissioner Benepe loves to help developers.
At Washington Square, the neighboring community and Community Board 2 have stated outright: “No Private Conservancy.”
EVENT: Whose Park Is It? Financing and Administering New York’s New Parks, Tuesday, August 9, 6:30 PM
In the past 20 years New York City has added over 20,000 acres of parkland to its acclaimed public park system. Recent additions, such as the Hudson River Park, the Highline, and Brooklyn Bridge Park represent a new generation of park design as well as financing and administration.
In an era of budget cuts and declining revenues, how is the city paying for its new parks? How does new park administration differ from the past? What role does private funding play in the administration of the city’s parks? What makes a successful park in today’s New York?
Parks commissioner Adrian Benepe; Alexander Garvin, professor of urban planning, Yale University; and Catherine Nagel, Executive Director of the City Parks Alliance, discuss the past, present, and future of New York’s public parks.
Co-sponsors: Central Park Conservancy, the City Parks Foundation, Civitas, Friends of the Hudson River Park, Friends of the Upper East Side, Hudson River Park and the Prospect Park Alliance.
Tickets and more information at the Museum of the City of New York web site.
RESERVATIONS REQUIRED: $12 Non-Members, $8 Seniors and Students, $6 Museum Members, A two dollar surcharge applies for unreserved, walk-in participants.
Getting to Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street:
By subway: #2, 3 or 6 trains get you there — #6 Lexington Avenue train to 103rd Street; #2/3 train to Central Park North/110th Street.
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Additional background:
See WSP Blog piece on privatization and the High Line.
Also, A Walk in the Park Blog on the Brooklyn Bridge Park housing “deal” reported in the news yesterday.
Will you cover the event?
Also, at least two of the new trees in the SE section are dead. As well, several of the new street trees are stressed/dying/dead. It appears to be only the Zelkovas (SW/S) and not the Lindens (S) or Dawn redwoods (E).
Hi Georgia, I did attend. I hope to write something about it in the near future.
I’ve seen the dead street trees but didn’t note the trees in the SE section that are dead. The Zelkovas apparently need a very specific kind of maintenance – I’m not sure they are getting the proper care. Obviously, something is wrong.
Thanks for noting!
Cathryn.
This was my write up — includes video from the panel —
Overall, I’d have to say it was more confirmation that those in power have a deaf ear to community concerns. The increase of public-private partnerships threatens and may possibly destroy the community’s concerns in how those parks are run and what is permitted vs. what is prohibited.
http://parkslope.patch.com/blog_posts/which-park-is-it-anyway
Excellent piece. Thanks, Johanna! I hope to write something up and link to it but, in the interim, your piece is an excellent overview and hits all the key points quite … pointedly.
Cathryn.