New York City Coalition for the Preservation of Gardens v. Giuliani

175 Misc. 2d 644, 670 N.Y.S.2d 654, 1997 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 632
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 175 Misc. 2d 644 (New York City Coalition for the Preservation of Gardens v. Giuliani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York City Coalition for the Preservation of Gardens v. Giuliani, 175 Misc. 2d 644, 670 N.Y.S.2d 654, 1997 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 632 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jeffrey M. Atlas, J.

The individual petitioners are New York City residents who have established and developed community gardens in their lower east side and Harlem neighborhoods on land owned by the City of New York and left vacant by the demolition of small buildings, tenements and brownstones abandoned by their original owners. The New York City Coalition for the Preservation of Gardens is a collective of many such gardeners raising gardens on such lots throughout the City. Many of these gardens are set on lots licensed by the City to the gardeners until such time as they are reclaimed by the City for development. In many instances, gardens have been operated with the financial help of City government programs, such as operation Green Thumb, and many have served as community centers [647]*647and a point of pride for the communities that maintained them. Some of the gardens have been maintained primarily by neighborhood residents and exist on City-owned lots without the express consent or license of the City. This proceeding is occasioned by the fact that a particular City program now seeks to reclaim the garden lots for the needed development of low-cost housing.

Since 1982, the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) has worked jointly with the New York City Housing Partnership (NYCHP), a not-for-profit housing sponsor, in maintaining the New Homes Program (NHP), a sponsor utilizing combinations of public aid to assist privately financed construction, on City-owned land, of affordable one, two and three family homes, condominiums and cooperatives for moderate and middle income purchasers. Since its inception, with NHP sponsorship, some 9,000 such units have been built and occupied throughout the City and many more are contemplated. NHP, established to function in perpetuity, does not appear to have a comprehensive detailed plan for each building project it hopes to sponsor in the distant future, nor does it imagine the building of all units to be erected by it as part of a single and interdependent building scheme. Indeed, at various intervals and project by project, when it has formally been decided to encourage the construction of such units at a particular location, HPD and NHP, by public advertisement, seek builders to submit their qualifications to build the units. This request for qualifications (RFQ) lists specific sites, generally located in all five boroughs of the City, then designated for development. To facilitate the development of these housing units, the City sells the properties in question to a subsidiary of the NYCHP and application is made to HPD and the City Council for approval of the contemplated construction under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA; ECL art 8) and the New York City Charter and General Municipal Law land use provisions. When that approval is given, the Mayor’s approval of the disposition of the properties is then sought, and customarily obtained.

The petitioners now seek to enjoin the construction of condominium units sponsored by NHP and made the subject of a request for qualifications from interested builders issued on March 15, 1996. In general, petitioners complain that construction of such projects at the 27 sites enumerated in that RFQ would result in the destruction of hundreds of community gardens located at the numerous lots that make up each of [648]*648these sites. Petitioners urge me to enjoin the City from taking any further action to develop these sites, contending that approval of the projects would violate both the provisions of SEQRA and the General Municipal Law. Petitioners argue that all contemplated action should be stayed until appropriate environmental review is undertaken and land use laws complied with. In particular, petitioners seek to prevent imminent construction of an NHP project at various sites on the lower east side of Manhattan known as the “East 11th Street Partnership Project” (11th Street Project) and to prevent further action with respect to a proposed project in Harlem known as the “Central Harlem Project” (Harlem Project). Petitioners request an order annulling determinations made by HPD waiving review of both projects under the provisions of SEQRA, annulling the resolution of the City Council approving the 11th Street Project and waiving land use review of it under the City Charter and the General Municipal Law, and annulling the authorization given by the Mayor to transfer the lands in question to NYCHP pursuant to the determinations made by the other agencies in question. The evidence before me shows that of all the projects included in the RFQ in question, only 5 sites of the total 27 have been transferred by the City to the NYCHP and only 1, the 11th Street Project, has received complete City approval and is about to be constructed. The 11th Street Project is made up of nine sites all located within several blocks of each other on the lower east side of Manhattan. Two contiguous sites are on 13th Street and Avenue A, an additional site is on 11th Street near Avenue A, another on 11th Street at Avenue B, two others, not abutting, on 11th Street between Avenue B and Avenue C, and three others adjacent but wedged together in an odd pattern between 10th Street and 11th Street on Avenue C. Each site is generally made up of several adjacent lots. It should be noted that all NHP projects seem generally to be built on available sites that may be bound together in a given neighborhood in a manner that makes each project economically feasible. The Harlem Project, incorporating many lots at diverse locations as far south as 121st Street and as far north as 129th Street, is, of course, similar. It has only been the subject of HPD waiver of SEQRA review.

Petitioners complain that in May 1997, respondent HPD acted capriciously and in violation of the law when it determined, under the provisions of SEQRA, that both the Harlem and 11th Street Projects were Type II actions which required [649]*649none of the exhaustive environmental review required of all other building actions described as Type I or unlisted actions by SEQRA. Moreover, petitioners complain that the City Council violated the City Charter by unlawfully waiving the land use review provisions of the City Charter for these projects. Finally, petitioners complain that the Mayor’s action in approving these projects and authorizing transfer of land in complete reliance on the determinations made by the other City agencies is equally unlawful and should, as with the others, be set aside.

For their part, respondents seek dismissal of the petition and contend that the petitioners lack standing to make these complaints and that all the actions of the agencies involved were lawful and rational determinations based on appropriate considerations. In particular, respondents note that the statutory law involved specifically allows for exemptions from environmental and land use review provisions for projects of this very type and, they contend, such exemptions were appropriately granted for these projects.

I

Respondents urge that I first consider whether the petitioners have standing to complain of the City’s determinations enabling the construction of the projects at the lower east side and Harlem locations. Indeed, “[w]hether a person seeking relief is a proper party to request an adjudication is an aspect of justiciability which, when challenged, must be considered at the outset of any litigation (Matter of Dairylea Coop. v Walkley, 38 NY2d 6, 9).” (Society of Plastics Indus. v County of Suffolk, 77 NY2d 761, 769.)

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Bluebook (online)
175 Misc. 2d 644, 670 N.Y.S.2d 654, 1997 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-city-coalition-for-the-preservation-of-gardens-v-giuliani-nysupct-1997.