Bd 1 Cabinet Hears Of 114 Civ-OP Anti-Graffiti Campaign
BY THOMAS COGAN
Delis cited Pollock's testimony against Oliver Siandre, the graffiti vandal who
went by the tag of Kiko, who was recently convicted on a property damage charge
and sent to jail. Pollock said he logged the times Kiko had tagged sites the Civ-OP
was maintaining and was thus able to establish evidence against him that he
spoke about at the trial.
Several groups visited January's Community Board 1 cabinet meeting, including
the Queens General Assembly, the Small Business Administration and Avon Walk for
Breast Cancer. The meeting, held at its usual site, the commissary of Kaufman
Astoria Studios and chaired by George Delis, Board 1 district manager, also
heard the latest on reconstruction of the Steinway Street Bridge and the
Department of City Planning Dutch Kills rezoning study.
Before all those persons spoke, Jim Pollock of the 114th Police Precinct
Civilian Observation Patrol (Civ-OP) described its members' dedication to
cleaning graffiti-stained buildings in Astoria. He said group members spend two
nights per week on the ongoing project, which consists of cleaning and
maintaining sites, having first secured the approval of any concerned owners.
Should graffiti be removed from a site and graffiti vandals promptly tag it
again, the new tag is removed as quickly as possible. At present, the Civ-OP
maintains 125 sites it has cleaned. Winter work is necessarily limited because
the PowrWash unit used to remove painted graffiti from brick and stucco walls
cannot be run in cold weather, and even the recent mild temperatures qualify as
cold weather. Pollock also pointed out that the Civ-OP also does vehicle
identification number (VIN) etching on automobiles in the Costco parking lot on
Vernon Boulevard on occasion. Delis cited Pollock's testimony against Oliver
Siandre, the graffiti vandal who went by the tag of Kiko, who was recently
convicted on a property damage charge and sent to jail. Pollock said he logged
the times Kiko had tagged sites the Civ-OP was maintaining and was thus able to
establish evidence against him that he spoke about at the trial.
Dan Ross of the city Department of Transportation announced the news about the
Steinway Street Bridge project. While the announcement was exactly the same as
last month's, it was a necessary reminder that during the last weekend of
January and the first weekend of February, demolition of the outside lanes of
the Steinway Street Bridge will necessitate closing first one, then the other
half of the Grand Central Parkway, with consequent slowdown of parkway traffic.
Ross said that traffic on the bridge would remain two-way at all times. He added
that there would be extended timing on stoplights in the interest of traffic
control. "Until we develop anti-gravity demolition techniques, this will have to
do," he concluded.
Speaking for the Queens General Assembly was Susan Tanenbaum, who began by
explaining that the assembly is the creation of Queens Borough President Helen
Marshall and inevitably bears the title, "Marshall Plan". It is meant to bring
together civic leaders, long-time residents and recent immigrants so each can
learn more about the others' culture, discuss common living issues and make
reports to their respective neighborhoods. Tanenbaum, community and cultural
coordinator for the borough president, said the QGA has a permanent advisory
committee of 14 and an unspecified number of delegates. At the start of each
term, the borough president appoints two delegates from each of the 14 community
planning districts in Queens. One of each pair of delegates is a community board
member, the other a representative of a religious, cultural or civic group.
These delegates serve for some 15 months, participating in monthly dialogues and
informational meetings and attending cultural events. They prepare final
presentations of their terms, which are broadcast on Queens Public Television.
Retiring delegates are encouraged to become alumni and mentors to the new group
of delegates. Tanenbaum said the assembly intends to create a speakers' bureau
that would serve as a resource in local neighborhoods, and also produce
educational materials to help replicate its work.
The Small Business Administration's Man-li Kuo Lin, a business development
specialist from the New York district, is currently making the rounds of Queens
community boards, informing her audiences of the possibilities of loans for
business development or guaranteeing bonds for contracts. The SBA is not a
lender of money but guarantor of loans. She has folders full of explanatory
literature and hands out several at each meeting, as she did at the Board 1
cabinet meeting. Joy Chen of the Department of City Planning spoke briefly about
the Dutch Kills zoning review, which she hoped the department would be able to
release this winter to get the approval process going. Dutch Kills is the
section of Long Island City bounded generally by Queens Plaza North, 36th Avenue
and 21st and 31st Streets. The new zoning study, the first in more than 45
years, attempts to redefine the status of Dutch Kills as a mixed-use district of
light industry and residences. Chen said she would have a full presentation of
the study at the March meeting of the Dutch Kills Civic Association.
The Avon Walk for Breast Cancer is a two-day weekend event that for the past
four years has had its event headquarters, the Wellness Village, in Randall's
Island Park. A construction project makes it impossible to stage the event there
in 2007. Three young women representing the Avon Products Foundation were at the
meeting to announce the plan to stage the 2007 walk, scheduled for Saturday and
Sunday, October 6 and 7, in Astoria Park, across the East River from Randall's
Island. The three women, Liz Arguelles, Brie O'Malley and Melissa Hillenbrenner,
described the walk as an outdoor fundraising event involving 3,500 walkers who
will traverse a 39.3-mile route during the weekend. Each will be committed to
raise a certain amount of money; the foundation hopes to attain a total of $9.5
million from the event. The Wellness Village that Avon hopes to establish in
Astoria Park would be for the overnight care and feeding of the walkers and
would consist of a dining tent, service tents, mobile kitchens, sleeping tents,
vehicle parking and showers. The women stressed that Avon expends great effort
to leave the Wellness Village site as neat as or neater than it was before the
village was set up. It should be stressed that the plan for a Wellness Village
in Astoria Park has yet to be approved by the Department of Parks and
Recreation, though Avon is working on getting such approval.