Why Is New York City Planning to Sell and Shrink Its Libraries?

Defend our libraries, don't defund them. . . . . fund 'em, don't plunder 'em

Mayor Bloomberg defunded New York libraries at a time of increasing public use, population growth and increased city wealth, shrinking our library system to create real estate deals for wealthy real estate developers at a time of cutbacks in education and escalating disparities in opportunity. It’s an unjust and shortsighted plan that will ultimately hurt New York City’s economy and competitiveness.

It should NOT be adopted by those we have now elected to pursue better policies.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

DC 37 Local 1321 President John Hyslop From Queens Public Library is “Cautiously Optimistic” About Dennis Walcott as new Queens Library Chief- Really?- When Library Defunder Michael Bloomberg Is Installing Him?

Infamous library defunder former mayor Michael Bloomberg presides over the installation of his man, Dennis Walcott, as new Queens Library chief
Sunday night March 13th, District Council 37 Local 1321 President John Hyslop from Queens Public Library was on “State of the Union,” the half-hour weekly radio program produced by District Council 37 saying a number of interesting things- you should listen for insight about the libraries and their funding- among them, that he was "cautiously optimistic" about the installation of Dennis Walcott as the new chief of Queens Library system. . . .

. . .  Why should Mr. Hyslop be optimistic when the ceremony for Mr. Walcott's installation as chief was presided over by former Mayor Bloomberg that mayor who could not be more infamous for an unprecedented underfunding of libraries and the stealth launching of a program to sell and shrink New York City libraries?

Maybe DC 37 is in a position where it must ostensibly be honeymooning with the incoming chief (who has absolutely no library experience and doesn't meet the state regulations to oversee a library), but at Citizens Defending Libraries we must suspect that the installation of a Bloomberg man with Bloomberg ostentatiously presiding is bad news.

Mr. Hyslop does sound very cautious during his interview (listen HERE, starting at about the 16:00 midpoint) repeatedly searching and asking for assistance to be circumspect about the words he chooses to describe, among other things, the way that, as of 2010, the Union was dissatisfied with former president Thomas Galante's hiring practices and the unfolding of the multiple front investigation that unseated Galante and dislodged about one third of the Queens Library trustees that had supported the union-opposed Galante, but who had also been standing up to the former Mayor Bloomberg.  The Queens system was the only one of the three library systems that continued to expand while the other two, Brooklyn and the NYPL did 180 degree turn-arounds to start selling and shrinking libraries.

Listening to Hyslop's caution statements we also learn:
•      About how NYC Comptroller went after the Queens library for hiding and misrepresenting funds, something the Comptroller has not yet started to involve himself in with respect to how the Brooklyn Library is cooking its books to hide money, claim poverty while ostensibly seeking funds as an excuse to sell off libraries.  See:  New York Post: ‘Broke’ Brooklyn Public Library sitting on $100M cash pile: activists, by Aaron Short and Jennifer Gould Keil, February 28, 2016
•      That the library budget dance is very much with us and that, no, not enough funds were obtained from the City Council and the Bloomberg administration last year when everyone swung from the rafters with misleading cries of "victory!"  For more on this see:  Thursday, August 13, 2015, Was Library Administration Officials’ Campaign For Restoration of Library Funding Done With Great Fanfare A Victory? No. Was It Even A Great Campaign? No.
We all agree our libraries need to be properly funded, properly run, and we shouldn't be selling them off or shrinking them.

As Bloomber is not out of the picture. . . .
. . . .he should not be out of mind!
Please sign our petition!:
Mayor de Blasio: Rescue Our Libraries from Developer Destruction

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

WBAI Reporting About The Sale and Shrinkage of NYC Libraries- “Behind News,” "The Morning Show," Plus News Reports

WBAI has been exceptionally good recently reporting on the battles concerning the sell off and shrinkage of libraries.  This page consolidates links (chronologically arranged) to some of that reporting.  This page will be updated as needed.

    •    Report on November 18, 2015 City Council Subcommittee hearing, by Mitchel Cohen, November 18, 2015

    •    November 30, 2015 Interview with Steve Levin About Selling off the Libraries, by Mitchel Cohen, November 30, 2015 
This includes Steve Levin’s denial that a compromise deal was in the offing.  It also include the story (activism and Domino project related) he met his wife.
    •    Report on Citizens Defending Libraries December 9, 2015 Event Gathering Outside Councilman Steve Levin’s Office evening BEFORE the City Council vote, by Mitchel Cohen, December 9, 2015

        This includes a street performance of Judy Gorman’s Library Song.

    •    Report on Citizens Defending Libraries December 10, 2015 Event Gathering Outside Councilman Steve Levin’s Office evening AFTER the City Council vote, by Mitchel Cohen, December 10, 2015.
This includes Councilman Mark Treyger explaining councilmen votes and discussion of Stephen Levin sellout of community.
    •    Report on Citizens Defending Libraries request to U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara to investigate Brooklyn Heights "pay to play" library sale- on WBAI Morning Show, by Mitchel Cohen, June 28, 2016.  (54 minutes in).
This includes an interview with Marilyn Berkon and goes into the subsidy of the subsidy of "pay to play" deal by diverting NYC Department of Education funds.
On the right at back:  WBAI's Mitchel Cohen- NY1 covering the same story caught Mitchel in the background as Levin was taken to task for voting to sell the library on December 16th.  NY1 ran this footage (and scenes of Citizens Defending Libraries holding signs in the balcony of the Council Chambers) when it took phone calls from a complaining public about the council awarding itself a substantial pay hike.
NY1 December 16th- Rebroadcast when council raised its salary

    •    WBAI News: In the news tonight the New York City Council agrees to sell of the Brooklyn Heights Library, Linda Perry anchor, Mitchel Cohen reporting, December 16, 2015 (Library story starts at: 3:24)
This segment includes Councilman Steve Levin being confronted in the City Hall rotunda over his betrayal of the community and the lack of transparency he promoted.


    •    8.5 minute special downloadable March 1st radio report on the press conference by WBAI reporter Mitchel Cohen, February 29, 2016.

LINK TO DOWNLOAD special 8.5 minute March 1st radio report on the press conference by WBAI reporter Mitchel Cohen
    •    Report Selling of NYC's Public Libraries, by Mitchel Cohen, July 1, 2016.  (54 minutes in).
This includes two audio reports, one a lengthy report on the protest opening of a shrunk-and-sunk library to "replace" the Donnell library.  There is also an interview with Marilyn Berkon of Citizens Defending Libraries abou the investigation of the library sale by U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara.
    •    WBAI "The Morning Show":  Michael G. Haskins Interviews Citizens Defending Libraries Co-Founders Michael D. D. White and Carolyn E. McIntyre, January 7, 2016 (interview, the last 1/2 hour about 3/4ths through the two hour show was broadcast at 7:30 AM).

    •    WBAI "The Morning Show":  Michael G. Haskins Interviews Citizens Defending Libraries Co-Founders Michael D. D. White and Carolyn E. McIntyre, June 17, 2016 (interview, the last 1/2 hour about 3/4ths through the two hour show was broadcast at 7:30 AM).  (Link to downloadable file.)
Hear about the latest NYPL for sale, the so-called Donnell "replacement," litigation, the federal criminal investigation, how NYS Attorney General Eric Schneiderman should be taking action to save the public from the loss of the Brooklyn Heights and other libraries.
    •    WBAI "The Morning Show":  Michael G. Haskins Interviews Citizens Defending Libraries Co-Founders Michael D. D. White and Carolyn E. McIntyre, November 10, 2016 (interview, the last 1/2 hour about 3/4ths through the two hour show was broadcast at 7:35 AM).  (Link to downloadable file.)
Hear about the connection of the libraries to the presidential election (the campaign Hillary could have waged to win for the Democrats and what prevented her), plus startling new news about how Booz Allen Hamilton, the nation's top private spy corporation was hired for a dismantling overhaul of the city's important libraries.
Nellie Hester Bailey on right, Laurie Frey of Love Brooklyn Libraries! on left
     •    WBAI "Behind The News with Nellie Bailey":  Selling NYC Libraries With Michael D. D. White of Citizens Defending Libraries and Laurie Frey of Love Brooklyn Libraries!, Wednesday, March 9, 2016 5:00 pm.  (This is a full one-hour interview after the vote of Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams and the Brooklyn Borough Board.)

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

We Talk About The Destruction of NYC’s Libraries: Award-winning Author Marilynne Robinson & Leonard Lopate Discuss Dismantling & Underfunding of Public Universities- SAME DIFFERENCE!

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Marilynne Robinson discusses preservation of of public assets, our public universities with WNYC's Leonard Lopate
When you are a citizen working to save our libraries it may seem that everything you hear has to do with the destruction and sale of NYC libraries for real estate deals that benefit developers, not the public, but this, we know, is not our imagination!. . . . . .

. . . . .  March 2nd The Leonard Lopate Show broadcast an interview with Pulitzer Prize-winning, and National Humanities Medal recipient author Marilynne Robinson about saving our public universities from attack.  Almost everything Ms. Robinson said sounded as if she was also speaking directly to the way our publicly endowed, publicly financed New York City Libraries are similarly being targeted for senseless, society-destroying attack.

We wonder if Ms. Robinson's knows with what exquisite perfection her critique and almost all her remarks also apply to the defunding and selling off of our NYC libraries, as we turn them into real estate deals that benefit developers, not the public.  Here is a connection:  Iris Weinshall, Senator Schumer's wife, who was at CUNY to "leverage" its real estate assets has now gone on to the NYPL to pick up where former NYPL COO David Offensend left off similarly selling NYPL libraries like SIBL which, in turn, means that Mid-Manhattan (previously slated for sale) will still have to be shrunk.
At one point during the show segment a listener called in to discuss the current attack on CUNY. Ms. Robinson's critique obviously applies straight out, no question at all, to the underfunding of CUNY, now in the spotlight because of the budget fracas between Coumo and  de Blasio (a manufactured one?).

You must listen to this interview!

Here is the WNYC blurb for the show:
The Leonard Lopate Show: Why Affordable Public Universities Are Vital to Our Democracy, Mar 2, 2016.
At a time when government funding of public universities is at an all-time low, shifting the cost burden onto students and families, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Marilynne Robinson explains why maintaining affordable higher education is vital to the survival and success of our democracy in, "Save Our Public Universities: In Defense of America's Best Idea," her cover story for the March issue of Harper's magazine.
Ms. Robinson's talk with Leonard Lopate is almost better than her Harper’s essay they were discussing:

Harper's Magazine:  Essay - Save Our Public Universities- In defense of America's best idea, By Marilynne Robinson, from the March 2016 issue.

Here, is a sample from that essay:
The Citizen has become the Taxpayer. In consequence of this shift, public assets have become public burdens. These personae, Citizen and Taxpayer, are both the creations of political rhetoric. . . . .  While the Citizen can entertain aspirations for the society as a whole and take pride in its achievements, the Taxpayer, as presently imagined, simply does not want to pay taxes. The societal consequences of this aversion - failing infrastructure, for example. . .
Here are transcribed remarks from this important interview, the transcription of which we hope will make it easier for people to stumble across these thoughts in their searches.  Nevertheless, please enjoy listing to the interview to appreciate Ms. Robinson's soft tones and gentle wise sense of humor.

As you read all the statements below, ask yourself: Isn't this exactly the same as with the attack on our libraries?: 
    •    There was an amazing period of institution building in this country. . many still thriving, a very successful episode in our culture. And I think the sort of zeal for Democracy that was characteristic of this country in its early period expressed itself for all sorts of reason as a great energy toward education.

    •    There was a great confidence about what might be discovered about human possibility if people were simply given the tools, given access . . .  It was a desire to outgrow colonial heritage. . . .  it was extremely ambitious, in terms of  the assumed capacities of people whose families might never have encountered education before.

    •    People talk now as if they were terribly shrewd about financial things, you know, but if you look at the landscape or if you look back historically, the value of these institutions to the economic of any place is astonishing.  They generate an active economy around them.  It’s so obvious that it seems amazing to have to make that defense.  And, of course my notion of the value of the universities is not based that they produce prosperity and wealth, but I think that certainly ought to be a defense of them for people who want to think only in economic terms.

    •    [There is a view that] it’s almost as if these institutions have just been loitering around, people passing each other paychecks.. . . This impulse that’s part of the economics that’s dominant now, to try to train people to be functionaries in what is imagined to be the emerging economy about which they are very unspecific . . . they, you know, have no humane conception of the future,. . and therefore they can’t imagine what the universities are for. .

    •    And now we have this odd erosion which, frankly is harder on the arts than on whatever is considered to monetizable.

    •    I think that a strange thing has happened.  It’s part of the attack on the public universities.  I think they are being talked down, like their stock is being depreciated by the way that they are spoken about . .

    •    It’s as if some strange unnamed crisis is passing through Western Civilization and we are trying to impoverish ourselves

    •    Mr. Lopate paraphrased and read from her article about what she referred to as a fundamental shift in American, possibly world, consciousness: The citizen has become the taxpayer and while the citizens can entertain aspirations for the society as a whole and take pride in its achievements, the Taxpayer, as presently imagined, simply does not want to pay taxes.

    •    The word taxpayer does not imply obligation, because the understanding of the term is really that the taxpayer is some sort of victim of the fact that society might make certain claims on his or her wealth in exchange for the fact of doing everything society does in order to sustain and enhance the wealth of individuals  within the community, everything the society does to enrich the experience of life in community.

    •    It just seems that every time someone tries to make an argument for, not only an enhancement of the life of the society, but even something that will sustain an old privilege that was given to us by the generations that came before us and were generous. .  Every time that sort of thing is mentioned the answer is `it’s a burden on the taxpayer’ without any suggestion that the taxpayer is really getting a lot in return. . . that it has been historically and is now a very good investment.

    •    What’s being curtailed . . .is freedom.. . .I know many people who go to university, get a degree in philosophy, never are able to use it professionally, in the narrow sense, but take a tremendous amount of interest in what they’ve learned, think in its terms, feel that their life is enormously enhanced by the fact of letting their minds move over, you know, larger than utilitarian spaces.  I think it’s a huge condescension to people in general to try to limit their options, which is what this comes down to.

    •    I think that trade schools are wonderful for people who want to learn a specialized trade: That should not, by any means, preclude them from learning anything else.  It’s a sort of termite thinking that people should have one function exclusively.  I think it would be wonderful to give people every opportunity to develop any skill that interests them, but that doesn’t mean that they can’t also read Moby Dick.

    •    I think that de Tocqueville is quite correct in seeing that the more information that people have and the more critical capacity they have, the likelier they are to assert their own rights, you know, feel the legitimacy of their own view of things.  I think it is very hard to control an educated population. . .

    •    The states are simply impoverishing themselves, and these kids come out of these colleges that their grandma has been paying taxes on forever thinking she was subsidizing their tuition- they come out with these debts that drive them into work that they are not trained for, anything they can get, which is a completely inefficient use of the whole experience of education economically speaking.

    •    The point is that there have to be people that live out human life in a way that equals civilization- You know, we should not become robots, because there is a possibility that there will, indeed, be very clever robots.

    •    It’s amazing, the people into whose clutches our civilization seems to have fallen are people who, if they had to basically define their response to the arts and education would say, `I don’t get it.’ It’s sort of like turning over our whole aesthetic sense to people who are color blind. It’s just `they don’t ‘get it,’ and that, in their opinion, who will purge this unnecessary thing out of the experience of all of us.

    •    There is a sort of conversation that people engage in and hear, and so on, and are very vulnerable to, and I think that things like the fact that people are thought of primarily as taxpayers, rather than citizens or that public assets have been reinterpreted as public burdens, you know, these are things that people assimilate, like a dialect or something, and think in those terms.

    •    All these people talk as if the mere fact of being magnates of one sort or another meant that they understood the world better than other people do, you know that it should convey some authority.  And what have they done? . . .  It’s a great display of something very different than shrewdness, very different from insight.  But nevertheless they’re extremely confident and they are extremely ready to be active to remake the world into something that they think it should be.

    •    It’s almost as if the genius of that particular side of the culture at this point is to undermine institutions, paralyze congress, paralyze the supreme court, you know, underfinance education, make everybody scared of everybody else. . . .
Ms. Robinson talks about the blindness to cultural value of people who think only in terms of what is "monetizable," something that ties in with what has been called "the politics of greed," but the math of bean counters swarming in from Wall Street gets things wrong for other reasons as well.  Their bean-counting math is deliberately skewed to justify the few companies that they work for making selfish profits at the expense of the rest of us.  . .

. . . That's what is going on with the weird climate change calculations offered by the Koch brothers that deliberately avoid internalizing the economic harm that is done to others by their environmental degradation. Similarly, we see Mayor de Blasio, a goon for the real estate industry, with fractured math selling off the Brooklyn Heights Library to a developer offering a very inferior bid because that developer is a friend and de Blasio contributor-  But, on top of that, all the so-called "bidders" were bidding only on the value of the library as a vacant lot, which the library certainly isn't: It's a library that was only recently expanded and fully upgraded at considerable public expense.

To learn more about the way we are destroying ourselves by destroying our libraries (like our universities), visit us at Citizens Defending Libraries.

And please sign our petition too!:
Mayor de Blasio: Rescue Our Libraries from Developer Destruction

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Report on March 1, 2016 Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams & Brooklyn Borough Board Vote On Selling and Drastically Shrinking Brooklyn Heights Central Destination Downtown Library

Levin's quote is the concluding line of the Patch article's coverage
This page will be updated.

First, before considering the vote, consider a background reference this page (with pictures) about our rally the day before outside Brooklyn Borough Hall with links to our press release and letter to Borough President Eric Adams asking for instillation of transparency and that the vote be delayed and not occur without it.  This page has links to press coverage, including a radio report from WBAI reporter Mitchell; Cohen.
 •        Monday, February 29, 2016, PHOTO & VIDEO GALLERY: February 29, 2016 Press Conference- Request Eric Adams Postpone Brooklyn Borough Board Vote

Here is press coverage of the vote (comments possible at the sites):

Brooklyn Paper/Brooklyn Courier coverage

 •         Brooklyn Paper: Adams changes tune on Heights library sale, votes to approve/Beep OKs Heights library sale, by Lauren Gill, March 2, 2016

 •         Patch: Brooklyn Borough Board Hands Over Public Library to Condo Developer- Say goodbye to the Brooklyn Heights public library in its current form, by Simone Wilson, March 1, 2016
    •    Brooklyn Heights Press & Brooklyn Daily Eagle:  Borough Board approves sale of Brooklyn Heights Library- BP Eric Adams votes in favor of sale, By Mary Frost, March 2, 2016.  (Commenting on the article is easier on the Brooklyn Eagle version)
We were the cover story in the Heights Press
The Patch article has the brilliant concluding quote from Councilman Steve Levin used in the image at the top of this page.  (The Brooklyn Eagle article has a picture of a lonely Levin being interviewed by NY1 in a vast empty Borough Hall space around the time he gave that quote.)

City Council members who disgraced themselves voting for this rigged deal included not only Council members Levin and, of course, the fervent library sales advocate Brad Lander (ditto David Greenfield), but also Carlos Menchaca who favors pushing through the no-bid sale of the Sunset Park Library for redevelopment, Mark Treyger, Vincent Gentile (despite the fact that when he was campaigning and needed and wanted voted he signed our letter of support calling for the opposite) and Laurie Cumbo who, in her statement at the City Council vote let the cat out of the bag that Steve Levin had been working against, the community's wishes for months.
Picture on the cover of the Heights Press




Here is video of the Borough Board vote (we hope to have our own version of this video up soon with better audio):

 •          VIDEO of the vote of Brooklyn Borough President Adams and Brooklyn Borough Board to, without requiring transparency a prerequisite, sell and drastically shrink (down to 42%) the Brooklyn Heights central destination downtown library selling it to net (maybe $23 million a minuscule fraction of the library's value ($120+ million to replace this recently fully expanded fully upgraded library). (click through t YouTube for best viewing)

Beginning at 17 minutes in you will see activists, including members of Citizens Defending Libraries (thank you Patti and Mary), holding up signs that express that they are opposed to the sale of the library.(some images below).  This turned into an image the Brooklyn Papers used in its coverage of the event.  Just before that moment Borough President Adams silences Citizens Defending Libraries  co-founder Michael D. D. White threatening to eject him from the proceedings for calling on Councilman Steve Levin to state when he would finally take action to to insist on transparency seated himself to state his support for the sale and shrinkage of the library (without transparency).



Borough President Eric Adams threatens to evict, demanding silence when CDL's Michael D. D. White calls out to Councilman Levin asking when he will observe his fundamental obligation as a city councilman to demand transparency about the library sales.









This is the image that made it into the Brooklyn Paper article

Heights Press Coverage (continued)
Heights Press Coverage (continued)
Picture from the Heights Press coverage
Citizens Defending Libraries in the Borough Hall lobby awaiting the electeds coming out of the Borough Board vote after the vote.  NY1 was filming, but reports on the national primaries is what aired instaed, plus a library story- See next image.
Opening up a new battlefront (of making further advances on it) NY1 reported this same evening that ex-mayor Bloomberg presided over the installation of his man, Dennis Walcott, as the new chief of the Queens Library, the one NYC Library system that resisted selling libraries and turning them into real estate deals.  Bloomberg is, of course, the mayor who underfunded libraries at an unprecedented level, an excuse, when he introduced the idea, to sell and shrink them.  BPL Linda Johnson says that the sale and shrinkage of the Brooklyn Heights Library will be used a s model for transactions in all three systems.   


Monday, February 29, 2016

PHOTO & VIDEO GALLERY: February 29, 2016 Press Conference- Request Eric Adams Postpone Brooklyn Borough Board Vote

This page will be and has been updated.
From one of two Brooklyn News 12 coverage reports that night
The press release describing the event is here:
    •     PRESS RELEASE- Citizens Demand Brooklyn Borough Board Postpone Critical Vote on Future of Brooklyn Heights Library- A Call for Transparency, Full Investigation of BPL Hoaxes & Bid-Rigging - Monday, February 29, 2016
The letter delivered to Brooklyn Borough President Adams is here:
    •     Monday, February 29, 2016,  Letter to Borough President Eric Adams Requesting Insistence on Transparency and Full Investigation Into Cooked Books and Rigged Bidding Before Calendaring Brooklyn Borough Board Vote On Brooklyn Heights Library
The media advisory noticing the event is here:
    •     MEDIA ADVISORY- Citizens Demand Brooklyn Borough Board Postpone Critical Vote on Future of Brooklyn Heights Library- A Call for Transparency, Full Investigation of BPL Hoaxes & Bid-Rigging, Sunday, February 28, 2016
Here is a link to a 8.5 minute special downloadable March 1st radio report on the press conference by WBAI reporter Mitchel Cohen who has already produced several other radio reports on the library sales aired by WBAI:

LINK TO DOWNLOAD special 8.5 minute March 1st radio report on the press conference by WBAI reporter Mitchel Cohen

We are looking for better photos when the entire crowd had arrived.  Please send if you have them.

Here is more press coverage:


•        Brooklyn Daily Eagle:  Group files federal complaint over sale of Brooklyn Heights Library- Borough Board to vote on issue Tuesday night, By Mary Frost, March 1, 2016


    •    The Jewish Voice: Activists: Bklyn Public Library Sitting on $100M Despite Crying Poverty, by Guy Malone, March 2, 2016
     •    The Home Reporter/The Brooklyn Spectator: Sale of Brooklyn Heights library to impact Sunset branch, by Jaime DeJesus, March 7, 2016.

    •    The Home Reporter/The Brooklyn Spectator: Star of Brooklyn: Christopher Robles, By Christopher Malone, March 7, 2016.
Robles has been a strong voice in the battle against the development at the Sunset Park library.
For more Brooklyn Eagle reporting on the rally and on the vote see:
    •    Brooklyn Heights Press & Brooklyn Daily Eagle:  Borough Board approves sale of Brooklyn Heights Library- BP Eric Adams votes in favor of sale, By Mary Frost, March 2, 2016.
For a report on the vote the next day as well as coverage see: 
    •    Report on March 1, 2016 Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams & Brooklyn Borough Board Vote On Selling and Drastically Shrinking Brooklyn Heights Central Destination Downtown Library



Laurie Frey of Love Brooklyn Libraries








From evening's second Brooklyn News 12 report


From Brooklyn News 12 report: Eric Adams at Borough Hall as we rallied outside about the library.








Picture from Home Reporter coverage.





Note: Quality audio of the press conference is available to member of the press upon request.