NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: State Officials Offer Striking Officers a Deal, NYC Task Force Tackles Quality of Life Issues, Worshippers Fight for Valuable Land and a Mets Pop-up Shop
Episode Date: March 7, 2025Gov. Hochul's administration is making a direct appeal to striking corrections officers, bypassing their union. Plus, the city launches a new interagency task force aimed at curtailing quality of life... issues like open drug use, retail theft and homelessness. And finally, a fight for control of a historic Williamsburg synagogue.
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Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC.
I'm Jenae Pierre.
Governor Kathy Hokel's administration is making a direct pitch to corrections officers in an attempt to get them to end their prison strike.
That has angered the officer's union, which did not authorize the strike and was left out of the negotiations.
State officials said they were close to a deal on Thursday, but the union refused to sign off.
The union says it's the only entity the state can legally bargain with.
Officials say the offer still stands.
At least seven people held in state prisons have died since the strikes began.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg
are launching a new interagency task force aimed at addressing quality of life issues
like open drug use, retail theft, and homelessness.
Bragg says his office will work with about a dozen city agencies.
We have a very good tool bag between government and our civic associations, and this is figuring
out which tool to pull out of the tool bag for the right situation.
The city has at least six quality of life task forces.
This one comes as major crime falls, but some New Yorkers say they still feel unsafe.
Coming up, we head to Brooklyn, where dueling groups fight for control of a historic Williamsburg
synagogue that sits on valuable land.
More on that after the break.
Two rival groups of worshippers are fighting for control of a synagogue in Williamsburg.
The dispute has led to months of lawsuits and restraining orders.
The conflict is about the future of the congregation's building,
and it reflects a pattern playing out at houses of worship across the five boroughs
as religious membership dwindles and property values soar.
WMYC's Samantha Max has more.
Members of congregation Bath Jacob O'Hav Shalom are bickering
on the sidewalk outside their synagogue.
One group is claiming to be the true owners of the building and has locked out many
longtime worshippers.
On this sweltering September afternoon, America Ruiz and other longtimers are back with a court
order allowing them to re-enter.
So a locksmith cuts off a metal padlock, sending orange sparks into the air.
Inside the sanctuary, they find the vintage oak pews have.
have been demolished into a pile of jagged planks.
One woman kneels on the floor and cries.
Ruiz gives her a hug.
I love you.
I love you.
Thank you for me.
Those pews had once provided a place for a diverse group of Jews to gather and pray.
They were dedicated to congregants who had donated to the synagogue over the years.
Some were Holocaust survivors.
Ruiz is in disbelief.
I have no words.
It's not evanches.
It's the lack of humanity.
Beth Jacob O'Hav Shalom is the only Orthodox synagogue in Williamsburg
that doesn't follow the more traditional customs of the local Hasidic Jewish community.
And it's the only temple in their neighborhood where Ruiz and her husband, Martin Needleman, felt comfortable praying.
Ruiz converted to Judaism.
Needleman grew up Orthodox, but not how much.
Hasidic. That's what we can hear. It was the only place that accept us. But Ruiz wonders whether
that welcoming spirit may have also caused the synagogue's current crisis. She says the divide started
a few years ago when the shrinking congregation allowed a small group of Hasidic Jews to join.
Ruiz says the Hasidic congregants started to tamper with the annual board elections so they could
take over the board and steal the building. At one election, she says they won't.
wouldn't let her husband vote because he didn't bring a utility bill to prove his identity.
Long-time worshipper Keith Cohn says they used similar antics this past summer to elect their allies.
By removing some board members, they had more power and influence.
Last summer, the recidic group announced it was renting the synagogue sanctuary to a religious school known as a yeshiva
and said it tore up the benches to make room for students.
Abraham Rubin is a new Hasidic worshiper and says he advised on the lease.
The ship is going to take care in the building and they will have room to pray downstairs.
Now, each side is accusing the other of trying to sell the congregation's property,
which sits on a corner lot across the street from the Marcy Avenue, MJZ stop.
The location is prime real estate.
That's Koniguan.
It's become a target.
Across New York City, many congregations are grappling with declining membership and mounting costs,
and they're considering whether their properties are worth keeping.
Architect Esther Sperber says selling a building to a developer can cover a congregation's expenses for decades to come.
They own this incredibly valuable real estate, but many of them are very cash poor.
Like, if their air conditioning system breaks, they don't always have.
have the funds to just fix that.
Dozens of religious organizations across the five boroughs have sold their buildings
in recent years, including at least 68 just last year, according to the Attorney General's office.
A Harlem church sold its building for $28.5 million and is now a luxury condo building
with a fitness center and a pet spa.
A Bronx church sold for $8 million and has been transformed into affordable housing.
But these types of deals can be divisive and risky.
That's why New York not-for-profit law strictly regulates sales and long-term leases for houses of worship.
For religious organizations, change can be in particular very difficult.
Jason Lillian is the former chief of the Attorney General's Charities Bureau, which oversees the state's nonprofit law.
He says the law sets out rules for how congregations are supposed to manage their assets and make decisions.
But Lillian says the state can't get involved in every argument between worshippers.
Therefore, they wind up in court.
At Beth Jacob O'Hav Shalom, the two opposing groups are waiting for a judge to decide who the rightful members of the synagogue are.
And by extension, who should control the building?
Ruben says he thinks there's enough space for both sides to share the synagogue.
You will have your place. She will have our place.
No big deal. It's big enough.
But on a Saturday morning in January, the doors to the synagogue are locked once again.
A small group gathers on the sidewalk in the 20-degree weather to pray.
Most of the group are women.
They aren't long-time members, but they keep coming on Saturdays to protest what they consider to be a hostile takeover of the temple.
At Hasidic services, women typically aren't allowed to pray out loud.
So even the group's prayer is an act of protest.
They hope to sing so loud, the Hasidic worshippers inside will have no choice but to hear them.
I thought maybe we could do a healing prayer.
Martine Duffy works at a local Jewish nonprofit and has been leading the Shabbat services.
I think there's a lot of healing that's needed on this corner of Williamsburg this morning.
I want peace for them. I want peace for us. You know, I also want every person to have a place to pray.
The renewal of body, the renewal of spirit, and let us sit.
No one lets them inside, but the group vows to keep coming back to pray, even if the doors are locked.
That's WMYC's Samantha Max.
Before we go, some news from Mets fans hoping to purchase new swag ahead of the season.
The baseball club has a new pop-up shop experience in Union Square.
The so-called Mets House includes themed activities, exclusive merchandise, and giveaways.
The team says it'll be open Tuesday through Sunday for at least three months.
The Mets say this pop-up is a way for fans to support the team outside of City Field.
The first Mets game this season is on March 27th in Houston, Texas,
and they'll play their home opener in early April against the Toronto Blue Jays.
Thanks for listening to NYC now from WNYC.
I'm Jinné Pierre.
Have a wonderful weekend.
We'll be back on Monday.
