8 THE QUEENS COURIER • JUNE 20, 2019 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM
With trailers long gone, Woodside school gets new yard
BY MAX PARROTT
mparrott@schnepsmedia.com
@QNS
Astoria Councilman Costa
Constantinides joined School
Construction Authority President
Lorraine Grillo at P.S. 151 at
the Mary D. Carter School in
Woodside on June 11 to unveil
a brand-new schoolyard aft er the
school removed mobile classroom
trailers from the site.
“Two years aft er we began the
process of removing these trailers,
Photo provided by the offi ce of Councilman Constantinides
City Councilman Costa Constantinides helped cut the ribbon on a new schoolyard at P.S. 151 in Woodside
Richards pushes community land trust funding with eye on Rockaway
BY MAX PARROTT
mparrott@schnepsmedia.com
@QNS
Last year, the City Council passed a law
that for the fi rst time offi cially recognizing
community land trusts and allowed the
city to enter into regulatory agreements
with this form of tenant-owned housing.
Now, Queens Councilman Donovan
Richards trying to expand the resources
to make this a form of ownership a reality
as soon as possible.
“Th e idea is to get very aggressive,”
Richards said.
Richards recently sponsored a City
Council initiative for this year’s budget
that would ask for an estimated $850,000
worth of resources to go to eff orts that
would help community land trust advocates
get organized.
“Th e nearly million dollar ask that we
have this year is going to really enable
us to build out even more capacity. But
more importantly now that HPD and
the city is actually recognizing and community
land trust as a tool, we want to
be prepared to organize communities,”
Richards told QNS. “Th ere’s a lot that
goes into engaging stakeholders, promoting
community land trust, educating
them, educating the public on what
it is. And then more importantly is establishing
boards for communities like the
Rockaways.”
Where does Richards interest in community
land trust stem from? He wants
them for Edgemere, the Rockaway neighborhood
facing Jamaica Bay that was
neglected for decades by the government.
Th ere’s acres of land of city-owned land,
acquired between the 1970s and 1990s,
available in Edgemere. In 1997, the city
began a plan to create over 800 units of
aff ordable housing on that available public
land, but it only got through about 300
units before the Great Recession halted
development in 2008.
“So you literally have hundreds of lots
open in Edgemere right now that have
the capacity to have homes put on them.
But more importantly, an opportunity for
us to preserve that land at least for a hundred
years. Even as the market changes in
Rockaway,” said Richards.
In 2015, Richards helped launch the
Resilient Edgemere Planning Initiative, a
Department of Housing Preservation and
Development plan which contains an initiative
to identify city-owned sites that
could be used for CLTs. Now he thinks it’s
the time to push that initiative forward.
Richards says he sees CLTs as an
important solution to relieving the eff ects
of predatory speculation because it takes
the city’s overwhelming focus on subsidizing
rentals, and it allows removes
them from the speculation process by
building them public land.
Richards says that he feels confi dent
that the council is inking toward a deal
on CLTs.
Councilman Donovan Richards
we can today proudly open a
new schoolyard for generations to
come,” Constantinides said.
Th e schoolyard plan is the result
of Constantinides’ sustained partnership
with Grillo to replace
transportable classroom units
(TCUs) from school campuses
across his district.
When the councilman announced
the removal of TCUs from P.S. 85
in April, Constantinides revealed
the fi nal part of his plan to clear
his district of all such temporary
classrooms, which have been criticized
for lacking proper heating,
cooling and other basic amenities
for students.
Up until 2017, the trailers at P.S.
151 were occupied by students
from P.S. 255Q, an elementary
school for autistic students who are
spread among eight diff erent sites
in Queens. When the city made
moves to remove the trailers, the
special needs students moved to
P.S. 397Q.
“We removed old, dilapidated
TCUs to bring new, beautiful play
space for the students at P.S. 151
to enjoy as well as ensure that the
students of P.S. 255Q have a new
permanent home that meets their
needs,” Grillo said.
Constantinides has also partnered
with Grillo and Borough
President Melinda Katz to close
trailers at P.S. 70 in Astoria in addition
to P.S. 85.
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