| Doing Ratner's Bidding–How
BUILD has supported Forest City Ratner in return for payment:
Ratner funds BUILD to bash the bid from Extell Development
Company (they have claimed Extell would not work with the community, is
racist because they've partnered with the Carlyle group in the past, has
a lower bid when it was not true).
Ratner funds BUILD to rally against the district's Councilwoman,
Letitia James and accused her of being racist, and against jobs and housing..
Ratner funds BUILD to create racial tension and divisiveness
in the community by threatening, at a rally, that an MTA vote against
Ratner would equal a vote against Black people.
Ratner funds BUILD to use racially charged language at
public hearings and meetings and in the press.
Ratner funds BUILD while BUILD claims it has community
support by claiming financial support from the community, when it's financing
comes entirely from Ratner.
Ratner funds BUILD to bus people into public hearings
- and likely paying them to fill up the room so that opponents could not
get in. *
* Excerpted from reporter Aaron Naparstek's New York
Press article from July, 2005 article,
Same
as the Old Boss
At about 7:00 a.m. on the morning of the vote, Brooklyn neighborhood advocates
started lining up in front of the MTA's Madison Avenue office. They were
late. The first nine spots in line belonged to Ratner supporters from
an organization called Brooklyn United for Innovative Local Development.
BUILD members had been camped out in front of the building since midnight.
BUILD is what you call an "astroturf" organization. The group
is designed to look, sound and feel grassroots but it was conceived in
the Forest City Ratner board room with the express purpose of providing
the developer a "community organization" it could deal with.
The mission of BUILD, ostensibly, is to create jobs for Brooklyn's unemployed.
Notably, the organization has been in business for about a year and a
half and the only jobs it has created are the staff positions at BUILD.
Also around 7:00 a.m. a caterer arrived dropping off "what seemed like
enough boxed lunches and drinks to feed half the people in Prospect Heights,"
according to Eric McClure, a neighborhood advocate from Park Slope.
A gaggle of cell phone-bearing Forest City p.r. women in designer threads
distributed the grub to the BUILD folks. Then a livery van rolled in and
unloaded about a dozen more BUILD people. The Ratner crew also
continued to multiply. At one point, McClure estimates there were as many
as 20 Forest City staff people bustling about the sidewalk.
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