NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: Turkish Consulate Lacks Safety Approvals, NYC Board of Elections Director Keeps Job After Investigation, Congestion Pricing Check-in and a Community Champion
Episode Date: January 9, 2025A new report finds a “staggering” number of buildings missing required permits, but the Turkish House was the only one of its size approved to open without a valid fire safety plan. Plus, the head... of the Board of Elections is facing scrutiny after city investigators found he created a hostile work environment. Also, WNYC’s Michael Hill and Liam Quigley look into the impact of New York City’s congestion pricing program. And finally, a New York-based artist talks about healing and community through dance.
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Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City from WMYC.
I'm Jene Pierre.
The criminal case against Mayor Eric Adams hinges on allegations he pressured fire officials
to approve the opening of a Turkish consulate building in spite of safety concerns in 2021.
A new report from the city controller finds that same building is still missing safety approvals more than three years later.
Comptroller Brad Lander says the building doesn't have a certificate.
of occupancy and received initial permission to open without a valid fire safety plan.
We thought it was critical to understand, all right, what happened here? Was the building safe?
Wasn't it safe? What did the fire department do? What did the buildings department do? And what's
going on now? Landers says his office didn't get clear answers to those questions. He's running to
unseat Adams in the Democratic primary. A building's department spokesperson says the building is safe
for occupants. The head of New York City Board,
of elections is facing scrutiny after city investigators found he created a hostile work environment
for two women who reported to him. The Department of Investigation found Mike Ryan made repeated
unwanted comments about the women's gender and ethnicity. Former Associate General Counsel
Stephanie Wachez quit because of Ryan's alleged conduct. She says she plans to sue the agency.
I think especially within the BEOE, it's a frightening place. And people tend to not want to speak
up because they feel like their careers depend on it.
The DOI took the unusual step of recommending that the BEOE fire Ryan.
But the Board of Elections commissioners refused.
They opted to suspend him for three weeks without pay, send him to sensitivity training,
and put him on a year's probation.
Ryan is disputing the allegations and apologizing to anyone he unintentionally offended.
It's been less than a week since the start of New York City's congestion pricing program.
After the break, we check in to see how it's going so far.
Stay close.
New York City's congestion pricing tolls began this past Sunday,
tolling drivers $9 to enter Manhattan south of 60th Street
weekdays from 5 a.m. to 9 at night.
The main goal is to reduce gridlock,
considered among the worst in the world.
So are the tolls accomplishing that goal?
My colleague Michael Hill posed that question
and more to WMYC's Liam Quigley,
who stepped in this week as our congestion correspondent.
Liam, what do we know so far about the tolls actually reducing
traffic. So the data we have right now, it jumps around day to day, but there are some early
signs of progress. InRICs, which is a traffic analysis firm, has data that shows compared to this
time last year, average vehicle travel speeds in Manhattan dropped a little bit, but that comes
after Tuesday's data, which shows there were speed increases on the FDR. So this is still really
early data, and remember, it's still really cold, and it's still after the holidays. But also what
people are staying in the streets is interesting because these are people who spend a big portion of
their lives downtown. My colleague Stephen Nesson went down to talk to Shirley Matthews and her
literal job is to deal with drivers trying to get in the Holland Tunnel and that's a lot of work
to corral these drivers. You can just hear what she said. We're shocked. I never expected to see this
and I've been in New York for almost 45 years. I've never seen it like this. The car horns that
usually just start climbing up the walls of the building around rush hour and the chaos and the
driver just creeping through crosswalks, that just didn't show up. But again, that's kind of like
early data. It's one anecdote. So that's kind of what we're poking around the city to look at.
You're right. That's one anecdote among others. What are the experts saying, Liam?
People who know traffic and they know how congestion pricing works, say they're not going to jump at
one data point and say, this is working or this is.
is not working. This is about looking at the cumulative data that we're going to get over the next
few weeks, the next few months. Bruce Shaler is a traffic analyst who worked on the congestion plan
under Bloomberg. He was kind of pointing out that since the pandemic, so much has changed,
there's less reliable ebbs and flows of stuff like congestion. So what's tough to look at one
moment and then just make an evaluation based on that? You're never there at the average moment,
right? So to sort of sense that, yeah, something has really changed would be a matter of some weeks or possibly months.
So you listen there, he's saying average moment. What is an average moment on Canal Street? What's an average moment on Broadway?
What's an average moment on 60th Street where drivers are crossing this threshold and getting charged in $9?
You know, I'm looking at social media and I see dozens of videos of people saying, oh my God, this is the best commute ever.
And then you see someone on going over the Manhattan Bridge and saying, I'm stuck in traffic.
What is the point of this toll?
What about subway and bus ridership, Liam?
Has there been any change with how many people are taking public transit, which is really one of the goals of this?
The MTA said that there was a slight uptick in ridership.
This is typically a slower time of year for subway ridership as well.
We're going to want more data.
We're going to want to see more information on the ridership before we say this worked or this didn't work.
That's WMYC's Liam Quigley, talking with my colleague Michael Hill.
Across New York City, everyday people are making impactful differences in their communities.
We're calling them community champions.
Allow me to introduce you to Walter Perez.
He's a New York-based artist and dancer from Argentina.
Walter is the founder and executive director of Friends of Argentine Tango,
a nonprofit established in 2013 that provides the benefits of dancing Tango to communities that
often lack access to it.
The rest of Argentine tango, it was a project that started with my husband, Leonardo Sardela,
also a tango dancer from Argentina.
We started a program in the Bronx, and right now we have 14 locations in four neighborhoods,
the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn.
I started with dancing in Argentina in 1993.
when I was 21 years old of salsa and later tango.
And I started as a therapy.
My mother passed away that year,
and I was feeling that I need embrace
and I need to do an activity for myself
to take me out of the sorrow and the morning.
And dancing, it was a perfect match in 2000.
I moved to New York
and I have the chance to teach for many dance studios.
but I find out that I want to get more into
understep communities,
not only to people who have the privilege
to take a dance lesson and pay for classes
and create a completely diverse community
and teach them how to socialize and have to dance
and to listen music and use this as a therapeutic tool
and a way to connect with others.
We create programs for people with dementia and Alzheimer's
or people who have different abilities and being gay with a partner.
I want to also get this idea to have an inclusive setup
where everybody could decide who to dance with
and a safe space for people beyond their sexuality or their abilities.
I don't know if I could get the title of Community Champ.
I just know that I'm passionate and I love what I do.
So I think everybody could find a way to get community together,
to get people together, and to bring joy.
Walter Perez is the founder and executive director of Friends of Argentine Dengal.
Thanks for listening to NYC now from WMYC.
Catch us every weekday, three times a day.
I'm Jenae Pierre. We'll be back tomorrow.
