Author Topic: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC  (Read 1729 times)

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rangerrebew

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20 years of cleaning up NYC pissed away


By Tom Wilson

 July 10, 2015 | 10:53pm

 
20 years of cleaning up NYC pissed away

 

This urinating vagrant turned a busy stretch of Broadway into his own private bathroom yesterday – an offense that would result in a mere summons if Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and her pals get their way.

Wrapped in rags and a Mets blanket the hobo wandered into traffic at around 10:30 a.m. and relieved himself as cabs, cars and buses whizzed by between West 83rd and 84th streets on the Upper West Side.

He finished his business at a nearby garbage bin, then strolled back to the front of a Victoria’s Secret store at Broadway and 85th Street, where he camped out for the rest of the day.

Mark-Viverito in April announced plans to decriminalize public urination along with five other low-level offenses: biking on the sidewalk, public consumption of alcohol, being in a park after dark, failure to obey a park sign and jumping subway turnstiles.

Police Commissioner Bill Bratton — who in the early ’90s implemented a “broken windows” approach to policing to dramatically cut crime — is against the new plan, saying such offenses lead to more serious crimes.

Bill Caprese, 38, who lives on 82nd Street with his 6-year-old daughter, was appalled by the street urinator.

“It’s absolutely a failure of government. It’s a total abject failure,” he said. “The mayor could fix it. The governor could fix it. We need asylums.”

An employee at the Victoria’s Secret, where the homeless man often lounges, said he drives away business.
 

 
“He curses people out, threatens lives,” said the employee, who works in the lingerie chain’s loss-prevention department.

“Customers complain about him all the time.”

And the growing problem isn’t solely on city streets.

Transit hubs, including Penn Station, are plagued by surging numbers of homeless people who publicly masturbate, harass bystanders and demand free food as the city looks the other way, commuters complain.

“It reminds me of the pre-[Rudy] Giuliani era,” said Jim Hoover, 60, who has been commuting through Penn Station since 1986. “The police aren’t chasing them away anymore.”

Just outside the Port Authority Bus Terminal, a homeless man drunkenly knocked a woman to the floor while stumbling around the sidewalk.

The bum, who goes by “Monk,” was arrested by a cop at the scene and taken away by an FDNY ambulance.

“He’s going to get a hospital bed and a slap on the wrist,” said Timothy Arroyo, who was watching from a crowd that gathered.

“He’ll be back out here tomorrow.”

A PA source said there has been a “noticeable uptick” in vagrants at the terminal in recent months.

“It’s a trend,” the source said.

http://nypost.com/2015/07/10/apparently-its-now-ok-to-pee-on-the-streets-of-new-york-city/
« Last Edit: July 11, 2015, 04:00:44 pm by rangerrebew »

rangerrebew

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2015, 04:03:41 pm »
Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC


By John Podhoretz

 July 8, 2015 | 1:12am

 
Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
 

Take a walk down Broadway on the Upper West Side from the 100s to the 70s, as I did Sunday, and you’ll see it everywhere. It seems every barren storefront with a rental sign in the window has ­become impromptu outdoor housing for a homeless person.

There are many such storefronts — ironic signs of prosperity, not recession. Rents have risen so high that small businesses often can’t afford to continue and landlords will keep a storefront unoccupied for a very long time to secure a wealthy customer willing to take a very lengthy lease (i.e., a bank).

The number of people living on the street in the neighborhood, or at least taking up daytime residence to beg for change, has skyrocketed from a mere handful to several dozen or more.

And many of the faces on the street are a type new to New York City. They’re often startlingly young and white and look like nothing so much as the hippies who used to populate the Upper West Side in the late 1960s and early ’70s. They would have fit right in at the Occupy Wall Street encampment two years ago or at a G20 protest.

Along with them are the classic street people — deinstitutionalized schizophrenics whose tragic unsupervised lives are a moral stain on this city and this country. Many live in the neighborhood’s halfway houses and shelters and are out and about now that the weather has gotten warmer.

And while most are living within the law and trying to make new lives, among their number are some very discomfiting people — panhandlers from the neighborhood’s bad old days, who are just this side of aggressive.

The change in atmosphere over the holiday weekend was startling. And it wasn’t just the constant demands for money or the filthy bedding in the storefront doorways.

In a shop in the low 90s on Broadway where I was buying my kids ice cream, a young man came in and demanded free sample ­after free sample from a clearly uncomfortable teen girl behind the counter, bought nothing, then planted himself in the store, started making phone calls, and wouldn’t leave.
 

Only the fact that people kept coming in and out, and that someone was working in the back who could call for help if necessary, prevented me from alerting the police. But what would I have told them? He’d done nothing wrong, yet he’d crossed some civilized boundary.

Walking along the sidewalk on Broadway between 86th and 87th, a bearded and unkempt middle-aged man muttering to himself suddenly threw a bottle into the street that shattered into a thousand pieces as cars were driving by.

On the same corner a month or two ago, a younger man bumped into me, looked me over, spat out something anti-Semitic — and when I kept walking said, “Just like you Jews not to fight for yourselves.”

These three anecdotes are all examples of what made living in pre-Giuliani New York City so problematic. It wasn’t crime per se that made you uncomfortable (even at the height of its troubles, New York had a lower per-capita crime rate than other US cities). No, the problem was a general feeling of menace — the sense that violence could break out around you at any moment.

My wife and I have three kids, ages 5, 8 and 11. Having grown up on the Upper West Side pre-Etan Patz during the 1960s and ’70s — when crime was so much worse, it almost beggars description, and yet when kids roamed far more freely through the city than they do now — I’ve argued for giving our older children a greater degree of independence. To go to the store. To walk to a friend’s apartment.
 

My wife has never been comfortable with that, but has gone along to some degree. Yet now, the evidence of our eyes and ears makes it clear our neighborhood is simply more menacing than it was a year or two ago, and that civil society is decaying.

I’m not offering an explanation for why this has happened. I’m only describing a change in mood.

And if I were Bill de Blasio looking ahead to 2017, I’d take this very seriously. He won election in 2013 in part because the argument that he would return the city to the bad old days didn’t resonate with voters.

But if they feel two years from now as though the city is a worse place to live than it was when he took office, the 73 percent of the city’s eligible voters who didn’t vote for de Blasio in 2013 will have no difficulty sending the moving truck to Gracie Mansion and shipping him right back to Park Slope.

http://nypost.com/2015/07/10/apparently-its-now-ok-to-pee-on-the-streets-of-new-york-city/
« Last Edit: July 11, 2015, 04:04:26 pm by rangerrebew »

Offline mountaineer

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #2 on: July 11, 2015, 05:59:37 pm »
Socialism Works: NYC Parks Filling Up w/Homeless Heroin Addicts
A quarter of the bums come here for the free stuff.
July 11, 2015 
Daniel Greenfield
 
Quote
The progressive administration of Bill de Blasio has advanced such progressive and humane policies as legalizing some forms of crime by not arresting the perps, removing bail from other offenses so that suspects have no reason to even show up in court and throwing open the parks to the homeless.

Welcome back to Death Wish City. There's a guy in Times Square brandishing a sign at tourists screaming, "F__ You, Pay Me" and surprisingly he's not a member of the teachers' union which has made that their official slogan.

And the parks, restored, cleaned up and patrolled through great efforts over the last two decades, are now full of homeless bums shooting up right near the playground.  ...
More at Front Page Mag

 
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Offline aligncare

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #3 on: July 11, 2015, 06:59:30 pm »
I've mentioned this before, I have a brother who works for New York City's homeless services. He says homelessness has blown way up since Obama took office.

Offline mountaineer

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #4 on: July 12, 2015, 12:35:11 pm »
Peeing menace cuffed by cops, only to be back on the streets
By Kevin Fasick and Melkorka Licea
July 12, 2015 | 6:00am
NY Post
Quote

New York’s revolving door of justice sprang a scary leak Saturday when a threatening, public-urinating, jagged-glass-waving homeless man was twice hauled away by cops — only to each time be quickly released to terrorize the same stretch of Broadway on the Upper West Side.

“I’ve seen him there peeing before, washing himself,” said an outraged neighbor, Israel Verchik.

The area stinks like a toilet, said Verchik, 61, one of many New Yorkers who voiced their outrage over the homeless explosion on Gotham streets.

“I live here on the second floor and I can smell it in my bedroom,” Verchik said.

“It’s outrageous that the city doesn’t do anything to help him.”

The unnamed 49-year-old vagrant, who goes by the moniker “Monk,” had been photographed urinating in the middle of Broadway traffic at 84th Street on Friday morning.

By 10:30 Saturday morning, he was back at Broadway and 80th Street, pacing and talking to himself.

He was promptly hauled off in handcuffs by cops, sources said.

The man was loaded into an ambulance and taken to Roosevelt Hospital for a mental evaluation, the sources told The Post. But hours later, he was back on Broadway, at one of his usual spots in front of a Victoria’s Secret store.

Shortly before 4 p.m., he reached into a garbage can, grabbed an empty Snapple bottle, broke it and brandished it.

“Wanna come to me? Wanna come to me?” he started shouting. “Get away from my property!”

The man, at that point shirtless, dropped the bottle after realizing his intimidating antics were being recorded on a cellphone. Still, he kept on ranting, “You want to get into a fight?”

A dozen cops soon swarmed to the scene, cuffed him and again hauled him away.

That time he was carted off to to St. Lukes Hospital, only to be back on Broadway by 9 p.m.

There he stayed about an hour and a half, pacing and poking into garbage pails.

He defecated into a Chinese newspaper at Broadway and 84th Street, then curled up one block north and went to sleep.

“It’s disgusting,” said Elton Brahja, a nearby doorman. “He pulls down his pants and goes.

“I’ve called the cops many times and they won’t come,” Brahja added. “When are they going to do something? When he does something?”

Mayor de Blasio, who had gone on the record in favor of “broken windows” policing, made a nonspecific promise to “address” the incident.

“‘Broken windows’ means addressing quality-of-life crimes and that’s a quality-of-life crime,” he said Saturday at an event in Central Park.

Everyday New Yorkers, meanwhile, were not surprised by the public toileting.

Astoria resident Janet Khan, 19, said the urine smell engulfing the subways makes her want to drive, instead.

“It’s horrible,” she said. “I never step in any liquid on the steps. I always think it’s pee and walk around it.”

She believes public urination should become a higher police priority — a view not shared by City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito.

The Manhattan Democrat has proposed decriminalizing several low-level crimes, including public urinating, biking on the sidewalk, publicly consuming alcohol, being in a park after dark, failing to obey a park sign and jumping subway turnstiles.

NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton — an architect 20 years ago of the “broken windows” approach to policing that has been largely credited for the city’s historic drop in crime — opposes watering down quality-of-life policing.

It was a sentiment shared by many Saturday.

Brooklyn resident Chenelle Johnson, 21, said she spots panhandlers catching a snooze on city streets at virtually every hour of the day.

“It’s like they don’t have any hope and they just give up,” she said. “I don’t even just see them sleeping at night, I see them all the time.”

As Johnson spoke to a reporter in Tompkins Square Park, a vagrant approached and flashed what appeared to be a bag of K2, a synthetic type of marijuana, and asked whether anyone wanted to partake.


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Offline kevindavis007

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #5 on: July 12, 2015, 12:50:43 pm »
I've mentioned this before, I have a brother who works for New York City's homeless services. He says homelessness has blown way up since Obama took office.


I wonder why we have not heard that in the news???
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Offline mountaineer

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #6 on: July 12, 2015, 12:54:28 pm »
I've mentioned this before, I have a brother who works for New York City's homeless services. He says homelessness has blown way up since Obama took office.
Remember how the snooze media have jumped all over homelessness whenever a Republican is in the White House? Then the problem suddenly goes away as soon as a Clinton or Obama moves in.
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Offline andy58-in-nh

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #7 on: July 12, 2015, 12:59:06 pm »
I've mentioned this before, I have a brother who works for New York City's homeless services. He says homelessness has blown way up since Obama took office.

I lived in Manhattan from 1986-1989, during the (Mayor) David Dinkins Era. It was an appalling experience, even living as I did on the Upper East Side, in a "nice" neighborhood. Piles of garbage in alleys and doorways. Bums and aggressive window-washers prowling the streets at odd hours. Drug dealers in every park. Subway stations and train cars were disgusting - filthy, oppressively hot in the summer, reeking of things you dared not even think about. And the rats: plump, nasty, and you could see their eyes while walking at night in the stairwells and alleyways, and especially in the parks, by the thousands. I could not get out of their fast enough.

After I'd departed (for Boston, a still gritty, but far more liveable city) Rudy Guiliani came along and helped change New York for the better. He actually demanded that laws be enforced and put people to work cleaning up the city. When I visited again (in 2000), I could not believe the difference. But in their wisdom, the people of New York have now elected a bombastic socialist cartoon character to lead them back to the future.     
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Offline DCPatriot

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #8 on: July 12, 2015, 12:59:54 pm »
Well, one thing is for sure....Hillary won't be using "It's the economy, stupid" in her 2016 campaign, as Bubba did in his campaign.   :laugh:

If a Republican was in office they'd be claiming an impeachable offense.
« Last Edit: July 12, 2015, 01:06:02 pm by DCPatriot »
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rangerrebew

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #9 on: July 12, 2015, 01:04:31 pm »
More proof positive for the "glorious" communist revolution in America. :huh?:

Offline aligncare

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Re: Homelessness and empty stores becoming the new normal in NYC
« Reply #10 on: July 12, 2015, 01:46:38 pm »
I've mentioned this before, I have a brother who works for New York City's homeless services. He says homelessness has blown way up since Obama took office.

Addendum.

He says his budget (he runs a distribution center) has correspondingly increased.

So, the communists create more homelessness, then they grow government (your tax dollars).

Funny how that works.