Jan. 27, 2020 By Christian Murray
Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has penned a letter to the Economic Development Corporation announcing that she no longer wants to be part of the Sunnyside Yard steering committee.
Ocasio-Cortez said that she wants out because she says the EDC is not listening to many of her constituents—particularly those who fear the plan to develop Sunnyside Yard will spur gentrification.
The EDC, which has conducted three town hall meetings and 100-plus stakeholder meetings, is expected to release its masterplan for the 180-acre Sunnyside Yard some time before the end of March.
“Despite the many outreach meetings that you have cited, I have yet to see sufficient inclusion of the feedback from those meetings in the current plan,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote in the letter dated Jan. 24.
“The feedback, both from community members and from my office, includes but is not limited to community land trusts, truly affordable housing and public and green infrastructure,” she wrote. “Without the inclusion of these requirements in the Master Plan, I cannot continue to contribute my resources to the project.”
The EDC announced the formation of a 35-member steering committee in May 2018 that is tasked with providing a local perspective on what should be included in the masterplan. It consists of local civic leaders, planning experts and elected officials.
The overarching plan for the 180-acre site will involve decking over the yards– and potentially constructing tens of thousands of apartments; office space; green space; and a transportation network. The plan would take decades to fully implement.
The majority of the residential buildings, according to project’s consulting team, would be between eight and 18 stories, although some of the plans displayed at a recent meeting indicated that some could reach 30 to 50 stories.
However the EDC’s plan to develop the site has received a mixed reception.
In September, dozens of protesters showed up at an EDC meeting to voice their opposition against development.
in November, a boisterous crowd of about 80 protestors—representing groups such as Justice for All and Woodside on the Move– staged a rally in front of the Sunnyside Yard site on Skillman Avenue. They voiced concern about gentrification, while arguing that the city should instead invest in restoring public housing, repairing the city’s infrastructure and saving small businesses.
Ocasio-Cortez’s letter to the EDC announcing her resignation from the steering committee follows similar correspondence she had with the organization on Nov. 19.
She wrote a joint letter with Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer at the time that read: “The proposed high-rise and mid-rise residential buildings would further exacerbate a housing crisis that displaces communities of color and parcels off public land to private real estate developers.”
The EDC, however, contends that the city would be able to address many of its problems by developing the Sunnyside Yard.
“Sunnyside Yard presents an opportunity to build a stronger New York for generations to come that includes more open space, transit, affordable housing, jobs and green infrastructure in Western Queens,” the EDC said in a statement. “This planning process has always put community engagement at the center. We’re committed to continuing our work with the community to build a strategic vision that can better serve local residents and all New Yorkers.”
The EDC did not directly address Ocasio-Cortez’ decision to leave the steering committee.
“IF WE DONT GET IT – SHUT IT DOWN!!”
Opponents of #NYC‘s #EDC #SunnysideYard Plan demanded Billions $$ to be invested in #affordablehousing, repairing #subways #infrastructure & save small businesses yesterday.@queenspost @sunnysidepost @LICPOST #Queens #Queenspost #Sunnyside pic.twitter.com/LJITBDOhyD— Michael Dorgan (@MDorganNYC) November 26, 2019
2 Comments
She has no say in the matter. Its The largest plot of open space in Western Queens, won’t make any difference – first Sunnyside yards, then light trolley rail from Sunset Park through Astoria, then Rikers Island extension of LaGuardia airport. This wave of progress and evolution can’t be stopped. Our city is crumbling, we need a new world class city – some parts of our city are falling apart smelling more like Port-au-Prince or Mumbai when you get off the plane like the broken sewer lines flooding homes in Ozone Park with raw sewage running through their homes. Potholes everywhere, homeless camps, bed bugs, roaches, rats, crumbling public housing, with urine infested stairwells impregnated so bad no matter how many bottles of Pinesol poured into the corners you can’t get rid of the stench. Under performing schools producing students that graduate into remedial programs at community colleges and our Mayor and Carranza want to dumb down the specialized High School and remove G&T programs. Property taxes on the increase, inflated city budget, high cost of living and health care through the roof and the quality of life in the toilet. Criminals being released in a revolving door policy, public elected officials defending them rather than us. Junkies shooting dope out in the open. This city needs to be rescued – we need change. IT’S APOCALYTICAL THE DOWNFALL OF A GREAT AMERICAN CITY!!!!.
All valid points…but lighten up Frances. It is going to be ok. The beauty of our system is that if it is not working, we can change it.