RE: NPR Update - Destruction of NYC gardens

From: Diane Cooner (amani@wclynx.com)
Date: Fri Feb 25 2000 - 00:04:15 EST


Greetings to all;

See, this scenario keeps happening all across the country. The housing
crisis in the SF Bay Area is so wild, I heard an ad on the newsradio two
days ago for "decent family housing, with community, vineyard country, that
is safe, secure, and the comfort you deserve - homes from $1.2 million...."

Obviously this is catering to a very small group of folks - I wonder what is
going to happen to all the rest of us, not just the "pesky" poor. Listening
to that ad, I felt pretty poor myself, and I live better (and more simply)
than most of my friends.

What about that pesky middle class? Maybe bullets would be cheaper than
revolution. This remains to be seen.

diane in rainy northern california

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-sanet-mg@cals.ncsu.edu
[mailto:owner-sanet-mg@cals.ncsu.edu]On Behalf Of mmiller@pcsia.com
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2000 9:15 PM
To: sanet-mg@ces.ncsu.edu
Subject: NPR Update - Destruction of NYC gardens

This afternoon on All Things Consisdered there was an audio segement by the
son of one of the Esperanza gardeners . He gave the community point of
view towards the garden destroyed by Mayor Guiliani. Tucked away as part
of the background of an interview was a local radio or TV report on the
incident. The newcaster reported that the garden was cleared for 75 units
of Luxury Housing. Oops, the Mayor said :

Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, who hopes to sell the lot to BFC
> Properties, a developer, says this lot and hundreds of others
> like it can be used to ease a housing shortage. The lots will create
housing
> for people who can least afford it, he said, and the city's plans are
> legal and sound.
>
> "If you live in an unrealistic world then you can say
> everything should be a community garden," Mr. Giuliani said. "Then where
would people
> live where they are able to get affordable housing?"

One of these two people resembles a prevaricating sack of unfinished
compost. I guess the less well heeled people of New York City are going to
have to find "affordable housing" in someplace other than New York City.
It is easier for the Mayor to get rid of those pesky poor and minority
people from the city with this type of "affordable housing" development
and saves bullets too. ;>) Mike Miller

To Unsubscribe: Email majordomo@ces.ncsu.edu with the command
"unsubscribe sanet-mg". If you receive the digest format, use the command
"unsubscribe sanet-mg-digest".
To Subscribe to Digest: Email majordomo@ces.ncsu.edu with the command
"subscribe sanet-mg-digest".

All messages to sanet-mg are archived at:
http://www.sare.org/san/htdocs/hypermail

To Unsubscribe: Email majordomo@ces.ncsu.edu with the command
"unsubscribe sanet-mg". If you receive the digest format, use the command
"unsubscribe sanet-mg-digest".
To Subscribe to Digest: Email majordomo@ces.ncsu.edu with the command
"subscribe sanet-mg-digest".

All messages to sanet-mg are archived at:
http://www.sare.org/san/htdocs/hypermail



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Mar 12 2000 - 14:00:30 EST