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 2     COURIER LIFE, MAY 8-14, 2020 
 Brooklyn parks manage  
 Green spaces seeing infl ux in visitors  
 BY ROSE ADAMS 
 Park stewards reopened  
 the gardens at Floyd Bennett  
 Field on May 2 to hundreds  
 of elated green thumbs — reversing  
 a decision from the  
 previous week that closed the  
 gardens in order to store outof 
 commission MTA buses.   
 “It’s phenomenal,” said  
 Adriann Musson. “I don’t  
 have words to describe the  
 relief people were feeling.” 
 The reopening came  
 fi ve days after the National  
 Parks Service shut down  
 Floyd Bennett Field to store  
 around 160 MTA buses that  
 are out of use because of a reduction  
 in service during the  
 COVID-19 pandemic.  
 The closure of the Floyd  
 Bennett Gardens — one of  
 the largest community gardens  
 on the East Coast —  
 infuriated the 430 local gardeners, 
  who blasted the park  
 offi cials for prioritizing idle  
 buses over residents, and argued  
 that  the  gardens  are  
 not close to the bus-storage  
 area. 
 “We’re a tiny drop in the  
 Parks Services’ responsibilities  
 and everything that  
 they do. But I’ve been gardening  
 there for 27 years,” said  
 Musson on April 30. “This is  
 a part of my life, and you’re  
 ripping it out for buses?” 
 The  gardens’  closure  
 sparked immediate public  
 backlash. Gardeners wrote  
 angry letters to the National  
 Parks Service and Mayor Bill  
 de Blasio — who said he was  
 Park offi cials reopened Floyd  
 Bennett Gardens on May 2.  
   Floyd Bennett Gardens Association 
 “not happy” with the federal  
 agency’s decision. 
 “You know, I have to believe  
 there are other alternatives,” 
  said Hizzoner at an  
 April 29 press conference.  
 Following gardeners’  
 protests, parks offi cials  fi - 
 nally caved — allowing precertifi  
 ed gardeners to enter  
 the premises after passing a  
 park police checkpoint.  
 “We’ve had two very good  
 days,” Musson said. “Park  
 police  cooperated  with  us.  
 We’ve had no problems.” 
 But while the gardens  
 have reopened, the rest of  
 the 1,000-plus-acre park will  
 remain  closed  to  the  public  
 while the MTA uses the  
 space as a makeshift bus depot  
 — indefi nitely sealing off  
 southern Brooklyn’s largest  
 public park just as cooped-up  
 Brooklynites begin searching  
 for open space. 
 Trees, fl owers, and wildlife have begun to bloom at the Brooklyn Botanic  
 Garden — despite no visitors allowed inside the arboretum.  
   Photos courtesy of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden 
 Gardeners allowed back  
 to Floyd Bennett Field  
 after weeklong closure 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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