Save The Date: October 22, 2009

Brooklyn's Forgotten Neighborhoods

I think we may have bit off more than we can chew with our transition to the new MyBrooklynReport.com.  Let me explain;

We have over 70 posts and nearly 200 comments on something we just began publishing back in April 2009 on this free platform.

Admittedly, when we started our blog, we had no idea it would be so well received and demanded that we create a more robust site for our readers.

So, we ask that you bear with us a little while longer.  We’ll be publishing our first post on October 22, 2009.

(well, honestly, it’s already scheduled for publishing that date and we made it that way to put a deadline on ourselves)

I just didn’t want you to think we’ve taken your readership for granted.

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

We’re Almost There…And You’re Going to Love It

Brooklyn Bridge Pedestrian Walk at Night

We’re going to make our transition next week to our new look.  Which is why we’ve been posting less frequently.  Ask anyone publishing a blog and they’ll tell you; when it comes to moving content from one platform to another, your bound to run into problems.  You really only get one chance to get it right.

We’ve made the most of this free WordPress.com theme but felt limited in our ability to offer a variety of content.  We’re growing up and have you to thank for it.  The comments you’ve left here told us our readers were interested in a richer experience.

We put a lot of thought into the new MyBrooklynReport.com and think it’s the right fit for what we want to offer our readers.

Our inaugural post will be published October 10th 2009 Friday, October 16th 2009 and will be back in old form in no time.

However, we won’t be totally inactive.  We’ll be contributing commentary to some of our favorite blogs;

Also, if your on Twitter, let’s follow each other.  I’m at the icon above.  Just click on let’s tweet.

I’ll see you in about a week.  Stay safe and play nice.

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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To The People Seeking Change in Bed Stuy & Crown Heights

Mark Winston Griffith

We’ve been asked by the Mark Winston Griffith Campaign to publish an open letter to the electorate of the 36th NYC Councilmanic District, representing Bedford Stuyvesant and parts of Crown Heights.

Our decision to publish the candidate’s remarks are based on our initial posture during the primary contest. We want our readers to consider a candidate’s platform on the issues important to them.

We’ll be happy to provide the same opportunity to the incumbent, Councilman Al Vann, and will make our intent known to his campaign with hopes he’ll takes us up on our offer.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

An Open Letter to People Seeking Change in Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant

I have decided to run for the New York City Council in the General Election on November 3. I will be running as a Democrat on the Working Families Party ballot line.

By now, you probably know the results of the recent Primary Election held on September 15th. I lost the Democratic nomination by a mere 600 votes to Al Vann — a 35-year incumbent elected official — and earned anywhere from two to five times the number of votes received by any other challenger.

Most strikingly, more than 70% of the electorate voted AGAINST the incumbent.

I am profoundly proud of the campaign we ran. It was smart, positive, and grassroots in nature. I am also grateful to so many of you who not only voted for me, but volunteered with the campaign and contributed in a variety of ways, including financially.

I want to particularly thank two of my competitors in the September race — David Grinage and Saquan Jones — who have already pledged their support to me going forward. I will also be asking the four other Democratic challengers to stand with me, in the kind of united political front that is all too rare in this community.

Two things have become abundantly clear since I entered this race more than one year ago;

First, while knocking on thousands of doors, I’ve been blown away by the visceral anti-Al Vann sentiment displayed by voters of all ages and walks of life — the stories of people feeling like he’s been absent over the last decade and that he takes getting re-elected for granted.

This view was only bolstered by his recent vote to extend term limits and then run for a third term, even after previously announcing that he would retire from politics at the end of 2009.

The other thing that struck me is the passionate yearning for change that my neighbors have been expressing across Central Brooklyn.

The Primary Election results demonstrated that — if enough people come out to support me on November 3rd — change can indeed be brought to Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant, the same way voters delivered change in the 2008 presidential election.

Although I’ve been deluged with people urging me run in the General Election, I know this race is not about me, or even Al Vann. This is about people seeking what that they haven’t had in quite some time:

  • An energetic, progressive advocate in City Hall who is engaged in issues of the day and will champion our causes;
  • A responsive City Council office that provide quality constituent service; and
  • A Council Member that never forgets that he works for you rather than the other way around.

There is a lot at stake this November. I am ready to work hard to win, and, my guess is, so is Al Vann.

But allow me to be blunt: If you want new leadership, it will not arrive if we treat this race like a spectator sport. Beyond voting, you will have to put skin in this game.

You can do that by making this message viral and sending it to relevant blog sites and listservs.

You can host a gathering of your neighbors so that I can make a personal appeal to them.

You can make a financial contribution.

You can become a campaign volunteer.

Do one, some, or all of those things. Just do something.

As Frederick Douglas famously said, “power concedes nothing without a demand.” That demand must come not just from my campaign, but from a grassroots movement of people like you willing to actively and loudly reclaim your community.

Let’s make history.

Peace,

Mark Winston Griffith

Democrat on the Working Families Party Line

Candidate, 36th District

New York City Council

Campaign Office: (718) 953-1110

Website: http://www.mwgriffith.com

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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Want to Earn that $8,000 1st Time Homebuyer Tax Credit?

If your you’re still out looking for the house of your dreams, you don’t have much time left.

The $8,000 1st Time Home Buyers Tax Credit is set to expire December 1st 2009.

Eligibility for the Tax Credit is determined by the following criteria;

  • Applies to Home Purchases after April 1st 2008 and before December 1st 2009
  • Applies only to Homes used as a Taxpayer’s principal address
  • Reduces a Taxpayer’s tax bill or increases his or her refund dollar for dollar
  • Is fully refundable, meaning the credit will be paid out to eligible taxpayers, even if they owe no tax or the credit is more than the tax owed

For more information, visit the IRS First Time Home Buyer Credit page.

In the meantime, view the above video and get an introduction to the tax credit.

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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Can You Still Campaign on Affordable Housing in Brooklyn?

Deutsche Bank Home Values Projections in NYC

Deutsche Bank holds a unique distinction in the Mortgage Loan Servicing business that few can claim;  They foreclose on homeowners with speed and precision.

While there are lenders that have the same business practices, none are as effective in protecting their client’s claim to a homeowner’s property when it’s time to exercise the rights defined in the mortgage note.

If any Mortgage Servicer can assert the above facts, they certainly can beyond distortion.  According to our proprietary database at Corley Realty Group, Deutsche Bank had 16% of the active foreclosure filings in Brooklyn as of March 2009.

Read carefully, Deutsche Bank asserts that by 2011, 77% of homeowners in New York City will be in a negative equity position.  Property owners will be paying a mortgage on a property they own, and in most cases live in, that won’t be worth what they purchased it for.

Said plainly, the majority of New Yorkers will be real estate poor in short order!

Foreclosure Litigation Grows in Brooklyn

Below is a map of Brooklyn, New York that shows the most recent foreclosure filings as of 9/24/2009;

Latest Brooklyn Foreclosure Map

The red ballooned white dots planted in the map represents a new foreclosure filing for September 2009.  As you review the map you’ll notice lots of ballooned dots clustering in parts of Central and East Brooklyn.

Neighborhoods in Central and East Brooklyn that red ballooned white dots cluster in are;

  1. Bedford Stuyvesant
  2. Crown Heights
  3. Bushwick
  4. East New York
  5. Canarsie
  6. East Flatbush
  7. Mapelton
  8. Wingate, and
  9. Flatbush

They are also the neighborhoods where buyers who purchased homes over the last 10 years used Sub Prime Loans.

Campaigning on More Affordable Housing (???)

Candidates campaigning for the Nov. 3rd general elections this year have made the term Affordable Housing part of their lexicon in their stump speech, campaign website and media quotes.

But if you ask any candidate to offer specifics on their affordable housing agenda, scary as it sounds, they want to create more affordable home buying opportunities for low income working families.

Isn’t that what got us into the trouble we’re in today?

A little known fact about the foreclosure crisis is that it has its origin in The Clinton Administration.  Andrew Cuomo (yes, the NYS Attorney General) was the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the 90’s when President Clinton continued the Bush Administration’s financial deregulation in addition to a domestic policy initiative to create home ownership opportunities among minority communities.

Unfortunately, we all know how that turned out.

It’s important to note that when politics leads domestic policy without a mandate, it often leads to getting it half right.  Sure you’ll create the direct benefit but fail to plan all the way to the end where all sorts of derivative problems occur.

Status of Affordable Housing projects in NYC?

If you ask Bob Starzecki, he may be in a better position to advise politicians on the present reality of affordable housing in New York City.  Mr. Starzecki is the owner of Guy Brewer Development Corporation.  His firm, under the direction of the Housing Partnership Development Corporation, built 21 two family homes in Jamaica, Queens.

As per a recent article, Open House in Jamaica Wait for Buyers while Neighborhoods Wait for Revival [NY Daily News], Mr. Starzecki is quoted saying;

I’m just trying to hang on.  I’m already in the hole.  Usually these homes would have been pre-sold.  However The underwriting criteria has gotten so restrictive

As of the publishing of the article (9/20/09) all 21 properties were still unsold.

Are Candidates Afraid of Making Foreclosure an Issue?

Yes, and here’s why.  The foreclosure crisis does not allow politicians to be succesful with the current tools available, which are;

  • Fund foreclosure education initiatives through Community Based Organizations
  • Offer free legal services to homeowners that are victims of predatory lending
  • Provide loan modification services to homeowners who can’t afford their current mortgage payment

While all of the above are extremely helpful to all homeowners in need of information and advocacy, it may not end with the outcome most homeowners seek.  A politician can ill afford a negative experience had by any of their constituents, especially one that finds them homeless.

The only real measure of success is the number of foreclosure auctions conducted at 360 Adams Street, the jury room of New York State Superior Court in Brooklyn.

It’s here where a politician will realize that all of the money spent on the above individual initiatives may not be yielding the results even they believed were possible.

Can a candidate continue to campaign under the traditional agenda of affordable housing?  Or, is it time to re-define the issue as Homeownership Sustainability?

Michael Corley is V.P. of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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How 39 Herkimer Street was Stolen from its Rightful Owner

39 Herkimer Street

Today, the national dialogue is centered on health care reform.  It seems that as we get older, our health becomes a prominent topic of discussion.

Speak to anyone battling a debilitating medical condition and they’ll share their experience with you in hopes of conveying the moral of their story: Don’t take your health for granted.

As if the cost of medicine, doctor care and hospital stays aren’t enough to be concerned about, seniors have to also be vigilant protecting the place they call home.  Often the last place of refuge for our senior citizens.

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House Theft isn’t new.  It’s a crime that knows no racial, economic or neighborhood boundaries.  Real Estate is attractive to the criminally inclined.

In a City that still employs a fundamentally flawed deed recording process, it’s a miracle that there aren’t more victims of this heinous crime that’s intentionally perpetrated on the weak and elderly.

Margaret Franklin happens to be one of many victims that have had their homes stolen.  What’s painful about this story is that Margaret was hospitalized and dying of cancer when she was targeted.

On July 12th 1979…

Margaret Franklin purchased 39 Herkimer Street from Millicent Hinds.  She managed to purchase this property with the assistance of owner financing, a common financing option in Bedford Stuyvesant due to years of red lining by lenders.

On July 6th 1987, she managed to pay off her mortgage and own her property free and clear 8 years later.

Her homeowner experience appeared to become difficult over time as  she found herself behind in property taxes.  This resulted in a Tax Lien Certificate sale on June 28th 2001.

Without knowing the personal narrative, it’s easy to conclude that her health was becoming a strain on her finances.

Cancer treatments are extremely expensive.   Depending on the diagnosis, it’s easy to see how someones life savings could be wiped out in a matter of months.

How Did She Come To Their Attention

Tax Lien Notices published in daily newspapers.  They’re the public service announcement for the criminally inclined.

Whenever these auctions are announced in the newspapers, they publish the block, lot, property address and amount the property owner is delinquent in taxes.

Individuals scouring the list published annually look for the following to identify their targets:

  1. Large amounts owed to the City
  2. Few delinquencies occurring around the subject property
  3. Individual ownership
  4. Year purchased

The first 2 items are easy to ascertain from the list.  The last 2 requires research and the Internet puts it right at their finger tips.

Item 4 is important because it allows the individual to allege the age of the target.

In Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, where 39 Herkimer Street is located, house theft is an all too common occurence.  And happens to be one of the favorite neighborhoods targeted, including;

  1. Bushwick
  2. Crown Heights
  3. East New York
  4. Ocean Hill
  5. Cypress Hills, and
  6. Stuyvesant Heights

If you can access the internet, type with 2 fingers, compose an email message and dial a phone number, then you have all the skills needed to research for individuals to target.

I won’t go into how a criminal implements technique to qualify their target prospects.  Suffice it to say, it’s easier than you think.  We certainly don’t want to aid any aspiring con artists in improving their skills at fraud.

Homeowners aren’t the Only Victim of House Theft

Painfully, the primary victim, the homeowner, experiences the loss of their home emotionally, psychologically and financially.  The elderly feel it even more as they fight to maintain independence and avoid becoming burdens to their families.

However, the list of victims to house theft may surprise you;

Lenders; they often finance fraudulent purchases by relying on the due diligence of the Appraiser, Title Agent, Attorney and Title Closer.

Heirs; they often have to fight to re-capture their family’s legacy from fraudulent conveyance.  The legal costs can make it prohibitive and often results in families giving up.

Homeowners; the recording of a fraudulent sale creates artificial value to homes in the immediate area.  When the sale is reversed it results in lower values.

Home Buyers; the false sense of value offered in an appraisal report that includes a home fraudulently conveyed can often lead to buyers over paying for a home in the same neighborhood.  This will result in a loss in equity and easily delay plans in using a homes value to fund a child’s college education, start a business or prepare for retirement.

Taxpayers; unfortunately, we’ll all share in the cost of a home fraudulent conveyed in 3 ways;

1. Inflated Property Values raise the tax based value of all properties similar to the one fraudulently conveyed and may contribute to inaccurate property tax assessments.

2. Cost of City Services to protect the property and provide housing to the tenants who leased from parties claiming to be the rightful owners.  Section 8 recipients are the easiest prey.  Subsidies paid to landlords can be wired into the landlord’s bank account.

3. Higher Interest Rates for homeowners when refinancing their homes in a given neighborhood.  Red lining still goes on regardless of what’s stated publicly.  The predatory loan scandals are proof that it only changed the way it’s done.  At some point it will take on a different appearance.

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On December 28th 2006, Kings County District Attorney Charles J. Hynes announced the indictment of the three men charged with stealing Margaret Franklin’s home.

In a press release,

The indictment  charges that in September 2004, Nathan Farkas and Russell Pitt sold the home to Winston Roche.  However, Winston Roche was involved in the criminal conspiracy, and he and other defendants divided the $476,000 mortgage proceeds.

A fourth defendant, Jerry Brauner, was charged with falsifying a notary public renewal application.  He notarized the Power of Attorney used by Russell Pitt to sell the property to Winston Roche.

Here is the title report that demonstrates the ease in which low level criminals engineered the heist.

Welcome to Bank Robbery in the 21st century, no guns or ski masks needed.

Title Report for 39 Herkimer St

You’ve probably noted one other item appearing at the top of the title report.

New York City sells another Tax Lien Certificate on June 26th 2008 for delinquent property taxes owed.

If only NYC’s Department of Finance could be as diligent in reforming the deed recording process as it is in collecting revenue, your loved ones might never experience what Margaret Franklin did.

Speaking of Margaret Franklin, I wonder what she might have felt knowing they finally caught, tried and convicted the individuals responsible for stealing her home.

Unfortunately, she’ll never know the satisfaction of her perpetrators being bought to justice.

She died in 2005.

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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Develop or Protect? Clinton Hill Struggles with Perception

Lefferts Place in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn

Reading my contributions to MyBrooklynReport.com one would conclude that I’m against real estate development.   A fair assumption in light of my posts on 1576 Fulton Street and the role politicians played in aiding Goldman Sachs.

I hope I’m not getting into trouble with what I’m about to say, but…I’m pro real estate development.  However the kind of real estate development I support contributes to a community and doesn’t take anything away from its organic appeal.

The best example of this is the completed condominium development on Atlantic Avenue by Habitat for Humanity for working families.  The units were built affordably, with volunteers, and priced accordingly.

The average household income of families purchasing condo units was $50,000, which says something about a City where a family of 4 could be considered the working poor earning that kind of money.

These families will contribute to NYC’s property tax base and will lead to an increase of services that are not based in social programs to Brownsville.  In addition, homeownership instills values that contribute to a community’s vitality and stability.

Fortunately Habitat for Humanity may be the only community minded real estate developer in New York City that’s not driven by one factor common to other developers: Profit Motive.

The resistance to any real estate developer’s plan to alter the neighborhood experience you enjoy is understandable.  Given the cozy relationship between developers and politicians, it appears no one is thinking of the families that make the neighborhood a community.

Develop or Protect?

So what happens when a commercial enterprise attempts to build in a Brooklyn neighborhood that doesn’t want any development threatening their quality of life?

On the surface, it would cause any of us to react in support of the families who worked hard to build the community they love.  After all, their the stakeholders of their 4 cornered world where block parties, block association meetings, play dates and pot lucks are the staples enriching their lives.

As it turns out, CNR Health Care Network is interested in building a Senior Assisted Living Residence on Lefferts Place in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn.

They’ve already obtained the building permits needed to construct the building that’s been approved.  However, CNR is altering it’s plans to build a larger structure beyond the zoning limits.

And Neighbors Against Development are NAD (wow, did I actually do that….my apologies for the poor attempt at humor at the expense of this very important issue)

CNR is attempting to lobby pols and city agencies on the merits of rezoning the area, 3 residential blocks, allowing for taller structures to be built.  Their leverage; a greatly needed senior assisted living residence that could serve more senior citizens incapable of living on their own.  CNR’s adversary: homeowners residing on the block where the proposed construction will occur.

Who will prevail?

This is a tough one to handicap because of the danger for homeowners.  Should their concerns be characterized as selfish or uncaring it will be easy for a politician to side with CNR because of the benefits for a core constituency: SENIORS.

If it weren’t for seniors, we wouldn’t have votes cast during local elections.  And politicians are mindful of this.  Yet, the threat of having long memories established to mobilize a grass roots campaign to unseat a politician favoring CNR looms large.

Lesterheard at ClintonHillBlog.com wrote a post titled, Don’t Upzone Lefferts Place, that contains a letter from the Society for Clinton Hill that outlines the concerns felt by the community.

How the homeowners lobby their concerns to the political establishment is going to be challenging.   There are is no easy opposition a politician can take against increasing the size of this development.

If analyzed carefully, it may be why CNR is requesting rezoning all 3 city blocks to offer Marty Markowitz, Letitia James and Community Board 2 the easy political solution of ushering in a Variance for the project.

What do you think?  Could you be against a project like this if it were happening where you live and feel justified in your position?

* the author has no knowledge of the existence of an organization known as Neighbors Against Development…He’s just corny that way at times.
Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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What Happened in Bed Stuy’s 36th Council District Primary?

Bedford Stuyvesant Map Outline *

Each candidate entered the fray for what was the battle for the hearts and minds (and votes) of the 36th council district electorate.

Inspired by Barack Obama’s historic candidacy for the Presidency of the United States, some entered the nearest telephone booth and donned the Super Candidate outfit to save the constituents from the evil Status Quo represented in the person of Al Vann.

We salute the candidates, as each had their reasons for why they entered the race.  All deserve our thanks for the sacrifice made by them and their families to represent a body of voters they’ve felt were underserved and poorly represented for far too long.

As for Al Vann, well….we’re not spoiled sports.  We congratulate him on a succesful re-election to serve the residents of the 36th council district for another 2 year term.

History has shown that anyone winning a Democratic Primary in a predominately minority district have enjoyed enduring incumbency.  Councilman Vann has enjoyed the advantage of incumbency throughout his career and faced down many an opponent over his 30 plus year career.

But if you are any of the candidates who waged a vigorous campaign to unseat the incumbent, you’re probably asking;

  • What went wrong?
  • What did I miss?
  • Who did I NOT meet with, talk to or mention in my remarks?

While the list of possible questions could go on and on, the day after an election is not a time for Monday morning quarterbacking.  Time to move on.  Be strong and maybe consider a run as an Independent Candidate for November 4th elections.

Before we provide our analysis, here are the results of the Democratic Primary in the 36th council district:

36th CCD 2009 Election Results **

What Went Wrong?

For full disclosure, I penned this post on September 12th 2009 after assessing the field of candidates in the televised debates:

Failing to Stand Out of the Crowd

A) It was tough drawing a distinction between the candidates during the debate moderated by Brooklyn News 12, and frankly a mistake to participate in.  Al Vann made certain to avoid the appearance of “Running with the Herd” and here’s why…the appearance of group think is disturbing to watch, as you hear the same answers offered by more than one candidate.  It will always marginalize the best candidate and lower voters’ expectations.

B) The failure by most candidates to develop a grass roots base of support/movement.  An electorate gravitates to movements and offers a base of support for a candidacy.  If you examine the 5 incumbents who lost you’ll see themes play out; Asian representation for an Asian district; Protecting Tenant Rights; Overturning Term Limits; End Absentee Representation; etc…

C) Failing to seek endorsements from unconventional and non-traditional supporters.

    • School Principals,
    • Block Association Presidents,
    • A Homeowner in Foreclosure,
    • Community Police Officer,
    • Juvenile Probation Officer,
    • Professional Trade Associations,
    • BLOGGERS,
    • Public School Children, etc…

Putting a local face on your campaign endears you to the electorate and puts a candidate in touch.  Promoting these local endorsements at the time when Unions, Newspapers, Politicians, Pundits and members of the Media begin to roll out these events.

D) Be Merciless to the Incumbent.  If you want their seat you have to take it.  Unlike President Obama’s civil demeanor, there is no place for that in local politics.  The best example of this frontal assault approach is Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson.  If you can’t go there and call the incumbent out daily (even standing in front of his campaign office and ranting before every pedestrian passing by) you don’t want it like he’s got it.

What did I miss?

Foreclosure and Homelessness

I watched each candidate talk about creating affordable housing and wondered if they were getting the same economic news I’d been hearing.  With the country mired in a deep recession, New York City’s unemployment rate is the highest in the entire country.  Adding to that distinction, Bedford Stuyvesant is mired in a foreclosure crisis within the 11221, 11216, 11233 and 11213 zip codes.  Instead they attempted to fight on the incumbents record instead of owning a key advocacy that would have garnered broad support.

Public School Education

Charter Schools is the fastest growing choice amongst poor families desperately seeking education alternatives to the neighborhood choice for their children.  While each candidate directed their answers about Mayoral Control, either could have made charter schools a part of the discussion.  It would have trumped the candidates present and placed you in direct opposition to the Incumbent, establishing a 2 person race.

Creating a Position through Alignment

The best example of this is the budget woes of the MTA and their constant threat of raising fares.  One of John Liu’s list of accomplishments was his ability dissect their murky accounting and getting them to open their books.  An easy campaign pledge would have gone as follows:

I look forward to working with our next Comptroller, John Liu, to stop the MTA from raising subway and bus fares on the families in the 36th council district“.

Borrowing the good will of another highly respected politician without their endorsement creates a “joint ticket” concept in the minds of the electorate.  As the city wide candidate runs their expensive television and radio advertising, the seed will have already been planted.  For greater impact, attach your campaign to the city wide candidate that the incumbent has endorsed, as voters only remember “top down” endorsements, not bottom up endorsements.

Who did I NOT meet with, talk to or mention in my remarks?

People Who Went to the Incumbent for Help…or at least thought of going to the Incumbent for Help

A) This one is easy.  Any candidate could have scoured the local newspapers and found the families at the 29 two family newly constructed townhouses by Delight Construction.  Or maybe stood at the corner of Fulton Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard and asked a simple question, “How long have you lived next to 1576 Fulton Street?”.  Or maybe stand outside the Brooklyn Children Museum and ask parents what they thought of 172 Brooklyn Avenue.  ”In their own words” is a damning statement that no incumbent can overcome.  Video recorded testimonies are a powerful tool to make viral and distribute throughout the internet.

All of the other candidates challenging to unseat the incumbent

Nothing worse than a crowded field of contenders.  This only benefits the incumbent, who already has a well constructed political machine.  Al Vann could easily avoid the debates because he never had to compete for the job he already had.  In a 3 person race, Al Vann would have been forced to attend at least 1 debate to win over some voters to guarantee a small margin of victory.  Instead the challengers marginalized each other, with Al Vann needing only 30% of the popular vote to be declared the victor.

[Now que the Twilight Zone theme]

Who among the candidates was asked to remain in the race by the incumbent?  After all, each have ties to Al Vann.  While all other incumbents were mounting legal maneuvers to remove challengers from the ballot,  Al Vann never made an effort to challenge the validity of any challengers credentials to be placed on the ballot.  My guess is you’ll know who granted the councilman this favor through either appointments in his office, funding for their Not for Profit or recommendation for employment as an aide in the Mayor’s office or City Council.

So now we move on and prepare for the coming City Council term.

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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2009 Election Results for 7 City Council Races in Brooklyn

Voting Booth Cartoon

The voters have spoken!

And the 2009 Democratic Primary will go down as a historic event in New York City politics for 2 reasons;

  • 5 Incumbents were unseated by candidates eager to lead under served constituents

Kendall Stewart (D), 45th NYC Council District in Brooklyn

Allen Gerson (D), 1st NYC Council District in Manhattan

Helen Sears (D), 25th NYC Council District in Queens

Kenneth Mitchell (D), 49th NYC Council District in Staten Island

Maria Baez (D), 14th NYC Council District in the Bronx

* a possible 6th incumbent, Thomas White (D) of 28th NYC Council District in Queens, could lose to Lynn Nunes as he currently holds a 6 vote lead over the challenger.

* Ydanis Rodriguez won the Primary for the seat vacated by convicted Councilman Miguel Martinez to represent the 10th NYC Council District in Manhattan, beating out his campaign’s replacement candidate, former Councilman Guillermo Linares

  • One of the lowest turnouts on record; approximately 350,000 Voters in a city with nearly 9 million residents

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How did the candidates do in the 7 council district races we were covering in Brooklyn?  Here are the election results from NY1.com

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Letitia James is declared winner for the 35th NYC Council District

35th CCD Results

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Charles Barron is declared winner for the 42nd NYC Council District

42nd CCD 2209 Primary Results in NYC

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Darlene Mealy and Tracy Boyland will be in a runoff in 10 days to determine who will be the Democratic candidate in the elections held in November 2009.

41st CCD Results

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jumanne Williams unseats incumbent Kendall Stewart to become the next City Council representative for the 45th NYC Council District

45th CCD 2009 Primary Results in NYC

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Erik Martin Dilan, incumbent for the 37th NYC Council District did not have to face any challengers after successfully removing Darma Diaz from the ballot through a formal court challenge on the signatures she collected.

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Lewis Fidler, incumbent for the 46th NYC Council District did not have to face any challengers after successfully removing Ayo O. Johnson, Elias Wier and Alan J. Sasson from the ballot.

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* We will have a separate post about the election results for the 36th NYC Council District in Brooklyn.

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law

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What the City Council Race in Bed Stuy will Mean for You?

Bedford Stuyvesant

Well, here we are.  The 2009 Democratic Primary in New York City.  Everything is up for grabs in an election year that we’ve witnessed;

Well, you get the point.  Why bother recounting everything.  Doing so would brand me a biased cynic in the eyes of supporters of certain politicians.

Given how many posts focused on Bedford Stuyvesant, It would be easy to conclude that I have a strong dislike of Councilman Al Vann.  Not true.  I would have to know the councilman a lot better to arrive at that opinion.   And since I don’t live in the 36th Councilmanic District, my opinion wouldn’t matter.

So I went about asking voters in his district their opinion of his representation.  Let’s just say, I couldn’t find anyone who had a favorable opinion of him (and I’m being kind in that characterization…I can’t repeat most of what was said)

Then why does this election in the 36th NYC Council District matter so much?

Here’s the short answer;

If Al Vann is reelected to another term, he would shepherd in policy changes that would accelerate the greatest social, economic and demographic shift that could adversely affect indigenous residents in Bedford Stuyvesant.

And those policy changes will re-define

  • housing
  • home ownership
  • small business
  • affluence
  • sustainability

It’s not an empty accusation levied against Councilman Vann.  The facts bear out the broad plan outlined in recent rezoning, foreclosure mitigation efforts, as well as pending and future real estate development in and around Bedford Stuyvesant.

Since parts of Bedford Stuyvesant are also represented by Letitia James in the 35th Council District and Darlene Mealy in the 41st Council District, central Brooklyn could transform on a scale we’ve seen experienced in Harlem.

In light of the above, what do you think of the choice in candidates running to unseat Councilman Vann?  Have you attended or viewed any of the debates?

With a crowded field of challengers (a total 8 candidates), conventional political wisdom favors the incumbent.  Name recognition has something to do with that.

Campaign literature doesn’t help either, as it reduces everything to a slogan.  Even campaign web sites fall short of really defining the candidates or their platform.  And maybe it’s that way on purpose.  Conventional political wisdom encourages skilled politicians to employ 2 broad strategies :

  1. The KISS approach – Keep It Simple & Subtle
  2. Avoidance – never engage your challenger or acknowledge their existence

But in a time of HOPE where CHANGE was the mandate in the 2008 national election season, will it be the rally cry for a new politics locally in 2009?

We’ve collaborated with the great writers and publishers at NostrandPark.com to contribute to a voter guide aptly titled POLITICAL FAST FOOD for the 36th council district Democratic Primary.

You can click here to read a Comparison Chart, a brief summary of each candidate that will aid you in evaluating which candidate to pull the lever for when you step into the booth.

Now, don’t let your ancestors and predecessors down.  GET OUT AND VOTE!!!!

Michael Corley is VP of Sales and Marketing at Corley Realty Group Inc. and contributor to MyBrooklynReport.com ©, All Rights Reserved under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and International Copyright Law


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