Here's an interesting item  about Columbia trying to take over 
Manhattanville, using eminent domain  to take what they can't buy outright.
Always at your service & ready for a  dialog ® brand 35-year resident & 
housing provider
Al  Krigman
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Ivy League University May  Use Eminent Domain in West Harlem: Associated 
Content,  2/11/07
Is it Boon or  Gentrification? 


By Renee  Morway 

Fox News reported today that Columbia University  may try to use eminent 
domain to acquire the 17 acres from 125th to 133rd  Streets in New York City 
known 
as Manhattan Ville. The University claims  expansion is necessary as it is 
currently only one-half the size of Harvard and  one-third the size of 
Princeton 
and Yale. 

According to Emerging Minds  Magazine, Columbia is one of the city's largest 
landlords. The acquisition of  Manhattan Ville would double the current size 
of the University's campus.  Columbia plans to build a bio-chemical research 
center on the property, which  would have five stories below ground level, 
potentially wreaking havoc on the  environment. 

Columbia has already acquired 85% of the area and is trying  to cut a deal 
for the rest. According to the New York Sun, "The University has  hired an 
outside organization to determine if the area is blighted. Such a  
determination 
would likely cause friction in part because the definition of  blight is 
unclear 
and because the university is funding the study." The blight  study may 
conceivably help Columbia to exercise the law of eminent domain to  acquire the 
remaining 15% of the area if property owners were to hold-out.  

One man clearly holding out is Nicholas Sprayregen. According to the New  
York Sun, he owns the largest chunk of any private property owner in Manhattan  
Ville. Most of it is devoted to his family's self-storage business and he has 
no  interest in selling out, hoping instead to pass his business on to his 
children.  

In addition to Mr. Spraygregen's refusal, Emerging Minds Magazine  reports 
that Columbia also faces opposition from The Coalition to Preserve  Community. 
It is a new grass roots movement that has led the fight against  gentification 
of West Harlem. It claims Columbia is carrying out gentrification  with the 
support of New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. It fears that Columbia's  plan 
will 
displace homes and small businesses in Manhattan Ville.  

Emerging Minds Magazine reported that Nellie Bailey of the Harlem  Tenants 
Council in New York stated that the 2004 Vera Institute for Justice's  study on 
family homelessness in New York showed that, among other factors,  neighborhood
s experiencing gentrification like Central Harlem had higher numbers  of 
families becoming homeless. Central Harlem ranked in the top 10 neighborhoods  
in 
the city with a high displacement rate. The New York City social service  
agency, Coalition for the Homeless, says there are 36,166 people who sleep in  
the 
city's shelters and welfare hotels each night, and 14,884 are children.  

According to the Fox News report today, the State of New York is  reviewing 
eminent domain and appears to be onboard. It believes the takeover  would be 
good for the local residents. Columbia would spend $7 billion to create  6,900 
jobs. Two-thirds of them, approximately 4,600 jobs, would go to the local  
community. 

Would Columbia's acquisition of Manhattan Ville be a boon to  the West Harlem 
community or is it gentrification? 

 
____________________________________

Associated Content: _http://www.associatedcontent.com  

_ (http://www.associatedcontent.com) 

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