PRESS RELEASE: Ikea Used Misrepresentations to Get Red Hook Approval, Will Set Bad Precedent
PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
CONTACT: Mary Campbell Gallagher, J.D., Ph.D.
MCG@MaryCampbellGallagher.com
IKEA USED MISREPRESENTATIONS TO GET RED HOOK APPROVAL, WILL SET BAD PRECEDENT
New York, NY. June 29, 2005. The trial court on Monday decided in favor of Ikea in the ongoing Ikea-Red Hook litigation. According to the blog BigCitiesBigBoxes.com, Ikea built its case for re-zoning on false evidence and deliberately-created racial divisiveness, as well as
on the misrepresentations that the plaintiffs pointed out in their court submissions, all of which are available on BigCitiesBigBoxes.com.
Ikea claimed that unemployment among racial minorities in Red Hook was epidemic, and Ikea systematically incited racial divisiveness in the community. Its claims about unemployment, however, were simply false. As revealed on the blog BigCitiesBigBoxes, publicly available evidence proves that Ikea secured City Planning Commission approval for the gigantic Ikea-Red Hook big box store by misrepresenting the number of unemployed residents of Red Hook Houses, a public housing project. Ikea stated, misleadingly and repeatedly, that there is a twenty per cent unemployment rate at Red Hook Houses, the local public housing project, which as of the Year 2000 census had 7,278 residents, most of them African-American.
The records of the Department of City Planning, however, show that in fact there were only 568 unemployed persons of working age in Red Hook Houses as of the 2000 census, not 1456, as Ikea's arguments suggested. In addition, hundreds of retail jobs are already available within walking distance of Red Hook Houses, at Lowe's and Home Depot, and another 200 union jobs will be available when Fairway opens.
Despite Ikea's gargantuan, racially inflammatory public relations efforts to turn the residents of Red Hook Houses into a pro-Ikea pressure group, with letter-writing, demonstrating, and Ikea T-shirt wearing, in fact very few people in Red Hook Houses are unemployed, and the City Planning Commission must have known that.
Ikea-Red Hook demonstrates the city's eagerness to sacrifice the Red Hook neighborhood and disregard its neighborhood 197-a plan, which the City Council approved in 1996, so that the city can allow a developer free play and maximize the city's own revenues from sales taxes. This is the same pattern as in Greenpoint-Williamsburg, West Harlem, and Prospect Heights. It is the same kind of governmental sacrifice of citizens' rights for higher tax returns that was demonstrated in Kelo v. New London, just decided by the United States Supreme Court.
The Ikea matter also demonstrates how, if we allow the big box stores to come into the city without specific planning constraints on size and site, they will suburbanize New York City with gigantic stores and huge parking lots. They will suck the life out of our vital neighborhood shopping streets.
It is the position of the blog BigCitiesBigBoxes.com that such serious matters deserve more serious discussion than the city has given them. New York City needs a civil public discussion of whether we want to allow big box stores into the city and, if so, with what constraints of size, design, location and employment practices.
Mary Campbell Gallagher, J.D., Ph.D.
PO Box 1308 Gracie Station
New York, NY 10028-0010
MCG@BigCitiesBigBoxes.com
http://www.BigCitiesBigBoxes.com
####
