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C R Y D E R P O I N T DECEMBER 14 Vote For Your Favorite Queens Library By Angy Altamirano It’s time to show your neighborhood library some love. Bayside’s small businesses tell film industry to take five By ERIC JANKIEWICZ Call it Hollywood fatigue. The Bayside Village Business Improvement District (BID) wants the city to put a temporary stop on granting filming permits to movie and show makers using Bayside as a shooting location. The organization, representing dozens of small businesses, plans on sending a letter to the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting to request a moratorium on filming in commercial areas like Bell Boulevard, according to the organization’s executive director, Lyle Sclair. “Filming in Bayside is a balancing act, but too often it’s swayed away from us,” Sclair said. “There’s a much better way to work together.” Citing a marked loss of business because of frequent filming activity in the area, Sclair said that small businesses need more representation in government. The FX-produced show “The Americans” used Bayside to film several scenes in January. During filming, Harry Rutgers’ jewelry business was penned in on 41st Avenue and Bell Boulevard. “We might as well be closed when the film crews are here,” said Rutgers, who is the owner of Bell Family Jewelers. “The whole business district shuts down and everybody suffers while one group benefits.” Rutgers cited many of the same problems that Sclair will bring up to the city. The vehicles used to transport the film crews and equipment are big and bulky, and these vehicles take up all the parking spots on Bell Boulevard that would be used by potential customers. Rutgers said that another problem is that the crews don’t spend any money in the area because they come with their own food and services. “They don’t spend a nickel on Bell,” Rutgers said. “I never heard anyone say they benefited from the film crews.” Rutgers suggested that the trucks and trailers used by the film industry should park away from Bell Boulevard so they don’t take up parking. He also said that if the crews spent money in the area, business owners would be more willing to tolerate the film industry. Sclair plans on making all of these suggestions when he sends the letter to the Mayor’s office. He is also urging the City Council to pass oversight bills. Councilman Paul Vallone is signing the letter, according to his spokesman. “I firmly support the Bayside Village BID’s request for a moratorium on filming on Bell Boulevard and the surrounding avenues, as the area is rapidly becoming a filming hot spot,” he said. “Our residents and small business owners should not have to bear the burdens that come with excessive filming, especially in an area that already has very limited parking space availability. It’s unfair for our small businesses to suffer these consequences.” Film crews park trailers and trucks in front of businesses and take up many parking spots, causing the merchants to lose money, according to Sclair. The large vehicles also cause people to think that 14 cryder point courier | DECEMBER 2014 | WWW.QUEENSCOURIER.COM Harry Rutgers, owner of Bell Family Jewelers, said that filming on Bayside kills his business. businesses are closed. THE COURIER/Photo by Eric Jankiewicz Bayside is frequently used for movie and television shoots, reflecting the city’s initiative to make New York City a filming center. The mayor’s office did not respond to a request for comment but, according to the city-run “Made in NY” site, the city “looks to support film and television productions of all shapes and sizes, and we look to make each and every one of those projects a clear, seamless, and enjoyable production experience.” In the city’s haste to make the five boroughs filmfriendly, it’s alienated small businesses, Sclair said. “It seems like the city is saying, ‘We’re choosing the film industry over mom-and-pop businesses,” he said. As of Nov. 7, nominations from the public are being accepted for the second annual NYC Neighborhood Library Awards. The awards, held by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation and the Charles H. Revson Foundation, honor library branches in the city’s three library systems including the Queens Library. After receiving nominations from community members, five libraries will be chosen as winners and announced during the award ceremony in May 2015. Each branch will be awarded $20,000. “Every day, New Yorkers enter their neighborhood libraries to seek the riches of the information age, available to everyone and all for free,” said Julie Sandorf, president of the Charles H. Revson Foundation. “These awards celebrate the love New Yorkers have for their libraries.” Nominations, which are being accepted through Dec. 12, can be submitted at www.nyclibraryawards. org, through each library’s website or in person at any neighborhood library. The winning branches will be selected by a panel of judges, including authors Jonathan Safran Foer and Jacqueline Woodson, and children’s book publisher Julie Strauss-Gabel. “Neighborhood libraries in New York City are the center of many of our communities,” said Andreas Dracopoulos, co-president of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation. “They welcome all New Yorkers and provide vital opportunities to learn, educate, reflect – and better ourselves.” The inaugural NYC Neighborhood Library Awards brought in more than 4,300 nominations and one of last year’s winners included Corona Library, located on 38- 17 104th St., which received $10,000. Photo courtesy of the Queens Library


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