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.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Calendar of Defending Library Events

[Back To Main Page]  (The main updates to this page now just occur in the calendar below.)

Below is Citizens Defending Libraries publicly available Google Calendar.

We try to keep the calendar up to date as best we can.  We don't always succeed.  You are invited to let us know what we should be adding to it.

IMPORTANT UPCOMING EVENTS:
•   Please refer to the calendar above for upcoming events.  We have switched over to this (together with periodic emails to signers of the petition, plus Tweets and Facebook posts) as the primary means of updating people although we may occasionally list put certain future events down below here to get them extra attention.
•   NYPL Board of Trustee Meetings.  The dates for the New York Public Library trustees meetings (which sometimes change) and the other public meetings of its various board committees (Executive, Program and Policy, etc.) are posted on the web (double check calendar year).  Attendance by the public is valuable.  The public is not invited to speak at these meetings.  The trustees meetings (not the committee meetings) are usually, not always, at the 42nd Street Central Reference Library, 476 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10018 at 4:00 PM.
•   BPL Board of Trustee Meetings.  The dates for the Brooklyn Public Library trustees meetings (which sometimes change) are posted on the web (click on "trustees").  Attendance by the public is valuable.  The public is not invited to speak at these meetings.  Information about the other public meetings of its various board committee is not available on web although it probably should be under the state Open Meetings Law.  The trustees meetings are usually, not always, held at in Trustees Room, Grand Army Plaza Library, 10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, NY 11238 at 5:30 PM.
 •   QPL Board of Trustee Meetings.  The dates for the Queens Public Library trustees meetings go up publicly no long in advance of the meetings here at bottom of page.  Attendance by the public is valuable.  We suggest calling the Press Office for more information.  The public is not invited to speak at these meetings.  Minutes of the meetings, board packets and other information respecting past meetings is extensively available at the site.  The trustees meetings are usually at the Central Library, 89-11 Merrick Boulevard, Jamaica, NY 11432 and held in the evening.
  •   City Council Meetings, Including its Library and Culture Committees. The calendar for the New York City Council is on the web.  (You can also use it as a porthole to view video of past meetings.)  Libraries are handled by its “Committee on Cultural Affairs, Libraries and International Intergroup Relations” as well as that committees “Subcommittee on Libraries,” which has a history of being passive is response the domination of  Cultural Committee Chair Jimmy Van Bramer who has consistently pressed for all the library sales and policies related thereto.  The underfunding of libraries as an excuse to sell them is also a budget matter.  When libraries owned by the city are turned into real estate deals the first City Council Committee to get a crack at the proposal before the entire City Council is the Land Use Committee.
   •   City Planning Commission meetings. When, as is typically the case, library real estate is directly owned by the city (rather than just paid for by the city) it must go before the City Planning Commission if the real estate is to be sold.  It's part of the ULURP process (Uniform Land Use Review Procedure.) The calendar for the New York City Planning Commission is here.  Certain meetings take public comment and others, which just involve the commission's discussion don't.

   •   Community Board and Borough President Meetings. Also as part of the ULURP process, when libraries are directly owned by the city (rather than just paid for by the city), sales must go before the local community boards (usually starting with its Land Use Committee) and the Borough President.  Even when particular library sales are not being approved it is good to go to these meeting to bring up the subject of underfunding of libraries, sale of libraries and elimination of books and librarians.
 CONTACT: To contact Citizens Defending Libraries email Backpack362 (at) aol.com.

You may also leave a comment with information in the comments section at the bottom of this page.

The first petition (gathered over 17,000 signature, most of them online- available at signon.org with a background statement and can still be signed).   On June 16, Citizens Defending libraries issued a new updated petition that you can sign now:
Mayor de Blasio: Rescue Our Libraries from Developer Destruction
You can also paste the following url into your browser.

http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/mayor-de-blasio-rescue-2?source=s.tw&r_by=5895137 

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Scruffing Things Up As Fast As Possible, De Blasio’s Pay-To-Play Developer Starts Trashing Brooklyn’s Still Publicly Owned Second Largest Library

This week on Wednesday, David Karmer’s Hudson Company sent a crew of men out to start trashing the still publicly owned Brooklyn Heights Library.

This very important destination library is still city-owned.  It’s Brooklyn second biggest and with the substantial enlargement and full upgrading it got in 1993 it is one of the most technologically advanced and up-to-date libraries in terms of supporting computers and modern technology.

Why would the de Blasio allow his pay-to-play developer, apparently granting the developer a license, to come in and start wrecking, scuffing up and trashing a still publicly owned building?  Bear in mind that allowing this wreckage before the developer has closed on or acquired rights to the property violates the oft touted promises of Mr. de Blasio and his representatives and people like Councilman Steve Levin that the library and its public property would suffer no destruction until a full set of protections was put in place to ensure that the luxury condo and the teeny replacement library (a much more underground library) would be built.

Here are some thoughts on why this is occurring now.
    1.    De Blasio, the developer and the BPL board and honchos don’t want a pristine and perfect piece of public property sitting grandly and obviously unused on Tuesday, November 8th the day that people are supposed to go out to vote for Hillary Clinton (not Trump, Jill Stein or Gary Johnson according to de Blasio).  The library’s public auditorium has been a key neighborhood polling spot for sometime.  With its doors sealed there isn’t currently an adequate replacement which has caused considerable public complaint about the failure to use this obviously still available valuable public asset.  You don’t want people going to the polls in November more angry than they have to be.  And Hillary surely doesn’t want Democrats showing up angry or not showing up at out of disgust or discouragement–   This library is, after all, given the intersection of the streets where it is located, the “Tillary Clinton Library.”  It is, furthermore, immediately adjacent to the Forest City Ratner owned building where Hillary has her national campaign headquarters.  The building is even, for development purposes, part of the same real estate development parcel as Hillary’s headquarters thus constituting Hillary’s Forest City Ratner landlord a gatekeeper to the library sale, shrink and sink transaction.  Notwithstanding, Hillary did not answer our calls to come forth and oppose this privatization of public assets that was laying at her doorstep. – It is important to note that while Hillary can be scolded for how this library sale lays uncriticized by her at her very doorstep, Trump has much the same problem: The shrink-and-sink sale of the Brooklyn Heights Library was modeled on the shrink-and-sink sale of the Donnell Library (there was an overlap of the people behind both) and one of the principal financial beneficiaries of the sale of Donnell for a pittance was Jered Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and top campaign advisor.

    2.    Via the symbolism attendant with a cavalier degradation of the still publicly owned library, the city wants to help the Hudson Companies prove to banks and those from whom the developer is seeking financing and guarantees that the developer isn’t afraid of the investigations into his deal, including the criminal pay-to-play investigation by Preet Bharara’s US Attorney’s office.   The impunity with which the developer hopes to vandalize the library before he owns it is like a thumb in the eye of the investigators to proclaim that he doesn’t fear them or being held financially responsible for the astronomical losses that will be engendered for the public when he proceeds.  It’s a risky ploy.  The developer is not a good faith purchaser for value of this property and the world is adequately on notice so that the developer and the property can be directly proceeded against resulting in substantial losses sustained by those who do business with him on this property.

    3.    As an extension of number 2 above, the developer wants, with a toe-in-the-water or camels-nose-under-the-tent, to show that no one is going to stop him even as promises are not kept.  While he may not be taking final steps here, the developer would surely like to demonstrate that no one is going to stop him, even as he imitate without keeping promises.   He’d like to show that community won’t stop him and that public officials like Comptroller Scott Stringer and Public Advocate Tish James won’t let out a squeak of opposition.  We buttonholed Comptroller Stringer just the other day and complained about his non-investigation of the library together with his failure to produce the BPL library audit he promised.  “I don’t investigate libraries,” he said.   We responded that his website, his press releases and public statements all represent that he does investigate corruption, fraud and abuse and the waste of city funds.  And Comptroller did produce an audit of the Queens Library where he went into details about much less significant matters comparatively involving just a few dollars: How the former Queen Library head improper used his library credit car to put gasoline in his other family members’ cars.
The head of the crew of men trashing the library didn’t want pictures taken or people walking on the public property near the library.  “You can’t do that!” he said, “they gave us the library!”


Monday, October 17, 2016

What Libraries Are Affected By City Strategy Of Defunding, Shrinking, Selling Off Libraries?

[Back To Main Page]  The information posted here at Citizens Defending Libraries, including this page, will be updated, evolved and developed further.

What libraries are affecting by city strategy of defunding, shrinking, selling off libraries?  All the libraries in the system are affected but here are highlights (which will be updated), focusing on the most immediate:
(We invite you to contact Citizens Defending Libraries with more information about what is going on with libraries you know about to add more information to this list.  See contact information and comments sections at bottom of page.)
    •   Libraries everywhere in New York City?  At a November 18, 2015 City Council hearing Brooklyn Public Library President Linda Johnson said that the sale and shrinkage of the Brooklyn Heights Library (itself modeled after the sale and shrinkage of the NYPL's Donnell library) was being looked at by all three NYC library systems (Brooklyn, the NYPL and Queens) as a model for similar transactions.

    •    Four Main Libraries in Manhattan (plus?):
    •        The Donnell Library (53rd between 5th and 6th Avenues) was closed for shrinkage in 2008, its collection disbursed.  Its former location now a construction site, “plans” having not worked out.  Perhaps a half-size library will be provided by 2014.
    •        The main research library at 42nd Street will have its recently-renovated research stacks destroyed, decommissioning it as the premier world class research resource it was meant to be.
    •        Mid-Manhattan (Across Fifth Avenue) will be sold as part of the consolidating shrinkage plan.
    •        The relatively new Science Library at 34th Street will also be sold as part of the consolidating shrinkage plan.
    •        Further down the list are. . . ?
     •       When the NYPL unveiled its system-wide real estate plans to staff in March of 2008 it identified a plan to put a new hub library in Northern Manhattan (Harlem?).  This is the only new hub library that seems to have been proposed anywhere.  What this plans means cannot be said with certainty, but going back to the Donnell Library closing in 2008, following through with consolidating shrinkage of the proposed Central Library Plan and now the sell-off of the Brooklyn Heights library, all central or hub libraries of any kind have been associated with the sale and shrinkage of other previously existing libraries in the vicinity.  Therefore, there shoud be concern about the upcoming sale and closing of libraries in northern Manhattan and Harlem.
NYPL Libraries New To The List 
      •      New to the list of libraries to be sold- An unidentified library in "northern Manhattan" that the NYPL Trustees were told about at a meeting held specially in Harlem.
      •      Also new to the list of libraries to be sold- The Inwood Library (near Dykman Street and just downhill from the Cloisters) at 4790 Broadway, New York, NY, 10034 which was renovated and expanded in 2001.
      •     Based on events at the NYPL trustees meeting we believe that the Jerome Park Library in the Bronx at118 Eames Pl, Bronx, NY 10468 is being looked at for sale.
    •    Spaceworks and its mission to shrink and privatize NYC public library space as "underutilized" a threat to NYPL (Manhattan , Bronx and Staten Island) and BPL (Brooklyn) and possible Queens Libraries:
 Recent news has come out that the private company Spaceworks, created by the Bloomberg administration in the summer of 2012 is decalred to be partnering with the NYPL and BPL with the mission of taking over and privatizing space in NYPL and BPL libraries based on the premise that the space in the libraries, despite greatly increasing use, is "underutilized."  See: Thursday, July 3, 2014, Spaceworks And Its Privatizing Space Grab Of The Libraries.  The two of libraries first announced as guinea pigs for Spaceworks shrinkage are the recentlt renovated Red Hook and Williamsburg libraries.  Spaceworks mission is promoted by the Revson Foundation.  The Revson Foundation funded a recent study by the Center for and Urban Future that concluded that libraries that are only 10,000 square feet should be enlarged.  Notwithstanding, the Red Hook Library is only 7,500 square feet and Spacework was proposing with the BPL to shrink that library by 2,000 square feet down to to only 5,500 square feet.

Spaceworks has been asked to identify what other libraries is it working on plans to shrink in its partnerships with the BPL and NYPL.  Spaceworks has denied, despite its proclaimed partnership with the NYPL, that it has any plans underway to shrink any NYPL libraries in Manhattan, the Bronx or Staten Island and denies that it has any other Brooklyn libraries in its sites to shrink.  It is not clear whether, with the board changes now underway at the Queens library whether Spaceworks will try to operate in Queens as well.    
    •    Libraries in Brooklyn:
The Brooklyn Public Library has a strategic plan that is looking to "leverage" (turn into real estate deals) ALL of the libraries in the system.  The most up-to-date information about libraries being targeted and in the most imminent possible danger comes from a recent thorough review of a decades worth of the BPL's board minutes.   See: Sunday, August 31, 2014, Mostly In Plain Sight (A Few Conscious Removals Notwithstanding) Minutes Of Brooklyn Public Library Tell Shocking Details Of Strategies To Sell Brooklyn's Public Libraries.   Based on that review, Citizens Defending Libraries has launched its Citizens Audit and Investigation which includes using the state sunshine laws to obtain more information about all of the following libraries talked about as being part of the BPL real estate strategy:
    •        Brooklyn Heights Library
    •        Pacific Branch
    •        Sunset Park Branch
    •        Red Hook Branch
    •        Williamsburg Branch
    •        Brower Park Library
    •        Midwood Library
    •        Gravesend Library
    •        Clinton Hill Library
    •        McKinley Park Branch and another seven or eight leased libraries being acquired with or without the formal threat of eminent domain. 
 Here is more information:
    •        The Brooklyn Branch library at 280 Cadman Plaza will be closed and shrunk to become a much smaller library in what has been spoken of (internally by library officials) as likely being a forty-story building likely owned, library officials say, in a “Partnership” with Forest City Ratner.  Library officials have indicated they can justify keeping the smaller library open shorter hours.  The current library space, which also hosts the Business and Career library, is 62,000 square feet.  This would be reduced to and orriginall proposed 16,000 square feet (now 21,000 square feet).  Library officials are arguing that the space used by the public would effectively be cut only in half.
    •        The Business and Career library would be booted out of its current and traditional location at the edge of Brooklyn’s Central Business District (at a transportation hub and adjacent to universities).  (This would help the library to keep shorter hours in Brooklyn Heights)  To the extent that Business and Career library continued to exist at all afterwards it would be by virtue of jamming it into (and effectively shrinking) the Main Branch Library in Prospect Heights at Grand Army Plaza.
    •        The Main Brooklyn Library at Grand Army Plaza will be shrunk to the extent that other libraries elsewhere are closed and shrunk and shunted off services get jammed into this library.
    •        The Pacific branch library, (recently renovated), the first Carnegie Building opened in Brooklyn and a proposed landmark that the City Landmark’s commissioner has refused to act on since 2004, would be closed.
    •        There is information coming together from several sources that the Clinton Hill Library, 380 Washington Avenue (at Lafayette Ave, two blocks from Clinton), Brooklyn, NY 11238 is being looked at for sale to a developer.  It is one of the libraries that has been the subject of recent sporadic closures claiming air conditioning or (March 2013) lack of heat.
    •        The Midwood Library was one of the first libraries that a developer made an offer on.  The BPL said it is looking at all possibilities.

    •        The Sunset Park Branch was specifically identified as being a library that would be solf to be turned into a mixed-use property.

    •        The BPL received a developer proposal for the Brower Park Library and asked that it be made more specific.
    •        There is a list of other Brooklyn libraries on the list for development.  Although the Brooklyn Public Library system denies it, libraries on the list were handed out to developers at least as far back as 2007.  (People visiting the Brooklyn Heights library building are being told that the Brooklyn Heights library is the only library affected by the current sell-off and shrinkage plans, information that is obviously incorrect.)
    •        The strategic plan for the Brooklyn Public Library states that the plan is to “leverage” (i.e. “sell”) all of the real estate.  The BPL: “will leverage its over one million square feet of real estate by launching partnerships . . .”
    •        The (Rupert Murdoch-owned) Brooklyn Paper that promotes the interests of the real estate developers ran two articles March 27, 2013.  One was run in lieu of covering of covering a Community Board 5 hearing where the community was out in force strenuously objecting as BPL spokespeople presented their plans to sell the Pacific Branch library.  That article, labeled a "News Analysis" in the print edition of the paper, was comprised of quotes and talking points of the BPL spokesman stating why the library should be sold and why Andrew Carnegie who donated this and other libraries on the condition that they be kept open and maintained would want to see such libraries sold off.  Along with that article the paper ran another article where, according to Curbed, a real estate blog, the “Brooklyn Paper helpfully outlined every at-risk Carnegie branch in the borough.”  Accordingly, that article gives clues to other libraies likely to be put on the block for sale. Another clue to which libraries are likely to be sold are which libraries get reported to have air conditioning problems.  So far no library (going back to Donnell in 2008) has been proposed for sale without citing air conditioning problems, whether that library was recently renovated or not.  A list of libraries with air conditioning problems appeared in the Brooklyn Eagle at the end of the Summer 2012.  Libraries overlapping on these two lists as being in poor condition and having air conditioning problems, in addition to the Brooklyn Heights library and the Pacific Branch Library include also the Clinton Hill Library, 380 Washington Avenue and the Brownsville branch, 61 Glenmore Ave. at Watkins St. Brooklyn, NY 11212.  Other still open Carnegie libraries Brooklyn that the Brooklyn Paper listed as being in "poor condition" were:  Brownsville branch, 61 Glenmore Ave. at Watkins St. Brooklyn, NY 11212, Carroll Gardens branch, 396 Clinton St. @ Union St., Brooklyn, NY 11231, Flatbush branch, 22 Linden Blvd. at Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11226, Arlington branch, 203 Arlington Ave. at Warwick St., Brooklyn, NY 11207, Walt Whitman branch, 93 Saint Edwards St. (between Myrtle and Park Avenues), Brooklyn, NY 11205, Saratoga branch, 8 Thomas S. Boyland St. at "Macon St.", Brooklyn, NY 11233, Leonard branch, 81 Devoe St. at Leonard St., Brooklyn, NY 11215, Eastern Parkway branch, 1044 Eastern Pkwy. at Schenectady Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11213, Washington Irving branch, 360 Irving Ave. (at Woodbine St.), Brooklyn, NY 11237.      
    •    All of the libraries in all of the boroughs affected:
    •        Because the current strategy involves underfunding all of the libraries in the New York City system in order to shake loose and prioritize these real estate deals wherever they be, every library is suffering negative consequences as a result.

    •    Libraries in Queens:
    •        The Queens Library sub-system has so far been the most protective of its libraries.  Some libraries in Queens lease space rather than being in publicly-owned properties so there is little real estate value to trying to sell off those particular libraries (unless there is s a very long-term, low-rent lease).  Still, because the strategy is to underfund all the libraries in the city to shake real estate properties loose from the system, the Queens libraries are also deleteriously affected; the Borough President must divert more discretionary funds in the direction of libraries (making those funds unavailable to the borough for other uses) and those funds are less effective in bringing library services up to an suitable level.
    •        The Elmhurst public library in Queens, which the Historic Districts Council fought with the community to save, was bulldozed.  That property was not sold off to a developer for another use; it only turned into a construction project the appropriateness of which can be investigated.  Alternatives would have included added library space to the existing library off or on site.
    •        According to the New York City Independent Budget Office’s critique of the mayor’s push to drive down funding of the libraries, “The funding fall-off is already taking a toll on the city’s three library systems, particularly the systems in Brooklyn and Queens.” . . .“more than three dozen branch libraries may be closed.”
    •        Here is a link to the HDC campaign to save libraries, which includes libraries in Queens.
    •     Libraries in The Bronx and Staten Island:
    •        The Bronx and Staten Island libraries are part of NYPL subsystem whose board of trustees have focused themselves on a prioritized creation of the real estate deals in Manhattan.  What we are seeing is that the juiciest real estate deals are getting priority, but what we know from the Brooklyn situation is that they are working their way down a list.
    •        Read the section on the Queens libraries about how the entire system is affected.
    •        The Historic Districts council is working to save libraries in the Bronx and Staten Island as well as the other boroughs.  
CONTACT: To contact Citizens Defending Libraries email Backpack362 (at) aol.com.

You may also leave a comment with information in the comments section at the bottom of this page.


The first petition (gathered over 17,000 signature, most of them online- available at signon.org with a background statement and can still be signed).   On June 16, Citizens Defending libraries issued a new updated petition that you can sign now:
Mayor de Blasio: Rescue Our Libraries from Developer Destruction
You can also paste the following url into your browser.

http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/mayor-de-blasio-rescue-2?source=s.tw&r_by=5895137 

Saturday, September 17, 2016

The Brooklyn Book Festival- Attending and Joining Citizens Defending Libraries at the 2016 Brooklyn Book Fair, Sunday, September 18th

This week at the NYPL trustees meeting we learned that the list of NYC libraries being targeted to be sold in real estate redevelopment schemes continues to grow.  The NYPL trustees met in secret executive session for more than an hour to discuss the chair’s introduction of a real estate deal.  The announcement of what was being discussed was cryptic.  Virtually all facts were withheld with staff being very nervous about information getting out, but we believe that the transaction being discussed is the sale for redevelopment of the Jerome Park Library, 118 Eames Pl, Bronx, NY 10468.  The library is several blocks north of the recently proposed Jerome Avenue rezoning so, although the use of such library deals has been discussed as inducements, carrots for such rezonings, there does not appear to be a direct connection between the two, at least as of yet.

This sale for redevelopment of the Jerome Park Library would be in addition to the upper Manhattan” (probably Harlem) library announced for a proposed redevelopment sale at the very last NYPL trustees meeting (where Ethan Hawke was appointed as a new NYPL trustee).  When will targeting of the next library be announced?. . .  The next NYPL trustees meeting is scheduled for November 16th.

Meanwhile, in this context, The Brooklyn Book Festival provides an opportunity for our Citizens Defending Library team members to get out, especially in connection with some of the events of Sunday the Book Fair’s main day, and get word out to book lovers about what is happening.

Here are the Sunday, September 18, 2016 events we consider the most important to attend and/or canvass (Contact Carolyn McIntyre if you want to coordinate in canvassing efforts):
    •    10:00am-  Brooklyn Book Festival Reception for Librarians- Brooklyn Historical Society Library, 128 Pierrepont St.  The library selling BPL president Linda E. Johnson will introduce this event.  We will canvass- An Rsvp is required to attend the event itself: librarians@brooklynbookfestival.org

    •    11:00am-  Where are Libraries Headed? Presented by the Brooklyn Public Library and the Architectural League of New York, Brooklyn Historical Society Library- 128 Pierrepont St.  This event about the “future” of libraries features David Giles, now working directly for the BPL who in reports and op-eds produced working with and funded by the Center for an Urban Future and the Revson Foundation (both of which have been promoting library real estate deals) has advocated and endorsed the sales and drastic shrinkings of the Donnell Library and the Brooklyn Heights Library as good examples for the future.  Another related issue: The BPL’s preference for forcing people to use more expensive, less private digital books.

    •    12:00pm- Security Without Backdoors: The Future of Digital Privacy- Brooklyn Law School Moot Courtroom, 250 Joralemon St.  This session is about whether the government entered an aggressive new phase in squashing digital privacy. Are they seeking to establish legal precedent to ratify their authority over telecoms, software companies, and others? Is this a necessary measure to keep citizens safe in a dangerous world? What are the stakes? Manoush Zomorodi, host of WNYC's Note to Self, leads an esteemed panel including Fred Kaplan (Dark Territory), security expert Bruce Schneier (Data and Goliath), and law scholar Laura K. Donohue (The Future of Foreign Intelligence).- This directly relates to concerns about eliminating physical books from libraries.

    •    12:00pm- Chronicles of the Brooklyn Bridge Park- St. Francis College Workshop Room 4202, 180 Remsen St.   The participants are: Joanne Witty (Brooklyn Bridge Park Corporation board member)and Henrik Krogius, authors of Brooklyn Bridge Park, A Dying Waterfront Transformed, and Nancy Webster (executive director, Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy), author of A History of Brooklyn Bridge Park, talk about the inspiring backstory of the community and political engagement that transformed a defunct, urban waterfront into an internationally recognized urban oasis. Moderated by former Brooklyn Parks Commissioner Julius Spiegel. - What’s valuable about being around for this gathering is to be able to point out that there is a heavy overlap involving board members and political operatives between those pushing to plunder libraries to create real estate deals and those pushing for maximum development within the boundaries of what is called Brooklyn Bridge Park.
    •    1:00pm- Terror, Threats and Fear- Brooklyn Law School Moot Courtroom, 250 Joralemon St.  In the 15 years since George W. Bush announced the beginning of the "war on terror," the United States has seen the country's longest wars, acts of homegrown terrorism, increased domestic surveillance, and a presidential candidate who promised to stop Muslim immigration. Join Masha Gessen (The Brothers), Moustafa Bayoumi (This Muslim American Life) and Amitava Kumar (A Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm a Tiny Bomb) for a conversation on Islamophobia, the "homegrown" terrorist threat, and the impact of the war on terror on our lives here in the United States. Moderated by Faiza Patel of the Brennan Center.- The war on Terror has provided the premise for massively  increased domestic surveillance.  Librarians were the first to successfully challenge the PATRIOT Act, but now with the sale and shrinking of libraries, the elimination of librarians and books, especially physical books from libraries, what was won by those librarians will be lost again.

    •    2:00pm- Politically Correct?-  Brooklyn Law School Moot Courtroom, 250 Joralemon St.  If and when Americans get to marking the ballot, a Democrat or Republican is invariably elected. If? If voting rights are protected and everyone gets to vote! When?  At the general election when the two major parties have rolled-over or rolled-in the independents, liberals, conservatives, green people, working class, tea party candidates et all. Ralph Nader (Breaking Through Power: It's Easier Than We Think), Thomas Frank, (Listen Liberal), and Gloria J. Browne-Marshall (The Voting Rights War) discuss the election process and voter empowerment. Moderated by Nicholas W. Allard, Brooklyn Law School President and Joseph Crea Dean.  Discuss how continued entrenchment of our duopoly deprives the people of power such that assets highly valued by the public like libraries can be plundered.

    •    3:00pm- Writing the War- Brooklyn Law School Moot Courtroom, 250 Joralemon St.  Who gets to tell the story of the U.S.'s recent interventions in the Middle East, and how does one's perspective or experience change what that story might be? Join Janine di Giovanni (The Morning They Came For Us: Dispatches from Syria), Larry Siems (editor of Mohamedou Ould Slahi's Guantanamo Diary), and Molly Crabapple (Drawing Blood) as they discuss what shaped their stories of America's military imprint, and how to communicate the disruptions of recent history. Moderated by Greg Milner (Pinpoint: How GPS Is Changing Technology, Culture, and Our Minds.

Thursday, July 28, 2016

PRESS RELEASE: Combined Power of Law Enforcers/Public Guardians should halt corrupt library deal

PRESS RELEASE- Law Enforcers and Public Guardians, Preet Bahara, Eric Schneiderman and Scott Stringer Included, are asked to use the combined authority of their five extraordinarily powerful offices to halt the imminent, tragic and corrupt loss of Brooklyn's second biggest, most important library

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
New York City

WHAT: Citizens Defending Libraries, in a letter issued yesterday, has asked the five most powerful law enforcers and public guardians in the city to intervene to prevent the indefensible loss to which Mayor de Blasio (violating his campaign pledge plus now under investigation) would cynically subject New Yorkers by shrinking and sinking Brooklyn's second largest and most important library.  The request comes in the wake of the opening of the so-called "replacement" for the Donnell Library that starkly demonstrates, by example, the extent of the pending loss.

Citizens Defending Libraries has asked the officials to intervene immediately to prevent the imminent and drastic loss of the Brooklyn Heights Library rather than simply prosecuting public officials for the harm to the public after the fact.

Citizens Defending Libraries has asked Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General State of New York, Scott M. Stringer, New York City Comptroller, Robert L. Capers, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York and Letitia James, Public Advocate for the City of New York, to coordinate to use their powers collectively, as is often done in such situations, to avoid any problems with gaps in authority or jurisdiction or skips in handling, believing that some other office was already taking actions necessary.

BACKGROUND:

It has previously been reported that Mayor de Blasio and his administration is under investigation by United States Attorney Preet Bharara and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance for a "pay to play" hand-off of the library to a developer, Hudson Companies, making an inferior bid for the library, a bid $6 million less than one of the two other higher bidders.  NYC Comptroller Stringer is involved in the related, very similar investigation of the Rivington nursing home scandal.

The library deal and preferential hand-off necessarily implicates in the "pay to play" fact pattern trustees and officials of the Brooklyn Public Library who were not only willing to hand off the library to the developer sending contributions to de Blasio campaigns, but were also willing to sell the recently expanded and fully upgraded library for less than the value of the property as a vacant lot (standing to net from the sale less than $20 million for a building it would cost $120+ million to replace).

The clock is ticking.  The library was shuttered only yesterday, the day of the delivery of Citizens Defending Libraries letter.

Citizens Defending Libraries letter to the law enforcers and pubic guardians is available here:
Wednesday, July 27, 2016,  Open Letter to US Attorney Preet Bharara, NYS Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman, NYC Comptroller Scott Stringer, et al,: Use Your Staggering Powers as Law Enforcers & Public Guardians To Immediately Halt the Corrupt Sale & Shrinking of Brooklyn Heights Library 
http://citizensdefendinglibraries.blogspot.com/2016/07/open-letter-to-us-attorney-preet.html
Quotes:
"It would be ridiculous to say that nothing can be done by people holding such powerful positions to protect the public and it would be ridiculous to let the library be destroyed now, only to bemoan its passing and prosecute those responsible afterwards."- Michael D. D. White, co-founder Citizens Defending Libraries

"Mayor de Blasio's failed to be present at the opening of the shrunken, sunken so-called "replacement" of Donnell, quite remarkable given how it represents and relates as a model his Heights library deal.  Is that merely practical politics or a guilty conscience?"- Carolyn E. McIntyre, co-founder Citizens Defending Libraries
CONTACT:
Carolyn E. McIntyre, Michael D. D. White

Michael White, 718-834-6184, mddwhite@aol.com
Carolyn McIntyre, 917-757-6542 cemac62@aol.com

Follow us on Twitter: @defendinglibraries

For photos and videos of prior Citizens Defending Libraries rallies opposing the sale, shrinkage, underfunding of New York City libraries, and elimination of books and librarians in the three and a half+ years since its founding, see:

PHOTO GALLERIES- PAST EVENTS

                                                                  #   #   #

Citizens Defending Libraries
(718) 797-5207
http://citizensdefendinglibraries.blogspot.com
@DefendLibraries on twitter
backpack362@aol.com

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Open Letter to US Attorney Preet Bharara, NYS Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman, NYC Comptroller Scott Stringer, et al: Use Your Staggering Powers as Law Enforcers & Public Guardians To Immediately Halt the Corrupt Sale & Shrinking of Brooklyn Heights Library

Here is the letter Citizens Defending Libraries delivered today to the city's law enforcers and public guardians asking them to use their immense combined powers to immediately halt the sale, shrinking and sinking of Brooklyn's second biggest library:

July 27, 2016

Preet Bharara
United States Attorney for
    the Southern District of New York
United States Attorney's Office
1 St. Andrew's Plaza
New York City, New York 10007

Eric T. Schneiderman
Attorney General State of New York
Office of the Attorney General
The Capitol
Albany, NY 12224-0341
&
120 Broadway
New York, New York 10271

Scott M. Stringer
New York City Comptroller
Office of the Comptroller City of New York
One Centre Street
New York, NY 10007
 
Robert L. Capers
United States Attorney for
    the Eastern District of New York
United States Attorney's Office
271 Cadman Plaza East
Brooklyn, New York 11201

Letitia James
Public Advocate for the City of New York
Office of the Public Advocate of New York
1 Centre Street, 15 Floor North.
New York, New York 10007

Re:    Using Your Powers to Halt Immediately the Corrupt Sale and Shrinking of the Brooklyn Heights Library

Dear Honorable Law Enforcers & Public Guardians:

In just weeks, weeks that might more readily measured in days, New Yorkers and the communities of Brooklyn and the city can expect to suffer the loss of the Brooklyn Heights central destination library in Downtown Brooklyn.  It’s Brooklyn’s second largest and second most valuable library, an entrusted asset that was meant to be and should be preserved. . .

. . . This is what will happen only if our elected officials and public guardians do not do what they are able to stop the destruction.  That’s why we write this letter to you in your official capacities: We ask you, without delay, to exercise your powers to protect the public.

This central destination library in Downtown Brooklyn is a sturdy well-designed building that was substantially expanded and fully upgraded in 1993.  It is five years newer and more up-to-date than adjacent Forest City Ratner building (part of the same real estate parcel for development purposes) that houses Hillary Clinton’s national campaign headquarters.  It is, significantly, one of Brooklyn’s very best libraries, probably its second best, in terms of the computer resources it affords, but it is even more important for what it was designed to be as a library, a place to find and discover books, including service as a federal depository.

The stories offered about why the library is to be destroyed would all be laughable jokes if they were not so tragically inane and cynically concocted.  The library is to be sold for a pittance, less than the value of the property as a vacant lot, and this critically valuable and irreplaceable library is far from a vacant lot.  While benefitting the real estate industry the sale of the property deeply harms and wrongs the public with the property being handed off for less than its tear-down value to an inferior bidder, one of the low bidders who bid $6 million less than another.  That $6 million left on the table in a deal with a developer who has a political contribution relationship with the mayor under investigation is a huge negative adjustment to the paltry amount the sale will likely net.  Like the New York Public Library’s sale of the Donnell Library, the sale of this Library is likely to net the Brooklyn Public Library less than $20 million when all is accounted for.

Moreover, and more important, the library that is being sold and shrunk to net such a small amount would cost more than $120 million to replace.

“A Stitch In Time” vs. “Spilled Milk”

These are not matters we should wait to lament in retrospect.  These are reasons for you to exercise your powers now to prevent this imminent tragedy and injustice.

Now that the so-called “replacement” for the Donnell Library has opened, the lessons afforded thereby teach us in retrospect everything we need to know about why the loss of the Brooklyn Heights must be actively stopped by your intervention now, not grieved in the future as an unfortunate past.  See: New York Magazine, The New 53rd Street Library Is Nice, Unless You Like to Read Books, by Justin Davidson, July 12, 2016, (“a real-estate” that “sloughed off the leftovers on the public”) City Journal, Books in the Basement- Midtown Manhattan's new library falls short of what a world-class city should provide to its citizens, by Nicole Gelinas, July 1, 2016, (“one of the worst decisions made by a local public institution in decades”. .  “ what is the city's excuse for asking people to be happy that they've been relegated to the basement?”) Jeremiah's Vanishing New York, On Donnell's Replacement & $375 Cocktails, by Jeremiah Moss, July 13, 2016.   Jeremiah's Vanishing New York: On Donnell's Replacement & $375 Cocktails, by Jeremiah Moss, July 13, 2016, (“a surreal nightmare of modern neoliberal urbanization” that “seems doomed to fail as a library.”) New York Times, N.Y. / Region-An Amphitheater- A Laptop Bar. It's a New York Library Like No Other.- Building Blocks, By David W. Dunlap, June 20, 2016 (“secretive plutocrats buying investment aeries in the sky while public institutions are relegated to basements”).

Clearly, although it is nearly nine years since the impending loss of Donnell was suddenly announced this is not a plundering the public is prepared ever to forget.

The closing of the Donnell, another beloved and critically valuable cental destination library,  was announced accompanied by the telling of multiple fictions that included the assuring promise that the library that “replaced” Donnell would likewise bear the name Donnell.  Quite tellingly, as it turns out, library officials haven’t dared to christen the shrunken, sunken inadequate library “Donnell.”

The sale of Donnell, the sacrificing of public benefit for private profit it represents, is another matter that has long cried out for the delivery of an investigation report to the public.  We look to you for such a report which we consider long overdue.  Hopefully statutes of limitations will not have been carelessly allowed to lapse.  That is why we have been a conduit of information respecting the same to your offices.   Especially when the private profit and luxury is so conspicuous, it is naive to believe that such abjectly bad decisions respecting our libraries have been made out of sheer stupidity and nothing else.  We credit city and library officials, both present and former with far more intelligence than that.

As has been documented, the sale, shrinking and sinking of the Brooklyn Heights Library is not only closely modeled on the sale, shrinking and sinking of the Donnell Library, behind the scenes there is a linkage of the people involved and the timing with which these plans were launched. If not stopped here and now, this past will be prologue for depredation of even more libraries, and likely, with that, more attacks on our public commons as we incite developers by demonstrating how easily juicy deals can be dreamed up to wrest away the public’s property.

Investigative Powers

All of your offices have investigative powers.  And your attendant powers extend beyond mere investigation.  The purpose of investigation is not to Monday morning quarterback.  We may punish after investigations and after bad deeds have occurred, but we do it in order to deter future misconduct and protect the public from harm.  Although investigations may take time to mature and carefully document, the idea of having investigative powers is not to let harm be done and then ask for an accounting afterwards.  While often we may stand back and wait on the theory that we are giving people enough “rope to hang themselves,” the bottom line should always be to do everything necessary to prevent harm to the public and that means doing what can be done to prevent it before it occurs.  The destruction of a library that would cost over $120 million to replace, if it could be replaced at all, is not a small matter to let slide by.

Individually, the powers of each of your offices are immense; collectively what you can accomplish is utterly staggering.

Among other things, including prosecutorial powers, the office of the New York State Attorney General is charged with oversight and regulation of the conduct of public charities to ensure that assets entrusted to them are neither squandered nor raided for private gains or purposes other than intended.  In fact, as of 2014 these powers were statutorily augmented to strengthen the "Attorney General's power to police fraud and abuse" by, among other things, "granting clear power to bring judicial proceedings to unwind interested-party transactions."

Similarly, it was only last July that Comptroller Scott Stringer commanded headlines informing the public about how he was expanding the use of his offices powers to investigate and root out corruption in connection with which he unveiled a new “Research and Investigation Unit. . comprised of a team of lawyers and data analysts with extensive backgrounds in financial, criminal and public corruption investigations,” the investigation team being “a powerful addition to our arsenal” with their work enabling us “to dig even deeper into the agencies we audit as we fulfill our mandate to root out fraud and save City taxpayers' hard-earned money.”   The unit’s first work product involved a library system investigation.  Indeed, as of February 5, 2014 Comptroller Stringer assurance to the public was already in place that he was going “to look at the three library systems” and “to examine, through a performance audit and a financial audit” the”entire system,” noting that “there is a big city stake in the libraries.”

And clearly the Brooklyn Heights Library abuses are connected with other investigations the Comptroller has underway.  When we last questioned Comptroller Stringer about the Brooklyn Heights Library sale this year he brought up by analogy his current participation in investigating the very similar set of facts concerning the Rivington House nursing home deal where City Hall turned a nursing home over to a developer making contributions to the Mayor, extinguishing its nonprofit public purpose so that it could be replaced by luxury condominiums.  While de Blasio said, as facts were unearthed, that the deal should not have been done and that it happened without the involvement of anyone high up in his administration, an investigative report shows that the most senior City Hall officials charged by de Blasio with handling such matters, Deputy Mayors Alicia Glen and Anthony Shorris and Shorris’s chief of staff, Dominic Williams, were quite informed about the transaction.  The de Blasio administration is stonewalling against the release of additional emails that would show more.

Likewise, de Blasio and City Hall officials, Deputy Mayor Glen particularly, were exceedingly aware and involved in the deal to shrink and sink the Brooklyn Heights Library.  Despite the emails from the investigation of the Rivington deal, that investigated deal, like the library deal, is inexplicably progressing despite its crookedness and the ways in which it substantially shortchanges the public.

As has been dramatically demonstrated with multiple high profile cases, the U.S. Attorney’s office, particularly the U.S. Attorney’s office for New York’s Southern District can effectively pursue and prosecute political corruption including malfeasance, and the abuse and neglect of duty by elected public officials.  Conversely, the U.S. Attorney’s Office is able to work with local elected officials so that their combined powers and jurisdiction doesn’t leave gaps where the public is told that `nothing can be done’ in the face corruption and abuse.

Whatever reassurance may flow from seeing elected officials prosecuted after the fact for feeding at the public trough, the deterrence value of such actions is severely truncated if the financial deals fueling such corruption are permitted to come to full fruition regardless.  The public is rightly skeptical of any true progress if a continuing round robin of indictments, prosecutions, convictions and removals does nothing more than clear the decks of one set of elected leaders just so that another will be less impeded to step up into their place whilst the powerful interests driving things behind the scenes still benefit and deals continue to be consummated at a huge toll to the public.  Real deterrence requires shutting down those deals.

The New York Times has become adept at what is now almost a signature leitmotif where it sorrowfully eulogizes, after the fact, losses that should not have occurred, losses that might have been prevented except for the Times own failure to exercise journalistic vigilance, take note of what was obvious, investigate and sound the alarm.  Notably, such commiseration and belated fulfillment of “paper of record” functions doesn’t upset any financial applecarts and thus does not align the paper with or serve the public interest.

Similarly, it doesn’t serve for an ascending set of political hopefuls to lament and lambast the conduct of and loss caused by ousted leaders if they, themselves, did not do everything they could in their power to prevent the harm visited upon the public.

Where Will the Blame Be Cast, Where Should the Blame Be Cast For the Destruction of the Brooklyn Heights Library?

There are those who are no doubt prepared to say that, in the end, the destruction of the Brooklyn Heights Library will be laid squarely at the feet of a mayor, Bill de Blasio, with many now being eager to predict his imminent departure.   Mr.de Blasio is the man who, while running for mayor, said of our multiple libraries besieged by sale schemes specifically including the Brooklyn Heights Library in his list:
“It's public land and public facilities and public value under threat. . . and once again we see, lurking right behind the curtain, real estate developers who are very anxious to get their hands on these valuable properties”
So well did Mr. de Blasio know of the real estate developers “right behind the curtain” coveting the libraries that just months later, even while still campaigning he was taking money from the development team to whom he would later award sale of the Brooklyn Heights Library.

To only cast blame on and then expediently shed from public office such a politician as Mr. de Blasio would be too simple and would be to give into a bad habit in corruption investigation where we only blame elected officials for selling out the public, excusing developers and others involved in these schemes as their innocent victims.  Mr. de Blasio’s sale of the library to a low-bidding, campaign-contributing developer for $6 million less than another bidder would not have been possible without the complicity and coordination of Brooklyn Public Library trustees and officials in “charitable” office already intent to sell off, and rationalize post hoc, the library for a minuscule fraction of its true value to the public as a library.

Certainly the developer and those on his team with him are very far from innocent or bone fide purchasers for value and they are not ignorant of the machinations in which they were participating, but it is clear from the minutes of the Brooklyn Public Library trustees meeting that concoction of the Heights library scheme pre-existed the selection of the developer as well as any knowledge on the part of those formulating plans that Mr. de Blasio would be mayor and participate in the scheme’s final effectuation.

The long secret plan to sell the library was developed contemporaneously and with an overlap of players with the sale of Donnell (announced in 2007) which it so closely mimics.  At the BPL October 11, 2011 trustee meeting, BPL president Ms. Johnson made absolutely clear on the record the goal of locking the next mayor (the mayor to follow then Mayor Michael Bloomberg) into the real estate plans that were secretly underway.  Reporting on the real estate plan, Ms. Johnson “reminded the Board of past conversations about the plan and let them know that the goal was to get far enough into the plan with this Mayor so that when a new Mayor takes office, the plan will be deep in progress and he or she will not derail it. She thanked Board Chair Crowell and Trustee Kimball for their work helping with moving it forward.”

At the same time, in order to avoid public objection, information about the BPL’s real estate plans were being kept secret and, as Linda Johnson told the BPL trustees who did not object, “in strict confidence.”  The BPL’s secrecy continues today with a copious amount of information we have informed you about that should be public that is being withheld by a stonewalling BPL, including information legally requested and required to be made available pursuant to Freedom of Information Laws.

Although the Brooklyn Heights Library was entrusted to the BPL for the benefit of the public, the plan that was fixed for its sale and shrinkage down to a preordained 15,000 feet above aground, was intended to be justified with post hoc rationalizations no matter what preceded and that included, not having any assessment of its value the public, the community’s need for it, or what would be paid for the library or netted by the sale.  Among other things, the so-called “replacement” for the library has apparently still never been designed.

While de Blasio will no doubt be properly blamed for signing onto this crooked deal, the developer and the trustees, not his innocent victims, will also be properly blamed.  The public will also have a potent recall of those who failed to exercise their power to stop this deal if it is not stopped.

Again, we ask you to stop this deal now.

Comptroller Stringer

Comptroller Stringer, we thank you for the December 9, 2015 letter from your office to the de Blasio administration addressed to Deputy Mayor Glen (also, as per the investigation emails, Glen is also involved in the Rivington House nursing home scandal) in which you made clear what folly it was for the administration to be pretending that the sale of this library could somehow accord with the public interest.

Since that time there was the last minute revelation of the backroom deal worked out at City Hall, pushed through by Deputy Mayor Glen, that made the deal significantly worse, especially with respect to City Hall’s blank check raid of Department of Education funds for the benefit of the developer, a whole new matter demanding investigation.

In addition, similarly, it was after your letter was delivered that your assessment that the value of the library was being disregarded with the public grossly shortchanged was confirmed and documented by revelations that the de Blasio administration and library trustees and officials had acted in concert to award the hand-off of the library to an inferior low bidder.

There is much here you can prevent and much here you should prevent.  In their trustees meeting the trustees of the BPL were led to believe they have nothing to fear from you.  We hope you act to prove them wrong.

Attorney General Schneiderman

The fact that you have jurisdiction hangs in our minds.  We remember (and we brought to this to the attention of your office) how the trustees of the NYPL involved in selling the Donnell and the launch of the impossible to justify Central Library Plan, were assured of good a relationship with your office when the subject of your increased authority concerning conflict of interests on their behalf came up.

Similarly, the trustees of the BPL were told about the BPL’s hosting of your Brooklyn Community Forum event as reassuringly good relations with your office were described.

There is also the concern of how BerlinRosen is working with the BPL to push through the Brooklyn Heights Library sale.  Acknowledging that BerlinRosen is, overall, problematically tied up in far too much of our city’s politics together with the deals that go along with them, we nonetheless hope that your own relationship with that firm would not be an issue in terms of doing the right thing here.

Your office is doing much good work, including some of the things you have done with respect to the fracking industry.  You have a lead role amongst the state attorneys general conducting the fraud investigation about what oil companies, including Exxon, knew and intentionally concealed as they sought to mislead the public (as well as its own investors) about climate change and the need to limit the use of fossil fuels.

The fossil fuel industry’s creation of a false and manipulative narrative burying the truth is an example of another for private profit driven and selfish assault on what is, in essence, the public commons, that which we collectively own and should be entitled to collectively benefit from, the environment, the earth’s climate, our future safety, security and perhaps even our continued existence on this planet.  Your work to investigate this stealing is important and should bring you deserved recognition.

At the same time, you also have a similar job that needs to be done with respect to some more home-grown problems right here in the backyard of the people who elected you: The real estate industry’s attacks on our public assets, libraries, hospitals, parks, schools.

One of the most important things Eliot Spitzer, one of your predecessors, did in this regard was the lawsuit he filed that saved Manhattan, Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital from a predatory real estate sale.  In accordance with his responsibility to monitor charities, Spitzer challenged  as “unacceptable” the MEET board’s decision-making process and overall behavior in the sale of that hospital invoking his power to seek removal of the board in court because their pursuit of a sale did not respect the duty of the board of directors, as a not-for-profit corporation, to use its entrusted charitable assets to keep first priorities in mind and further the organization's charitable mission.  Now of course, in a similar situation we see that one of the federal “pay to play” investigation going on respecting the de Blasio administration concerns the sell-off of Long Island College Hospital to the real estate industry.

The ostensible reasons for selling, shrinking and sinking the Brooklyn Heights Library are false in multiple, easy to document ways.  Just as the fossil fuel industry manipulated and lied to present a false and fraudulent narrative to the public concerning climate change, Love Brooklyn Libraries! presented to the Attorney General’s office documentation of how the Brooklyn Public Library was cooking its books concealing over $100 million in unspent capital funds while it was claiming that impoverishment was forcing it to sell the Brooklyn Heights Library.

After Attorney General Schneiderman refused to review these patterns of fraud and by the BPL (ostensibly for lack of jurisdiction), this was taken to the US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York where the response from the attorney assigned was that this needed to be handled by New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman because of the Attorney General Office’s jurisdiction over misconduct by New York State charities.

US Attorney Bharara and Capers

US Attorney Bahrara, we thank you for your investigation of the library sale.  As previously communicated we stand ready to provide you with more information in addition to that which we have already furnished.  We can also offer information to US Attorney Capers’ office additional to that which was previously furnished.

Public Advocate James

Your office has standing and resources to address the theft and waste of public assets that far surpass any individual citizen’s or even organizations thereof.  We appreciate how you highlighted the issue of so protecting our public assets and specifically our libraries during your campaign for the office of Public Advocate, your acceptance speeches after the elections and in your inaugural address for that office.   As we thank Comptroller Stringer for the December 9, 2015 letter he issued from his office we also thank you for the December 9, 2015 letter you similarly issued echoing his.

While you may not have the same powers to criminally prosecute as the US Attorneys and Attorney General, we note that this often gives you a freer hand to take initiative when required for the public’s protection.  And, exceedingly pertinent to our writing, it is within the power of your office to ensure that information that should be public is made public.  Lastly, we note that the revelations with respect to investigations markedly change the situation since you last dealt with it in connection with the City Council.

Why We Write to You Collectively

We write to you collectively to avoid improper runarounds and/or gaps in authority and jurisdiction and we hope that you, collectively, will do all that is certainly in your power to ensure that the public does not lose this library, this extraordinarily valuable public asset.  We implore you individually and collectively to act so that this does not happen because any public officials are shirking their responsibility or abusively neglectful of their duties to protect the public.

Conclusion

We are well aware that investigations are often long-term, going on behind the scenes and secret from the public for years so that sufficient evidence for the strongest possible, most airtight cases can be collected and so that trails leading to related misconduct can be pursued.  We are also aware that there are tradeoffs that must be evaluated as to whether the continued keeping of such investigations secret is worth the additional and irremediable pending harm that will befall the public.

We hope that you are already well advanced into your investigation of these matters.  In any event, we urge you to act immediately.  The loss of such a valuable irreplaceable library is too much of a loss to ask the public to sustain as public officials stand by.

We request that your actions also include communications that make clear that anyone complicit in any harm that may hereafter befall the library risks personal financial jeopardy by virtue of future pursuit of restitution.

The announced sale of Donnell is already nearly nine-year-old history and still nothing has been done about it.  Just as the public remembers and is appalled by that episode, the destruction of the Brooklyn Heights Library will not pass from public memory and all will be remembered in terms of what public officials did or did not do that was within their power to prevent it.

Thank you for your consideration and thank you for acting immediately to prevent this grotesque harm to the public.

Sincerely,

Michael D. D. White
Carolyn E. McIntyre    Co-founders of
Citizens Defending Libraries
   
CC:     James Sheehan, Esq. 120 Broadway
           Alaina Gilligo, Municipal Building
           Ibrahim Khan, 1 Centre Street,
           Barbara Sherman, 1 Centre Street,
           Governor Andrew Cuomo
           New York State Comptroller, Thomas P. DiNapoli