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9 Downtown housing projects to get part of $3 billion Sandy fund

Mayor de Blasio and Sen. Schumer in Red Hook March 31 announcing $3 billion in funds for NYCHA complexes around the city. Downtown Express photo by Duncan Osborne.
Mayor de Blasio and Sen. Schumer in Red Hook March 31 announcing $3 billion in funds for NYCHA complexes around the city. Downtown Express photo by Duncan Osborne.

By JOSH ROGERS | Nine Lower East Side public housing complexes will be able to tap into a $3 billion federal fund to repair damage from Hurricane Sandy, Sen. Chuck Schumer and Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday in Red Hook.

The nine are part of 33 NYCHA projects around the city that will receive the money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to repair and protect places damaged three years ago.

The mayor and Schumer said it was the largest single grant FEMA has ever made.

In Downtown Manhattan, the New York City Housing Authority houses that will get money are Smith, LaGuardia, Two Bridges, Baruch, Wald, Riis 1 & 2, and Campos 1 & 2.

“I know we have to protect our boilers because we had no water during Sandy,” said Aixa Torres, tenant leader at Smith Houses next to the Brooklyn Bridge.

“I am very happy about the 3 billion,” Torres said Wednesday. “I’m sure there’ll be another Sandy with this crazy weather….

“I think for too long the federal government has ignored public housing in general. We’re taxpayers like everyone else. “

Underscoring that last point, NYCHA estimates that there is an additional $18 billion shortfall citywide on needed repairs at over 300 developments.

Residents of Smith Houses carrying supplies after Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Downtown Express file photo by Sam Spokony.
Residents of Smith Houses carrying supplies after Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Downtown Express file photo by Sam Spokony.

It’s not yet known how much money each housing project will get, but the average is just over $90 million. Torres said all of the needed repairs at Smith will cost $623 million, but some of that is not connected to Sandy damage.

Smith needs backup generators and protection for its boilers, two projects eligible for the FEMA funds.

Torres said the water tank was first damaged by an earthquake then by Hurricane Irene in 2011, which did not hit New York City particularly hard, and then by Sandy. She and most residents had no power or water for a week.

She said only half of Smith’s leaky roofs have been repaired and the elevators also need replacing.

About half the FEMA money will be for repairs, and the rest will be for flood protection measures, which is especially important for Smith, LaGuardia and Two Bridges.

All three have been cut out of the first phase of the “Big U,” another federally-funded project that aims to build a U-shaped ring of protective berms around the southern half of Manhattan.

The U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development has pegged $335 million to build at least part of the first section on the East Side from Montgomery St. up to 23rd St.

Torres, Community Board 1 chairperson Catherine McVay Hughes and other Downtown leaders have been clamoring for money to protect the rest of Lower Manhattan.

Last month, Patrick Ryan, a de Blasio administration official working on storm protection, said the Big U was “more like a little i” because so much of it is unfunded.

Schumer said last month that getting more HUD money for Lower Manhattan is at “the top of my list.”

In a press release Tuesday, he said “For thousands of hard-working New York families and seniors in some 200 NYCHA buildings from Red Hook to Coney Island to the Lower East to the Rockaways who were displaced and devastated by Superstorm Sandy, this massive and historic federal investment … will both restore decent living conditions to their buildings and fortify them against future storms and disasters.”

Joining the release from the mayor were a long list of politicians including on the local level, U.S. Representatives Nydia Velázquez and Carolyn Maloney, Borough President Gale Brewer and Councilmember Margaret Chin.

Chin said the money “represents a huge step toward improving the lives of thousands of Lower East Side NYCHA residents who are still struggling with post-Sandy damage and the fear of being left unprotected,” and means that “we can get much closer to truly protecting those public housing residents for generations to come.”

 

The 33 NYCHA developments to receive the funds are: Coney Island Houses, Red Hook West, Red Hook East, Redfern, Hammel Houses, Carey Gardens, Coney Island Sites 4 & 5, Surfside Gardens, O’Dwyer Gardens, Gravesend, Ocean Bay Oceanside, Haber Houses, Coney Island Site 8, Riis II, Metro North, Carleton Manor, Beach 41st, Ocean Bay Bayside, Wald, Gowanus, Riis I, Astoria, Baruch, East River Houses, Smith Houses, La Guardia, Campos I, Coney Island Houses Site 1B, Lavanburg, Rangel Houses, Two Bridges, Campos II, and Isaacs.